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Could someone help with a Medal of Honor POW story?
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GenrXr
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 5:07 am    Post subject: Could someone help with a Medal of Honor POW story? Reply with quote

One of the POW's during Vietnam was posthumously awarded the medal of honor and was given it for his attempted escapes. He attempted if I remember 2 escapes and was badly injuried and in poor health. From what I remember his medal was given for his dying commitment to the must always attempt an escape if possible section of if captured and the effect his courage had on all the other POW's. A couple of years ago someone wrote a book about amazing POW or MOH? stories and this one hit me really hard and thought it would be a good story to post for all to see in light of Paul Galanti getting some recent air time and the effect Kerrys actions would inflict on the morale of the POW's and if not for people such as this POW giving the others courage to stand tall even when faced with what seemed to be no hope. This definately relates to Kerry and what he stood for and the antithesis of his position. The honorable POW.

Tried to google it and could not find it.

Thanks, if someone can help and post it for all to read this amazing story. And when you read it realize Kerry had a personal aggenda whch had no regard for these men only for his own personal gain.
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HOV1
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 5:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think this is what you were looking for.

Captain Humbert R. Versace distinguished himself by extraordinary heroism during the period of 29 October 1963 to 26 September 1965, while serving as S-2 Advisor, Military Assistance Advisory Group, Detachment 52, Ca Mau, Republic of Vietnam. While accompanying a Civilian Irregular Defense Group patrol engaged in combat operations in Thoi Binh District, An Xuyen Province, Captain Versace and the patrol came under sudden and intense mortar, automatic weapons, and small arms fire from elements of a heavily armed enemy battalion. As the battle raged, Captain Versace, although severely wounded in the knee and back by hostile fire, fought valiantly and continued to engage enemy targets. Weakened by his wounds and fatigued by the fierce firefight, Captain Versace stubbornly resisted capture by the over-powering Viet Cong force with the last full measure of his strength and ammunition. Taken prisoner by the Viet Cong, he exemplified the tenets of the Code of Conduct from the time he entered into Prisoner of War status. Captain Versace assumed command of his fellow American soldiers, scorned the enemy's exhaustive interrogation and indoctrination efforts, and made three unsuccessful attempts to escape, despite his weakened condition which was brought about by his wounds and the extreme privation and hardships he was forced to endure. During his captivity, Captain Versace was segregated in an isolated prisoner of war cage, manacled in irons for prolonged periods of time, and placed on extremely reduced ration. The enemy was unable to break his indomitable will, his faith in God, and his trust in the United States of America. Captain Versace, an American fighting man who epitomized the principles of his country and the Code of Conduct, was executed by the Viet Cong on 26 September 1965. Captain Versace's gallant actions in close contact with an enemy force and unyielding courage and bravery while a prisoner of war are in the highest traditions of the military service and reflect the utmost credit upon himself and the United States Army.
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GenrXr
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 5:23 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

YES, This is the guy I was looking for. But, we need the story written by the author that tells his story by interviews with his cell mates. He wasn't in isolation the whole time and had time with other POW's. Can you help find that story?

I think what you posted is just his MOH citation correct?
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 5:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yes Sir,

I just went to the MOH web site and scrolled down until I got to his citation. I don't know of the book you're speaking of, but I'll go "surfing safari"
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 5:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Go to http://www.mishalov.com/Versace.html and see if that doesn't have what you're looking for.
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GenrXr
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 5:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

By Steve Vogel, May 27, 2001

His head was swollen, his hair completely white and his skin turned yellow from jaundice. He was rail thin, and he had no shoes, and his Viet Cong captors were yanking him around from village to village by the rope tied around his neck.

On patrol in late 1963 in the Mekong Delta, Army Capt. Jack Nicholson listened to villagers describe the scene they had witnessed. When they said the American prisoner had continually argued with his captors -- using Vietnamese and French to rebut their propaganda -- he knew they were talking about Rocky Versace.

"He had a funny expression about him, a smile, a flashing of teeth, that got their attention," said Nicholson, now a retired brigadier general living in Virginia. "And then when they heard him speak, they listened, because they couldn't help it."

Versace's defiance grew even as his condition worsened, infuriating his captors. In 1965, at age 27, Versace was executed. His remains have never been recovered. His family was told little. And in the eyes of many, Versace has never received the recognition he earned.

But after a long campaign by supporters, the former Alexandria resident is close to being posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor, an award he was denied 30 years ago. An Army recommendation to give the award was approved this year by Gen. Henry H. Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and forwarded to the secretary of defense's office.

Unlike the Air Force, Navy and Marines, the Army has never awarded the Medal of Honor to a POW from Vietnam for actions during captivity. Pentagon officials said they think it would be the first time in the modern era that the medal has gone to an Army POW for heroism during captivity.

"It's well known around here that the Army's very reluctant to give the award to a prisoner," said a Pentagon official, who ascribes the Army's attitude to a stigma associated with being captured.

