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Correction: Trump-World War II Veterans story

President Donald Trump is joined by World War II veterans, seated from left, Sidney Walton, Allen Jones, Paul Kriner and Floyd Wigfield, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Thursday, April 11, 2019. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Original Publication Date April 11, 2019 - 12:06 PM

WASHINGTON - In a story April 11 about President Donald Trump meeting with four World War II veterans, The Associated Press reported an erroneous hometown for Allen Jones, based on inaccurate information provided by the White House. Jones is from Dunbar, Pennsylvania.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Trump hosts Oval Office celebration for 4 World War II vets

President Donald Trump treated 4 World War II veterans to an Oval Office meeting Thursday, fulfilling a birthday wish for 95-year-old Allen Jones and giving three other centenarian veterans a day to remember

By KEVIN FREKING

Associated Press

President Donald Trump treated four World War II veterans to an Oval Office meeting Thursday, fulfilling a birthday wish for 95-year-old Allen Jones and giving three other veterans age 100 and older a day to remember.

One of the men, 101-year-old Floyd Wigfield, of Cumberland, Maryland, managed to win a promise from the president for a return flight on Air Force One following this June's ceremony marking the 75th anniversary of D-Day and the Battle of Normandy. "We'll work that out," Trump said. "You'll like Air Force One."

Trump had met Jones at a Veterans of Foreign Wars convention last year and Jones, of Dunbar, Pennsylvania, asked to spend his birthday with the president. Trump looked happy to oblige, joking with the men and their families, and asking each one to say a few words. When one of the guests presented Trump with a hat and suggested he tweet about it, the president deadpanned: "I don't tweet that much."

Sidney Walton, 100, of San Diego, and a medic in the war, told the president he joined the Army to fight Hitler, prompting Trump to reply: "That was a good reason."

Walton is on what his family called the "No Regrets Tour," a personal mission to visit all 50 states and the White House to educate Americans about World War II veterans.

Paul Kriner, 103, of Chambersburg, Pa., told the president he participated in 517 days of combat. The president told him he didn't look a day over 90.

Kriner and Wigfield are working with the Greatest Generations Foundation, which provides veterans with the chance to memorialize their stories and find closure by returning to visit where they served.

Trump described the men as "great heroes, great warriors, highly respected."

News from © The Associated Press, 2019
The Associated Press

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