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LtCol Raul 'Art' Sifuentes, USMC, Vietnam

May 29, 202436 min
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Episode description

Raul "Art" Sifuentes was born in Michigan and knew he wanted to be a U.S. Marine when he watched John Wayne in "The Sands of Iwo Jima" when he was just 11 years old. At age 17, while still in high school, Sifuentes enlisted in Marine Reserves and went on active duty after graduation. He left the Corps after three years and attended college.

After receiving his undergraduate degree, Sifuentes planned to pursue a Masters degree, but a meeting with a Marine officer selection official changed all that. Soon, we was off to flight school to learn how to fly helicopters. Shortly after that, he was off for the first of three tours in Vietnam.

In this edition of "Veterans Chronicles," Sifuentes takes us through flight training, the wide variety of missions he flew in Vietnam, including many in hot zones to extract reconaissance teams or wounded service members. He also details the work on his third tour in helping to remove mines from Haiphong Harbor and discusses the horrible treatment our troops received from Americans when they returned home.

Finally, Sifuentes details his rewarding work with the Iwo Jima Association and why he is forever grateful to have served in the U.S. Marine Corps.

Transcript

This is Veterans Chronicles. I'm Greg Corumbus. Our guest in this edition is retired US Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel Raoul Art Sefuentes. Colonel Sefuentes served three tours in Vietnam as a helicopter pilot. He now serves as executive director of the Ewo Jima Association, a role which allows him to serve the surviving veterans of that pivotal battle in World War II, raise funds for their projects, and

educate the rest of us about the heroism of those veterans. Colonel Sefuentes was born in the small town of Lakeview, Michigan, in nineteen thirty nine. His parents were brought to that area for work, and that's where they were

at the time he was ready to be born. But my parents were migrant workers and during the summers they would they would bring the Hispanics up for Mexico and Texas and the Southwest to pick the various crops there across the country, and Michigan was known for its cucumbers and sugar beets and cherries and things like

that. So during the summer they would transport these these migrants with the old school buses to do the crops, and they just follow follow the crops with the time of the year, and my parents just happened to be up there at that time and when it was time for me to come along, and rather than returned back to San Antonio, Texas, they elected to stay there in Michigan, and I was born and raised in the best of times. So went days. Enlisted in the Marine Corps in nineteen fifty six while he

was still in high school. Looking back on it, he suspects there were multiple reasons for joining. It was kind of it, kind of fun. I was a little guy. I was, you know, I didn't date much in high school. All the girls were taller than I was, and they these big old farm boys were all the we're all the stars and the football team. So I probably had a little man's complex at the time. I was a third string, third string linebacker at one hundred and seventeen pounds

going after these big old farm boys. It didn't work for me. So when I was eleven years old, I went to our little local theater and so Sanza Vio gam with John Wayne and eleven years old, and I went home and said, mom, that's what I'm going to be. That's what I'm going to be when when I grow up. Then she patted me on the head, she said, of course you are son to to form.

When I was eleven, I spotted a gunnery sergeant from World War Two who just happened to be coming through time for a cup of coffee, and I chatted with him, and he taught me to the reserves, and the rest is history. I joined the Reserves, and graduation from high graduation from high

school, I went to boot camp. Joining the military and going through basic training can be a culture shock to any new service man, but Marine Corps boot camp has a well earned reputation for changing boys into men quickly and effectively. Says it was intense, but he thinks he did pretty well. It was interesting and it was fun. Even though I was not the biggest guy in the in the class, I'd always been kind of I had been athletically in good shape, so boot camp boot camp was a fun challenge for me.

I thoroughly I thoroughly enjoyed it. Uh, duck walking and things of that nature were things that the drill instructors liked to like to put it through where you squat down and march up hills and down hills. But the physical activities for me were were easy. And it was something all of a sudden that that that I excelled at so uh, marching and drilling and running up and down hills and you know, fighting off rattlesnakes and firing rifles, to me is it. It was exciting and so I took to it like a

duck to water. Immediately after Basic, Sefentes was assigned to a radio unit, which he found interesting enough, but not interesting enough to keep him in the Marine Corps. They sent me because I was able, actually able to do to work a typewriter, they sent They sent me to a radio school to become a radio telegraph operator they called twenty five twenty five thirty three, and we learned, we learned and operated old World War two radios and that

