I am baldwin frank myers. My first name is spelled balwin when i reported back to them and said this was frank myers they did not know why was because they only knew me as baldy. Can you spell your last name . Myers. My birthday is may 29th 1918 owyhee county, idaho. It is an orange valley. That is an indian name . It is an indian name. I do not know what it means. Tell me about your family. Where you are growing up. I grew up on a cattle ranch about five miles south of jordan valley. My mother was born in east europe. She was austrian. My father was an old cowboy whose ancestry goes back to the neptune in 16 22. He arrived in charleston, south carolina. His descendants served in the revolutionary war. They were original founders of tennessee, the city of newport. They came to missouri, and in 1841 migrated to california. An old man of 62 brought his 12 grandchildren out in california. What about your siblings . I have one in reno who runs a computer store. I have another that is insane francisco. He is in an apartment for seniors. I have a daughter and another son that i dont keep much track of. I dont know where they are. What school did you go to . The first second grade i walked three and a half miles to go to school with my older brother. He was 18 months older and i. Through very cold weather sometimes, and snow. It was called the South Mountain school. Right on the border of oregon, idaho. It was called the South Mountain school. My parents divorced, and we moved. I stayed with my father. We moved to an area called murphy. He bought a place called the grace creek ranch. We stayed there for three or four years. And we moved to ashton, oregon. He married again. I did not like the person he married, so at 13 i moved out. I ran away from home and went to oregon where understood i had relatives and family. So you just i left. After a while my brother my dad came back and i saw him. I made an arrangement with my uncle that i would go to a boarding school there. He could send my report cards and i would read work on his ranch. When did you graduate high school . 1949. What is the name of the high school . Crane high school. Its a boarding school in oregon. Did you learn anything about korea . I did not know where korea was at the time. But i was interested in geography, history, and migrations and origins of people. I was not knowledgeable at that time. What did you do after graduation . From high school i worked on the ranch in the summer. That fall i was persuaded by some of my friends and an Army Recruiter to join the army. When did you join the army . September 22nd, 1949. Where did you get based in . California. I was enlisted at idaho. I was put in charge of 200 recruits, approximately, to go on the train down to what was your specialty . Rifle man . That is kind of a long story. I went to the army to operate heavy equipment so i could have a job when i got out. Like bulldozers and heavy equipment. When i joined the army, there is a lot of new people there that have difficulty adjusting. The new recruits were coming in. On one occasion, the two companies were going to fight for some reason. There were alliance that wanted to attack our hawaiians. I said we are not going to do that. I walked through the two companies persuading them not to fight. If we fight we will both be rich strict at the rest of the time we are here. Go back to your barracks, no fighting, and if you feel that you have to and you want to beat somebody up, go off the company area at the end of the street, and i will come down and take you on when at the time. When i did that, only a few of them showed up. I went down there, but then other guys came out and said we are not going to see you get beat up. That made everything evaporates. Nobody wanted to fight anybody. That was over. The next day i was called in to the orderly room by captain smith, the master sergeant. They asked me what the hell it was doing out in the Company Street last night. I said i was trying to stop a riot. He said were trying to get yourself killed . At that time, the captain said, what are your plans in the army . I said i want to learn a trade so i could get a good job when i get out. He said we want you to go to leadership school. Youre going to go to leadership school, and if you dont, i will blackball you the rest of the time you are in the army. So i said let me talk to my friends. We decided i better go to leadership school, which i did. When that happened moss riflemen. Class . Class a 13. When did you leave for korea . That is another little short story. I was stationed at Camp Stoneman for departure to korea. I was visiting my mother who is living in San Francisco at the time i got home i got to the camp late one night. It was about 1 00. I had just gotten in bed, and some person was going through the barracks stealing wallets. An african guy. I saw him. I yelled. There is a thief in here the person started running out the door. I only had my shorts on that i chased him out and tackled him and held him down on the street till others came up and helped arrest him. I had to stay then passed my ship out date as a witness for his arrest and incarceration for stealing. On about the end of may, sometime, or the 1st of june. Im not sure of the day. I was boarded on a ship transport. 1949 . 