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Abanto, Capt. Rizalito
Acheson, Dean
A Company, 1st Battalion
Ahn Jom (hamlet)
Almond, Maj. Gen. Edward
American Psychiatric Association
Anderson, Thomas
Andrews Sisters
anti-communism
in South Korea
in U.S.
Appleman, Roy E.
Army Field Manual 7–40: Infantry Regiment
Army Times
Associated Press
investigates and publishes No Gun Ri story
Atomic weapons
atrocity in war
Australian air force
AutoTrack
Autumn Wind Pass
Bank of Japan
Barnett, Lacy
Bataan Death March
Bernotas (father of Ralph)
Bernotas, Ralph
after war
arrives in Korea
background of
in Japan
war experiences
wounded
Berry, Sidney
Berryman, Elzondo
Big Foot Riders
Big Foot Survivors Association
Blackwell, Maybelle
Blair, Clay
Blalock, Aulton E.
Boehm, John “Pop”
Bohlender, Otto R.
Bollinger, Royal
Boyd, Tom
Boylan, Richard
Boyle, Hal
Bradley, Gen. Omar N.
Britain
Brumagen, Pfc. Dan
Buchanan, Crawford
Buckley, Christopher
Buddhism
Burrow, Sgt. Lonnie
Burton, Joseph
Byles, Second Lt. Edwin M., Jr.
Callaway, Lt. Col. John W.
Calley, First Lt. William L., Jr.
Carroll, Robert M.
CBS News
CDB Infotek
Central Intelligence Agency, U.S.
Chandler, Capt. Melbourne Caldwell “Mel”
history of 7th Cav by
Chang Hae-ja
Chang Hae-soon
Chang Sang-ryol
Chang Soon-yi
Cheju island
Cheyenne Indians
Chiba prefecture (Japan)
China, Communist
invades North Korea
MacArthur advocates war against
Chinnampo, seized
Cho (baby)
Choe, Sang-Hun
Choi Sang-joon
Cho Koon-ja
Cho Nam-il
Cho Nam-joo
Chongju District Compensation Committee
Cho Soo-ja
Cho Sun In Min Bo (newspaper)
Christianity
Chu Gok Ri (village)
American soldiers arrive at
at beginning of war
burned
evacuated
family life in
Japanese occupation of
“March 1 Protests” of 1919 in
politics and repression in
refugees enter
after war
Chun Choon-ja (daughter of Chun Soon-pyo and Kim Ae-shim)
Chun Doo-hwan
Chung Chan-young
Chung Eun-yong (husband of Park Sun-yong)
aftermath of No Gun Ri and
book by
experiences of, during No Gun Ri
journalist contacts
letter and petition to Clinton
life of, before war
on Pentagon report
petitions for compensation
Chung family
Chung Hee-yong (father of Chung Koo-il)
Chung Hyun-mok (second cousin of Yang Hae-sook)
Chung Jin-myong
Chung Jong-ja (daughter of Chung Kwan-yong)
Chung Koo-do (son of Chung Eun-yong and Park Sun-yong)
Chung Koo-hak (brother of Chung Koo-hun)
Chung Koo-hee (daughter of Chung Eun-yong and Park Sun-yong)
Chung Koo-ho
Chung Koo-hong (brother of Chung Koo-il)
Chung Koo-hun (brother of Chung Koo-hak)
helps Koo-hak after war
Chung Koo-il (son of Chung Hee-yong; brother of Chung Koo-ok)
Chung Koo-ok (daughter of Chung Hee-yong; sister of Chung Koo-il)
Chung Koo-pil (son of Chung Eun-yong and Park Sun-yong)
Chung Koo-shik
Chung Koo-sook (daughter of Chung Eun-yong and Park Sun-yong)
Chung Koo-soon (sister of Chung Koo-hak and Chung Koo-hun)
Chung Koo-sung (son of Chung Kwan-yong)
Chung Koo-yon (sister of Chung Koo-il)
Chung Kum-yong (brother of Chung Eun-yong)
Chung Kun-yong (brother of Chung Eun-yong)
Chung Kwan-yong (brother of Chung Eun-yong)
Chung Kyong-yong
Chung Myong-ja (sister of Chung Koo-hak and Chung Koo-hun)
Chung Shin-woong
Chung Soon-ja (daughter of Chung Kwan-yong))
Chung Soon-rye (daughter of Chung Kwan-yong))