was for six months. I was I was given a promotion out of boot camp, so I did. I did pretty well there, and as as the guy that kind of ran ran a little radio school class, I got my choice of duty stations. So I was transferred to the territory of Hawaii and I was there when they converted when when Hawaii went for I'm a territory to a state. And I finished my active duty obligation with the Reserves in nineteen fifty nine and tried my hand in college and took me five years to

work my way through, but I did that. So if one Days left the service in nineteen fifty nine and completed his undergraduate degree in nineteen sixty four, it was then, just as he was planning to attend graduate school and pursue a master's degree. That's if one Days paid a simple courtesy call that

changed his life forever. Just as I graduated, the officer selection officer from Houston, Texas, guy my name of John Geary came through, and as a former Marine, I thought I'd go down, shake his hand and say say howdy, because I was. I was on my way to graduate school and on the better things. And he took me into coming back into the Marine Corps. And as I'm walking out the door, he mentioned aviation and kind of looked at me and said, you looked like a helico after pilot.

So in nineteen sixty four, I came back to the Marine Corps and went to flight school and started my aviation career. But there's much more to the story. While the idea of flying was appealing to Sefuentes, he admits now that he was most enticed by the promise that accompanied the opportunity to fly choppers in the Marine Corps. I was working my way through school, so money was very dear. I was working in the cafeteria for my meals.

I'd just gotten married to this beautiful woman. And I was working in the bookstore for my tuition and cleaning wrack cages for twenty five books a month. So as I'm walking out at the door before he mentions aviation on my way out, and he said, have you thought about aviation? I said, well, sir, I get like how you see carsick You know, motion sickness is not a thing for me. And then he said the magic words. He said, do you know there's flight pay kaching flight? Tell me

about it. And so he told me, I should you give it? Give it a shot. So they took me up on a flight, and then it went pretty pretty well. I didn't I didn't feel a little brown bag. Uh. And so went on to flight school and and and then they assigned me to helicopter helicopter training and boa I'll tell you that I can't see enough about a helicopter career and and uh just aviators in general. But

I love the helicopter mission. There's nothing like it. So I was I was very fortunate that for most of my career I stayed on the helicopter community. Soon he was off to flight training, and it would not be long before fell in love with flying helicopters. In fact, he still remembers that first solo flight. My first solo flight was was pretty interesting. Uh. We took off, we took off for for my for my check, and

I remember my instructor. We landed a little base, a little outlining base, and my instructor through through his his back seat cushion out and got in. He said, go on, see what this. Either give me five landings or kill yourself one or the other. So I did. I did my landings, and then they told me to go solo. So I went out and buzzed around in the little T thirty four mentor, which was just it's just an absolute absolute thrill when you have an airplane all to yourself at

at at low altitude, there's I mean, there's nothing like it. You feel so so uh so free and easy, and so that was indeed fortunate. It was something it was fun and you did you had a career that you just s thoroughly, thoroughly enjoyed and what you were flying and what you were doing. So the day, says after completing his flight training, there was just a short window of assignments before receiving orders for Vietnam for the first

time. First assignment to Vietnam was it was actually three months, three to four months after I got my wings. I received my wings at fifteenth of April nineteen sixty six, and UH went immediate immediately to my first first squadron

in New River, Jacksonville, North Carolina in August. Then in September got September sixty six got orders to to go to Vietnam, and UH so our squadron was at that point stationed in Okinawa, Fatima, and the ship came down, picked up the squadron, and we sailed to Vietnam off floated in UH early October in just off the coast to waif Fubai, took off fload of the squadron and we operated out of UH, out of waif Fubai for for the entire year and UH from there, our our squadron would detach two,

three or four four birds either to Kisson or Dongha or other areas. And and so we pretty much operated out of out of out of I Corps area for the entire time. Looking back at it now, Sefente says he held a very simplistic and idealistic view of war before he got to Vietnam. It's a view that would be dispensed with quickly once he experienced war. You

know, to me, it wasn't adventure. The reality of war didn't hit me until, uh, even on my first mission we took just offloading, we took some some rounds of UH in an old aircraft that I've become familiar with. UH And even to this day, it didn't really didn't really strike me. It was more curiosity and just a happening more than anything else. But uh, the reality of war really didn't hit until you went on your on your first big mission, first first operation, to saw what what what

