William Frobe pursued the Green to Gold scholarship in 1996 and attained commission as second lieutenant at the University of Arizona upon graduating.
Bradley Nay led during five major operations while stationed in Vietnam. He served with Company A, First Battalion, 1st Marines, First Marine Division.
Les Payne was part of a Pulitzer Prize winning Newsday reporting team that created a series tracking heroin from growth in Turkey to being sold in America.
After returning home following World War II, Joseph Acevedo became a United States citizen. He recalled this day as one of the happiest of his life.
John Carver said that his ship treated around 75,000 patients during the war. The crew was involved in almost every major invasion in the Pacific theater.
Robert Ondrish's unit fought in the Battle of Pusan Perimeter, one of the first major battles of the Korean War. He recalls seeing combat nearly every day.
Dona Mills-Bozman joined the Army Nurse Corps after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. She was working at a New Orleans Hospital where nurses were being recruited
Jeanette Marshall served from during the Vietnam War. She was assigned to as a member of an air evacuation crew that flew soldiers from Korea to Japan.
U.S.S. Cape Cod departed from San Diego on Jan. 11, 1991 to replace the U.S.S. Acadia AD-42 in the Persian Gulf and aid in the conflict to liberate Kuwait
In January 1955, Virginia Edds Defourneweaux was deployed to Camp Gifu, Japan, where she was a nurse for the Air Force and the Marines.
Millie Dalrymple joined the Women Airforce Service Pilots program in 1943 with a good friend after they both became widows from war.
Rae Mary Leff was a nurse on the USS Repose. The ship visited Guam, Midway Island, Vietnam, Japan and St. Augustine, New York (the ship’s home base).