Conduct Under Fire

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Conduct Under Fire Page 86

by John A. Glusman

Sakaba, Colonel

  Sakagami Jin’ichirō

  Sakai Saburō

  Sakakida, Richard

  SakamotoLieutenant

  Saki (orderly at Kōbe POW Hospital)

  Sanchez, Dr.

  Sanders, Cecil M.

  Sanders, Philip Earl

  Sartin, Lea B. “Old Man”

  at Bilibid

  assignments

  Memorial Day service

  on shortages of food and drugs

  transfer to Cabanatuan POW Camp

  at Cabanatuan POW Camp

  letter to Glusman on adjustment to civilian life

  Sassoon, Siegfried

  Satō, Lieutenant

  Satō Gempachi

  Sawamura Masatoshi

  Sawfish (submarine)

  Sayre, Francis B.

  Scecina, Thomas J.

  Schaeffer, Max W.

  Schwartz, Jack

  Schweizer, Earl G.

  Scott, Irvin C., Jr.

  Scott, Warwick

  Seadragon (submarine)

  Seagrave, Peggy

  Seagrave, Sterling

  Sealion (submarine)

  Seater, James

  Sekiguchi Hisashi

  Seki Yukio

  Senō Kappa

  Shanghai

  Shanghai Sunday Times

  Shark (submarine)

  Shark II (submarine)

  Sharp, William F.

  Shearer, Clarence

  Sheats, Robert C.

  Sherrell, Walter

  Shiga Kiyoshi

  Shigemitsu Mamoru

  Shiizaki Jirō

  Shiki Haruko

  Shikisan Maru (ship)

  Shimada Kaichi

  Shima Kiyohide

  Shinagawa POW Hospital

  Shinsei Maru (ship)

  Shiozumi (guard at Tsumori)

  Shofner, Austin C.

  Showers, Donald

  Si Kiang (ship)

  Silverman, Sam

  Simpson, Carter

  Simpson, R. W.

  Skerry, Harry A.

  “Slap Happy Larry” (guard at Ichioka POW Hospital)

  Slaughterhouse Five (Vonnegut)

  Smeallie, John M.

  Smith, Alfred Littlefield “Smitty,”

  Smith, Carey Miller

  at Bataan

  at Bilibid

  at Cavite

  at Corregidor

  transport to Japan

  Smith, Charles

  Smith, Ezra

  Smith, Jacob

  Smith, Private

  Smith, Stanley W.

  at Bilibid Prison

  evacuation of patients from Osaka Red Cross Hospital

  at Ichioka POW Hospital

  at Kōbe POW Hospital

  at Maruyama POW Camp

  repatriation of

  transport to Japan

  at Tsumori (Osaka No. 1 Headquarters Camp)

  Smith, Travis J.

  snafu (term)

  Snook (submarine)

  Snyder, Wilburn

  Spaatz, Carl “Tooey,”

  Spearfish (submarine)

  Spiegel, Herbert

  Spielhoffer, Sergeant

  Sprague, Clifton

  Stamp, Loren

  Stark, Harold Raynsford

  Stassen, Harold E.

  Steele, Archibald

  Steele, Benjamin Charles

  Sternberg General Hospital

  Stewart, Alvin E.

  Stillman, Jules

  Stilwell, Joseph W. “Vinegar Joe,”

  Stimson, Henry Lewis

  Stingray (submarine)

  Stobaugh (escapee from Cabanatuan POW Camp)

  Stradley, Bernard

  Strangman, William L.

  Straub, Ruth

  Strobing, Irving

  Strong, Commander

  Suehiro Satoro

  Sugahara, Captain

  Sugino Minemaru

  Sugiyama Gen

  Sutherland, Richard K.

  Suzuki Kantarō

  Suzuki Shō

  Sweeney, Thomas F.

  Tabaniag, Master Sergeant

  Taft, Robert A.

  Taft, William Howard

  Taiten Maru (ship)

  Takanaka, Lieutenant

  Takasaki, Major

  Takata Fujika

  Takatsu Toshimitsu

  Take (ship)

  Takechi Susumu

  Takeuchi, Captain

  Tamai Asaichi

  Tamura (doctor at Cabanatuan POW Camp)

  Tamura Toshiko

  Tanaka Shizuichi

  Tanaka Yuki

  Tango Maru (ship)

  Taniguchi Kureo

  Tasaki Hanama

  Taylor, Henry Longstreet

  Taylor, Tom

  Templon, Foster H.

  Tenshin Maru (ship)

  Terada Seichi

  They Call It Pacific (Lee)

  They Were Expendable (White)

  Thompson, Burton C.

  Thompson, “Tommie,”

  Tisdelle, Achille C., Jr.

  Tōgō Shigenori

  Tōjō Hideki

  Tokonaya, Sergeant

  Tokugawa Ieyasu

  Tōkyō, bombing of

  Tomonaga Kiyoko

  Toshino Junsaburō “Liver Lips,”

  Toyoda Soemu

  Toyokuni Maru (ship)

  Treskon, Stephen J.

  Trujillo, John B.

  Truman, Harry S.