1950. In late may. Sometime around the middle of the night. Collins. That was the name of the ship. We sailed out today for okinawa. That was an uncomfortable trip for me, because i did not like bobbing around like a cork in the ocean. It was pretty rough. I think it was about the 12th of june. Where . Okinawa . Yes. Okinawa. It was a little hard to get used to. The mosquitoes and the heat. After a while, i was out in the street and the young man named daily. It was a sunday. The bell rang. The whistles blew. We were summoned to attend a meeting. It was announced on loudspeaker that a war had become begun and korea. We were going to immediately exercise in the field, taking combat training. What was your unit at the time . I was within 29th infantry regiment. My Company Commander was alexander. One time i was training with a person named james and a couple of others who were bright, capable people by the way. He was very helpful. He was helpful in helping people. Reading maps. Interrogating prisoners. We had these training cycles that we were going through in okinawa. Water . No thank you. Not right now, but pretty soon. K you are leading, scouting, patrolling and seeing what is ahead of you. Its intelligence. Very dangerous. It was. James, my buddy tony and others went ahead with that. Of course i ran into jim and tony later on in combat. That is another story. Kind of a sad one because they got captured and they saved my life. They went up to rescue a medic on the hill in combat. So you knew you were going to go to korea, right . No. At first we were told we were going to japan to relieve the 24th division who is going to be sent to korea. We shipped out. We got as far as sass a bill. Then they told us we were going to korea. Were you scared . No. You are not . No. You are going to the war. For some reason i never had a lot of fear in my life. Oh. So when did you arrive in korea . Where . We arrived there approximately in pusan about the 22nd of july, as soon as i can tell. On the root over we encountered an enemy submarine. We heard death charges going off. People panicked. Our ships started to the only way i can explain it is just about getting sunset. You heard boom, boom, boom. It was like the ship was hitting rocks. Everybody thought the ship was sinking. I said theyre just dropping death charges. Sure enough, there was a canadian corvette circling the smoke pot and dropping death charges. They were flashing red light at us. We were told we had to move out and parts of what seemed to be a submarine moved up out of the water and dropped back down. I was told later that that was a submarine. It was probably russian. Russian. Right. When you arrived in person, what was the situation . How did the Korean People look like at the time . How was it . My First Impression when he landed there, we were marching up this kind of a steep incline on dirt streets. There was older buildings. There were many people lining the streets all dressed in white clothes. A lot of young people. They were applauding us. I just thought it was kind of strange. I could not communicate with them, which is not like me to not communicate with someone. We marched up to the top of the hill where there was a school house. We disembark and took showers and changed our clothes. At night, we boarded a train. Or trucks. I forget. Im a little confused about that. We went to a place called some of us went and trucks and some untrained. Thats why mueller confused. I enjoyed a good nap. I think what i did was flawlessly. I think it was a train. Okay. It probably was. We disembark when we got there and marched away to the school house. When we were there, as we were approaching we saw many wounded people. I believe it was the 19th regiment of the 24th division. Some of them were pretty bloodied up. Shot up and wounded. They looked pretty scared. I said dont worry, you guys. We will win the war for you. I had no idea at the time with that was going to lead to. After getting ourselves organized we went out on a couple of patrols. When i specifically remember. I was issued a sniper rifle. Thank you. I liked being a soldier, i guess, where i could reach out over long distances and see what was going on. We were taken out to a place, i believe it was southwest of change you by truck. We saw one of our vehicles wrecked. I could not tell if it was shot up or not. It was alleged that it had been ambushed by guerrillas so we were going to do something about the gorillas. I had to position high up on a hill. I had to observe what was going on and saw an unusual number of people in white clothes which i thought were farmers moving through the race pattys below and around them heading towards jinju generally. Our guys were splashing around the creeks swimming and pretty soon we were told to board up the trucks and get back. So we left there and i was a little concerned about the migration of white clothes coming in around our area with what was going on for sure. We got back to change you, and later that night, i believe. Maybe the 20 i dont know what date it would be. We boarded up the trucks again. We had it out for hadong. There were road problems. We slept over the night. And early in the morning we had a patrol out. Jim, tony and some others were in that patrol. When they came back they woke everybody up. The colonel gave us a speech. We were gathering up we were going to go to a town that was currently occupied by guerrillas with pitchforks and knives. I dont know it was before or after that. We ran into several truckloads of pretty badly shot up korean militia. South koreans. I understood that there had been a problem at the head, but i did know what kind of a problem, because i did not understand the language. I was not briefed being a private. We continued on. We started marching at that point on. We were not and trucks anymore. We were marching. We had two columns extending a mile and a half to two miles. About ten steps apart. One column on each side. I was in reserve country. That was icompany. The lieutenant was in charge. It was a little bit after eight maybe a quarter to nine. We were probably a couple of miles east of jinju on a windy road. All of a sudden we could