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This article lists the various minor fictional characters who appear in The Hot War series. These characters play at best a peripheral role in the series. Most were simply mentioned once, or had a very brief, unimportant speaking role that did not impact the plot. Some appeared only once, others a small number of times scattered throughout a single volume. Most are identified by a name, but not all of them are.

Krikor Agajanian[]

(Armistice)

Krikor "Greg" Agajanian was the head of Consolidated Cropdusting in Fresno, California. He was a burly man with slicked-back gray hair, a big hooked nose, and a grip like a bear trap. In November 1952, he hired Bruce McNulty, a veteran of the late war, as a pilot. He warned McNulty that a crop duster's salary paled in comparison to an airline pilot's, but McNulty took the job because it sounded like fun, and because all higher-paying jobs in the region were taken.[1]

Andrei Aksakov[]

(Bombs Away)

Andrei Aksakov was the radio operator on Boris Gribkov's Tu-4. In addition to the usual duties, Aksakov was in charge of the salvaged American IFF system which allowed the crew to deceive American air defenses. They managed to drop an atomic bomb on Bordeaux in late April 1951, and returned to the Soviet Union unharmed.[2]

In June, Gribkov's bomber was assigned the task to atom bomb Paris. Aksakov was replaces on this mission by Klement Gottwald, a Sudeten German who spoke English. Gribkov noted to himself that Aksakov didn't seem disappointed to miss this flight.[3]

Roman Amfiteatrov[]

(BA-A)

Roman Amfiteatrov succeeded Yuri Levitan as the chief newsreader of Radio Moscow after Levitan was killed in the American atomic bombing of Moscow in March 1951. He was southern, which showed in his accent.[4]

On 1 May, Amfiteatrov announced that the Red Army had taken Milan, and that the army was now driving on Turin. He also reported that "fierce fighting" in West Germany had yielded further advances. He also reported vague victories in the North Atlantic.[5] He further reported on American bombing attacks with conventional explosives on Kharkov and Rostov-on-Don. He claimed that the attack on the latter city killed several children at a child-rearing collective.[6] After reporting on increased production output, Amfiteatrov concluded his report by quoting Stalin's promise that communism would triumph.[7]

In July 1951, Amfiteatrov reported on rapid advances the China and North Korea made into South Korea in the wake of the Soviet Union's atomic attacks on the U.S.-held city Pusan and U.S. positions south of Chongju. He also decried the attacks the U.S. had made on Soviet positions in Western Europe.[8]

In June 1952, Amfiteatrov reported that the U.S. had deployed a hydrogen bomb against Omsk while Stalin was present, and that Stalin was dead. He also reported that Lavrenty Beria had taken the reins of power.[9] A few months later, he reported on the Soviet Union's efforts to bring its satellites back in line, even though he made them sound more successful than they were.[10][11]

Tom Andersen[]

(F)

Tom Andersen was a logger with the Shasta Lumber Corporation in Weed, California. In December 1951, he was working Billy Hurley when Andersen lost control on an icy road a truck down a scree slope. Hurley was thrown clear, but Andersen was badly injured. Hurley made his way to the road, flagged down a car, and got a ride back to the company office, where he asked the secretaries present to call Dr. Christopher Toohey for help. When Toohey arrived, Hurley led him to Andersen.[12] After gathering up Andersen for the eighty-mile drive to the nearest hospital, Toohey put a bandage on Hurley's head and dropped him off at the office again.[13]

Andy[]

(A)

Andy was a senior USAF mechanic stationed at the base near Dundee. When word came that the war in Asia had finally ended in August 1952, Andy and his crew got drunk and celebrated the fact that they weren't going to be sent east. Bruce McNulty pointed out that Andy and the crew wouldn't do any actual flying.[14]

Yefim Arzhanov[]

(F)

Yefim Vladimirovich Arzhanov was a navigator in the Soviet Air Force during World War III. He was assigned to Boris Gribkov's Tu-4 in June 1951 to replace Leonid Tsederbaum, a suicide. While Gribkov was initially concerned the Soviet government had given him a bad navigator, Arzhanov soon proved he knew what he was doing. He joined the crew in Soviet-held West Germany, and returned with them to Prague.[15]