Today, in conjunction with Memorial Day observances, a band of supporters will be near the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, raising money for a memorial in Alexandria to honor Versace. For those who know it, Versace's story has made an indelible impression.

"He told them to go to hell in Vietnamese, French and English," one of Versace's fellow captives, Dan Pitzer, who died in 1997, told a historian. "He got a lot of pressure and torture, but he held his path. As a West Point grad, it was duty, honor, country. There was no other way. He was brutally murdered because of it."

Another prisoner held with Versace, James "Nick" Rowe, escaped in 1968 after five years of captivity. Rowe made an impassioned plea to President Richard M. Nixon that Versace receive the Medal of Honor, describing how his resistance deflected punishment from other captives and stiffened their will to resist.

The Army downgraded the award to a Silver Star. Rowe, embittered, kept talking about Versace until the day he died, assassinated by communist rebels in 1989 while serving as a U.S. military adviser to the Philippine armed forces.

The pending honor will focus attention on a group of POWs who have received little recognition. While the ordeals suffered by downed aviators who were imprisoned in North Vietnam, such as Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), are well documented, less has been said about the more than 200 prisoners, mostly infantry soldiers, held in horrendous jungle camps in South Vietnam.

Versace is "a perfect symbol for a lot of the guys in the South who were overlooked," said Stuart Rochester, a Department of Defense historian and co-author of a history on Vietnam POWs. "The guys in the South really took tougher punishment than the guys in the North."

The medal will come too late for Versace's mother, who died in 1999, never fully accepting that her son was gone.

"My mother, she never gave up," said one of Rocky's brothers, Dick Versace, president of the National Basketball Association's Vancouver Grizzlies. "Until she died, she thought he'd come walking out of those jungles any day."

Humbert Roque "Rocky" Versace was just a few days short of joining a seminary to become a priest when he was captured.

His father, Humbert, was a West Point graduate and Army officer, his mother, Tere, an accomplished author who would write "The Fifteenth Pelican," a short story that became the basis for "The Flying Nun."

The oldest of five children in a close, strict Catholic household in Alexandria's Del Ray neighborhood, Rocky took on the role of father when Humbert Versace was away with the Army. He had a firm sense of duty and moral responsibility -- in addition to being infuriatingly opinionated and headstrong, his brothers said.

"If he thought he was right, he was a pain in the neck," said his brother Steve, a professor at the University of Maryland's University College. "If he knew he was right, he was absolutely atrocious."

Versace followed his father to West Point, graduating in 1959. Assigned to the "Old Guard" at Fort Myer, he chafed at the ceremonial duties and volunteered for a tour in Vietnam.

In 1962, Vietnam had barely registered on the American consciousness. There were no U.S. combat troops, only a few thousand military advisers sent to help the South Vietnamese government fight a communist insurgency.

Versace was assigned as an intelligence adviser for the South Vietnamese army in the Mekong Delta. Tall, dark-haired and handsome, Versace quickly made his mark. "If you were going to ask for a West Point cadet from central casting, he was it," said Don Price, a Marine officer who met him there.

Versace immersed himself in Vietnamese culture and the delta town of Camau. He created dispensaries, procured tin sheeting to replace thatch roofs and arranged for tons of bulgur wheat to feed family pigs, Price said. He wrote to schools in the United States and got soccer balls for village playgrounds.

When his one-year tour ended, Versace volunteered for a second stint and then planned to leave the Army. He had been accepted into the Maryknoll Order and wanted to work with children in Vietnam.

In October 1963, two weeks before his second tour was to end, Versace accompanied an operation near U Minh Forest, a Viet Cong stronghold. The South Vietnamese company was overrun by a large enemy force, and Versace went down with three rounds in the leg. He, Rowe and Pitzer were taken prisoner, stripped of their boots and led into the forest.

It was a dark maze of mangrove, canals and swamps. The prisoners were kept in bamboo cages, deprived of food and exposed to insects, heat and disease.

Versace's untreated leg became badly infected, but within three weeks he tried to escape, dragging himself on his hands and knees. Guards soon discovered him crawling in the swamp. Back in camp, they twisted his injured leg.

Versace was kept in irons, flat on his back and frequently gagged in a dark and hot bamboo isolation cage that was 6 feet long, 2 feet wide and 3 feet high.

The VC cadre set up indoctrination classes, but Versace attended only at the tip of a bayonet. Rowe and Pitzer "adopted a sit-and-listen attitude between bouts of body-wrenching dysentery, feeling the more we said, the worse off we'd be," Rowe later wrote. "Rocky, on the other hand, was engaging all comers." The instructor's voice would "climb an octave from its already high pitch" as Versace tripped him up with verbal gymnastics, Rowe said.

Increasingly, Versace was separated from the other prisoners.

Patrolling the delta, Nicholson kept hearing stories from admiring rice farmers about the resolute, white-haired POW whom the Viet Cong pulled around by a rope.

"Rocky Versace made an impression on these people, which heightened our eagerness to rescue him and caused us to immediately respond to any intelligence we could get," said Nicholson, who now works for a veterans organization in Alexandria.