Chung Soon-yong (sister of Chung Eun-yong)
Chung Ssang-yong (father of Chung Koo-hun and Chung Koo-hak)
Chung Tae-gu (sister of Chung Koo-il)
Chung Tae-nyon (father of Chung Eun-yong)
Chung Young-sook (sister of Chung Koo-hun)
Chun Joon-pyo (uncle of Chun Choon-ja)
Chun Joo-sup
Chun Kyong-moon (grandfather of Chun Choon-ja)
Chun Ok-boon (aunt of Chun Choon-ja)
Chun Soon-pyo (father of Chun Choon-ja)
Chun Tae-sung (brother of Chun Choon-ja, “Great Success”)
Chun Wook (reporter)
civilian refugees (“people in white”). See also No Gun Ri; orders to kill civilians
Air Force attacks on
allegations of killings of, silenced
AP reports on deaths of
Army War College study refers to strafing of
blown up on Naktong bridges
confusion at headquarters about handling
evacuation of
events of July 25 and
flee from Yongdong
Gay and
infiltrators rumored to be among
killings of, in Korea vs. Vietnam
killings of, reported during war
killings of, reported in American histories of war
lack of training on how to handle
leafleting of
at Naktong River
number of deaths of
official war diary and
orders on handling of
orders to shoot
psychological problems of veterans and
suspicion and mistreatment of
war diaries on attacks on “infiltrators” among
“woman with radio” report on
Clair, Cpl. Alfred B.
Clinton, Bill
petition to
Clinton, Hillary Rodham
CNN
Cohen, William
Cold War
Cole, Dick
Collins, Gen. Joseph Lawton
Collins, William T. “Bill”
Combat Forces Journal
“comfort women”
Communists. See also anti-communism
calls for global war against
in North Korea
promises of, to South Koreans
suppression of, in South Korea
Confucianism
“containment” policy
Cooprider, Rev. E. T.
Croft, Maj. Lucian
Crosby, Bing
Crume, James
Crump, Ronald W.
Cumings, Bruce
Custer, Lt. Col. George Armstrong
Daily, Edward L.
Daniel, Marvin
David C. Shanks (US Navy transport)
“dead valleys” report by Murrow
Dean, (Bernotas’s buddy)
Dean, Maj. Gen. William F.
Defense Department, U.S.
Democratic People’s Republic. See North Korea
Denis, Pfc. Leon L.
Dodd, Leighton
Doody, John J.
Dot (Wenzel’s girl)
Down, Donald D.
Downey, Earl C.
Do You Know Our Agony? (Chung Eun-yong)
Drumright, Everett F.
Dulles, John Foster
Durham, Melvin
Dutton, Patricia
Early, George W.
Edwards, Lt. Col. Bob E.
E Company (Easy Company)
Eighth Army
casualties
chain of command chart of
communiqué, of July 21
intelligence staff
meets Chinese army
No Gun Ri reports and
officers of
orders to fire on refugees
orders to stop refugees and
report after No Gun Ri
refugee policy of
8th Cavalry Regiment
orders to shoot civilians and
Eisenhower, Gen. Dwight D.
Elkins, James
Embassy at War (Noble)
Ent, Uzal
Far East Command (Tokyo)
No Gun Ri reports and
“war crimes” and
F Company (Fox Company)
Fellers, Brig. Gen. Bonner F.
Fetter, David
Fifth Air Force
5th Cavalry Regiment
Filipino independence movement
Finazzo, John
Findley, Lois (later McKown)
1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment
1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment
1st Battalion, 29th Infantry Regiment
1st Cavalry Division
attacks civilians and South Korean soldiers
casualities in
communications of, with 7th Cav
in Japan
in Korea
No Gun Ri and
orders to fire on refugees and
poor performance of
poor training of
Yongdong and
Flint, Pfc. Delos K.
