A Voice for Vets

Ann Arbor-based radio show celebrates 10 years of reaching out to military veterans in Michigan and beyond
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Vietnam vets Bob Gould (left) and Dale Throneberry host 鈥淰eterans Radio.鈥 // Photographs by Josh Scott

On Nov. 15, 2003, Vietnam War veterans Dale Throneberry and Bob Gould went on the air to broadcast a new show they had come up with鈥夆斺塧 show they thought was long overdue. They called it 鈥淰eterans Radio.鈥 Operating as volunteers with no budget or funding, they used the facilities of WSDS, a tiny Ypsilanti radio station. Using equipment considered prehistoric today, and fighting off cats that wandered over their control board, the two interviewed leaders of veterans organizations. There were kinks, but Throneberry and Gould, former insurance salesmen, considered the launch a success.

So they did another program the next week. This month, 400-plus programs later, is their 10th anniversary. These days, they broadcast from Ave Maria Radio studios at WDEO 990 AM in Ann Arbor, on four other stations in the U.S., and online, from 9-10 a.m. (EST) every Saturday.

Ten years鈥夆斺10 years鈥夆斺塷f talking to veterans and scores more who have played various roles on the military stage. Where do you start?

How about that program featuring Yung Krall, whose father was representing the Viet Cong in the Soviet Union while she was operating as a CIA and FBI spy? Or the Korean War vet who during his interview suddenly remembered an experience at the Battle of Pork Chop Hill he had repressed for more than 50 years? Or the other Korean vet who survived the slaughter by Chinese troops at the battle of the Chosin Reservoir, when he was just one of nine of 300 left alive from his battalion鈥?

One Vietnam War sniper broke into tears. World War II vets shared tales from Normandy and Auschwitz. Women veterans, Tuskegee Airmen, and those serving in Iraq and Afghanistan also have found a voice on Veterans Radio.

More famous visitors include legendary test pilot Chuck Yeager; Daniel Ellsberg of Pentagon Papers fame; Major Theodore 鈥淒utch鈥 Van Kirk, navigator of the Enola Gay when it dropped the first atomic bomb; Sen. John Kerry; and more. Also, author Dwight Jon Zimmerman hosts 鈥淎t Ease,鈥 a weekly program on Veterans Radio about books and authors.

Veterans Radio has been an emotional experience for the hosts. 鈥淲e did a program on Arlington Cemetery that made me cry,鈥 says Throneberry, 67, who served with the 195th Assault Helicopter Company in Vietnam in 1969. But he cried harder when one listener called in to say he had served during World War II with Throneberry鈥檚 father, who had died when Throneberry was 15.

鈥淭his is not your vanilla veterans program,鈥 says Gould, 70, who was an Army Airborne medic in the early 1960s. He likes to call Veterans Radio 鈥渢he History Channel鈥 of radio. A third major sponsor and team member early on was Gary Lillie, a U.S. Navy Seabee who served during the Vietnam War. He was killed in 2011 by a drunken driver, and his death was a shock to Throneberry and Gould.

For a time, they wondered if they should continue; budgets were tight, and sponsors were few. 鈥淧lus,鈥 Throneberry says, 鈥淚 was exhausted.

鈥淏ut we decided that what we鈥檙e doing is so important. And what else was I going to do? I was retired, and I thought, 鈥楧o I want to plant a garden the rest of my life?鈥 Veterans鈥 affairs had become so important. People do different things to help. I won鈥檛 be the guy who builds the memorial. But I can鈥夆︹塴et people know what鈥檚 happening, so they can help.鈥

Throneberry and Gould get emails from people 鈥斺塶ot just veterans鈥夆斺塮rom around the world. Veterans Radio reaches an estimated 200,000 of the nation鈥檚 22 million veterans a month.

The station鈥檚 variety of programs keeps the show 鈥渇resh.鈥 Says Throneberry, 鈥淲e don鈥檛 get stuck in this continual churning of [depressing] stories about ineptitude and failure.鈥 They said from the beginning this would not be a whiner鈥檚 program. 鈥淥ur job is to let veterans tell their stories, and to tell other stories that are uplifting. They went through hell, came out, and somehow made a life. So it鈥檚 the human spirit we鈥檙e talking about here.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to move ourselves into the present,鈥 he adds, 鈥渁nd talk more to today鈥檚 young veterans. I鈥檓 finding they鈥檙e very similar to Vietnam vets. When they come home, they don鈥檛 want to talk about it; they don鈥檛 think people will understand.鈥

Throneberry, in fact, has his own stories about being shot down twice during combat. He knows the inclination not to talk; these guys never do. But on Veterans Radio, they鈥檙e given the order: Stop being modest. Your stories reveal the sacrifice of military duty and represent those of comrades who didn鈥檛 make it back home.

鈥淧eople need to understand鈥夆︹塿eterans are just regular people who answered the call,鈥 Gould says.

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