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8B – Daily News – Monday, April 5, 2010 Vietnam-era photo at cafe unearths memories, emotions (MCT) FORT WORTH, Texas — War has a way of surfacing at the most improbable times and unlikely places. The hostess and wait- resses at the West Side Cafe can attest. Not long ago, on an ordinary, crowded Thursday morning, a man visiting from Ohio came in for a plate of bacon and eggs, saw a photo on the wall and dissolved into tears, unable to speak. The small portrait, just a few steps from the cash register, was of Army Sgt. John E. Miller, a man he had fought to save in a battle in South Vietnam nearly 44 years ago. Within the span of a few minutes, Galen Tay- lor's spring break visit to Fort Worth had trans- formed from seeing the kids and grandkids to reuniting with Miller's family. The process unearthed distant memo- ries and raw emotions — not all of them exactly welcome. "I just couldn't believe seeing that pic- ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● ture down there," Taylor said by phone, having returned to Cincinnati. Miller's sister-in-law, Ada Randall, could hardly believe it either. It was her idea to hang Miller's picture on the cafe wall a few months ago, not expecting to talk to someone who had been among the last to see him alive. "It was like I had got- ten a message from Johnny," she said. "It shook me up for several days." Taylor had no idea of Miller's connections to Fort Worth. Miller's hometown was always listed as West Point, Ill., where he grew up with six sib- lings. In 1954, at 18, he enlisted in the Army and found his way to Fort Wolters in Mineral Wells. That's where he met Bonnie Ashby, who lived in Weatherford with her family. They married on June 1, 1955, in her church in Weath- erford. The Army seemed to take Miller away regu- larly. 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SUNDAY $ Buffet 10.99 All Day DRINKS with coupon FREE Expires 4-30-10 COUPON 343 S. Main St. Red Bluff 530-529-5888 (No Checks) South Korea, another in Germany. His wife and two sons kept their home in Granbury. "They had very little time together, except when he was on leave," Randall said. He arrived in Vietnam in October 1965 as part of the initial buildup of major combat forces. He was with his two best friends from Fort Wolters days — Wade Linder and Vicente Rodriguez, all of them members of Alpha Com- pany, 2nd Battalion, 28th Infantry. Rodriguez was killed May 12, and per his request, Miller had escorted his body from Vietnam back to Pharr in the Rio Grande Valley. Before he headed back, he sat on the porch of Randall's house in Fort Worth. "He didn't think he would come back," Ran- dall said of that conver- sation. "I said, 'Oh, don't say things like that.' " On June 11, 1966, about 9:30 in the morn- ing, Miller was fatally shot in the head just after he single-handedly Miller's body to Granbury, where he was buried by the same min- ister who married him. Linder, who insisted on seeing his friend's body in state, pinned the Silver Star on his uniform and closed the casket forever. "I still remember Eddie running out of the church and waving as they loaded his dad's casket in the hearse," Randall said of Miller's oldest son. Taylor, whose chil- MCT photo Family photographs of Army Sgt.John E.Miller, who died in Vietnam in 1966, lay on a table at the West Side Cafe in Fort Worth,Texas.A man from Ohio came in to the cafe and saw the photo that Miller's sister-in-law, Ada Randall had put up on the wall.Turns out the man had served with Miller the day he died. attacked and silenced a machine gun nest with grenades during a fierce battle in a rubber planta- tion. He earned the Sil- ver Star posthumously for his bravery. Thirty-four men from 2nd Battalion would die that morning in the same firefight. Taylor survived his wounds, received as he Bartlett & Spence Now Available Organic & Heirloom Spring Vegetable Plants 1 1/2 miles South of Red Bluff 12645 Hwy 99E (530) 529-2546 ★★ ★ laid down fire for two other men to retrieve Miller's body. "He was all Army," Taylor said of Miller. "He was there to look out for his men. He was a good man." Miller had been back in Vietnam three days. Linder — the only one of the three best friends still alive — escorted dren have lived in the Fort Worth area for years, had eaten in the West Side Cafe many times. He even ate there several days on this visit. But the difference on that Thursday was that he had to wait for a table, which gave him time to look at the pho- tos on the walls. "I saw this big man just burst into tears," said Angela Rowell, the morning hostess at the cafe. "I asked him, 'Are you OK, sir?' He just pointed at that picture." 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