hear fires exploding. Machine gun fire, rifle fire and so forth. We know that there was some kind of contact ahead. We did not know what to expect. We arrived on the scene probably 30 minutes later coming up a windy hill over the crest of the hill. I could see about a half a mile ahead going down into hadong, and the road ran through, down to the right and along the foot of the hill that we called the North Mountain or north hill. North koreans were entrenched on it and ready for us. Then a road further, another for 500 yards, another road that led down to jinju. When i came around the hill, i saw three burning vehicles. One at the pass. Two more 500 yards down toward our direction, burning. I also saw another one burning and i got distracted for the moment. It turned out to be an orange colored jeep. It was our air to ground jeep. It was burning not far from where general cheese monument is. As we were continuing down the hill, we received mortar fire on the hill that we had just come the back of. It was about five rounds each of mortar rounds. They wounded to squad members of my unit. They were pretty badly wounded. They were screaming. I laid my rifle down and ran down to help them and do it i could. When i got down there i saw his stomach was blown out. Either had a shoulder and chest wound. They were screaming loudly and i did not know what to do. I was told to go back to my position and let the medics handle it. Its hard to not be able to help somebody, but i could see if i moved him i wouldnt hurt him more. I went back to the position and the medics came, picked them up and put them in stretchers and loaded them on a lurie. Was that around august . No, im sorry. That was july 27th. Im glad you asked. This started the firing started about 8 45 in the morning. You stay you still belong to the 27th and century . At that time i was at the 29th infantry. This was kind of a blow by blow account as i recall it. When we left jinju, it took us a day to get to jinju from when we were in hadong. We spent one night on the road. The next morning we camped out the 26th, and the 27th we began to take hadong. You have such a vivid memory. I sleep with it every night. I wake up with it every morning. I used to wake up at 2 30 in the morning. Same old thing. Carrying grenades and rifles going up the hill. The same hill, trying to rescue a medic. And all these koreans shooting at me. Im shooting at them. Jim and tony are shooting at them to. I would wake up and try to figure out do you have p. T. Is the . Yes. A very bad case. I didnt know. When i came back, i did not know what i wanted to do. When i game back to japan i was so tired i dropped. I was looking for somebody that shared my experience. I dont know why did that. When i came back home i thought i want to go to school, stop wars. Im going to go to law school. Whatever unqualified for. I took a bunch of tests through the veterans administration. Their comment was to me, you must have had a terrible childhood. I said why . They said you are angry. You have very low self esteem. You are very aggressive. You are suicidal. You are all this and that. You are a timebomb ready to go off. I said no, i had a very happy childhood. Why would you even think that . I had all the range and open space i wanted to roman. I was happy. I had brothers and sisters. I had good parents. No, i was happy. I said the only thing that happened that was really upsetting in my life is going to war in korea and seeing all my friends killed, and i feel really guilty about it. I felt that i could have or should have done something more. When i tried to go back and help, i was told where and what to do. I had to go back. They restrained me and i felt guilty about it. Then another time i felt that when i held a guy till he died, when he was dying he said, tell mom and that i will be all right. That i love them. He died. I didnt know who he was. I didnt go back to see him. Where did you go from jinju . We were taken out again. Weve got chased off that hill and back through jinju, and after jinju fell when i left there. Where did you go from there . I was loaded on a train. I was helping the wounded out of the school house on to the train. The train left jinju and the last thing i remember is fighting for my rifle with somebody that was trying to get it away from me. I was lying on a stretcher or i believe was pusan. It might have been a nurse or somebody. Next thing i remember is i heard a lard strange noise and i shot upright and looked around and some of this big round hole in the wall. Everything was white where i was. I looked out the window. I saw beautiful green grass. I said why am i . In heaven . Where is mom and dad . They said no you are on a ship and you are going to japan. So you were in the hospital ship . Yes. Were you wounded . I was wounded. I couldnt see out of my eye. I had blinds thoughts, moving around, at my right ankle was very badly sprained, i could barely walk on. It but when we lift that hill position, the reason i am talking about why the here is that we were put on this position and i had my sniper knife. I went to that position and i some movement over there and there were can koreans unloading some equipment to prepare an attack on us. And then somebody came out to get me and i said you tell them to scent and airstrike out here in this area, and hurry up because theres thousands of greens and a lot of equipment out there. About an hour and a half later 14 course airs flew in from i would say the south or southwest, and attacked that area, then the lone he 53 mustang flew down and i thought he was going to shoot me. He went over there and he drifted off with his wings, and went down to where the course wears were a spent two weeks in the