No, you should not use an apostrophe in "Military Veterans" when used as a header. The term refers to veterans of the military in a general sense, so it is plural and does not indicate possession. An apostrophe would only be necessary if indicating possession, such as "Military Veterans' Benefits."
They simply feared induction into the military, and if they were too old for military service or otherwise unqualified for service (or had already served, thus being veterans) then they feared for their nephews, sons, grandsons, cousins, younger brothers, best friends, etc. being drafted into military service. This is why they wanted the war to end.
If he perished in Vietnam, his name should already be there.
The military is neutral, they serve the elected commander in chief.
The belief that your nation should have the strongest military/navy/army in the world.
Assuming the person served in the US Navy, you should request the person's service records from the National Archives. The process varies somewhat depending on your relationship to the person.http://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/#evetrecsThe records center receives nearly 5,000 requests for records per day, so allow a couple weeks for a response!
Definately every day we should honor our military veterans because they give up their lives to gain freedom for our country.
Beacuse they served in the military and helped to defend our country. If we didnt have Veterans that would mean that no one served in the military and we could well be a third-world country. We honor our veterans because they are the main cause of our freedom.
it's is a abbreviation of it is so it should have an apostrophe
no There should never be an apostrophe in "never".
All veterans of all military services are honored on Veteran's Day, for their sacrifices in preserving the nation and all the freedoms American enjoy.
It should not have an apostrophe.
No. Harringtons doesn't need an apostrophe.
Should not = shouldn't
No they should not.
Yes, the sentence should have an apostrophe to denote possession. It should be written as: "Linda and her vice presidents' are going to Brazil."
No there shouldn't be an apostrophe.
No, Morrisons should not have an apostrophe in its name. It is a plural possessive noun.