asked thatstween two the girls the boys adopted the n Long to jslie Jeffer-’ programs.ard asking m the duty. ;he request ey to thee board: s budget 2-93 fiscal Sept. 21 to*ly dismis-' changes, to do away smissals Wednesday larch, andace those iy in each dismissalo acherCommunity unces there ill potential n Monday,in the dis-M.meeting is s teachers to •ugh neces-over sub-dbook, andchool year, istitute payis is $50. d in sub-10 holds a license isme parK.Nazis never cracked codeST. LOUIS (AP) — The firstmessage relayed from Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr. on D-Day was: “We have landed safely.” It was in Comanche, the “code” Nazi Germany never broke.Forrest Kassanaviod still marvels that the Germans never cracked the code, which he used to relay tactical messages among the Allied troops in World War II.The code is also the language of his ancestors — the nomadic Comanche of the American West.Kassanaviod was one of 17 Comanche men recruited by the U.S. Army for a special World War II communications unit. He and Ed Nahquaddy were on hand Sunday at the Missouri Botanical Garden’s Native American Festival to lecture on the Comanche “code talkers” of World War II.“There was some joy in the fact that we served this country of ours,” Kassanaviod said. “Not everything in the war was always so sad.”Kassanaviod, 71, of Indiahoma, Okla., and Nahquaddy, 72, of Oklahoma City, spoke about their role on D-Day, the invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944.The code talkers were also instrumental in relaying messages about the location of enemy troops during the liberation ofParis in August 1944.The Navajo language was used in the Pacific theater, and members of the Navajo tribe were recruited for communications units there, Kassanaviod said.Kassanaviod and Nahquaddy said only four Comanche code talkers are alive today, but all of them survived the war.Bikim*Two Park The i withwaitiiRec(ContinuReagan favor ofly,” aswholehe“The businesi afford tlt; a man matchelt; and abi!Reagf calls frlt; you, Roi He ke ruption: His e1lumped, “the pe life’s jlt;Potcrem