hospital. And did you get any medal no. The person who told me i was getting a medal was the police who said i should be getting a medal of honor i dont know, its just a metal. So a colonel woke me. Up i hadnt slept in days. He woke me up in a dead sleep and asked how did you get hurt . I said i was bringing a messenger back to the city. And the korean who lived the he had read money on him, which is korean money. I was taking him down to the cp to be deep, i sprained my ankle, and i was trying to say i was bringing the messenger in and he was a korean messenger in in my opinion. On anyway they put that i was a Company Runner. Im not a Company Runner so you went to camp strike . Yes. Then i spent two or three weeks there processing groups and then they wanted me in the headquarters, head of fiscal demand. So they send me to the physical headquarters, and i wouldnt be paid saw used russian cars for cigarettes. What do you mean by you werent paid . Well i couldnt find out where my records were, and the military wasnt paying. I didnt know what to say. How did it happen . You are still in the army. U. S. Army. Right . Yes but i didnt know it. Here is the rest of the story. I got a security clearance. From back home i could work in a secret, cage secret documents or something, i didnt know that i was reported missing an action. I would read that casualty reports and when they i saw my name on the casualty reports and said gravy. When did you read . That october, 1950. So i looked up the code name from gravy and i said colonel this is why im not getting paid. He said oh you are missing in action we had a laugh about it. And not long after that one of my leaders, he was a cure year than, we kept looking at each other and he finally says youre the guy that pulled me out of the race pad, a pulled him by the color and pulled him into the bamboo the. Get his name was quiet for. He was a lieutenant. So, he remembered that, and i said ok ill leave you here just joking. So we went on to the kernels and he introduced me as a hero. I dont know about hero and all that, but anyway he was really nice and we became friends. And afterwards we hooked up after the war and i was so glad to see him alive. So when did you leave japan . I left there, about the first part of december 1950. And you are sent back to the states . San francisco. I was discharged on the 22nd, december, 1950, 1952. 22nd . 22nd of december, 1952. And i dont remember the camp so well. This is the kind of scenario that we could make a movie out of then. Im telling you. Now let me tell you a little bit about why do you. This is so important. The people that i run into that i thought were killed, i ran into dawson, a real hero, i ran into two mediator after years, and then talking to him on the phone by calling him, up i read a story that he was involved in. I called him up and asked him if he knew baldwin frank myers. I said what happened to him . He said the fool got himself killed. I said how does it happen . He said i told him to take cover, that we were pulling back, people were getting killed and he said im gonna get the sense of bleep. He got their names and everything and he said i try to cover him but i saw him get hit at the top of the hill. I said will how would you like to talk to him . He said what . You couldnt be. I said yes. I said i saw you get hit and go down. I saw you go down so you wouldnt go hit. You cut me off so i would survive. So he said there, blabbered, cried for an hour and a half. So we got together and he told me about how my commander was and how he got out. And i talked about this lieutenant got out. Weve got together again. But then i was so concerned about the survival of the others i let my business go to, how i let my family go to, how i lost just about everything just focus on what happened over there. And thats when i learned that i had a real problem with ptsd, and it was obsessing me. So i dont want to say that i was horribly distracted. I couldnt hold a job when i got out so i thought the only thing that i could do after trying law school i couldnt Pay Attention to well. I didnt like it. I wanted to build something so i made a list of ten things that i should do, and i narrowed it down to one, build new homes in my county. So i went out and start of a construction company, and i was successful at it fortunately. And i really enjoyed spreading the word. And i was fortunate enough to get to japanese carpenters that i could trust implicitly, and they did a excellent job in training me. So i became successful in the construction and real estate business. So i didnt really pay much attention to my state of mind or how i really felt, except when i started the, the vietnam war awakened old memories, then i got to the veterans that i served with, it kind of caused me to fall apart, i felt obsessed, i want to reunite the people. So i started the Korean War Services in america the first one in the country in california in 1884. 