Three times, after receiving tips about Versace's whereabouts, U.S. advisers launched helicopters to rescue him, and three times they came back empty-handed, taking heavy casualties on one occasion.

"It was very frustrating," Nicholson said. "Very frustrating and very sad."

When his tour ended in 1964, Nicholson went home and called Versace's father, who wept at the news of the attempted rescues. "You know, it's been almost a year since he was captured, and I haven't heard one word, not one word, from the government," Humbert Versace told him, Nicholson said.

Back in Vietnam, Versace tried three more times to escape, and his treatment worsened. The last the other prisoners heard from him, he was singing "God Bless America" at the top of his lungs from his isolation box.

On Sept. 29, 1965, Hanoi Radio announced that Versace had been executed in retaliation for the killing of suspected communist sympathizers by South Vietnam.

His family learned the news from television reports. "The thing that hit my dad hardest was when he heard Rocky had been executed on the 6 o'clock news," said Steve Versace. "I think he started dying then."

Tere Versace refused to believe it, pressing for more information and flying to Paris to try to meet with North Vietnamese diplomats.

But for most people, the story told by Rowe after he escaped ended any hope Versace might be alive. At a private meeting at the White House in 1969, Nixon was one of the first to hear it.

"The president wasn't prepared -- I don't think anyone was -- for what we were about to hear," said retired Col. Ray Nutter, an Army congressional liaison officer who accompanied Rowe to the meeting.

Rowe spoke for more than an hour, describing the prisoners' treatment and Versace's resistance. When it ended, Nixon, visibly moved, stood and hugged Rowe, Nutter said. Rowe told the president that Versace deserved the Medal of Honor. Nixon turned and told the liaison officers to "make damn sure" it happened, Nutter said.

The submission sat for two years before being turned down in 1971.

"The political climate of the time stopped that thing right in its tracks," Nutter said, noting that Rowe had publicly criticized antiwar senators.

Versace's case has been pushed in recent years by a hodgepodge group of soldiers and civilians who have heard his story: officers in the Army Special Forces command, West Point classmates and friends from Alexandria.

What they have in common is the haunting image of a man who, as Rowe wrote, did not break, or even bend. Said Nicholson, "It makes you think, 'Good Lord, could I be that strong?' "
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GenrXr
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

My last post was the best thing I could find with HOV1's help regarding the story I read. But if anyone out there can find that authors story who interviewed the survivors and re-enacted his whole experience, I love you long time. Smile

Either way, Versace gave all POWS the unbelievable courage of a Hero that resonated for all those that followed him and gave them the strength to survive even in the face of John Kerrys attacks on them while still prisoners.
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BenDeR
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:17 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I only thought I was pissed.
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thank you both - HOV1 & GenrXr - for your questions and research.

In thinking what to write, I cannot help but think that Mr. Versace's story is one that typifies the type of Americans that built this country and have protected and served her since in our "grand experiment" for over 200 years - God Bless that we were given such people.

I think that I could easily come up with many comparisons, but after reading this account, I don't even want to go there. Suffice it to say, "real Americans" - I think - can recognize "real Americans". When the word "hero" starts to be used to define certain people much less deserving, it truely undermines the memory of all of our past and current "real heros".

This may be one of the greatest crimes against our Country during one of the last Conventions.

Thank you again!
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

BenDeR wrote:
I only thought I was pissed.


It blows you away doesn't it? What is really big is I think his story will somehow play a role this election. Because if I remember right I read somewhere every POW that was new heard this story of Versace just so they didn't have any ideas of whining over minor stuff.
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buffman
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wasn't there an Air Force pilot that had a similar story of determined resistance? I think it may be Lance Sijan.
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:24 am    Post subject: MOH/POW Reply with quote

Yo Genxer, I believe the man you are referring too is Captain Lance P. Sijan. I believe the chapel or a wing at the US Air Force Academy is named in honor of him. He was shot down in 1966. Immediately after being shot down and being seriously wounded he tried to over power his captures and fled into the jungle. I know he died in captivity and was awarded the CMOH. I don't have a URL. You could find it on a google search I'm sure. Hope this helps.

George F. Thompson, USN/USAF (Ret).
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GenrXr
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

JROTC wrote:
Thank you both - HOV1 & GenrXr - for your questions and research.

In thinking what to write, I cannot help but think that Mr. Versace's story is one that typifies the type of Americans that built this country and have protected and served her since in our "grand experiment" for over 200 years - God Bless that we were given such people.

I think that I could easily come up with many comparisons, but after reading this account, I don't even want to go there. Suffice it to say, "real Americans" - I think - can recognize "real Americans". When the word "hero" starts to be used to define certain people much less deserving, it truely undermines the memory of all of our past and current "real heros".

This may be one of the greatest crimes against our Country during one of the last Conventions.

Thank you again!


Aye thank you HOV1, for helping me locate this real hero's story and how it affected every POW that came after him in Vietnam.


