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Press Release
from the Smithsonian 3/19/04
Vietnam Combat Huey Helicopter Landed at
Smithsonian's National Museum of American History
Friday March 19, 2004.
WASHINGTON, March 19 /PRNewswire/ -- A Vietnam combat Huey
helicopter landed on the National Mall in front of the Smithsonian's
National Museum of American History, on Friday, March 19. It was the
culmination of a month- long, nationwide journey that began in Fort Worth,
Texas. The helicopter is slated to be the central artifact of the Vietnam
War section of the museum's new exhibition, "The Price of Freedom,"
scheduled to open on Veterans Day, Nov. 11.
"The museum is honored to receive this icon of the Vietnam War to tell
the story of the Vietnam experience," said Museum Director Brent D.
Glass. "Visitors will be able to see an actual helicopter that carried
troops into battle and out of harm's way, evacuating them from the
battlefield."
The 9 a.m. landing ceremony will include General P.X. Kelley (U.S. Marine
Corps Retired), 28th Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps and member of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. At the ceremony, the museum will officially take
possession of the helicopter for the national collections.
The Huey 65-10091 was manufactured by Bell Helicopter in 1965 for the
U.S. Army and deployed to Vietnam in 1966. It served with the 173rd
Assault Helicopter Company, known as "The Robin Hoods," and was
shot down on January 7, 1967. After being repaired in the United States,
it returned to service until 1995 when it was acquired by the Texas Air
Command Museum in Fort Worth for use in educational programming.
"This exhibition will be about people, and the contributions they have
made in critical moments of our history," said David Allison, project
director for "The Price of Freedom. "The museum's goal is to tell the
story of America's involvement in the Vietnam War and its political,
social and technological impacts."
The Vietnam section of "The Price of Freedom" will explore a number of
themes, including events in the U.S. at the time and stories of
reconciliation following the war. Other items in the section will be
objects from the Vietnam Wall, a Green Beret, U.S. Prisoner of War
artifacts, U.S. military uniforms and weapons, and captured Vietcong
uniforms and weapons.
After the Texas Air Command Museum agreed to donate the Huey
091 to the National Museum of American History, a group of Vietnam
veterans and other volunteers formed the 091 Committee to facilitate the
helicopter's transfer.
The helicopter departed Fort Worth on Feb. 10, to embark on a
month-long, cross-country delivery, billed as the Huey's "Final Journey
Home." This nationwide tour was an educational program of the 091
Committee and included stops at the U.S. military academies, schools, and
other destinations nationwide, ending with the landing at the museum.
Through the support of DynCorp, a CSC company, AMR/American Airlines, U.S.
Helicopter, Novogratz Family Foundation, Bell Helicopter and the Allied
Pilots Association, the 091 Committee raised the necessary funds to take
the Huey 091 on the tour.
The 18,200-square-foot "Price of Freedom" exhibition will survey
the history of America's military from the colonial times to the present,
exploring ways that wars have been defining episodes in American history.
Through hundreds of artifacts and pictures, "The Price of Freedom" will
tell the stories of how Americans have fought to establish the nation's
independence, determine its borders, shape its values of freedom and
opportunity and define its leading role in world affairs. The Huey
helicopter will be the largest single artifact in the exhibition.
Among the 700 objects in "The Price of Freedom" will be Andrew
Jackson's uniform coat and sword, Colin Powell's woodland camouflage
uniform, the nameplate from the "Maine," a regimental flag of Civil War
black troops, the surrender furniture from Appomattox Court House, a World
War II jeep, and firearms and swords from all periods of American military
history. "The Price of Freedom" is made possible through the generosity of
Mr. Kenneth E. Behring.
The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History traces American
heritage through exhibitions of social, cultural, scientific and
technological history. Collections are displayed in exhibitions that
interpret the American experience from Colonial times to the present. The
museum is located at 14th Street and Constitution Avenue N.W., and is open
daily, from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. For more information, visit the museum's
Web site at
http://americanhistory.si.edu or call (202) 633-1000 or 357-1729
(TTY).

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October 15, 2004 - January 16, 2005
Albuquerque, New MexicoSponsored
by
Vietnam Veterans of America
New Mexico Veterans Service Commission
VIETNAM: VOICES AND
VISIONS UNFILTERED is a multi-component symposium
that will present a public history of the Vietnam War.