Flynn, Errol
Fontana, Alan
14th Engineer Combat Battalion
Freedom of Information Act
friendly fire
Gallup survey
Garland, Judy
“Garryowen” (tune)
Gay, Maj. Gen. Hobart R. “Hap”
correspondence with Appleman
G Company (George Company)
General Sherman (ship)
Germany
Giannelli, Cpl. Rudolph “Rudy”
Gibbs, Sgt. Lyle R.
Gingrich, Newt
“gooks”
term picked up
used in Korea
used in Vietnam
war crimes and
Gore, Al
Gray, Sgt. Robert C. “Snuffy”
orders by Nist and
ordered to kill wounded soldiers
reunions and
in Vietnam
Greek units
Grossman, Lt. Col. Dave
Hacha, Cpl. Thomas H.
Ha Ga Ri (village)
Hague Treaty of 1907
Hanley, Charles J.
Han River bridge
Han Soon-suk
Han Yang-sok
Han Young-ok
Harris, Lt. Col. William A. “Wild Bill”
Harry S. Truman Library
Haskell, Jack
H Company (How Company)
Headquarters (HQ) Company
Herschaft, Randy
Hersh, Seymour
Hesselman, Cpl. Eugene S. “Gene”
Heyer, Lt. Col. Herbert B.
Hideyoshi (Japanese shogun)
Hill 300
Hill 303
Hill 314
“Hill of the Japanese Barbarians”
Hirohito, Emperor
Hiroshima
Hiss, Alger
Hitchner, Maj. Omar T.
Hodge, Lt. Gen. John R.
Hodges, Cauley
Hodges, Decar “De” (later Wenzel)
Hodges, Dorothy
Hodges, Eula Mae
Hodges, James Lamarr
Hodges, Juanita (later Royal)
Hong Won-ki
Hope, Bob
Hopkins, Capt. Walter
House Un-American Activities Committee
Huff, Lt. Col. Gilmon Augustus “Gil”
Huff, Nina Hicks
Hunter, Art
Hunter, Ruby
Hwachon Dam
Hwang Eun-yon (mother of Chung Koo-hun and Chung Koo-hak)
Hwanggan (town)
Hwang Sam-ryang
Im Ke Ri (village)
American soldiers arrive at
ancestor day in
at beginning of war
Chu Gok Ri villagers move to
evacuated
North Korean occupation
police and guerrillas near
refugees arrive at
Inchon landing
Indian Country Today (newspaper)
Indian Wars
Ipock, Pfc. Joseph
Jackman, Joseph
Jacobson, Pfc. Lyle W.
Japan
American racism and
colonial rule in Korea
early invasion of Korea by
postwar occupation of
rearmed
WW II and
Japanese Communist Party
Johnson, Robert W.
Jong-boon (girl)
journalists
on civilian casualties
on No Gun Ri
self-censorship by
Kaluf, Second Lt. William C. “Bill”
Kean, Maj. Gen. William B.
order on civilians found
Keene, Clyde
Kennan, George
Kerns, James T.
killing, mechanisms that facilitate
Kim Ae-shim (mother of Chun Choon-ja)
Kim Bok-hee
Kim Bok-jong
Kim Boo-eui
Kimchon (city)
Kim Dae-jung (president)
Kim Dong-dae
Kim Hak-joong
Kim Hong-ki (servant in Chung Eun-yong’s family)
Kim Il Sung (North Korean leader)
Kim Jin-sok
Kim Jong Il (son of Kim Il Sung)
Kim Ke-soon
Kim Kook-hun (son of Chung Koo-yon)
Kim Myong-june
Kim (old villager), death of
Kim Suk-jin (grandmother of Chun Choon-ja)
Kim Sung-ja (daughter of Chung Koo-yon)
Kim Young-sam (president)
King, O.H.P.
