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Prisoners of war

 Subject
Subject Source: Library Of Congress Subject Headings
Scope Note: When subdivided by place, the name of the place may designate either the current location of prisoners of war, or the place of origin. For prisoners of war of a particular nationality held in another country, two headings are assigned: 1. Prisoners of war--[country of nationality]. 2. Prisoners of war--[place where held].

Found in 9 Collections and/or Records:

Downs, James R.: A graduated series of defenses to forceful indoctrination, 1969

 File — Box 292, Folder: 1
Identifier: RG-13- File N420 .F82 1969 no.35
Dates: 1969

Hattersley, Julian: An analysis of the Asian-Communist exploitation of American prisoners of war, 1967

 File — Box 271, Folder: 8
Identifier: RG-13- File N420 .F8 1967 no.26
Dates: 1967

Holt, Philip R.: Prisoners of war : prescriptive conduct and compliance in captive situations, 1968

 File — Box 283, Folder: 6
Identifier: RG-13- File N420 .F82 1968 no.2
Dates: 1968

POW's - Vietnam War scrapbooks

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: NC-10
Dates: 1966-1979

Richardson, Walton K.: Prisoners of war as instruments of foreign policy, 1970

 Item — Box 311, Folder: 14
Identifier: RG-13- Item N420 .F8 1970 no.80
Dates: 1970

Schneider, Donald L.: Chieu Hoi and the Geneva Convention : are they compatible?, 1972 Jun 19

 Item — Box 349, Folder: 17
Identifier: RG-13- Item N420 .F82 1972 no. 160
Scope and Contents

A thesis submitted to the faculty of The School of Public and International Affairs of the George Washington University in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in International Affairs 19th June 1972

Dates: 1972 Jun 19

Tetsushi Nakamura letter (copy), circa 1945

 File — Box 4, Folder: 6
Identifier: MSC-364- File MSI 026
Scope and Contents

Cooy of a letter attributed to a Japanese Second Lieutenant regarding favorable impression of Americans and exceptional treatment as a prisoner of war on U.S. Navy vessel during WWII. Copies of the letter, actually devised by U.S. Intelligence, were dropped over Tokyo during U.S. bombardment in February 1945.

Dates: circa 1945