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Olson: Man behind T-shirt has great story

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Noah Currier of Poplar Grove started the company Oscar Mike, a company that donates part of its profits to a foundation that helps disabled veterans. The shirt Currier is wearing in the photo caused some controversy this week when a teacher at Genoa Middle School asked a student to turn it inside-out. School officials have apologized. (Submitted photo)

Noah Currier immediately recognized the T-shirt that 14-year-old Genoa Middle School student Michael McIntyre was made to turn inside-out this week.

Currier is a 30-year-old, quadriplegic Marine Corps veteran from Poplar Grove. The company he started in his garage in 2011, Oscar Mike, made the shirt.

“The reality is it was a Marines shirt, and everything the Marines do and stand for is about as patriotic as you can get,” Currier said.

Currier served in the Marine Corps from 2000 to 2004. He found himself deployed to Afghanistan soon after the Sept. 11 attacks. After almost a year there, he returned for a few months to Camp Pendleton, Calif., then was deployed to Kuwait in Dec. 2002. His unit was one of the first to cross the border March 19, 2003, at the start of the war in Iraq.

His deployment lasted only a few months longer before he returned to Camp Pendleton. Only a few days after returning, he was riding in a truck when the Marine driving it fell asleep behind the wheel. The vehicle rolled down a hill. Currier broke his neck.

The armed forces paid for his physical therapy, but when it ran out, he and other troops wanted to keep going. Currier and another injured Marine came up with the idea of making T-shirts, which they sold around their hometowns.

“We sold enough of those shirts to be able to go to another six months of physical therapy,” Currier said.

After he retired from the Marines in 2004, Currier returned to Poplar Grove. The adjustment was difficult, he said. He had been a 6-foot 1-inch Marine in his 20s. He had been active, fit, strong. Now he needed a wheelchair.

Then, some buddies talked him into attending the National Disabled Veterans Winter Sports Clinic put on by the Department of Veterans Affairs and Disabled American Veterans in Colorado. He skied. It was transformative, he said.

“It really changed my life forever, because I got to do something I didn’t think I’d be able to do again, and I loved it,” Currier said. “Once I did that, after that I started doing all sorts of stuff, being involved in all sorts of sports, going skydiving, things that got the wind in your face again.”

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