a war does? UH, And it was very, very sobering. But the mind is a funny thing, and you can, you know, there are things that you can cut out while they're happening, and you know, just continue to do the thing, so God bless all Marines and aviators that do their job. That's Lieutenant Colonel Raoul Art Sefuentes, a US Marine Corps veteran who served as a helicopter pilot for three tours in Vietnam. Later,

we'll hear about the work Colonel Seffuentes does with Ewo Jima veterans. He'll also discuss his work to remove the minds from Haiphong Harbor in Vietnam and share what it was like to return to an ungrateful nation. But when we come back, Colonel Sefuentes will take us in depth on that first tour in Vietnam. I'm Greg Corumbus and this is Veterans Chronicles sixty Seconds of Service. This sixty

Seconds of Service is presented by T Mobile. T Mobile offers exclusive discounts for a veteran and military families and are proud supporters of the National Defense Network. Visit tmobile dot com slash military to learn more about how they support our military community. A charity in England providing gardening therapy to improve mental health among ex

military personnel has urged more people to ask for support when needed. Veterans' growth based in Hastings said it's seen a recent rise in issues among the community due to difficulties assessing mental health services as well as the impact of COVID. CEO Sarah Wilson said people also struggled to come forward, but encouraged those in need

of support to please get in touch. The call comes as NHS England has redesigned mental health support for veterans following a survey that showed about sixty percent found it difficult to seek support. The survey of three thousand veterans and serving personnel also showed more than half of respondent said they had suffered with a mental health problem. This is Veterans Chronicles. I'm Greg Corumbus. Our guest in this

edition is retired US Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel RYO. Wilson fuent Days before the Break, we heard how Colonel Seffuentes was convinced to rejoin the Marine Corps just after he graduated from college and the idealistic mindset that he brought to Vietnam One that soon collided with reality. Says he was quickly put to use on a wide variety of missions once he was in theater. Our squadron was like like all the others. You never did just one type of mission, unlike the

army where you have dust off that does metovac. And on a given week, one day you could do what they call working birds. You would be assigned to a combat unit and you'd work with with that unit, and they might have you hauling water, doing recon extracts, going from point A to point B, taking a patrol out, pick picking patrol up. So you would do that and perhaps the next day you were assigned strictly for emergency metava

acts. You had you had two birds and stand so if there was an emergency metavac, you went, or if there was a metavac, you went, whether it's an emergency or not. But you were dedicated to doing just that. And maybe the next night or the next day you were you did only reconnaissance flights taking taking reconnaissance patrols in or getting them back out, or during reconnaissance overflight over flights. The next night you might be doing just You

didn't fly all day long. You got your rest because you were going to do the night metavac, and at six o'clock in the evening you went on standby for for night emergency emergency metavacts, and you were relieved at six o'clock six o'clock the next morning. You might have the next day off to complete any any long distance learning courses that you that you have just to give you

a break. Or or Mike case, I worked, uh work with maintenance, and I might have to take some some aircraft up for uh uh for for maintenance sets flights. Uh the system wasn't working right, the engine was popping, popping, what whatever, So you had to do that sort. I might just uh have an easy day of doing uh n uh doing maintenance flights. Or sometimes uh you just get an on call flight. Ay, we we need you to take uh General so and so to to such such

a place and bring him back. So the the missions were varied. There was uh you never you never got bored. Or uh you might just be on a detachment uh three birds to uh go to Fubai and we go to uh we had uh five or six bergs at dong Hot all times to support the DMZ and from there and you might have a two bird uh detachment. I'd go up to Quisson and you sat there and and and uh operated out of there. There uh, helping the the Marines either out of patrol or

out on the infamous eight eighty one or and and eight sixty one. So you know, never a dull moment, and you never did the same thing. Answer Fente says, there are a lot of missions from that first tour that he remembers wow, some for their intensity and some for other reasons. Well, there are a lot of a lot of missions that that kind of stood out. Some some were humorous, and some were uh, some were

very very sobering and and and poignant. The worst, the worst missions were, of course the metav acts, the emergency metavacts or in some cases recovering UH recovering reconnaissance teams or or the night metavac or or the night recon extract where where the team was on the move, UH they were being chased and they they had they had to come out you had no choice, or or an emergency metavact where there was an injury and the team had to move and

