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John Kuzio

. . After his first month in the Army, John Kuzio shipped out to the South Pacific islands for the next three years.  That’s a long time overseas.  “You gotta be kidding me,” said the Army discharge clerk looking over his service record.  What can I say, he thought, I just

Marshall Krumpe

. . Marshall Krumpe was sent to Vietnam as an intelligence operative.  If there was anything worth knowing in country, the analysts of the 179th Military Intelligence Detachment would sort it out and pass it along:  field positions, body identification, troop movements, targets worth destroying, people to kill.  “We were in

Bill Krobot

. . Bill Krobot joined the US Army in 1941 at 18 years old after leaving high school. He fought in the battle of St. Lo in France where he was hit with shrapnel and was awarded the Purple Heart for his actions before leaving the Army in 1943.

Frank Kravetz

. . Frank Kavetz entered the Army Air Corps on November 2nd, 1943 and he was trained as a tailgunner on a B-17.  He was assigned to 457th Bomb Group, 750th Squad in the Eighth Air Force. On a mission to Merseberg on November 2nd, 1944 his crew was attacked by

Alfred Krasnow

. . As a Jew serving in World War II, Alfred Krasnow of the Shadyside area of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania had no idea of the atrocities committed by Nazi Germany. His take on Jewish prejudice was, “I’m a Jew. You don’t like that, lump it.” Alfred’s motives for joining the navy were

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