For 58 years, Margie Griswold of Marietta never gave up hope. It was Nov. 27, 1950, that her brother was reported missing in action in the Korean War. It was December 2008 that his remains finally were identified, thanks to a gold tooth and DNA on file from his family. "It was one of those closure moments you could write a story about," said her son-in-law, Keith Hoffmann of Fayetteville. The MIA status of Griswold's brother, U.S. Army Cpl. Samuel C. Harris Jr., 21, of Rogersville, Tenn., was never talked about in her family, said Griswold, who grew up as Ruth Harris in Rogersville. Harris' mother died thinking he was still alive because no body had been found.