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A POW returned home in 1969 after spending 8 months captured in Vietnam. Where is he now?

A POW returned home in 1969 after spending 8 months captured in Vietnam. Where is he now?
AND NEWS 8’S KATELYN SMITH SET OUT TO SEE WHERE THAT MAN IS NOW. >> IT’S EYE-OPENING, TO SAY THE LEAST. KATELYN: WATCHING SOMETHING THAT HASN’T BEEN SEEN IN HIS LIFETIME, ONE CLIP AT A TIME. >> DECLARED MISSING IN ACTION FROM THAT DATE AND UNTIL THE VIETCONG-AMERICAN CHRISTMAS DAY MEETING, HIS FATE WAS UNKNOWN. KATELYN: WHILE DIGITIZING FILM THAT ONCE AIRED ON WGAL, ADAM OMAR DISCOVERED THE STORY OF DONALD GLEN SMITH. >> I JUST HAD TO BREAK DOWN AND CRY. WE DIDN’T EXPECT IT. KATELYN: THIS IS THE SMITH FAMILY IN 1969 REACTING TO THE NEWS THAT THEIR SON, WHO GOES BY GLEN, WAS COMING HOME AFTER BEING DECLARED MISSING IN ACTION, THEN KILLED IN ACTION, HE’D FINALLY BEEN FOUND AS A PRISONER OF WAR, HELD IN A VIETNAM JUNGLE FOR EIGHT MONTHS. >> THEY DID STATE THAT HE GO OFF THE HELICOPTER AT THE AIRPORT ABOVE SAIGON, THAT HE WALKED AWAY FROM THE HELICOPTER IT APPEARED THAT HIS FEET WERE SWOLLEN. >> TODAY WAS THE DAY HE CAME HOME TO THIS SMALL LANCASTER COUNTY COMMUNITY. KATELYN: ONCE BACK IN AKRON, THE ENTIRE TOWN GREETED HIM AND EVEN NAMED A DAY AFTER HI BUT WHERE IS GLENN SMITH TODAY? 52 YEARS LATER. >> I HAVE PTSD, SO I THINK ABOUT IT EVERY DAY. KATELYN: WE FOUND HIM IN LEBANON COUNTY. AND BEFORE WE EVEN GOT THE CHANCE TO TELL HIM ABOUT THE FILM WE REDISCOVERED AND OUR PROCESS OF DIGITIZING IT, HE HAD SOMETHING FOR US. >> I WAS WONDERING IF YOU GUYS HAD ANY PEOPLE THAT COUL CONVERT THIS INTO LIKE, A DVD? OR HAVE THE EQUIPMENT TO DO THAT? KATELYN: DO WE EVER, AND BETTER THAN THAT, WE BROUGHT SOME OF THE DIGITIZED FILM WITH US. >> MR. AND MRS. SMITH, WHAT IS YOUR REACTION TO YOUR SON’S RELEASE? KATELYN: IT’S HIS WIFE JENNIFER’S FIRST TIME SEEING THE VIDEO, AND HIS FIRST TIME SEEING HIS PARENTS IN A LONG TIME. >> MY MOM. KATELYN: BOTH HAVE SINCE PASSED. BUT THE CHRISTMAS BEFORE HIS MOM DIED. >> THE WHOLE STORY, THE NEWSPAPER ARTICLES, THEY’RE IN THERE. KATELYN: SHE GAVE HIM THIS BOOK. >> I THINK, YOU KNOW, YOU HAVE TO REMEMBER, EVEN THE BAD THINGS, YOU HAVE TO REMEMBER THEM. IT’S PART OF OUR LIFE. >> WHEN YOU GOT PEOPLE LOCKING YOU UP AND STICKING GUNS IN YOUR FACE AND SMACKING YOU AROUND, IT’S JUST STUFF YOU NEVER FORGET. KATELYN: GLEN WAS A MILITARY POLICE OFFICER SERVING IN VIETNAM IN MAY OF 1968 WHEN HE WAS ATTACKED IN HIS BUNKER AND WOKE UP IN A CAVE. TWO OTHER MEN HE’D BEEN WITH WERE KILLED, AND HIS LIFE WAS THREATENED MANY TIMES. >> HE LOST TOENAILS. ALL THAT PEOPLE DON’T REALLY KNOW ALL THE LITTLE DETAILS, THE SUFFERING. KATELYN: BUT IN JANUARY OF 1969, AFTER TURNING 21 IN CONFINEMENT, GLEN AND TWO OTHER AMERICANS WHO WERE ALSO PRISONERS OF WAR WERE FINALLY FREED. >> WE JUST GOT IN TH HELICOPTER AND IT TOOK OFF AND I WAS LIKE, I COULDN’T BELIEVE IT. >> HIS MAIN INTEREST NOW ARE TO GET HOME, RELAX WITH HIS CAR AND HIS RECORD COLLECTION, AND FIND OUT JUST HOW GREAT IT IS TO BE BACK IN THE WORLD. KATELYN: HE NO LONGER HAS THE CAR OR RECORD COLLECTION. AND THAT HOMECOMING CELEBRATION? >> I WAS DREADING THAT THE WHOLE WAY UP THE TURNPIKE. KATELYN: HE COULD HAVE DONE WITHOUT THAT. BUT EVERY PIECE OF THIS PRESERVED VIDEO HE DOES WANT YOU TO SEE. >> PEOPLE AREN’T LEARNING ABOUT THIS STUFF NOW IT’S JUST SAD, THEY JUST SWEPT A LOT OF THIS STUFF UNDER. AND YOU TALK TO SOME OF THESE YOUNG KIDS, YOU TELL THEM WHERE YOU WERE AND THEY DON’T EVEN KNOW WHAT IT WAS. KATELYN: THANKFULLY HE’S STILL AROUND TO TELL HIS STORY. ONE OF THE OTHER MEN WHO WAS RESCUED WITH HIM, AND EVEN THE WGAL REPORTER WHO ORIGINALLY TOLD THE STORY, HAVE ALL DIED. AND IF IT WASN’T FOR THIS PROJECT TO DIGITIZE WGAL’S OLD FILM. >> YOU WOULD HAVE NEVER EVEN HEARD OF THIS GUY, RIGHT? >> NOPE, NEVER. KATELYN: T
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A POW returned home in 1969 after spending 8 months captured in Vietnam. Where is he now?
An Akron, Pennsylvania, man who had been a prisoner of war in Vietnam returned home in 1969.Sister station WGAL's film preservation project with Millersville University rediscovered the footage of that homecoming. While digitizing film that once aired, WGAL's Adam Omar learned the story of Donald Glen Smith. Smith was declared missing in action, then killed in action before he'd finally been found as a prisoner of war. He was held in a Vietnam jungle for eight months.When he returned to Akron, the entire town greeted him and even named a day after him.Fifty-two years later, WGAL caught up with Smith. "I have PTSD, so I think of that every day," he said.We showed him some of the newly digitized film from his homecoming, which included an interview with his parents after they found out their son was coming home.It was his wife's first time seeing the video and Smith's first time seeing his parents in a long time. His parents have since died, but his mother gave him a book full of newspaper articles the Christmas before she died."I think, you know, you have to remember, even the bad things, you have to remember them. It's part of our life," Smith's wife, Jennifer, said."When you got people locking you up and sticking guns in your face and smacking you around, it's just stuff you never forget," Smith said.Smith was a military police officer serving in Vietnam in May 1968 when he was attacked in his bunker and woke up in a cave. Two other men he'd been with were killed, and his life was threatened many times. "He lost toenails. All that, that people don't really know – all the little details, the suffering," his wife said.In January 1969, after turning 21 years old in confinement, Smith and two other Americans who were also prisoners of war were freed."We just got in that helicopter and when it took off it was like, 'Whew!' It was like, I couldn't believe that really, couldn't believe it," Smith said.He could have done without the homecoming celebration."I was dreading that the whole way up the Turnpike," he said.But he does want people to see the preserved video. "People aren't learning about this stuff now. They just kind of swept a lot of this stuff under, and you talk to some of these young kids, you tell them where you were, they don't even know what it was," he said.