After a couple of months which saw the Soviet Union's forward positions in Europe destroyed, followed by a slow retreat back east, Olminsky gave Gribkov's crew a mission. This time, Antwerp, one of the key ports to which the Allies shipped men and materiel. The relatively green Arzhanov was the least worried about the planned attack. Arzhanov guided Gribkov's plane over Denmark. The mission was a success, and Antwerp was destroyed.[16]

A few weeks later, a coup in Slovakia managed to seize Bratislava. Gribkov's crew was tasked with helping to put the coup down.[17] When he informed his crew, most had the same unspoken concern about attacking a country that was supposed to be a Soviet ally, save for Yefim Arzhanov, who was vocally determined to punish the enemies of the Soviet Union.[18]

Their attack was launched just after midnight. While Gribkov's crew was able to deliver their payload, their plane was hit by flak, and everyone was forced to bail out.[19]

Nikita Azarov[]

(A)

Lt. Colonel Nikita Azarov was the assistant chief of staff in the Kiev Military District. On the recommendation of his brother-in-law, Colonel Vsevolod Rogozin, Azarov accepted Sgt. Ihor Shevchenko as a weapons and tactics instructor. Shevchenko quickly impressed Azarov, who arranged a leave Shevchenko, who returned home for the the first time in over a year.[20]

Babs[]

(F-A)

Babs was a waitress at a greasy spoon in Weed, California. She waited on Marian Staley and her daughter, Linda, when the two arrived in Weed. When Marian asked if anyone was hiring, Babs suggested that the local lumber companies often hired people for secretary work. She also referred them to a nearby hotel. Marian assumed that Babs probably got money from Roland for every referral.[21]

After Staley got a job and rented a house, she continued to go to the same diner, Babs quickly took a shine to her.[22]

Bartender in Meiningen[]

(BA)

An East German bartender served Soviet tank commander Konstantin Morozov in January 1951. When Morozov asked him where he'd served during World War II in Russian, the bartender didn't understand until Morozov asked again in German. The bartender admitted he'd fought in France and the Low Countries, and then in North Africa, where he'd lost his right eye. He then showed Morozov his glass eye.[23]

Bartender in Schmalkalden[]

(BA)

On 15 February 1951, Tibor Nagy had a night pass in Schmalkalden. He conversed with a bartender who'd served in World War II and lost his left leg below the knee to shell fragment near Kiev. The bartender called Nagy's Sgt. Erno Gergely a "sock person", since he was the type of person who could "fit on either foot" easily, that is to say, his political allegiance was flexible.[24]

Steve Bauer[]

(BA)

Steve Bauer was the bombardier aboard the B-29 commanded by Major Hank McCutcheon.[25] After participating in several key missions, he was killed when their bomber was shot down over the Soviet city of Blagoveshchensk.[26]

Tom Baxter[]

(Posthumous references)

Tom Baxter (c. 1923-1945) was the late husband of Daisy Baxter. He was killed in March 1945, when his tank was hit by a Panzerfaust. His widow continued to run his family's pub, the Owl and Unicorn, for years after his death.[27]

Charlie Becker[]

(BA)

Charlie Becker was the bombardier in Major Hank McCutcheon's B-29 during the Korean War and the subsequent World War III. During a massive bombing raid against Pyongyang, McCutcheon ordered Becker to drop the conventional explosive bombs early due to flack piercing the plane's outside.[28] After participating in several key missions, he was killed when their bomber was shot down over the Soviet city of Blagoveshchensk.[29]

Demyan Belitsky[]

(A)

Demyan Belitsky was a Soviet tank driver during World War III. He was assigned to a T-34/85 under Konstantin Morozov in December 1951.[30]

They were first assigned a T-34/85, a tank that had been produced in 1943. Despite his protests that the tank was outdated and likely to be destroyed, Morozov knew he'd be overruled by the higher ups.[31] They were then assigned to the regiment of Major Kliment Todorsky, and joined a drive on Paderborn.[32]