Kinsman, Sgt. Carroll F.
Kiyo (Don McFarland’s girlfriend)
Kleinman, Col. Forrest K.
Klinedinst, Edwin
Kobe riots
Korea. See also North Korea; South Korea Americans in, after WW II
army assigns little value to
civil war foreseen
division of
elections of 1946
family structure in
history of
Japanese colonial rule in
names in
provisional republic dissolved
unified state, American-Soviet meetings on
village life in, during WW II
Korea Institute for Military History
“Korea night,” at White House (1995)
Korean National Farmers’ Committee
Korean New People’s Party (communists)
Korean Righteous Army
Koreans
distrusted by Americans
Japanese and
Korean War
American troops brought in
Army caught off guard by
Army declines to term “war”
casualties
decisions to enter
impact of, in U.S.
Korean War veterans
located by AP staff
psychological problems of
reports of atrocities by
return home
reunions of
Korean War Veterans Association
Korean War Veterans Memorial
Korean Workers’ Party
Koryo dynasty
Kum Cho-ja
Kum River
Kyongju (ancient capital)
labor unions
Lakota Sioux
land reform
Laney, James T.
Lawrence, W. H.
Leavitt, Charles
Lee Bok-hun
Lee Byong-hoi
Lee Choong-keun
Lee Do-young
Lee Duk-hwan
Lee Duk-soo
Lee Hwang-hoon
Lee Ja-sun (grandmother of Yang Hae-sook)
Lee Ok-soon
Lee Soon-kum (mother of Chung Koo-il)
Lee Soon-yi (mother of Yang Hae-sook)
Lee Won-hee
Lee Young-ja (aunt of Chun Choon-ja)
Lee Young-ja (daughter of Park Hee-soon, niece of Park Hee-sook)
Lee Young-jong
leftist guerrillas
LeMay, Gen. Curtis E.
“Letter to the Men of the Eighth Army” (Ridgway, 1951)
Levie, Col. Howard
Levine, Sgt. Lawrence “Larry”
Liberation Daily (newspaper)
Lippincott, John C.
Little Bighorn, Battle of
Lloyd, Donald
London Daily Worker
Looking Elk, Rev. Simon
McAnany, Joseph A. “Joe”
MacArthur, Gen. Arthur
MacArthur, Gen. Douglas
desegregation of Army and
handling of refugees and
message from 8th Army to
occupation of Japan and
political prisoners and
relieved of Far East command
ROK and
start of Korean War and
visit to Taegu on July 27
McCarthy, Joseph M.
McCloskey, Paul N. “Pete” Jr.
McClure, James
MacFarland, Pfc. Donald J.
McKinley, Russell
McKown, Lois
McKown, William N. “Bill”
McManus, Francis
Mantle, Mickey
Mao Tse-tung
“March 1 Protests” of 1919
Matthews, Francis P.
Matthias, Henry
Mehl, Louis S.
Mendoza, Martha
Meredith, Roy L.
Merlin
Michener, James
Milam, Capt. James
Miles, Lt. Gen. Nelson A.
Miller, Reid G.
Miller, Walter D.
Millett, Allan R.
Min Eun-soon (daughter-in-law of Yang Ke-soon)
Min Young-ok (wife of Chung Kwan-yong)
missionaries
Mitchum, Robert
Monroe, Marilyn
Moon Wan-shik
Murrow, Edward R.
My Lai massacre
Nagasaki
Naktong (river)
bridges blown up
refugees try to cross
National Archives, U.S.
National Council of Churches, U.S.
National Personnel Records Center, U.S.
Native Americans
Navy pilots attack refugees
“New Order”
“New Village” movement
New York Public Library
New York Times
Nippon Times
Nist, Col. Cecil W.