The purpose of the project is to provide
additional insight and knowledge about the
nature of the war and its effects on everyone
involved, including those at war and those at home.
The symposium serves to inspire
discussion, instigate learning and elucidate some of the myths that
have pervaded the war.
Project
components will lay bare the personal experiences of the Vietnam
War, and in the process, spawn a more accurate discernment of an
extremely painful and contentious period in our history – one that
divided a nation and engendered controversy that refuses to die.
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Website at
http://www.vietnamvoicesandvisions.org/
The American Authors Association will be participating in events
throughout the program's run. Vietnam Veteran authors and those writing
about the Vietnam experience who wish to get involved with this event can
contact
Bill McDonald for more
information.

Vietnam Veteran
Events For Spring 2004
The Moving Wall - Sacramento, California
April 1st through April 7th
Bill McDonald will be delivering the
opening and closing invocation and benediction.
A Salute to Veterans
Poetry Reading by Poet and Author Bill
McDonald
May 22, at BTs Place in Elk
Grove, California
2:00 p.m. at 9090 Elk Grove Blvd. , Elk Grove CA
Angel Fire Vietnam Veteran National Memorial
Memorial Day Weekend Events
The Theme this year is:
"The Last Full Measure of Devotion"
Open house and POW/MIA update will be held on Sunday, May
30th followed by the Candlelight Vigil at 7:00 p.m.
The Memorial Day activities will be Monday, May 31, beginning with the
flag march at 9 a.m.
The ceremony will follow at 11:00 a.m.
Bill McDonald will be delivering the
opening and closing invocation and benediction.
He will also be reading a couple of his poems from his book "Purple
Hearts"

Book of the Month
The Pucker Factor
By Daniel "Duke" C. Webster
The Pucker Factor: One
Noncombatant's Vietnam Memoirs
THE PUCKER FACTOR
is a phrase familiar to the military.
Fear, surprise, and the unknown are its major components. Jointly or
one at a time, these components can scare you to death, or you are certain
you will die, and then you are afraid you will not die. The author
and THE PUCKER FACTOR became very close friends during his tour of
duty in Vietnam. As a noncombatant, he earned the Air Medal, the Army
Commendation Medal, Crew Member Wings, and the Purple Heart. THE
PUCKER FACTOR details the much easier living and working conditions "Headshed
personnel" endured than those of the foot soldier. Although certainly not
a war hero, he earned the respect of his fellow GIs by giving of his time
and efforts to make his units better; he made the best of clerical errors
to construct a photo lab for the 20th Engineer Brigade at Bien Hoa, he
assisted his fellow 164th Aviation Group NCOs in robbing the Army Supply
Depot near Saigon to obtain cots and wall lockers his Can Tho company
could not obtain through normal channels, and he built the "mother of all
barbecues" for the 336th Assault Helicopter Company at Soc Trang. He had
time to fall in love with a beautiful Vietnamese widow just as his
stateside marriage was going down the drain, only to lose his new love
just as quickly as he found her. He moves from the "Jungle Eaters" as
they clear back the jungle with Rome plows in the Hobo Woods, to fly with
the Commanders of the 13th Assault Helicopter Battalion and the 164th
Combat Aviation Group on missions in the Delta to rout out and destroy the
VC in the U-Mihn Forest, then to prepare operational maps for the 336th
Assault Helicopter Company missions. His work takes him from being
Information Sergeant to Unit Photographer to Intelligence Analyst to Intel
Sergeant to Perimeter NCO. An interesting memoir of one soldier's life
on and off duty.
The Author:
Daniel C. Webster, better known as "Duke", has had only
military articles published. This is his first book. Finally, being
prodded by many of his friends after listening to his tales of Vietnam,
he agreed that the story of his tour of duty in 'Nam was worth telling to
the world. THE PUCKER FACTOR , 34 short chapters, each a separate
story, is a work of love. Now, in his golden years, this retired Army
Sergeant First Class has settled in the panhandle of Florida to live out
his life with his Korean wife, Suk Cha. Working full time as a security
guard, seventy year old Webster and his wife do a bit of fishing and a lot
of relaxing
McDonald's recommendation - A good
read for veterans and non-veterans. IT will bring many memories back and
educate those who were not there. The "Duke" writes with enthusiasm and lots
of energy - you will find this book hard to put down once you begin to read
it.
http://1stbooks.com/
Go to 1st Books and write in "The Pucker Factor"


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