1984. I dont have a lot of assets to carry it through, but general basking approached me with Financial Support but i didnt want to take. It i wanted to do it on my own so some other people took it on and started it in washington, and they called it the korean war veterans general who was also the chairman for the veterans, and colonel the west, and jim yeager were also directors on it. So we were ready to go. What did you . Form Korean Service veteran . Korean Service Veterans of america. So that means u. S. Forces stationed in korea after the war . No, what i was trying to do, there was a United Nations adventure so wanted to incorporate out the others who served so that we could have reunions, International Unions where everyone serves. Why did you call it the Korean Service thats afterward. The reason the service, veterans as we perform service nobody wanted to call it a war. So i got criticize because i wanted to use it. I say war veterans, they said no its korean war veterans, it hasnt been called a war thats politicians speaking. I let it go with that because what i wanted to do is have the greeks and the turks in the english and the canadians, and the new zealanders, and the australians, and everyone else commend join us thats what my foundation is doing. Invading youth, descendants of the war in 21 countries to the thats what i was trying to do. Im really glad youre doing that. Thanks so much for doing that. I used to talk to turks and greeks and when they would go to their been they would drop blood and i would be like why would you do that and they say its because we dont put it back did you see them doing that . Right in front of me in yokohama. Oh in yokohama . They were doing that in yokohama to . In the hospital . No i was out in the street. Id go to the library and id see them on the street. Id say can i see your knife . Theyd whip it out, and why did you do that . So turkish soldiers were in yokohama. Yes. And greeks. I saw lots of different nationalities there they were back in japan because they were wounded . Or why . I dont know maybe r and r. I see. R and r. It was a lot of respect, i really respected the greeks, the North Princeton want to fight with them. When did you learn that you have ptsd . I think the two colonels told me that they have a really bad case of, it and i think jimmy iger told me. But kernels Lewis Smollett was, one he had a, to agree and got the medal of honor another was adam who saar colonel. He was in special forces vietnam. He said i need to get help. So they dont do anything. They dont. When did you learn that . I learned it i guess, i think it was about 96, somewhere in there because my life was collapsing, the force, bankruptcy, i just couldnt thank and i was angry. Very angry. Did you go back to korea . Yes. When did you go . The last time was about 2001. Clare . About 2001. And what did you find . If you go to jim jew, . When i go to change you i were the little badge, they give me, tea this at me down, just so nice. Their supply and create, they are always saying thank you and when i went to the sheila hotel and talk to the people, the mayor wanted me to have dinner with him, and i didnt now, i did want to do that. I just wanted to go to a battle site and see. So when i was there, i got a taxi read from this person that i want to tell you about who told me about when he was 13 years old he picked up a couple of americans that took him to his village, and showed them how to get out. And i remember them coming back to our lines. I didnt go to withstand the last time. But did you see the percent back the last time . No. Where were you . I went out to soul. I dont know if i took a train or recap their. Somebody i think to drive me down. So when did you see hadnt . And what did you feel . I felt sensitive. I felt keenly sensitive, like they were spirits all over the. Place and i miss the firing. And it was very strange. And it was like erie, erie. And after a while, i started remembering specific things, kind of traumatizing in a way, but sad. So you never belong to the 24th division . I am told, and i dont know to be honest with you, i didnt fall all of that. I didnt even know that the town we were in was hadong, i didnt know it was jinju. I found a leader i didnt know. So you were not in 24th division . We were attached to the 24th division. Wet from what i heard, and i heard that again, we were attached to the 24th division through the 19th regiment, and kept in, it was the last Commanding Officer that i knew about whose name i can pronounce. I could describe him. Even though it was a little bit rainy, fires going off and everything, hes a tubby little pull look. What is create you now . You didnt know anything about korea when you left . When you left korea, the area that you were, hadong and jinju were completely destroyed. Just about. I dont go to downtown hadong when i was there. Since ive been back there, ive looked at the area that had been bombed ive been back there with jim yeager, the church where he was when it was bombed. So what is create to you now . Very close friends, i have good feelings towards koreans, the Korean People. They are good people. I was proud that i was able to serve and help them. Very proud. And i gave a little speech at cedars palace when they had those people there. And that came out. I just said that was one of the most precious things that ive done is to serve in korea. And the reason im proud is because look at what theyve done with freedom. They are our strongest ally over there, and they helped us with vietnam. Thats how i feel. And i always hear thankyous from the Korean People. Ive a whole lot of newspaper clippings but its inquiry and. I dont read korean. So anyway, i have really good feelings about, it they really enjoy going back to visit their. Almost a week story from july 22nd to about early august. Very short period. And you participated in all of these battles, theyre yet 25 people there, its an amazing story. You know, there is another story that i feel obligated to tell, when i was wounded i was going down to the cp and i was taking in the socalled prisoner, and i just pushed him off the bank. He probably survived. I went down the dispensary, they put me in the dispensary and left me there, and the dispensary was overrun that night by north koreans. And i can find my weapon. I saw someone left something in there that had the koreans were running through the courtyards, and explosions going off. This is just before jinju fell. This is a couple of miles north of jinju, in this