there was no choice. You had to get those guys out, UH at least the wounded or or the casualties out so that the team could continue to move. So there are a number of missions like that you remember, or some zones that you went into that uh uh all of a sudden, things what we call a hot zone or things got very very uh exciting in a very short short period of time. So metavacts, reconnaissance inserts, things of

things of that nature and uh were are the most memorable. But it it it's kind of funny after uh flying those missions for a year there there there are actually very few missions that that I actually recalled, like I think the missions in the hot zone hot zones you just you know, I I don't remember. And there was you know, like any helicopter pilot there, there were there were many, uh I mean that was that was what you did. And now I was very, very, very extremely I'm one of the

looks gusman in the world. I did not get a purple heart, but I should have, but I didn't. Just you know, I had my my aircraft and my troops were good. We took a lot of hits, but the Good Lord watched over me and and in my crew. That's retired US Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel Raoul art Sefuentes. He served three tours as a helicopter pilot in Vietnam as part of a distinguished decades long military career coming up.

Sefuentes takes us along on his other two deployments to Vietnam, including a focus on removing mines from Haiphong Harbor during the peace negotiations, and he reflects on the poor treatment that our returning veterans received. That and much more in just a moment, I'm Greg Corumbus, and this is Veterans Chronicles. This is Veterans Chronicles. I'm Greg Corumbus. Our guest in this edition is retired US Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel Raoul Art Sefuentes. He served three tours as a

helicopter pilot in Vietnam and eventually retired in nineteen eighty five. He is now executive director of the Ewojima Association, which we'll also talk about in more detail in just a few moments. As we just learned, Sefuentes went from an idealistic newcomer to Vietnam to a pilot who quickly learned the realities of war. After a year of harrowing and otherwise memorable missions, his first tour ended and Sefuentes came home. Soon it was on to learning new skills and new choppers

before returning to Vietnam. And while a lot of his responsibilities on that second tour were the same as the first, there were some noticeable differences. Then

I started the normal rotation of going to peak time squadrons. We went back to UH, I got N I got to orders back to newer Alurjactionville, North Carolina where I started, and then we transitioned from the old H y piston driven UH piston driven H three four that I just dearly loved to fly to the newer model UH Boeing C H forty six uh C night tandem tandem

rotor aircraft. And UH A transition to that flew that for UH for a couple of years, and then UH I was asked H to transition a couple of de couple of years later, went back to UH, went back to Vietnam, operated UH operated off off a ship and UH the same area. But UH it was UH not quite as exciting as UH uh as the first tour. So did UH did that same kind of missions? UH pretty much, but UH but the UH the living conditions were were much better aboard UH

aboard ship. So UH did that tour? Went back to the States and they were looking for for H fifty three drivers, a big old sea stallion, completely different bird, but a good Sokrski bird. From that second tour we went to Hawaii HM H four to sixty three with the Flying fifty threes. When he landed that assignment in Hawaii, Sefuentes was overjoyed because he was confident that meant the war was over for him. But it wasn't. He would soon be back in Vietnam for another nine months, and this time the

duties changed quite a bit finely. I mean Hawaii Hawaii Squadron. Hawaii Squadron never deploys, They've been in Hawaii for years and years and they never go any oil. So, as it turned out, six months later, we were back in Vietnam working with the working with the Navy to sweep the sweep the mines up in Hifong and Hanoi Harbor's and that was a condition. The mines had to be swept before they would release at least the prisoners of war. Uh so uh we uh got with HM twelve the Navy squadron, and

there just had a grand time. What we thought was gonna be a three month MISSI mission ended up being uh about about nine months. But uh it was something different, something the Marine Corps uh had never had never done a

different type of flying uh altogether. Uh. So we uh we did uh we did the mine sweeping and and UH we'd we'd be doing uh doing our mine sweeping uh in these uh what they call fields uh and uh the talks would break and the peace talks would break off, So we don't get back aboard the aircraft carriers and go to go to the Philippines and hang out there for a while until things got copastic with the with the peace talks, and we'd go back out and and swoop some more, and the talks would break

