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Showing posts from March, 2015

VA Continues to Deny Justice To C-123 Crews Exposed to Dioxin

IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 23,  2015 No. 15-1 Contact: Mokie Porter 301-585-4000, Ext. 146 301-996-0901 (Washington, D.C.)– “It is an outrage that the VA, in effect, is continuing to deny these veterans justice,” said John Rowan, National President of Vietnam Veterans of America. “These VA bureaucrats attempting to delay justice ought to be relieved of their duties so that they can no longer abuse veterans with their tactic of ‘delay, deny, until they die.’ There is no excuse for why these worthy veterans are still not being treated with the appreciation and the respect their service warrants.” Rowan praised Wes Carter, the leader of the C-123 Veterans Association, for his spunk and spirit: “You’ve got to keep on keeping on,” Rowan urged, “and VVA will be at your side to convince the VA hierarchy that to continue to delay justice is to deny justice.” For over five years, retired Air Force Reserve Major Wes Carter has led the fight of his life: to get the Department of Vetera
64 years after death, Korean War vet to be laid to rest in Greenville Co. Read more:   http://www.foxcarolina.com/story/28535741/korean-war-vet-killed-in-action-to-be-laid-to-rest-in-greenville-co#ixzz3UhvuIQTW GREENVILLE, SC (FOX Carolina) - A veteran is finally coming home to the Upstate 64 years after he was killed in the Korean War. The family of Army Pfc. John Russell Bowers learned just a few months ago his remains had been recovered in North Korea. The Piedmont native's last days were spent in a North Korean prisoner of war camp. It is presumed Bowers lost his life after being injured in an accidental air raid, according to records from the U.S. Army. He died in 1951, but his remains were never recovered.  His nephew, Neal Collins, never knew him. "My mom has been working with the  Korean War Project  and it's in conjunction with the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command," said Collins. "They've been working for the last decade and

The Marmalade - Reflections of My Life - Vietnam Vets