Friends, relatives speak out while honoring veterans of Vietnam WarBy Joe Gromelski, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Tuesday, April 22, 2008
WASHINGTON — Eleven years ago, when Vietnam War veteran William Carroll Herman applied for an insurance policy, he was told that the protein level in his blood was the highest the tester had ever seen. He had amyloidosis, a form of blood cancer. The problem was that it wasn’t among the diseases officially linked to Agent Orange exposure until December 2007 — a month and a half after the commander of the Taylorsville, N.C., Disabled American Veterans chapter died at age 66.
Herman’s sister, Faye Shew, was among the dozens of relatives and friends gathered Monday on a rise above the Vietnam Veterans Memorial to honor those who died as a result of their service in Vietnam but don’t qualify to have their names engraved on the wall.
The 10th annual In Memory Day ceremony featured remarks by Jan Scruggs, founder and president of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, and Richard C. Schneider, executive director of government affairs for the Non-Commissioned Officers Association of the USA. Singer/songwriter Chuck Price also performed “The Unsung Heroes,” a song that has become the unofficial theme song of the event.
But the focus was on the fallen, especially the 75 veterans who were honored at the event for the first time this year. And one theme that carried through the comments of those who read the names was the horrible effects of agent orange, and the problems that those Vietnam veterans exposed to it and their families have encountered over the years in trying to get recognition of a connection and adequate treatment.In his speech, Schneider told the families that their government had let their loved ones down, and Stephanie Fairfield didn’t have to be convinced. Her fiance, Arthur Howard Kidney, died last May of diabetes, thought to be linked to Agent Orange exposure.
“I’m angry,” Fairfield said after the ceremony. “He was only 57 years old. He was very, very special. He enlisted at 17; his mother had to sign him in. He did two tours of Vietnam.”
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http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=54231uhc comment: If you think Agent Orange was bad news, wait until depleted uranium deaths hits the news. Depleted uranium is Agent Orange on steroids.