down. They said get you know, get out of there. So the ship ships would go back back and forth. So what started out as a three month mission ended up uh ended up nine months. So went back, we finished that up, went back to Hawaiian that I got orders to the Naval Academy. So for just a wonderful tour. As you heard, Sefentes mentioned, a significant part of his third tour was taking part in the effort to remove mines from Hifong Harbor, and Sentes offered a lot more detail about

the work that he did and how he did it. HM twelve was the Navy mind sweeping squadron, and our squad had never ever done that before, so it was a it was a learning process, and you did it with with two different two different devices. The Marine Corps had the more simpler device, what they called it a MOP, a magnetic orange pole that you UH. There was this array of of cables and wind shoes and stuff, and you dragged this this magnetic orange orange poles about the size of a telephone pole.

You'd drag drag that and what they call clappers on the back make you making a lot of noise. And so this magnetic gorge pool would put out a a magnetic field and if there was a I and it's of course you're hauling it way behind you. But but we were at a little altitude and ostensibly if if the UH there went over a mine that had not expired,

UH, then it would it would detonate the mine. And I think during that whole time, UH, I don't think we detonated more than one or two minds between the Navy and the Marine Corps UH and the UH the Navy h M twelve would haul a more sophisticated UH, a more sophisticated device to called the sled, and it put out a whole different type of UH of signal UH in a ray. And it was just a huge thing that UH, a big UH on this big palette that they would that they would haul

and UH the same thing. I don't I don't think they uh, I don't think they they detonated UH too many. I think we did Warner one or two total. But UH. The the flying was completely different because you were flying out of balance flight, very uncomfortable, and you were very low altitude at a very very slow speed. But it was interesting. And I don't think any squadron, any Marine squadtern, has ever done a sentence. But you had a Marine squadter, a Navy squadn and we bothered, became

brothers. We had more fun with those with the Navy guys, and stayed in contact with him for a period of time after we finished. The nineteen seventy three Peace Agreement was eventually followed by the withdrawal of US aid for South Vietnam and the inevitable fall of Saigon two years later. The end of hostilities for US forces there also meant they were headed for another conflict upon their return home, one that was far less deadly, but in many ways far more

painful. Sefente says, American forces facing the hate, the scorn, and the abuse of other Americans was an especially deep wound. On our first tour, we were absolutely absolutely oblivious, uh, and all we knew was was what we got from stars and stars and stripes. But when we saw, when we saw what was happening, the riots, Kent State, those kinds of things, it was, uh, it was kind of disheartening, but it was Hey, we're here to do a job, and we're going to

do the job. And that did not that did not hit us until until we came back to the States and uh uh and that that was that was an eye opener for all of us. Uh m hm. I remember one one of our one of our kids was a was a bachelor, and uh when we were in Hawaii and and and he went to the skipper and said, Skipper, can I not Can I not wear my uniform? Uh t uh to work. I'll change. I'll change when I get here, Uh he said. But I walk out of my apartment building and they're they're throwing

full beer cans at me. They're throwing They're throwing all kinds of crap on me because I'm earn, I'm wearing my uniform and I've got another another buddy, uh, you know, back from Vietnam. He lands and and Los Angeles, gets in a cab and the first thing the guy says, Oh, how many babies did you kill? You know, cause you're you're in uniform. So it was pretty pretty sobering. But but military guys are are are pretty tough. So we just we we we shrug it off and we

did, but it it was disheartening. But I'm we we and and I think I speak for a huge Vietnam community, you know, uh, Vietnam veterans community. W h M. When I say it, it w We are glad things have changed in the attitude toward uh, toward those of us that that we're in Vietnam. Uh have changed and uh and we thanked in the public for realizing that we did what we were what we were asked by

our country to do. And uh and UH we're glad that some folks finally acknowledge that, both publicly and and and privately, because uh, rarely will you see a ah, a vet with a with a hat or flight jacket or whatever that that doesn't that doesn't receive thank you for your service. And uh after after all the years, it's greatly appreciated. So uh, that's that's the long answers. So you saw that the f the first time,

and then you just kind of uh through the other tours. You know it, it didn't change, but but that that was the lay of the land, that's where things were happening. So you just Okay, Uh, it is what it is. You can't change it. You can't change people's minds. Uh. But when you talk to people one on one, it might be happening out here, but every person that you talked to, for the most part, just uh understand who you are and what you do, and