JROTC, you are right about real heros and real americans. We need to remember the real Heros, the real Americans. Thanks for pointing this out. You said it better then I could have.
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GenrXr
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

buffman wrote:
Wasn't there an Air Force pilot that had a similar story of determined resistance? I think it may be Lance Sijan.


Possibly, lets research and post the actions. We need to make people aware of the great efforts a few made that impacted soo many and made such a difference for the later POWS that had to face Kerrys testimony which was used against them by their captors.
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2004 6:42 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

'Sijan! My Name is Lance Peter Sijan!'

by Lt. Col. Fred A. Meurer (USAF, Ret.)

This article is reprinted from the June 1977 issue of Airman. The articles of the Code of Conduct, which appear throughout the article, are those memorized by Capt. Lance P. Sijan as a cadet. They have since been modified to reflect the service of women in the armed forces.]

Capt. Lance P. Sijan was the first Air Force Academy graduate to receive the Medal of Honor.

THE CODE OF CONDUCT

ARTICLE I

I am an American fighting man. I serve in the forces which guard my country and our way of life. I am prepared to give my life in their defense.

The colonel, recalling the tragic events of almost nine years earlier, had been talking for more than an hour about the heroic ordeal of Capt. Lance P. Sijan, his cellmate in North Vietnam. Reaching the point in his chronology when Sijan, calling out helplessly for his father, was taken away by his captors to die, Col. Bob Craner's voice broke ever so slightly and tears glistened in his eyes. He agreed to a recess in the interview.

THE CODE OF CONDUCT

ARTICLE II

I will never surrender of my own free will. If in command, I will never surrender my men while they still have the means to resist.

''Okay Mom, you can come back in now!"

The voice, coming from a tape recorder that day in early November 1967, gave immense pleasure to Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Sijan (pronounced sigh-john), just as it had so many times for more than 25 years. It was especially meaningful now, coming from Da Nang AB, Vietnam. Their son had done his Christmas shopping early and, separated by half a world, was having some mischievous fun with his family.

Sitting in the living room of the comfortable two-story house in Milwaukee, Mrs. Jane Sijan tenderly related the tale of her son's tape. Across the street, snow was crusted on the park that gently slopes into Lake Michigan. Flames danced in the fireplace as Sylvester Sijan busily prepared to show movies of Lance's graduation from the Air Force Academy in 1965.

Everywhere was memorabilia of Lance and his brother, Marc, younger by five years, and his sister, Janine, 13 years Lance's junior. An oil painting bathed in soft neon light on one wall showed Lance in his academy uniform, smiling out into the room.

Along the staircase hung dozens of photos of the Sijans--their children, relatives and friends. Football pictures of Lance and Marc abounded, for football is a tradition with the Sijans. Lance's Bay View High School team won the city championship in 1959, the first time Bay View had turned the trick since 1936, when Lance's father played on the team.

Family heirlooms, souvenirs from faraway places, and trophies dominated mantels and shelves. The most significant showpiece, however, was enshrined in a glass case. Resplendent with its accompanying baby-blue ribbon dotted with tiny white stars was Capt. Lance Sijan's Medal of Honor.

It had been awarded posthumously.

Jane Sijan--attractive and darkhaired, her Irish heritage smiling through--continued her story of the tape from Vietnam:

"Lance made us individually leave the room as he described the Christmas presents he had gotten for us. He'd say, 'Mom, leave the room,' and then he'd tell everybody what he had for me. Then he'd yell for me to come back in, and he'd send someone else out."

Those Christmas presents were not opened that year, nor for several years thereafter. On Nov. 9, 1967, Capt. Lance Sijan was shot down over North Vietnam. For years no one at home knew his fate. The box of Christmas presents was added to his personal effects, and not until his body was returned to Milwaukee some seven years later did his family sort through his belongings.

On March 4, 1976, President Gerald R. Ford awarded the Medal of Honor to Sijan for his "extraordinary heroism and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty at the cost of his life. . . ."

THE CODE OF CONDUCT

ARTICLE III

If am I captured I will continue to resist by all means available. I will make every effort to escape and aid others to escape. I will accept neither parole nor special favors from the enemy.

R&R in Bangkok, Thailand, had been nostalgic for Lance Sijan. He told his family in a tape from the country once known as Siam that his drama teacher at Bay View High School--where Sijan had been presi dent of the Student Government Association and received the Gold Medal Award for outstanding leadership, achievement, and service--would have been impressed.

As a sophomore, according to his mother, Lance had competed against seniors for the lead singing role in the school production of "The King and I," which was set in Siam. Competition raged for six weeks, con suming Lance's energy and concern.

"One day," said Jane, "he walked in and said, 'Well, I'd like to speak to the Queen Mother.' I knew he had the part."

There were 21 children in the cast, and Sijan needed one special little princess. He and Marc had always doted over their sister, Janine, even to the point of arguing who would feed her, as an infant, in the middle of the night. Lance asked Janine, then not quite 4 years old, to be his daughter in the play.