They survived the drive, and, against all odds, the whole tank crew grew rather fond of their old tank.[33] As March gave way to April, Paderborn was still in American hands. Morozov and his crew were once again part of a drive on the town, under the command of Captain Lezkov. After a kilometer and a half, a bazooka round hit the engine compartment, crippling the tank. The crew evacuated safely, and there were no further attacks.[34]

When the time came for a new tank, Morozov flatly refused to be assigned another T-34. After some wrangling, Morozov insured his crew were given a T-54.[35] They then joined their new regiment, commanded by Major Genrikh Zhuk, in Dassel.[36] Belitsky[37] and Vazgen Sarkisyan were both killed by a U.S. bombing raid.[38]

Natasha Berman[]

(F)

Natasha Berman (d. 1951) was the late wife of David Berman. She had died not long before Vasili Yasevich arrived in Smidovich. In late 1951, Berman, knowing of Yasevich's reputation for honesty, sold Yasevich the opium left over after Natasha passed away. During their conversation, David Berman described Natasha as "eveything". Yasevich, realizing how depressed David Berman still was, paid him more for the opium than David had paid in the first place.[39]

Betsy[]

(A)

Betsy was a teenage resident of Weed, California, who earned money as a babysitter. Betsy sat for Marian Staley's daughter Linda while Marian went out on dates with Fayvl Tabakman.[40]

Mrs. Blankenship[]

(A)

Mrs. Blankenship was a comparatively wealthy resident of Pasadena. In late summer of 1952, she ordered an ice box from Blue Front. Aaron Finch and Istvan Szolovits delivered. Szolovits realized that Mrs. Blankenship was affluent even for California. He also noticed that Mrs. Blankenship was quite distant with himself and Finch. She employed a colored maid named Lucille, the first such person Istvan had ever seen. When Mrs. Blankenship grew frustrated with Aaron Finch's directions, she had Lucille listen to them.[41]

Pyotr Boky[]

(F)

Pytor Boky was a soldier in the Soviet Red Army during World War III. He'd also served during World War II. He gave his comrade Ihor Shevchenko grief when Shevchenko was promoted to corporal.[42]

Borya[]

(F)

Borya was a Soviet medic stationed in West Germany during World War III. In July 1951, he was charged with driving Ihor Shevchenko from a medical station to a field hospital in Hörstel.[43]

Horatio Bowers[]

(A)

Major Horatio Bowers was the judge advocate who reviewed Cade Curtis' legal adoption of Jimmy. He didn't like the plan, as he felt there were too many "Asiatics" in the U.S. already. However, as it was clear that the relationship was not a homosexual one, and as Curtis had served the U.S., even giving up his leg, Bowers could not find a legal reason to deny the adoption process.[44]

Cade Curtis' Driver[]

In June, 1951, Cade Curtis was returning to his company in Chongju after spending leave in Pusan. He and his driver were ten to fifteen miles northwest of Pusan when the city was destroyed by a Soviet atomic bomb. Curtis and his driver were far enough away that they were not caught in the explosion. For lack of a better idea, Curtis suggested, but did not order, that his driver head back to try to help in Pusan. The driver agreed. Not long after that, the Soviets deployed an atomic bomb on his company's position near Chongju. Curtis and the driver arrived in Pusan and did what they could.[45]

Captain Guarding Norwich[]

(BA)

A British Army captain assigned to guard the remains of Norwich was patrolling with a soldier named Simpkins when they caught Daisy Baxter who'd got too close to the city. When she gave the two the impression she resided nearby, the captain ordered Simpkins to take Daisy to nearby Bawdeswell.[46]

Casimir[]

(A)

Casimir (d. 1952) was the leader of a group of Polish guerrillas who continued to fight the Soviet Union after World War III ended in Europe. His band captured Vasili Yasevich, a Russian who'd grown up in Harbin, China, and had no love for the Soviets. When Yasevich volunteered to join the band, despite Casimir's warning that the Soviets would kill him when they realized he was Russian, Casimir tasked him with building a position that allowed the bandits to attack the Red Army. Yasevich accepted this, and his defense works proved successful in repelling the Soviets during the subsequent skirmish.[47]

