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Author: Memorial Vietnam Wall Created: 2/15/2009 4:41 PM
Join us in Piedmont, Oklahoma from July 2nd - 5th to see the awe-inspiring Dignity Memorial Vietnam Wall.

Free and open to the public 24 hours a day from Friday, July 3 through Sunday, July 5, the replica is eight feet high and 240 feet long. Its black, reflective surface is inscribed with the names of more than 58,000 servicemen and women who died or are missing in Vietnam . Paper and pencils will be provided so visitors can make rubbings of names etched on the wall.

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The ground was rocking like a seven point five earthquake. Whistling rockets were diving, the bunks threatened to topple as the metal hooch clanged and quivered.  Shrapnel sliced into the building as though it were butter. The most terrifying part of the rocket attack was when the whistling stopped -- the two to three seconds before impact. In those seconds Dan just waited hoping the rocket wasn’t coming down on top of him. 
 

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With dark blond wavy hair and a movie-star smile Larry Welsh proudly walked his bride, Margaret, down the aisle of their hometown, Kansas City, Kansas church on June 17, 1967. Margie, a beauty with straight brown hair, long eyelashes lining big dark eyes, was 20 and her high school sweetheart groom had just turned 21 the day before their wedding. Wildly in love and devoted to each other, they decided to settle in their hometown, Margie working for Dial Financial and Larry a switchman for the Santa Fe Railroad Company.

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And then the memory of the ambush rushed into his pounding head. As usual he readily returned the machine gunfire from atop of his Armored Personnel Carrier with his M60. Then the enemy’s sharp bullet pierced his left hand. It went through the fleshy part between the index finger and the thumb. No big deal, he thought at first -- he’d been hurt before. The shrapnel scars on his hip and shoulder could testify to the assaults his body had endured from atop “Lech” the name Kenny Kreutz – his crew’s commander -- had given their tank.

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Ronnie
By the way he holds his baby granddaughter, looks at his wife, speaks proudly of his two grown sons—Ryan and Mike both graduates of Piedmont High and of OU—and by the way he remembers his mom, Ronnie Mays communicates that life is precious. By the way he serves his church, cheers his baseball and T-ball-playing granddaughters and cares for his house, his garden and his memory books, it’s clear that Ronnie cherishes life.
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