An Akron, Pennsylvania, man who had been a prisoner of war in Vietnam returned home in 1969.

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Sister station WGAL's film preservation project with Millersville University rediscovered the footage of that homecoming. While digitizing film that once aired, WGAL's Adam Omar learned the story of Donald Glen Smith.

Smith was declared missing in action, then killed in action before he'd finally been found as a prisoner of war. He was held in a Vietnam jungle for eight months.

When he returned to Akron, the entire town greeted him and even named a day after him.

Fifty-two years later, WGAL caught up with Smith.

"I have PTSD, so I think of that every day," he said.

We showed him some of the newly digitized film from his homecoming, which included an interview with his parents after they found out their son was coming home.

It was his wife's first time seeing the video and Smith's first time seeing his parents in a long time.

His parents have since died, but his mother gave him a book full of newspaper articles the Christmas before she died.

"I think, you know, you have to remember, even the bad things, you have to remember them. It's part of our life," Smith's wife, Jennifer, said.

"When you got people locking you up and sticking guns in your face and smacking you around, it's just stuff you never forget," Smith said.

Smith was a military police officer serving in Vietnam in May 1968 when he was attacked in his bunker and woke up in a cave. Two other men he'd been with were killed, and his life was threatened many times.

"He lost toenails. All that, that people don't really know – all the little details, the suffering," his wife said.

In January 1969, after turning 21 years old in confinement, Smith and two other Americans who were also prisoners of war were freed.

"We just got in that helicopter and when it took off it was like, 'Whew!' It was like, I couldn't believe that really, couldn't believe it," Smith said.

He could have done without the homecoming celebration.

"I was dreading that the whole way up the Turnpike," he said.

But he does want people to see the preserved video.

"People aren't learning about this stuff now. They just kind of swept a lot of this stuff under, and you talk to some of these young kids, you tell them where you were, they don't even know what it was," he said.