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Local boys coming home at last

dwarven1

Lonely Mountain Arms
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U.S. Identifies Remains of Vietnam MIAs

By MARTHA MENDOZA, AP National Writer

The remains of 12 servicemen listed as missing in action during the Vietnam War have been identified and are returning home, 37 years after they died in a fierce battle near the Laos-Vietnam border, the Defense Department announced Tuesday.

The 11 Marines and one Army soldier are the largest group of MIAs identified since the war, according to the military.

"Now we don't have to wonder anymore," said Steven Fritsch of Cromwell, Conn., who will bury his older brother Sunday at St. John's Catholic Church in Cromwell.

He said the news has been "bittersweet" for his parents.

"Obviously now they have to bury their son, and who ever wants to do that?" he said. "But at least they know he's not just missing, he actually died in battle."

Marine Lance Cpl. Thomas W. Fritsch and four others will be buried by their families. The other seven will be buried as a group in Arlington National Cemetery in October, said Larry Greer, a spokesman for the
Pentagon's missing personnel office.

The Marines were killed during a 10-hour battle on May 9, 1968, on a football field-sized area in South Vietnam, Greer said. He said villagers, former Vietnamese soldiers and American survivors helped investigators narrow their search to three excavations in 1998 and 1999, where they recovered the remains and other personal materials.

Since then, they have been working to identify the remains through DNA and other forensic tools, he said.

"We really feel very fortunate that we do have some remains coming home to us, and we are welcoming him home," said Brenda Scott, whose brother, Lance Cpl. Donald W. Mitchell, of Princeton, Ky., was among the recovered MIAs.

Their father, Herman Mitchell, died in 1998 without knowing his son's fate. Their mother, Marjorie Mitchell, is now 80 and "feels finally at peace," Scott said.

Mitchell's funeral is scheduled for Aug. 27, more than three dozen years after his family prepared for it.

"We've had this family plot since 1968 with a monument ready for him to come home," Scott said.

In addition to Fritsch and Mitchell, the Marines identified were Cpl. Gerald E. King of Knoxville, Tenn.; Lance Cpls. Joseph F. Cook of Foxboro, Mass., and Raymond T. Heyne of Mason, Wis.; and Pfcs. Thomas J. Blackman of Racine, Wis., Paul S. Czerwonka of Stoughton, Mass., Barry L. Hempel of Garden Grove, Calif., Robert C. Lopez of Albuquerque, N.M., William D. McGonigle of Wichita, Kan., and Lance Cpl. James R. Sargent, of Anawalt, W.Va. Also identified was U.S. Army Sgt. Glenn E. Miller of Oakland, Calif.
 
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