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This undated image provided by The National WWII Museum, shows a photo Harold E. Ward presented to his girlfriend at the time as a gift. Executives with the New Orleans museum say creating a vast online digital collection of 9,000 existing oral and written histories will take longer than the war was fought - 10 years and $11 million dollars. First-person accounts of Pearl Harbor, the D-Day invasion, Germany’s surrender, Iwo Jima, Hiroshima and more will ultimately be online for researchers and the wider world to peruse. (Brian T. Ward/Courtesy of The National WWII Museum via AP)

This undated image provided by The National WWII Museum, shows a photo Harold E. Ward presented to his girlfriend at the time as a gift. Executives with the New Orleans museum say creating a vast online digital collection of 9,000 existing oral and written histories will take longer than the war was fought - 10 years and $11 million dollars. First-person accounts of Pearl Harbor, the D-Day invasion, Germany’s surrender, Iwo Jima, Hiroshima and more will ultimately be online for researchers and the wider world to peruse. (Brian T. Ward/Courtesy of The National WWII Museum via AP)

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