Noble, Harold Joyce
Noblet, Kevin
No Gun Ri
aftermath of, for American GIs
aftermath of, for Korean survivors
American histories of Korean War and
AP investigation of
AP story published
Chandler’s history of 7th Cav and
Chung Eun-yong presses claims about, after war
civilian deaths at, not reported in official diary
civilians evacuated to
death toll at
early reports on
events of July 25–26 at, 120–46GIs hear rumors of killings at
map of
Pentagon report on
post-traumatic stress disorder, of victims
reporting on, after publication of Chung Eun-yong’s book
2nd Battlion, 7th Cavalry positioned at
survivors’ committee and petition
survivors’ lives, after war
survivors’ memorial ceremony
survivors warned not to talk about
train trestle at
U.S. officers learn about
victims list
villagers claim of massacre at
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
North Korea (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea)
bombing of
CIA opposes invading
civilian deaths in
invades South
map of
newspaper articles, of 1950
republic declared, in 1948
Soviet Union and
after war
North Korean People’s Army
communication about No Gun Ri
first GI encounters with
moves into No Gun Ri
survivors of No Gun Ri and
suspected of infiltrating refugees
10th Division
3rd Division
wounded killed
North Koreans
political prisoners killed by
popularity of, among South Korean villagers
racism of Americans toward
O’Donnell, Maj. Gen. Emmett, Jr.
Of Garryowen in Glory (Chandler)
One Minute to Zero (movie)
On Killing (Grossman)
order to blow up Naktong bridges
orders to kill civilians
Air Force and
battalion log and
declassified military documents and
evacuation orders and
found by AP reporters
Gay and
July 24 and
at Naktong River
Kean and
Pentagon report on
7th Cavalry Regiment and
soldiers’ revulsion at
orders to stop civilians
Osgood, Cornelius
Palmer, Gen. Charles D.
Palmer, Col. Raymond D.
Pang Sun-joo
Park Chang-ha
Park Chang-rok
Park Chang-soo
Park Choon-ja
Park Chung-ha (cousin of Yang Hae-sook)
Park Chung-hee
Park Hee-moon (mother of Chung Eun-yong)
Park Hee-soo (brother of Park Hee-sook)
Park Hee-sook (daughter of Park June-ha and Sohn Soon-nam)
Park Hee-soon (sister of Park Hee-sook)
Park Hee-un (sister of Park Hee-sook)
Park Hwa-ja (cousin of Yang Hae-sook)
Park Hwa-soon (cousin of Yang Hae-sook)
Park Jong-dong
Park June-ha (father of Park Hee-sook)
Park Ne-eung (uncle of Yang Hae-sook)
Park Sang-ja (cousin of Yang Hae-sook)
Park Soon-nam
Park Sun-yong (wife of Chung Eun-yong)
birth of children
events leading up to No Gun Ri and
life of, after No Gun Ri
life of, after war
at No Gun Ri
at outbreak of war
publication of story and
wedding of
Patterson, Herman W.
Patton, George S.
Pauley, Edwin
Pentagon
report of January 2001
“people’s committees”
“people’s courts”
Philippines
Picasso, Pablo
Pius XII, Pope
Poland
“police action,” term coined
political prisoners
North Koreans and
South Koreans and
Port, Bob
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
of American veterans
of victims in Korea
Powhida, Lt. Col. J.P.
Preece, Sgt. George D.
prisoners of war
American, in Korea
in World War II
prostitution, in Japan
Pusan
“Pusan Perimeter”
Pyongyang (city)
Provisional People’s Committee, Pyongyang
Quang Ngai Province (Vietnam)
race and racism
GIs of Asian descent and
killing in war and
Koreans in Japan and
U.S. Army and
Ramirez, Sgt. John M.
rapes of Korean women
“Rape of Nanking”
Record Group 338 (Records of U.S. Army Commands)
Record Group 407 (Records of the Adjutant General’s Office; Korean War Command Reports)
Representative Democratic Council of Koreans
Republicans, U.S.
Republic of Korea. See South Korea
Republic of Korea army (ROKs, South Korean Army)
casualties caused by U.S. forces
collapse of
distrust of, by Gay
MacArthur and
rebellions of 1948
17th Regiment
Resor, Stanley
Rhee, Syngman
fall of
retreat of
unpopularity of
villagers accused of leftist sympathies and
“rice rent”
Ridgway, Lt. Gen. Matthew B.