Casimir was killed when he and Yasevich went into Warsaw to get supplies from a druggist named Witold. A Russian recognized Casimir and opened fire. While Casimir fired simultaneously and killed the Russian, he took a round to his chest, and died in short order.[48]

Nadezhda Chukovskaya[]

(F, A)

Nadezhda Chukovskaya was one of guards at the Soviet prison camp where Luisa Hozzel and Trudl Bachman were taken in 1951 during World War III. Like the rest of the guards, Chukovskaya enjoyed tormenting the German prisoners. When Hozzel complained about the cold winter of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, Chukovskaya told her about Kolyma, where prisoners might be forced to sleep in tents without heat as punishment.[49] Later, she offered better food and other such favors, to Hozzel if Hozzel paid for it with lesbian sex, an offer Hozzel was able to tactfully decline.[50]

Freddy Cullenbine[]

(F)

Freddy Cullenbine was a British trumpet player. He clearly patterned himself on the more famous (and talented) Louis Armstrong. He was pot-bellied, and proficient trumpet player at best, but his enthusiasm made him entertaining. Daisy Baxter and Bruce McNulty saw Cullenbine and his band twice. First on New Year's Eve 1951,[51] and then again in May 1952.[52]

Carl Cummings[]

(F, A)

Carl Cummings was one of the "big wheels" at the Shasta Lumber Corporation in Weed, California. Marian Staley was one of his employees. She did not care for his imperious nature.[53] However, in May 1952, to the town of Weed's surprise, the town gathered enough signatures to convince the logging companies to purchase an ambulance, and the companies agreed. Carl Cummings himself told Staley and the other employees about the companies' acceptance.[54]

Later that year, she agreed to Staley's request to have the afternoon off so she could marry Fayvl Tabakman. He was quite pleasant about the request, and even agreed to pay her for her time off.[55]

Viktor Czurka[]

(F)

Viktor Czurka was a captain in the Hungarian People's Army during World War III. He was captured in 1951, and sent to the POW camp outside Lyon, France. He became the head coach of the Hungarian football team. When he met Isztvan Szolovits, Czurka seemed unhappy to have a Jew on the team, but decided to see what Szolovits could do.[56]

Wilf Davies[]

(BA, A)

Wilf Davies was a resident of Fakenham. He'd lost his left hand at the Battle of the Somme during World War I. He'd known Daisy Baxter her whole life, and frequented her establishment, the Owl and Unicorn.[57]

A few months after nearby Norwich was destroyed by a Soviet atomic bomb, Davies began receiving scavenged auto parts from the wreckage through third parties. He let it slip to Daisy Baxter in May 1951 when he asked if she knew how long metal stayed radioactive. She advised he get a Geiger counter.[58]

Davies was one of the few people to survive the Soviet attack on Sculthorpe on 11 September, 1951.[59][60] Daisy Baxter also survived, only to be killed in May 1952 during a Soviet raid.[61] Davies attended her funeral, and conversed briefly with Bruce McNulty, Baxter's American paramour.[62]

Aram Demirchyan[]

(F)

Aram Demirchyan was an Armenian who served in the Soviet Red Army during World War III.[63] In late 1951, he was part of Sgt. Anatoly Privshin's section west of Paderborn. Privshin was suspicious of non-Russians, and abusive, too. Demirchyan was on the receiving end of this abuse.[64] Demirchyan became friends with Ihor Shevchenko, another soldier who was the object of Privshin's abuse.[65]

When nearby American troops fired on the Soviet positions with a German MG-42. Privishin decided his section would take the gun, much to Demirchyan and Shevchenko's horror. However, Privishin proved to be a brave and reasonably competent sergeant. The section took the gun, and Shevchenko even killed an American who was about to ambush Privishin, an act he rather regretted, as did Demirchyan.[66]

As the fighting outside Paderborn continued, Demirchyan grew to hate Sgt. Privishin more and more. Shevchenko shared that hatred, as did the other men under Privishin's command. Finally, during an assault on Paderborn, which sent Soviet troops into the path of an American machinegun, Privishin went too far, commanding his men to take the machinegun nest. Instead several Soviet men were killed, Demirchyan included. In revenge, Shevechenko shot Privishin in the back, killing him.[67]

Aziz Dzhalalov[]

(A)

Aziz Dzhalalov was a colonel in the Soviet Air Force. He was a Tajik. He commanded the air base at Tula in mid-1952. In July, he ordered Boris Gribkov to bomb Budapest. When Gribkov made it clear he would no longer deploy atomic weapons against targets, Dzhalalov assured Gribkov, with great sarcasm, that Gribkov's crew would be using conventional ordinance in accordance with the terms of the recent Treaty of Versailles.