Occasionally, the family listens to a recording of the play, Lance's rich voice sing-talking the role of the Siamese king that Yul Brynner made famous.

Sijan flew his first post-R&R mission on Nov. 9, 1967, in the back seat of an F-4 piloted by Col. John W. Armstrong, commander of the 366th Tactical Fighter Squadron. On a bombing pass over North Vietnam near Laos, their aircraft was hit and exploded. Armstrong was never heard from again. Sijan, plummeting to the ground after a low-level bailout, suffered a skull fracture, a mangled right hand with three fingers bent backward to the wrist, and a compound fracture of his left leg, the bone protruding through the lacerated skin.

The ordeal of Lance Sijan--big, strong, tough, handsome, a football player at the Air Force Academy, remembered as a fierce competitor by those who knew him--had begun.

He would live in the North Vietnamese jungle with no food and little water for some 45 days. Virtually immobilized, he would propel himself backward on his elbows and buttocks toward what he hoped was freedom. He was alone. He would be joined later by two other Americans, and in short, fading, in-and-out periods of consciousness and lucidity, would tell them his story.

Now, however, there was hope for Lance Sijan. Aircraft circled and darted overhead, part of a gigantic search-and-rescue effort launched to recover him and Armstrong. Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Service histories state that 108 aircraft participated the first two days, and 14 more on the third when no additional contact was made with Sijan, known to those above as "AWOL 1."

Contact had been made earlier, and the answer to the authenticating question, "Who is the greatest football team in the world?" came easily for the Wisconsin native. "The Green Bay Packers," Sijan replied. In continuing voice contacts, "the survivor was talking louder and faster," the history notes. "AWOL did not know what happened to the frontseater."

The rescue force, meanwhile, was taking "ground fire from all directions" and was "worried about all the [friendly] fire hitting the survivor." Finally, Jolly Green 15, an HH-3E helicopter, picked up a transmission from the ground: "I see you, I see you. Stay where you are. I'm coming to you!"

For 33 minutes, Jolly Green 15 hovered over the jungle, eyes aboard searching the dense foliage below for movement. Bullets began piercing the fuselage, a few at first and then more and more. Getting no more voice contact from the ground and under a withering hail of fire, Jolly Green 15 finally left the area.

Rescue efforts the next day and electronic surveillance in the days that followed turned up no more con tacts, and the search for "AWOL" was called off.

One A-1E aircraft was shot down in the effort--the pilot was rescued--and several helicopter crewmen were wounded.

"If AWOL," said the report, "only had some kind of signaling device-- mirror, flare, etc.--pick-up would have been successful. The rescue of this survivor was not in the hands of man."

Much later, a battered Lance Sijan was to ask his American cellmates, "What did I do wrong? Why didn't I get picked up?" He told them he had lost his survival kit.

On that November day, except for enemy forces all around, Sijan was alone again. Although desperately in need of food, water and medical attention, he somehow evaded the enemy and capture as he painfully, day by day, dragged himself along the ground--toward, he hoped, freedom.

But it was not to be.

Former Capt. Guy Gruters, who was to be one of Sijan's cellmates later, told Airman:

"He said he'd go for two or three days and nights--as long as he possibly could--and then he'd be exhausted and sleep. As soon as he'd wake up he'd start again, always traveling east. You're talking 45 days now without food, and it was a max effort!"

Col. Bob Craner, the older cellmate in Hanoi, picked up the story:

"When he couldn't drag himself anymore and said, 'This is the end,' he saw he was on a dirt road. He lay there for a day, maybe, until a truck came along and they picked him up."

Incredibly, after a month and a half of clawing, clutching, dragging and hurting, Sijan was found three miles from where he had initially parachuted into the jungle.

Horribly emaciated and with the flesh of his buttocks worn to his hipbones, Lance Sijan still had some fight left.

"He said they took him to a place where they laid him on a mat and gave him some food," Craner related. "He said he waited until he felt he was getting a little stronger. When there was just one guard there, Captain Sijan beckoned him over. When the guy bent over to see what was the matter, Captain Sijan told me, 'I just let him have it--wham!' "

With the guard unconscious from a well-placed karate chop from a weakened left arm and hand, Sijan pulled himself back into the jungle. "He thought he was making it," Craner said, "but they found him after a couple of hours."

Once again Sijan had been robbed of precious freedom. Once again he was down, but--as other North Vietnamese were to learn--by no means out.

THE CODE OF CONDUCT

ARTICLE IV

If I become a prisoner of war, I will keep faith with my fellow prisoners. I will give no information or take part in any action which might be harmful to my comrades. If I am senior, I will take command. If not, I will obey the lawful orders of those appointed over me and will back them up in every way.

Sijan's obsession with freedom had manifested itself much earlier, and rather uniquely, at the Air Force Academy. His arts instructor, Col. Carlin J. Kielcheski, remembers him well.

"He had the crusty facade of a football player, yet he was very sensitive. I was particularly interested in those guys who broke the image of the typical artist."

