The Marines of B Company made the front page of the newspaper when they marched down the street in downtown Duluth. They were two-hundred-twenty-seven young men in uniform, on their way to the train station. That was the summer of 1950, and the Korean War had just started. The men in B Company were Marine reserves, and they'd been called up for active duty. One month after they got on the train in Duluth, half of them were in combat. Eighty-percent of the men in "B Company" were wounded or injured in Korea. Ten of them died in battle. Sunday is the 50th anniversary of the end of the Korean War. The surviving members of B Company are getting ready to unveil a monument on the shore of Lake Superior. They say most Americans don't know about *their* war. Minnesota Public Radio's Chris Julin has this documentary report: "B Company from Duluth."