the friendship remains. It's a fun day. Stayed in the Marine Corps for more than a decade after American forces were brought home from Vietnam. Rising in the ranks mean greater responsibilities, and he shares the final assignments of his honorable career. After Vietnam, I just got a peacetime went to peacetime squadrons, and I was fortunate enough to have command. I went to the Naval Academy

for just absolutely wonderful tour. Not not being an academy grad. It was a different kind of kind of world to mix with the with the midshipment. I had a company for three years, which is basically your your their leadership instructor, and their droll instructor. For three years, I had one hundred and twenty five midshipmen, even number of pleagues all the way up to the

to the to the first class. Had some future generals in my future Marine generals and admirals in my company that I was very fortunate and hope that I

provided some leadership skills for them. So it did a three year tour then and then went back to cal to California, where I was fortunate enough to become a squadron HMH four sixty two Squadron EXO, and then fleeted up to be the commanding officer, and it was a squadron that had been I had been in earlier as a captain, so it was it was kind of enough

to get back to the heavy haulers. Finished that tour and then went to the training command down of Corpus Christie in nineteen eighty two and elected to resigned my commission and try severely in life in nineteen eighty five. Nowadaysentes as an active veteran, not only with the Marines and other service members of his generation,

but also the greatest generation. Sef went days as the executive director of the Ewo Jima Association, an organization serving and connecting with the surviving veterans of that critical battle in the Pacific Theater during World War Two. The small island was essential for the Allies to control before making a push towards Okinawa and the Japanese mainland. The Japanese had used a tactically significant airstrip there to inflict great

damage on the Allies. Once in US hands, that airstrip then became a powerful weapon against the Emperor and his forces. Now, nearly eighty years after that battle, the number of veterans may be dwindling, but quite a few still remain. So Fuente says, getting to know these heroes well is the best part of the job, but getting so close to them makes the worst part of the job even harder. Did I get to talk to the and these guys on a daily basis, and they want to talk and they want

to tell their stories. And so many of them are civilive, you'd think they were fifty years old, and all of a sudden, when you do talk to them, you can see the years peel away. So they want to they want to tell their tell their stories. I love these guys. The downside, the downside of this job comes when you get the phone call from a Valletta and say so and so, so and so has passed away.

And so for several years you've established this wonderful, warm relationship with these guys, and like I said, they want to talk, especially to another VAT. A lot of times you won't talk to their family, but they will talk to another another VAT. And they've got they've got stuff that that you know, like like like Vietnam vets, or or or or those those

guys that have found out in the desert. Sometimes you'll only talk to another another veteran of of some things you need to get off your mind, need to get off get out of your get out of your head. When you get that phone call that that they've passed away, it just it takes a little bit, it takes a little bit out of you. Arts of fun

days did not originally plan on spending his career in the military. He was quite convinced his initial three year enlistment would be the extent of it until he paid a courtesy call to that Marine Corps officer's selection official that led to three tours in Vietnam and twenty one more years in the Corps in total. Sefente says he does not regret it for a moment. I'm living the American dream

because of because of the military they offer. They offer any opportunity that you want, that you want to, you want to take, you can join the military as a private and if if you want to pursue that and become a PhD or anything you want to, anything you want to from your military career, it's there. All you have to do is have the gumption and the initiative to take it. You will have you will have the pride, you will have the education, you will have the contacts, you will have,

the social skills, you will have the profession professional attitude. You will be learned. And if you pay attention and take advantage of what the what the military has, and I've seen it time and time and time again, it's there. It is there, and you you will see any number of top executives that that is so successful, and they will all say, you know, I owe so much of this, so much of this too to the Marine Corps. That's retired US Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel Raoul art Sequentes.

He served three tours as a helicopter pilot in Vietnam and he is the executive director of the EWO Jima Association. I'm Greg Corumbus and this is Veterans Chronicles. Hi, this is great Columbus, and thanks for listening to Veterans Chronicles, a presentation of the American Veterans Center. For more information, please visit American Veteranscenter dot org. You can also follow the American Veterans Center on Facebook

and on Twitter. We're at AVC update. Subscribe to the American Veterans Center YouTube channel for full oral histories and special features, and of course, please subscribe to the Veterans Chronicles podcast wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks again for listening, and please join us next time for Veterans Chronicles

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