Once a Marine: Collected Stories by Enlisted Marine Corps Vietnam Veterans - Their Lives 35 Years LaterThe former enlisted Marines whose stories you will read in this book have a common thread. The common thread is that they became one of the few, the proud, the Marines. They joined and entered the Vietnam war when their country called. They fought and returned home to adjust to normal lives by themselves. These are the life stories, told in their own words, of how Marine Corps vets came home, built families, businesses and are living the American dream today. Many still live their lives today with the same traditions and values taught to them by the Marine Corps and have adjusted after the traumatic experience of a war. Marine Corps values are easy to state as: Honor, Courage, and Commitment. The Marine Corps defines these values in the following way: Honor as demonstrating integrity in all one does, and accepting responsibility and accountability for ones actions. Courage as doing the right thing, in the right way, and for the right reasons. Commitment as devotion to the Corps and ones fellow Marines. All Marines, former and active duty, live and fight under this same creed. Read about these men who left the Corps and the war behind and used this experience as a stepping stone to success and happiness. |
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These men were members of the Third Battalion, First Marines, and attached units who first came ashore in Vietnam as part of a large amphibious landing on January 28, 1966. They were killed in the next three to five months while ...
The company and certainly the battalion structure and leadership are beyond the horizon of practical importance. Application What is recounted here is about the common man, about undistinguished American youth, about advancement from ...
I think I had twenty days of leave before returning to staging battalion for the trip to Vietnam. There was nothing special about that leave, and I spent my days working on my running program. The days quickly passed, and I said goodbye ...
... the beer hooch inside the battalion compound and proceed to get drunk. Always, it would take six of us to get him back to the platoon tent. He was a handful for six of us and simply impossible for two or three ordinary Marines.
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Turinys
1 | |
Arthur W McLaughlin Jr | 31 |
James Thiel | 55 |
Manning | 73 |
John Stoddard | 91 |
Wadlow 101 Doc Raymond W Knispel 121 Thomas G Casey | 145 |
Doc Dev Slingluff | 167 |
Joseph Kee | 189 |
McClintick Sr | 203 |
REUNION Pat Murphy 215 Lessons Taught Commentary | 227 |
And Lessons LearnedConclusions 241 Appendix | 249 |
DeShazo MD | 263 |