00:00What is this all standing for?
00:05What's going on here?
00:07What?
00:08What's going on here?
00:10What are you standing there for?
00:13What?
00:14Well, well, well.
00:16What do you think that would be, hun?
00:31Pictures of yourself now as well, you do on the floor but not me.
00:36That is a picture of a decent soft way to look at it.
00:43I should be a hundred six months time.
00:48That's brilliant.
00:50I taught the king this.
00:52I'm sure you'll make it to a hundred.
00:55When he said he was going home to get out my card and start filling out my card.
01:00Yes, he's a nice gentleman.
01:03A portrait is around in lots of places and it's true to form, right?
01:09Yeah, it's true to form.
01:11Yeah.
01:12And what do you think of the exhibition as a whole with some of the other people who
01:18have got that portrait taken right beside you?
01:21Well, I've only seen John there.
01:24John there, yes, I've only seen him but it looks very interesting.
01:29There's plenty of space.
01:32Plenty of space for people to be seen, to be asked questions.
01:40No, it's very lively actually.
01:43This is my first time in such an occasion, in such a place to be.
01:52But I do recognise myself and I recognise my awards as well.
01:58Yeah, very happy to be here.
02:00Very happy to be here.
02:02And what do you think of your story being displayed in such a way that people can come
02:07to the exhibition and read about your work or your service?
02:10What I've done in the past, my service?
02:13Well, it's true and it's worth listening to what I experienced.
02:23And it has left me with ironed army legs but I cope.
02:33I cope.
02:37And I've got a nice family to grow up with me and we're very happy.
02:48Very happy.
02:50Very happy family man.
02:53And Stan, what do you think of there being information about what life was like after the war?
02:59The contrast from what you did in your service but also some information about what you've done since.
03:04What do you think of that being a part of the exhibition?
03:07Well, in a case like that, if you were wounded, injured at all,
03:15and it tends to go with you when you leave the forces, but they do take care of you.
03:24They do take, in spite of what people say, they do take care of you.
03:31And they wouldn't do it otherwise.
03:34It does. I was determined that when it was my turn to meet a lady and to start a family,
03:45I was determined that my family would be a normal family.
03:51Normal family. We would do things that normal people do.
03:57And my children would not suffer in any way.
04:00They wouldn't go without anything because of who I was and what I had endured.
04:14They had a very good family.
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