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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Americans of all stripes give thanks

Children watch as the Shrek balloon passes by on Broadway during the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade Thursday. Associated Press (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Adam Goldman Associated Press

NEW YORK – Delighted, shrieking children were barely able to contain themselves Thursday as Barbie rolled past and enormous Shrek and Snoopy balloons floated overhead in the traditional Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Unseasonably balmy weather, with temperatures around 60 degrees, helped draw hordes of families to the parade route to see the floats, helium balloons, marching bands and roller-blading clowns.

Five-year-old Lauryn Geiger, of Freeport, had no problem ticking off her favorite Macy’s parade characters: Dora the Explorer, Shrek and Scooby Doo.

“And we’re going to see Santa. Did you know that?” said her mother, Dorothea Geiger, eliciting a squeal.

In Detroit, drizzle, snow and temperatures in the 30s didn’t deter thousands of people from lining up to watch that city’s America’s Thanksgiving Parade.

Some spectators took their eyes off the parade to gawk at a 3-year-old dog in the crowd named Diamond, dressed as Santa Claus, complete with red tasseled cap.

“Last year, she was Minnie Mouse,” said owner Shelita Porter, 33. “I think of her as my child. And she enjoys her clothes. When I pull her clothes out, she knows it’s time to go.”

The parades headlined observances across the nation that also featured football, including Detroit’s NFL game between the Lions and the Green Bay Packers, and family dinners with too much food on the table.

President Bush, spending the holiday at the Camp David retreat in Maryland, called several men and women serving in the armed forces in Iraq.

“He called to wish the members of the military and their families and the troops that they are serving with a happy Thanksgiving,” White House press secretary Dana Perino said. “He said, ‘I can’t tell you how impressed I am by the courage and compassion of our troops.’ He thanked them for their service.”

Among those he called was Air Force Staff Sgt. Neil Lockart, of Kamiah, Idaho, who leads a team that protects military aircraft, personnel and equipment in Iraq.

At the U.S. base called Camp Speicher, in Tikrit, Iraq, the military put on a traditional American Thanksgiving dinner in a mess hall decked out with red, orange and brown paper streamers and other decorations.

The U.S. military puts on a traditional Thanksgiving celebration for some 165,000 military personnel stationed across Iraq. The cost is in the “hundreds of thousands of dollars” at the Camp Speicher dining hall alone – one of three facilities at this base north of Baghdad, said Chief Warrant Officer William Duff, who oversees contractors here. That pays for turkey and all the trimmings for about 20,000 customers who include U.S. military members, contractors and an occasional visiting journalist.

Cpl. Brandon Henry, 23, from Winchester, Va., said he has been in the Army for four years and hasn’t spent Thanksgiving in the United States since he joined.

“So it’ll be five Thanksgivings, five Christmases and four birthdays spent away from home, by the time I get done here,” he said. “This is my family here – the Army in general – so I don’t feel like I’m away from home.”

The crew of the International Space Station put together a special Thanksgiving message that was aired on NASA Television and the agency’s Web site, www.nasa.gov/ntv/.

“We wanted to say happy Thanksgiving to all our NASA viewers,” said Expedition 16 Commander Peggy Whitson, an Iowa native. “We feel particularly privileged and thankful to be up here on board the International Space Station this Thanksgiving, and we’re looking forward to our activities this week. We have a busy week with spacewalks, and we hope that you also are having a great Thanksgiving.”

At the Salvation Army’s annual Thanksgiving Day dinner in Oklahoma City, holiday music wafted from a stage as dozens of volunteers in red Salvation Army vests carried trays of sliced pumpkin and pecan pies or escorted new arrivals to their place at a table.

“I love Thanksgiving. I love this event,” Salvation Army spokeswoman Heide Brandes said as she surveyed the scene. “You have the people who are the haves, and you have the people who are have-nots. And this brings them together,” she said.

This year’s Macy’s parade, the 81st, offered a mix of new attractions and longtime favorites, solemn tributes and lighthearted spectacle.

Some 10,000 participants, many of them holding down the buoyant balloons, followed the parade route down the west side of Central Park, then down Broadway through Times Square to the Macy’s store on Herald Square. The lineup included three new balloons, 2,000 cheerleaders, 800 clowns and the Radio City Rockettes.

There were 11 marching bands, including the Virginia Tech Regimental Band, playing in honor of the victims of last spring’s campus shooting.

“The whole experience is special,” said Rich Piasio, of Wilmington, N.C. He and his wife wore Virginia Tech sweat shirts as they waited for the band.