University of Wisconsin anthropology professor helps Defense Department recover service member remains in Europe
By:
Victor Jacobo
Posted: Dec 15, 2019 9:00 AM CDT

-
1:42
Washington County honors former Germantown star with ’KK Arnold...
-
1:31
Wisconsin native Ty Majeski battling to repeat as NASCAR Trucks...
-
0:56
Milwaukee leaders come together to honor the lives lost to overdose
-
2:33
Dozens drop off flood-damaged items before last day of free services...
-
2:09
1 person dead after vehicle collides with ATV in Milwaukee, suspect...
-
1:41
Schlesinger’s Saturday Showcase (8/30)...One more county fair,...
-
2:30
Ending August on a quiet note but still on the cooler side
-
1:35
High School football highlights 🏈
-
1:33
Welcome Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers! 🏈
-
2:38
Milwaukee Mayor addresses National Guard questions amid national...
-
0:48
Brewers fans come together at Zocalo Food Park for music and...
-
3:02
Amid order to not drink tap water, Williams Bay businesses scramble...
(MADISON) - The University of Wisconsin is helping our nation deliver on its promise to honor brave Americans who paid the ultimate sacrifice by bringing closure to their families. Of the more than 72,000 U.S. service members still unaccounted for from World War Two, the Defense Department says that about 30,000 are possibly recoverable.
On CBS 58 Sunday Morning, Victor Jacobo met UW Anthropology professor Gregg Jamison and members of a team focused on the recovery and identification of U.S. forces still unaccounted for.
Sign up for the CBS 58 Newsletter