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Joe McDonald
Vietnam
| A Company, 3rd Battalion, 4th Division
Joe McDonald served 6 months each in San Antonio, Ft. Meade, Vietnam, and the hospital. Unfortunately, he had to face the public abuse known to so many Vietnam vets. (3:13)
Joe Nemastil
Korea
| D Company, 31st Infantry Regiment, 7th Infantry Division
They were a little short of funds to continue in college so Joe Nemastil and his cousin talked to a recruiter to see what they could get in the Army. Promised a place in Officer Candidate School, he went off to basic training. The conditions were rough and the Kentucky winter came blowing right through the wall boards of the old barracks. Then, surprise! No OCS and orders for Korea. (5:55)
As soon as the troop ship cleared Seattle and headed for Korea, they hit a storm and Joe Nemastil was seasick the rest of the way. He was on his way to join the 7th Infantry Division at the front. It was only three months before the armistice was signed but it was three months of combat on the static lines. For Joe, the worst enemy was not North Korean or Chinese. It was something in the bunkers. (4:32)
When Joe Nemastil arrived at the front in Korea, his platoon leader gave him a short talk, then disappeared, not to be seen very often again. Joe was assistant gunner on the 75 mm recoilless rifle and quickly learned how to use it in combat. That was just one heavy weapon on the line, and it was really something when they were all firing at once. (4:32)
The area where Joe Nemastil was sent as a replacement had seen plenty of action. Old Baldy and Pork Chop Hill had been hard fought over and then abandoned. Sent to reinforce an outpost on the next hill over which had been attacked, he saw the aftermath of the worst of war. (4:29)
During a lull in the action at the Iron Triangle in Korea, Joe Nemastil and his buddy were walking back to camp when he froze. He had spotted something and the next step could be deadly. (3:27)
They got the word that the Armistice had been signed and to cease all firing. That gave Joe Nemastil a chance to find out what was actually in the no man's land below his position. Checking his weapons, he made his way down the hill and very soon, spotted a Chinese soldier walking right toward him. (2:52)
Joe Noonan
WWII
| 17th Bomb Group, 432nd Squadron, 12th Air Force
Joe Noonan recalls his first bombing mission over the island of Pantelleria, Italy, leading up to the invasion of Sicily in 1943. (2:18)
While serving as a camera operator on one bombing run, Joe Noonan recalls having to bail out of his B-26 over Belgium and being mistaken for a German soldier after making his way back to safety. (10:17)
Joe Noonan talks about the fear he experienced during World War II and shares his feeling about being labeled as a hero. (:46)
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