Kielcheski still has the "Humanities 499" paper Sijan submitted with his two-foot wooden sculpture of a female dancer. Sijan wrote:

"I feel that the female figure is one of nature's purest forms. I want this statue to represent the quest for freedom by the lack of any restraining devices or objects. The theme of my sculpture is just that--a quest for freedom, an escape from the complexities of the world around us."

Kielcheski chuckled. "Here was this bruiser of a football player coming up with these delicate kinds of things. He was not content to do what the other cadets did. He was very persistent and not satisfied with doing just any kind of job. He wanted to do it right and showed real tenacity to stick to a problem."

Others remember different aspects of Sijan's character. His roommate for three years, Mike Smith of Denver, said he was "probably the toughest guy mentally I've ever met."

Sijan was a substitute end on the football team, Smith said. Football, he thought, hindered his academics, and his concern over grades conversely affected his performance and chances for stardom on the gridiron.

"He had a lot of things going and tried to keep them all going. He came in from football practice dead tired. He'd sleep for an hour or two after dinner and then study until 1 or 2 in the morning. He knew he had to give up a lot to play football, but he had the determination to do it."

Sijan did give up football his senior year. But one thing he did not sacrifice for studies was the company of young women.

"They found him very attractive, and he had no trouble getting dates," said Smith. "He was a big, hand some guy with a good sense of humor."

Maj. Joe Kolek, who roomed with Sijan one semester, agreed. In fact, he said, "It was pretty neat now and then to get Lance's cast-offs."

Smith recalls they talked sometimes about the Code of Conduct that was to test Sijan's character so severely fewer than three years later.

"We found nothing wrong with the Code. We accepted the responsibility of action honorable to our country. It was strictly an extension of Lance's personality. When he accepted something, he accepted it. He did nothing halfway.

"It seemed," Smith said, "that there was always a reservoir of strength he got from his family."

Sylvester Sijan, whose character and physique bear a striking resemblance to a middle-aged Jack Dempsey, owns the Barrel Head Grille in Milwaukee. Built into an inside wall is a mock 4-feet-around beer barrel top, a splendid woodwork fashioned by the elder Sijan from an oak table. A wooden shingle on the polished oak bears the engraved inscription, "Tradition."

Sylvester Sijan's forefathers immigrated from Serbia, a separate country prior to World War I that later be came part of Yugoslavia.

"Serbians have been noted for their heroic actions in circumstances where they were outnumbered," the elder Sijan said. "They were vicious fighters on a one-to-one or a one-to-fifty basis, so they have a history of instinct and drive."

He thinks a mixture of that tradition, his son's love for his home and his competitive spirit spurred him through the painful odyssey in Vietnam.

"What made Lance do what he did? One thing, for sure. He always wanted to come home, no matter where he was. He was going to come home whether it was in pieces or as a hero.

"Lance's competitive nature kind of grew with him," said Sylvester Sijan. "A person never knows how competitive he really is until he comes up against the ultimate situation. He could have been less courageous; he could have retreated into the ranks of the North Vietnamese and said, 'Here I am, take care of me.' But he chose to go the other way. He probably never doubted that somehow, somewhere he'd get out."

Lance Sijan had wondered about his ultimate fate even before leaving for Vietnam, according to Mike Smith. In the Air Force at the time and stationed at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, Smith enjoyed a visit from Sijan, who was on leave prior to going overseas.

"I sensed a foreboding in him, and he and I dealt with the issue of not coming back," Smith said. "I remember it distinctly because I talked with my wife about our conversation. I felt he had a premonition that he might not return."

Jane Sijan, too, sensed something. In Milwaukee prior to leaving, Lance asked her to sew two extra pockets into his flight suit, and he took great pains coating matches with wax.

"One night he was sitting on his bed," she recalled. "He was sewing razor blades into his undershirts so he would have them if he was ever shot down."

THE CODE OF CONDUCT

ARTICLE V

When questioned, should I become a prisoner of war, I am required to give name, rank, service number, and date of birth. I will evade answering further questions to the utmost of my ability. I will make no oral or written statements disloyal to my country and its allies or harmful to their cause.

Capt. Lance Sijan had been on the ground for 41 days when Col. Bob Craner and Capt. Guy Gruters took off from Phu Cat AB in their F-100 on Dec. 20, 1967.

Pinpointing targets in North Vietnam from the "Misty" forward air control jet fighter, they were hit by ground fire and ejected. Both were captured and brought to a holding point in Vinh, where they were thrust into bamboo cells and chained.

Reaching back into his memory, crowded with recollections of more than five years as a prisoner of war, Craner told the story:

"As best as I can recall, it was New Year's Day of 1968 when they brought this guy in at night. The Rodent [a prison guard] came into the guy's cell next to mine and began his interrogation. It was clearly audible.

"He was on this guy for military information, and the responses I heard indicated he was in very, very bad shape. His voice was very weak. It sounded to me as though he wasn't going to make it.

