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Semper Fi: A Brother's Search
By Phil McCombs His hero. "HAPPY BIRTHDAY," Richard had scrawled on stationery embossed with the U.S. Marine Corps emblem and a small military map of Southeast Asia. "Judy [a girlfriend] told me she saw you awhile back and that you were just like me how lucky can a guy be?
Two days later July 21, 1967 Cpl. Richard F. Sutter was shot through the head in a battle with North Vietnamese troops near Khe Sanh. He died instantly, leaving his parents, five brothers and sisters and innumerable friends back in Atlanta to deal with their grief. For Rob, the pain and anger would only grow. "Remember you're in my daily thoughts and prayers," Richard had closed that last letter. "Oh yeah! Save a few good-looking blondes for me."
This was a bitter, angry time in America the '60s of song and fable, of My Lai and Woodstock, political assassinations, troops blocking citizens at the gates of the Pentagon. The day Richard died, Time's cover featured a Newark cabby under a banner that read "Anatomy of a Race Riot." Carl Sandburg's death was reported two days later, and his great antiwar poem "Grass" appeared on the front page of this newspaper:
Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo. "I opened that letter," recalls Rob, now a successful businessman of 44. "I don't know if I cried then, but I'll tell you this: Since then I haven't. ... I haven't released in tears about anything. "It's been gnawing in my gut."
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