Given how hard it was for Asians to progress in the Soviet military, Gribkov concluded that Dzhalalov was either very competent or very well connected.[68]

Dolores[]

(F)

Dolores was a secretary with the Shasta Lumber Corporation in Weed, California. She worked alongside Marian Staley. In December 1951, loggers Billy Hurley and Tom Andersen were involved in a truck accident. Hurley was thrown clear, but Andersen was badly injured. Hurley made his way to the road, flagged down a car, and got a ride back to the company office, where he asked the secretaries present to call Dr. Christopher Toohey for help. Dolores made the call. She also helped Staley give first aid to Hurley When Toohey arrived, Hurley led him to Andersen. When Staley asked how they were going to get the bloodstains out of the rug, Dolores suggested cold water.[69] She also informed Staley that the nearest hospital was in Redding, about eighty miles away.[70]

Doyarenko[]

(BA)

Doyarenko was a Ukrainian colonel in the Soviet Red Air Force. He commanded a base at Provideniya in the early 1950s. In 1951, a number of planes were transferred to his command in response to rising tensions between the USSR and the United States over the course of the Korean War.[71]

On 2 March, flyers under Doyarenko's command, including Captain Boris Gribkov, launched a series of atom bombing raids on the West Coast of the United States.[72] In response, the U.S. destroyed a number of strategic Soviet points, including Provideniya. When he learned of the bombing, Gribkov presumed Doyarenko was killed.[73]

Dale Dropo[]

(F)

Dale Dropo (b. c. 1916) was the editor of the Weed Press-Herald, the weekly newspaper of Weed, California. In December 1951, after an accident that involved loggers working for the Shasta Lumber Corporation, a secretary of the company, Marian Staley, approached Dropo about the fact that the town didn't have a hospital or an ambulance service to the nearest hospital in Redding. Dropo agreed that it was a problem, and wrote up an editorial. He cautioned Staley that the town didn't pay much attention to his editorials.[74]

People in fact did notice the editorials. After the death of another logger named Leroy van Zandt, Staley approached Dropo again with the suggestion that if all of the lumber companies in town pooled their monies, they could establish an ambulance service at minimal costs to them on an individual basis. She admitted she got the idea from Fayvl Tabakman, the new cobbler in town (and an old friend of hers). Again, Dropo agreed to put petitions in the paper, but made no promises.[75] The petitions did yield fruit in the long run, though.

Eckhardt[]

(A)

Dr. Eckhardt was a U.S. Army surgeon in South Korea during World War III. He was one of the surgeons who removed Cade Curtis' leg below the knee in mid-1952. Eckhardt informed Curtis of this when Curtis came out the final surgery. He also explained the concept of "phantom pain" to Curtis, who was complaining about the itchy toes on his amputated foot. [76]

Anatoly Edzhubov[]

(BA)

Commander Anatoly Edzhubov was the skipper of the destroyer Stalin. He was responsible for picking up Captain Boris Gribkov and his bomber crew after they atom bombed the Seattle area on 2 March 1951.[77]

Edzhubov carried Gribkov and his crew to Korf. They had originally been headed for Petropavlovsk, but that city, along with other key ports, had been destroyed by the U.S.. Edzhubov also told Gribkov that Provideniya, Gribkov's original base, had been among the cities destroyed.[78]

Gribkov was frequently seasick on the voyage. Edzhubov gave Gribkov vodka to help; Gribkov found it helped him sleep, anyway.[79]

Nikolai Feldman[]

(F)