"The Rodent would say, 'Your arm, your arm, it is very bad. I am going to twist it unless you tell me.' The guy would say, 'I'm not going to tell you; it's against the Code.' Then he would start screaming. The Rodent was obviously twisting his mangled arm.

"The whole affair went on for an hour and a half, over and over again, and the guy just wouldn't give in. He'd say, 'Wait till I get better, you S.O.B., you're really going to get it.' He was giving the Rodent all kinds of lip, but no information.

"The Rodent kept laying into him. Finally I heard this guy rasp, 'Sijan! My name is Lance Peter Sijan!' That's all he told him."

Guy Gruters, also an Air Force Academy graduate, but a year senior to Sijan, was in a cell down the hall and did not know the identity of the third captive. He does recall that "the guy was apparently always trying to push his way out of the bamboo cell, and they'd beat him with a stick to get him back. We could hear the cracks."

After several days, when the North Vietnamese were ready to transport the Americans to Hanoi, Gruters and Craner were taken to Sijan's cell to help him to the truck.

"When I got a look at the poor devil, I retched," said Craner. "He was so thin and every bone in his body was visible. Maybe 20 percent of his body wasn't open sores or open flesh. Both hipbones were exposed where the flesh had been worn away."

Gruters recalled that he looked like a little guy. But then when we picked him up, I remember commenting to Bob, 'This is one big sonofagun."'

While they were moving him, Craner related, "Sijan looked up and said, 'You're Guy Gruters, aren't you?''

Gruters asked him how he knew, and Sijan replied, "We were at the academy together. Don't you know me? I'm Lance Sijan." Guy went into shock. He said, "My God, Lance, that's not you!"

"I have never had my heart broken like that," said Gruters, who remembered Sijan as a 220-pound football player at the academy. "He had no muscle left and looked so helpless."

Craner said Sijan never gave up on the idea of escape in all the days they were together. "In fact, that was one of the first things he mentioned when we first went into his cell at Vinh: 'How the hell are we going to get out of here? Have you guys figured out how we're going to take care of these people? Do you think we can steal one of their guns?'

"He had to struggle to get each word out," Craner said. "It was very, very intense on his part that the only direction he was planning was escape. That's all that was on his mind. Even later, he kept dwelling on the fact that he'd made it once and he was going to make it again."

Craner remembers the Rodent coming up to them and, in a mocking voice, he paraphrased the Rodent's message:

"Sijan a very difficult man. He struck a guard and injured him. He ran away from us. You must not let him do that anymore."

"I never questioned the fact that Lance would make it," said Gruters. "Now that he had help, I thought he'd come back. He had passed his low."

The grueling truck ride to Hanoi took several days. Sijan--"in and out of consciousness, lucid for 15 seconds sometimes and sometimes an hour, but garbled and incoherent a lot," according to Craner--told the story of his 45-day ordeal in the jungle while the trio were kept under a canvas cover during the day.

The truck ride over rough roads at night, with the Americans constantly bouncing 18 inches up and down in the back, was torture itself. Craner and Gruters took turns struggling to keep an unsecured 55-gallon drum of gasoline from smashing them while the other cradled Sijan between his legs and cushioned his head against the stomach.

"I thought he had died at one point in the trip," said Craner. "I looked at Guy and said, 'He's dead.' Guy started massaging his face and neck trying to bring him around. Nothing. I sat there holding him for about two hours, and suddenly he just came around. I said, 'OK, buddy, my hat's off to you."'

Finally reaching Hanoi, the three were put into a cell in "Little Vegas." Craner described the conditions: "It was dark, with open air, and there was a pool of water on the worn cement floor. It was the first time I suffered from the cold. I was chilled to the bone, always shivering and shaking. Guy and I started getting respiratory problems right away, and I couldn't imagine what it was doing to Lance. That, I think, accounts ultimately for the fact that he didn't make it."

"Lance was always as little of a hindrance to us as he could be," said Gruters. "He could have asked for help any one of a hundred thousand times, but he never asked for a damned thing! There was no way Bob and I could feel sorry for ourselves."

Craner said a Vietnamese medic gave Sijan shots of yellow fluid, which he thought were antibiotics. The medic did nothing for his open sores and wounds, and when he looked at Sijan's mangled hand, "he just shook his head."

The medic later inserted an intravenous tube into Sijan's arm, but Sijan, fascinated with it in his subconscious haze, pulled it out several times. Thus, Craner and Gruters took turns staying awake with him at night.

"One night," the colonel said, "a guard opened the little plate on the door and looked in, and there was Lance beckoning to the guard. It was the same motion he told me he had made to the guy in the jungle, and I could just see what was going through the back reaches of his mind: 'If I can just get that guy close enough. . . ."'

He remembers that Sijan once asked them to help him exercise so he could build up his strength for another escape attempt. "We got him propped up on his cot and waved his arms around a few times, and that satisfied him. Then he was exhausted."

At another point, Sijan became lucid enough to ask Craner, "How about going out and getting me a burger and french fries?"

