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Senator Lugar has partnered with the Library
of Congress to help preserve the oral histories of Indiana veterans.
This program will ensure that these valuable stories are preserved
for future generations of authors, historians, students and other
interested individuals to use and experience.
Veterans wishing to participate in the program
should send an email to: vetproject@lugar.senate.gov.

Senator Lugar announces the Veterans History Project at Tyndall
Armory in Indianapolis, February, 2002.
Facts about the Program:
- The Veterans History Project was signed into
law in October 2000, as an effort to preserve oral histories.
The project is part of the
Library of Congress' American Folklife Center National Veterans
History Collection, and they will be the repository for all
materials collected and will be maintained in perpetuity.
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The U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs estimates
that 559,000 veterans live in Indiana.
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According to the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs, almost 1,500 veterans die in the United States each
day.
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Interviews are conducted with veterans of
all military branches of service, who served during World War
I, World War II, the Korean, Vietnam or Persian Gulf Conflicts.
Veterans need not have seen combat to participate in the program.
Interviews are also being conducted with citizens who supported
the armed services and individuals involved in home front activities.
U.S. Senator Dick Lugar (center) with (from left to right) Jeanne
Anderson from the North manchester Center For History; Jim Ridenour,
a Vietnam veteran and representative of the Wabash County historical
Museum; Clyde Dawson a WWII veteran; and Mayor Robert E. Vanlandingham
of Wabash. Senator Lugar visited the Wabash County Historical Museum,
a VHP partner in May 2005.
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