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・ Veterans Memorial Stadium (Lawrence)
・ Veterans Memorial Stadium (League City)
・ Veterans Memorial Stadium (Long Beach)
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・ Veterans Museum and Memorial Center
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・ Veterans of Foreign Wars Walter R. Mickens Post 6021 and William Weech American Legion Post 168
Veterans of Future Wars
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2000–05
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2006
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2007
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2008
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2009
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2010
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2011
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2012
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2013
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2014
・ Veterans of the Spanish Civil War who died in 2015
・ Veterans Outer Loop
・ Veterans Paralympic Act of 2013
・ Veterans Park


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Veterans of Future Wars : ウィキペディア英語版
Veterans of Future Wars
Veterans of Future Wars (VFW) was an organization formed as a prank by Princeton University students in 1936.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Veterans of Future Wars )〕 The group was a satirical reaction to a bill granting the early payment of bonuses to World War I veterans as articulated in their manifesto:
The manifesto spread nationwide as wire services quickly picked up the group's press releases. Representative Claude Fuller of Arkansas unwittingly increased the group's visibility by denouncing them on the floor of the House. Soon local chapters began popping up at campuses throughout the nation. Enthusiastic new members from as far away as North Dakota paid dues to the main chapter in Princeton and adopted the organization's salute: arm held out towards Washington with "hand outstretched, palm up and expectant" – a mockery both of the World War I veterans, whom the founding Princetonians viewed as freeloaders, and of the fascist salute then gaining currency in Europe.
The message of the organization had a rare appeal to both conservatives and liberals. Conservatives saw them as kindred spirits in the effort to keep Roosevelt from spending the country into bankruptcy. Pacifist liberals on the other hand, saw the movement as an opportunity to satirize war itself. Many veterans, however, were disgusted with the movement and felt it was in poor taste.
By June 1936, the Veterans of Future Wars reached its peak membership of 50,000 paid members at 584 college campuses. By the next school year, national attention focused on the Presidential campaign. The group ceased operations in April 1937.
Ironically, the group's joke had become serious prophecy. With the exception of one man who had been injured in an automobile accident, each of the Princetonian founders of the Veterans of Future Wars served in the armed forces of the United States in World War II.〔.〕
==Other clubs==

*Profiteers of Future Wars was a college political club founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute before World War II.〔Ferguson, Charles. ''Fifty Million Brothers.'' New York: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc. 1937.〕 It objected to the way that businesses profited from war, primarily during World War I.〔"Before Pearl Harbor" http://www.virginia.edu/100yearslawn/papers/stambaugh/pearl-ha.html〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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