But Sijan's injuries and now the respiratory problem sapped his strength. "First he could only whisper a word, and then it got down to blinking out letters with his eyes," said Gruters. "Finally he couldn't do that anymore, even a yes or no."

With tears glistening, Bob Craner remembered when it all came to an end. They had been in Hanoi about eight days.

"One night Lance started making strangling sounds, and we got him to sit up. Then, for the first time since we'd been together, his voice came through loud and clear. He said, 'Oh my God, it's over,' and then he started yelling for his father. He'd shout, 'Dad, Dad, where are you? Come here, I need you!'

"I knew he was sinking fast. I started beating on the walls, trying to call the guards, hoping they'd take him to a hospital. They came in and took him out. As best as I could figure it was January 21."

"He had never asked for his dad before," said Gruters, "and that was the first time he'd talked in four or five days. It was the first time I saw him display any emotion. It was absolutely his last strength.

"It was the last time we saw him."

A few days later, Craner met the camp commander in the courtyard while returning from a bathhouse and asked him where Sijan was.

"Sijan spend too long in the jungle," came the reply. "Sijan die."

Guy Gruters talked some more about Sijan:

"He was a tremendously strong, tough, physical human being. I never heard Lance complain. If you had an army of Sijans, you'd have an incredible fighting force."

Said Craner:

"Lance never talked about pain. He'd yell out in pain sometimes, but he'd never dwell on it like, 'Damn, that hurts.'

"Lance was so full of drive whenever he was lucid. There was never any question of, 'I hurt so much that I'd rather be dead.' It was always positive for him, pointed mainly toward escape but always toward the future."

Craner recommended Sijan for the Medal of Honor. Why?

"He survived a terrible ordeal, and he survived with the intent, sometime in the future, of picking up the fight. Finally he just succumbed.

"There is no way you can instill that kind of performance in an individual. l don't know how many we're turning out like Lance Sijan, but I can't believe there are very many."

THE CODE OF CONDUCT

ARTICLE VI

I will never forget that I am an American fighting man, responsible for my actions, and dedicated to the principles which made my country free. I will trust in my God and in the United States of America.

In Milwaukee, Sylvester Sijan started to bring up the point, and then he hesitated. He finally did, though, and then he talked about it unabashedly.

"I remember one day in January, about the same time that year, driving down the expressway; I was feeling despondent, and I began screaming as loud as I could, things like, 'Lance, where are you?' I may have murmured such things to myself before, but I never yelled as loud as I did that day."

He wonders if maybe--just maybe--it may have been at the same time Lance was calling for him in Hanoi.

"The realization that Lance's final thoughts were what they were makes me feel most humble, most penitent, and yet somehow profoundly honored," he said.

He still wears a POW bracelet with Lance's name on it. "I just can't take it off," he said, adding that "not too many people realize its significance anymore."

Though Lance was declared missing in action, and though one package they sent to him in Hanoi came back stamped "deceased"--"which jarred me terribly," Jane Sijan said--the family never gave up hope.

"I'm such an optimist," she said. "I even watched all the prisoners get off the planes on television [in 1973] hoping there had been some mistake."

Lance's body, along with the headstone used to mark his grave in North Vietnam, was returned to the United States in 1974 for interment in Milwaukee (23 other bodies were returned to the United States at the same time). At a memorial service in Bay View High School, the family announced the Captain Lance Peter Sijan Memorial Scholarship Fund.

"It is a $500 scholarship presented yearly to a graduate male student best exemplifying Lance's example of the American boy," said Jane. "It will be a lifetime effort on our behalf and will be carried on by our chil dren."

Lance Sijan, U.S. Air Force Academy Class of 1965, would be 54 years old now. He is the first academy graduate to be awarded the Medal of Honor. A dormitory at the academy was named Sijan Hall in his honor.

"The man represented something," Sylvester Sijan said of his son. "The old cliche that he was a hero and represented guts and determination is true. That's what he really represented. How much of that was really Lance? What he is, what he did, the facts are there.

"We'll never adjust to it," he said. "People say, 'It's been a long time ago and you should be OK now,' but it stays with you and well it should."

"Lance was always such a pleasure; he was an ideal son, but then all our children are a joy and blessing to us," said Jane Sijan. "It still hurts to talk about it, but I have certainly accepted it. I'm a very patient woman, and I wait for the day our family will all be together again, that's all."

On March 4, 1976, three other former prisoners of war, all living, also received Medals of Honor from President Ford. One of them was Air Force Col. George E. "Bud" Day ["All Day's Tomorrows,"Airman, November 1976]. Col. Day later wrote to Airman:

"Lance was the epitome of dedication, right to death! When people ask about what kind of kids we should start with, the answer is: straight, honest kids like him. They will not all stay that way--but by God, that's the minimum to start with."
_________________
"An activist is the person who cleans up the water, not the one claiming its dirty."
"All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to stand by and do nothing." Edmund Burke (1729-1797), Founder of Conservative Philosophy
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