Rogers, Col. Turner C.
memo of
Roh Tae-woo
Roosevelt, Theodore
Rose, Lisle A.
Rosenheck, Dr. Robert A.
Royal, Juanita. See Hodges, Juanita
Rush, Susan Huff
Rusk, Dean
Russell, Robert G.
Sachang (village)
Salvation Army
Salvation Army Hospital
Samni-dong (hamlet)
Sayonara (Michener)
Schacter, Jacob
“scorched earth” campaigns
in Vietnam
2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry
casualties in
civilians killed by
fight Chinese in North Korea
fight on Naktong line
fight in North Korea
identified as responsible for No Gun Ri
in Japan
lands in South Korea
at No Gun Ri
panic of, on July 26
retreats to Tuksong-dong
transported to warfront
2nd Battalion, 8th Cavalry
2nd Infantry Division
segregation
Seo Song Won (hamlet)
Seoul
7th Cavalry Regiment (Garryowens). See also 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry; 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry
casualties in
command of, given to Harris
communications log vanishes
drives North
fighting north of Taegu
fights Chinese army
“Garryowen” adopted by
history of
in Japan
journalists and
lacks training and equipment
lands in South Korea
at No Gun Ri
ordered to shoot civilians
outbreak of Korean war and
Pusan Perimeter and
regimental war diary of
retreat of, after No Gun Ri
reunions of
segregation of
sent to Korea
sent to Korean front lines
status of enemy contact, July 26–29
Wolakota reconciliation and
wins unit citation
Shakespeare
Sheehan, First Lt. John E.
Shin, Paul
Silliman, Scott
Sioux Indians
Smith, Glenn
Smith, Lt. Col. Charles
Sohn Seok-tae
Sohn Soon-nam (mother of Park Hee-sook)
Solis, Gary D.
South Korea (Republic of Korea)
anti-leftist repression in
crusade of, against communism
declared separate republic
democracy movement in
elections of 1952; of 1960; of 1987; of 1992
invaded by North
map of
national anti-communist coalition
student activism in
U.S. “defense perimeter” and
U.S. military government in
after Korean War
South Korean Army. See Republic of Korea army (ROKs)
South Korean Cabinet
South Korean Defense Ministry
South Korean Military Police (MPs)
South Korean National Assembly
South Korean police
South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu (Army history of Korean conflict)
Soviet Union
atomic bomb and
North Korea and
Spanish-American War
Spiroff, Sgt. Bob
Stalin, Joseph
Stars and Stripes
State Department, U.S.
Status of Forces Agreement
Stephens, Col. Richard
Steward, Harold D.
Suh family
Suh Jong-ja
Suh Jong-koo
Sullivan, Walter
Summers, Col. Harry G., Jr.
Supreme Commander Allied Powers (SCAP)
“Supreme Grief” (papal encyclical of July 26)
Suwon (town)
Swinton, Stan
Taedong River
Taegu (city)
meeting on refugees in
Taejon (city)
“Tailwind, Operation”
“Task Force Smith”
They Died with Their Boots On (movie)
3rd Battalion, 7th Cavalry
3rd Engineers
38th Parallel
chosen
clashes at
map
North invades across
38th Infantry Regiment
35th Fighter-Bomber Squadron
35th Infantry Regiment
34th Infantry Regiment
Thompson, Hugh
Timberlake, Brig. Gen. Edward L.
Tinkler, Norman L.
Tojo, Hideki
Tokyo
Trainor, Marine Lt. Gen. Bernard E.
Traylor, William
Trevathan, Louis B.
