Military > popular all-time > Marines of 1st Bn. 9th. Marines move through a foggy jungle the DMZ, 1968. The camera noise startled the marine.
Military > popular all-time > Unknown
Military > popular all-time > 05/22/06 Orgun, Paktika provence, Afghanistan;  (L-R)Pfc. Charles Dobbs age 20 from Eugene, Oregon and Pfc. Keith Heckman age 20 from Coeurda'lene, Idaho, with 2nd Battalion 87th Infantry Regiment, 10th Mountain Division fire mortars at suspected targets in the mountains around FOB Orgun.
Photo/Rick Kozak/ Military Times
Military > popular all-time > This is a photo of my  friend Frank Garcia Jr. on the left and his squad leader and friend Chuck on the right. I add this photo out of my great respect for those warriors that served in combat.  This photo was probably taken in July of 1967 at the hamlet of Gia Le, South Vietnam a few miles south of Hue.  

August 4th, 1967, Frank and Chuck, three other Marines and several PF's were out on patrol in the early evening. Before they could set up their own ambush, they became the target of one.  There was a huge issue with the newly introduced M16 jamming that night that turned a defendable situation into a desperate one.  Chuck survived and was sent home wounded along with several of the other Marines.  Like thousands of other good warriors that died that year,  Frank did not come home alive.  He died there that evening. (16 deg. 25' 18.33" North  --  107 deg. 39' 05.15 East)

Over forty years have passed.  Chuck won't  talk about what happened to them that day.  Most heroes are like that.
Military > popular all-time > Dad's WWII Pix photo
Military > popular all-time > Dad's WWII Pix photo
Military > popular all-time > Eddie Pozelnik (left, from Utah), Ned Wells (center - my dad - from NC), and Glenn Hensley (right, also from NC) on captured German horses in Kirchdorf, Austria, Sep 8th, 1945. Ned is on a gray gelding they named "Mustang." After the 11th Armored Division pulled out of Kirchdorf in August, 1945, the 26th Infantry Division inherited these and other horses that were left in the local stables. Dad and his buddies got permission from their commanders to run the stables, charging a minimal fee to the locals and occupation GI's for horse rides (for the horses' upkeep). Once the war was over, Dad's three months in Kirchdorf were some of his most enjoyable during his entire time in the ETO.
Military > popular all-time > B-24 bomber navigator Ed "Red" Weir, taken in the "greenhouse" of his B-24D Liberator "Red Ass."  Probably taken in the skies near Fort Myers, Florida, circa 1942, while Ed was in his final phase of training, before he flew over to England to join the air war against Hitler in the fall of that year.  Ed's sitting in the seat normally occupied by the bombardier, Al Naum, who took this photo.
Military > popular all-time > "The Gruesome Foursome" at Le Havre, France, 1946, just before shipping back home.  Ned Wells (left, from Clemmons, NC), Arthur Duell (center, standing, from Kensington, CT), Howard Cohen (right, from Philadelphia; looked like Dustin Hoffman, didn't he?), and Bill Ricker (sitting, from Kenosha, WI).
Eddie Pozelnik (left, from Utah), Ned Wells (center - my dad - from NC), and Glenn Hensley (right, also from NC) on captured German horses in Kirchdorf, Austria, Sep 8th, 1945. Ned is on a gray gelding they named "Mustang." After the 11th Armored Division pulled out of Kirchdorf in August, 1945, the 26th Infantry Division inherited these and other horses that were left in the local stables. Dad and his buddies got permission from their commanders to run the stables, charging a minimal fee to the locals and occupation GI's for horse rides (for the horses' upkeep). Once the war was over, Dad's three months in Kirchdorf were some of his most enjoyable during his entire time in the ETO.
 > Eddie Pozelnik (left, from Utah), Ned Wells (center - my dad - from NC), and Glenn Hensley (right, also from NC) on captured German horses in Kirchdorf, Austria, Sep 8th, 1945. Ned is on a gray gelding they named "Mustang." After the 11th Armored Division pulled out of Kirchdorf in August, 1945, the 26th Infantry Division inherited these and other horses that were left in the local stables. Dad and his buddies got permission from their commanders to run the stables, charging a minimal fee to the locals and occupation GI's for horse rides (for the horses' upkeep). Once the war was over, Dad's three months in Kirchdorf were some of his most enjoyable during his entire time in the ETO.
Eddie Pozelnik (left, from Utah), Ned Wells (center - my dad - from NC), and Glenn Hensley (right, also from NC) on captured German horses in Kirchdorf, Austria, Sep 8th, 1945. Ned is on a gray gelding they named "Mustang." After the 11th Armored Division pulled out of Kirchdorf in August, 1945, the 26th Infantry Division inherited these and other horses that were left in the local stables. Dad and his buddies got permission from their commanders to run the stables, charging a minimal fee to the locals and occupation GI's for horse rides (for the horses' upkeep). Once the war was over, Dad's three months in Kirchdorf were some of his most enjoyable during his entire time in the ETO.
Photo by: jawtex · see photo in gallery

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