little place by the river i can remember a little rock outcropping. You know exactly where that is. So anyway, i had to fight my way out of there. They were running through the courtyard. I ran out. I had a lot of pain in my ankle, i fell, i hit the road. Then i could hear american voices down the road, so i followed down the road and ran into more americans and ambulances, and went to a school house and helped get people out of their wounded. And i think jinju foul the next day or so. What is the legacy of the korean war and the korean war veterans to you . The legacy is i hope that korea and the Korean People can be united, and not hate each other. What really got me is being over there when they had reunited, bringing families together, that really made me cry to see it i just want to see them cry together. I dont think any country or any culture should be torn apart. They should be together, and thats what it means to me to see them back together again. Its like a big family. Same way with germany. Glad to see their gettogether. I think we have to stop wars. We have to stop this heat and bleep. I think we should have peace in the middle east and palestine. If these rich people would give something to those poor palestinians. Give them a homeland. I think all this warfare can stop what would you do if i arranged a meeting with a north korean soldier who fought against you at the time . I would probably tell him i met with him already. Ill give you his name. Hes written a book in france. North korean. Yeah hes north korea. Whats his name . Donald. He surrendered in pontiac, he did no had to surrender, they told him how. He worked for the American Government for a while afterwards. He was a medical student i believe when he was captured. What i would say is i hope we can see korea reconciliation. Absolutely. Absolutely. You know how i got over my ptsd, i was so preoccupied with i had a dream about it. And i had a dream that i was going to meet a north korean officer out there outside the palace in a certain position or Something Like that, and he was going to show me what my as and to ws were so he took me to wear the rim rock wasnt trees and gravestones. And he said here they are. 27 of them or Something Like that. Since that time i havent had any nightmares about being left there anymore. What happened to me, pretty much, in mortal combat is the name of the book. And theres four books. That was me when i was 19. You know i told you have been looking for that medic for 45 years. The person that wrote this book is here ruled gamble. He was a medic. He introduced me to reading through jack cotton. And he was the medic that picked up those two people off the road. And this is what he says here. And there is the person who knows who that winded guy was. I met him on the trail, but it didnt talk to him and i didnt remember that he was the guy. This air was left alone on the side of the hill killing 400 and dank soldiers by himself. Private frank myers came to jack and alerted him that it was time to get out jacks day there alone, treating the blended until the very last. Jack was finally able to make it back to american lines after several days during the battle, frank myers took command of group of survivors and did a commendable job. He like several others had completed an advanced infantry course and on this occasion as an every battle there are many who should have been decorated for their bravery but it didnt happen. Then he talks about jim, the guy who was helping me. That is a book from korea. So you are in hadong and jinju for a week. That was a critical battle because if you werent there we might have been pushed it to the ocean through busan. So i really appreciate that you are sharing this story with meet my foundation and we are going to remember what you did for Korean People. And now curry is the 13th largest economy in the world. The size of india we are the most substantive democracy in the nation. And you know some saying, lg, everywhere we werent able to do it if you dont fight for us. So it looked a thank you. And id like to follow up with you about what you did and i think we need to recognize you somehow. So thats why i want to get some record from you on and i want to talk to my government about it. Okay . All the things ive gotten from the people, and when i see them in las vegas thats enough i dont need anything else. But i really appreciate it. My heart goes out of the Korean People. I love to see them reunited and their families together. And i want you to personally know that chan, clare, whats her name . She was in north korea beautiful people. She was 13 and she came on a boat. Frank i want to thank you for this wonderful opportunity. And we will correspond with each other after this. Okay . Thank you. I appreciate that. Thank you so much again. Weeknights this month were featuring American History tv programs as a preview of whats available every weekend on cspan three. Tuesday night at 8 pm eastern a Police Training film from 1964 on how to handle protests and civil disturbances including techniques for mock control, and the use of equipment such as tear gas and batons. Federal laboratories inc. Who funded the film was a manufacturer of a popular right gun used to fire gas canisters watch real america. Police training films tuesday beginning at eight eastern enjoy American History tv this week, and every weekend on cspan three. The korean war began 70 years ago on june 25th, 1950, it ended with an arms disagreement about three years later in july, 1953. Next an oral history interview with joseph lewis grapple by the Korean War Legacy Foundation he talks about taking part in the Amphibious Landing in inch. On a victory for un forces which turned the tide in