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Paul Zolbrod

. . Paul G. Zolbrod of Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania was shipped off to the Army during the heart of winter, 1953.  He was twenty, and like so many other young men during the 1950s, Mr. Zolbrod was drafted into a quietly raging military conflict on the Korean peninsula.  Some call it The Forgotten

Lew Weingard

. . At the tail end of the Korean War, Lew Weingard left Erie, Pennsylvania and wanted to fly planes in the Air Force.  But it was not meant to be.   So, after getting his commission from the enlisted ranks he was sent to post-war Japan and served with the 9th

Charles Torisky

. . Like many Korean War veterans, Mt. Lebanon’s Chuck Torisky is quiet about his service.  It was a long time ago when he was drafted into the Army for two years as a radio operator.  He was 21. When you’re young, Chuck reflects, guys think they’re bullet proof.  Invincible. Before

Lester Snyder

. . After his University of Pittsburgh ROTC unit was activated in 1943, Lester Snyder of Dormont, PA, found himself at Ft. Bragg, NC, undergoing artillery training.  But instead of being shipped overseas, Lester enrolled in the controversial Army Specialized Training Program, where he attended college classes six days a week.

Al Schimdt

. . Al Schimdt entered the US Navy in June 1951 and served aboard a submarine patrol plane as a mechanic in the Korean War and left the Navy in 1955.

Jim Scheder

. . Jim Scheder served his country from 1944 to 1946 in the United States Merchant Marine Service, and from 1946 to 1951 in the United States Army. Those seven years were an odyssey. As a Merchant Mariner, his first port-of-call was Iran via the Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, the

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