Truman, Harry S.
address on war with communism
anti-communism and
desegregation of Army and
division of Korea and
elections and
Korean War and
MacArthur and
military budget and
Vietnam and
“Truman year”
Tuksong Bridge
Tuksong-dong, battle at
Turkish units
25th Infantry Division
civilians killed in sector
orders on refugees
21st Infantry Regiment
24th Infantry Division
Tydings, Sen. Millard
“Uijongbu Corridor”
United Nations
Allied Command
Security Council
United Press
United States
anti-communism in
criminal jurisdiction over forces in Korea
Japanese colonial rule and
sends troops to Korea
popular support for war collapses
U.S. Air Force
attacks civilians under orders
attacks South Korean 1st Division
“scorched earth” policy of
U.S. Air Force Historical Research Agency
U.S. Armed Forces Claims Service
U.S. Armed Forces Radio Service
U.S. Army. See also specific battalions, companies, divisions, and regiments
advisers
budget reduced
chain of command, in Korea
intelligence, and Taejon killings
in Korea after WW II
lack of combat training
lack of equipment
medical officers
military government in Korea
occupation of Japan and
officers’ lack of experience
official history of war
racism in
records researched by Chung Eun-yong
report of January 2001
in Vietnam
U.S. Army General Staff
U.S. Army Map Service
U.S. Army Military History Institute
U.S. Army War College study
U.S. Board of Veterans Appeals
U.S. Congress
elections of 1950
My Lai massacre and
Sioux and
wartime concentration camps and
U.S. Embassy, South Korea, files of
U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff
U.S. Marines
U.S. military. See also specific branches and units
attitude toward Koreans
censorship by
criticism of
desire to “kill Japanese soldier”
early arrivals in Korea
government, in South Korea
records on Taejon political prisoners
in South Korea after 1953
“superiority complex”
Taegu uprisings and
troops sent to Korean War
U.S. Navy
U.S. News & World Report
U.S. Senate
Valley Forge (USS)
action report
Veterans Administration (later Veterans Affairs Department)
veterans. See Korean War veterans; Vietnam veterans
Vietnam
atrocities in, vs. Korean War
Korean War as prelude to
South Korean troops in
Vietnam veterans
Waegwan
Waegwan bridge
blown up
plaque at
Walker, Lt. Gen. Walton H. “Johnnie”
war crimes investigations
Warthen, Maj. John G.
Washington Daily News
Washington Post
Washita, Battle of the
Wenzel, Albert, Sr. (father of Buddy)
Wenzel, Albert (brother of Buddy)
Wenzel, Decar Hodges “De” (wife of Buddy)
Wenzel, Leonard B. “Buddy”
aftermath of war for
death of Hodges and
on drive north
family background of
history of 7th Cavalry and
letter writing by
on No Gun Ri
in occupied Japan
return home
sent to Korea
on war experiences
wounded
Wenzel, Leonard James, Jr. (son of Buddy)
Wenzel, Lydia
West, Capt. Herman L.
White, Kelly B.
White Horse Mountain
Willoughby, Maj. Gen. Charles A.
Wilson, Woodrow
Wolakota reconciliation
Women’s Alliance
Wong, Cpl. Suey Lee
Wong, Eva
Wooksoo (village)
World War II
Wounded Knee massacre
Wyrick, William
X Corps
yangban (Korean elite)
Yang family
evacuated by American GIs
at No Gun Ri
Yang Hae-chan (brother of Yang Hae-sook)
Yang Hae-sook (daughter of Yang Ho-young; “Kum Yi” or “Golden Girl”)
Yang Hae-yong (brother of Yang Hae-sook)
Yang Hae-young (brother of Yang Hae-sook)
Yang Ho-young (father of Yang Hae-sook)
Yang Ke-soon (aunt of Yang Hae-sook)
Yang Mal-soon (aunt of Yang Hae-sook)
Yang Sung-bok
Yang Young-jo
Yeosoo rebellion
Yi dynasty
Yongdok (town), fight for
Yongdong (town)
destruction of
fighting in
guerrillas in
Japanese occupation of
Yonhap news agency
Yoshiko (Bernotas’s girlfriend)
Your Own Beloved Sons (Anderson)
Yul (village)
zaibatsu (Japanese monopolies)