  Tsuchibashi Yūichi

  Tsuji Hideko

  Tsuji Kayoko

  Tsuji Masanobu

  Tsuji Shūji

  Tsuji Tadahiro

  Tsuji Tsuruyo

  Tsukioka Yoshio

  Tsumori (Osaka No. 1 Headquarters Camp)

  Tsunehiro Nariyoshi

  Tsuneyoshi Yoshio

  Tudjman, Franjo

  Tuohy, William

  Turner, Houston

  Twain, Mark

  Uchiyama Eitarō

  Uemura Seitaro

  Ueyanagi Isamu

  Ullom, Madeline

  Umali, Vicente

  Umezu Yōshijirō

  United States, U.S. forces

  Asiatic Fleet

  campaigns and offensives

  attacks on shipping vessels

  bombing, holdout for unconditional surrender

  Caroline Islands, attack on Truk

  4th Marine Regiment Hiroshima bombing

  Japanese Home Islands invasion

  Kōbe bombing

  Leyte Gulf, Battle for

  Marianas, capture of Saipan

  Nagasaki bombing

  Naval Battalion

  Normandy landing

  Okinawa capture

  Osaka bombing

  Philippine Sea, Battle of

  propaganda leaflet drop over Japanese cities

  Rabaul neutralization

  73rd Bomb Wing

  Solomons counteroffensive

  Tōkyō bombing

  civilians, American

  characterizations of Japanese

  civilian defense, homeland activities

  internment of Japanese-Americans

  civilians, Japanese, policy concerning attacks on

  following Japanese surrender

  failure to hold Japan accountable

  homeland celebration

  Potsdam Declaration

  review of surrender documents

  San Francisco Peace Treaty

  settlements for POWs and Japanese-

  American internees

  war criminals, interrogation of

  war criminals, pardon of

  intelligence systems

  medical education in

  press accounts of war progress

  wartime economy and productivity

  weapons, armaments

  atomic bomb

  B-29 Superfortress

  M-69 incendiaries, napalm

  Victory production program

 
Yangtze Patrol

  Uno, Kazumaro “Buddy,”

  Urabe, K.

  Ushijima Mitsuru

  Usui Sōcho

  Vance, John R. “Jack,”

  van Couenhoven, H. W.

  Vargas, Jorge

  Victorio, Ramon

  Villamor, Jesus

  Villanueva, Maxima

  Volckmann, Russell W.

  Volkan, Vamik

  Vonnegut, Kurt, Jr.

  Wada Kinsuke

  Wada Shinken

  Wada Shūsuke

  Wade, Ernest Marion

  Wade, Private

  Wainwright, Jonathan M. “Skinny”

  attack against Japanese at Olongapo

  at Bataan

  at Corregidor

  acceptance of troops from Bataan

  during air raid

  assumption of command, popularity with troops

  capture of

  correspondence with governor of Malta

  damage to hearing

  on deterioration of situation

  determination to defend

  on Japanese nighttime landing

  and King’s surrender

  on MacArthur’s evacuation

  request for medical supplies and evacuations

  surrender

  tactics employed

  invitation to Japanese surrender ceremony

  on status of Philippine Army

  transfer to POW camp in Tarlac

  Wakayama POW Camp

  Wake (formerly Guam) (ship)

  Waldrum, Everett R.

  Wallace, Richard

  war crimes

  destruction of evidence

  evasion of prosecution by POW guards

  immunity of Hirohito from prosecution

  prosecutions for

  reparations for

  San Francisco Peace Treaty waiver for

  War Plan Orange-3 (WPO-3)

  Warren, Earl

  Watanabe Shōichi

  Waterous, Walter H.

  Waters, Lloyd

  Wavell, Archibald

  Wedemeyer, Albert C.

  Weinstein, Alfred A.

  Welch, Cecil Charles

  Wellborn, Charles, Jr.

  Welsh, Clyde L.

  Wermuth, Arthur

  Western, Carl E.

  West Virginia (ship)

  Wheeler, Kenneth R.

  White, William L.

  Whitney, Courtney A.

  Wickens, R. A.

  Wiesel, Elie

  Wilber, Avery E.

  Wilcox, Perry O.

  Wilkes, John

  Wilkins, H. Ford

  Williams, Anna

  Williams, E. S.

  Williams, Everett C.

  Williams, Francis H. “Joe,”

  Williams, George R.

  Williams, Isaac C.

  Williams, Maude R.

  Williams, Ted “Willie”

  at Bataan

  at Cavite

  health problems, loss of vision

  support of Nogi at war crimes trial

  Willoughby, Charles A.

  Wilson, Ovid O. “Zero,”

  Wing, Paul

  Wint, Guy

  Winter, Richard

  Winter, William

  Winterhalter, Albert

  Wohlfeld, Mark

  wolf pack submarine offensive

  Wood, Leonard

  Wood, Stuart

  WPO-3 (War Plan Orange-3)

  Wright, Betty

  Wright, Frank Lloyd

  Wright, John M., Jr.

  Wyler, William

  Yahara Hiromichi

  Yakushiji Kunizo

  Yamada Otsuzō

  Yamagata Aritomo

  Yamaji Kiyoshi

  Yamamoto Isoroku

  Yamamoto Tsunetomo

  Yamanaka Norio

  Yamashita Tomoyuki

  Yangtze Patrol

  Yokohama, bombing of

  Yonai Mitsumasa

  Yoshioka Yorimasa

  Yulo, José

  Yu Yung Kee

  Zanuck, Darryl F.

  Zimmerman. F.

  Zinnsser, Hans

 

 

 


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