Nikolai Feldman was a Russian Jew in Smidovich during World War III. He met Vasili Yasevich when the newcomer built a smokehouse for him. Feldman was impressed with Yasevich's efficiency, but warned Yasevich that his efficiency was making other handymen in town look bad. Yasevich, who claimed to be from the destroyed city of Khabarovsk but was actually a refugee from Harbin, China, didn't initially take Feldman's meaning, but heard him out nonetheless.[80]

Feofan[]

(A)

Feofan was a soldier in the Soviet Red Army. He'd served during World War II, participating in the siege of Breslau. He lost his pinky-finger and part of his ring finger of his left hand the day before Germany surrendered.[81]

After the Treaty of Versailles ended World War III, Feofan was part of a section of the army assigned to pacify the rebellion in Poland. He shared this story with Ihor Shevchenko, who pointed out that if he hadn't been wounded in World War II, Feofan might have been called back sooner when World War III broke out, and he might have been killed.[82]

In July 1952, Feofan's section was assigned to guard a section of railroad between Breslau, now Wroclaw and Czestochowa. He helped fend off a Polish attack on the railroad.[83]

Ferenc (Armistice)[]

(A)

Ferenc was a Hungarian in the same POW camp as Istvan Szolovits in 1952. During a football practice, Szolovits and Ferenc came to blows, with Szolovits gaining the upper hand in short order.[84]

Ferenc (Bombs Away)[]

(BA)

Ferenc was a private in Tibor Nagy's squad. He came from Szekesfehervar‎‎. When he found out that the United States had destroyed his home town with an atomic bomb on 15 February 1951, he was livid, and made several attempts to cross from Schmalkalden, East Germany in to West Germany to kill Americans. He was stopped by the men in his squad. Tibor Nagy and Isztvan Szolovits had the best luck in calming Ferenc.[85]

Fieberg[]

(F)

Lt. Fieberg was a West German soldier during World War III. He helped command the retaking of Marsberg from Soviet troops in December 1951.[86]

Syastoslav Filevich[]

(F, A)

Syastoslav Filevich was a flight navigator in the Soviet Red Air Force during World War III. He was assigned to the Tu-4 piloted by Boris Gribkov in January 1952. The crew began training for mid-air refueling, using a technique based on one the Germans had actually attempted to use to refuel their submarines.[87]

In May 1952, he participated in the atomic bombing of Washington, DC.[88] The crew ditched in the ocean, and were picked up by the submarine S-71, commanded by Alexei Vavilov.[89]

He participated in Gribkov's bombing run on Warsaw in September 1952.[90]

Fred[]

(BA)

Fred was an aide to President Harry Truman. After Truman's plane landed in Honolulu on December 18, 1950, Fred told Truman his car was ready. Truman sarcastically replied that he was sure that it was, then apologized, suggesting he was tired, and that maybe the weather would be nice outside and he would be, too. By the look on Fred's face, he didn't believe it.[91]

Fursenko[]

(BA)

Colonel Fursenko was the air-defense commander at the Red Air Force base in Provideniya in the days leading up to World War III.  When Boris Gribkov learned that the Tu-4s that had bombed Elmendorf Air Force Base had been painted to look like B-29s, he suggested to his immediate commander, Colonel Doyarenko, that the U.S could paint its B-29s to look like Tu-4s. Colonel Doyarenko replied that he would pass his concerns on to Colonel Fursenko.[92]

Nina Fyodorova[]

(F)

Nina Fyodorova lived in Smidovich. In July 1952, she hired Vasili Yasevich to build a cabinet for her. To her surprise and delight, he finished it on time and delivered it on the day he promised, as it was common for handymen in town to go weeks past their promised deadline. Fyodorova paid Yasevich half again as much as the origin price.[93]

Nodar Gachechiladze[]

(A)

Nodar Gachechiladze was a Georgian tank-loader in the Red Army, serving under Konstantin Morozov in the last days of World War III.[94] When Georgia seemed restive, Morozov worried that Gachechiladze might desert, but he didn't.[95]

Gennady Gamarnik[]

(BA)

Gennady Gamarnik was the engineer in Boris Gribkov's Tu-4. He checked over the bomber before the crew took-off to drop an atomic bomb on Seattle.[96] He survived the water landing after the bombing run and escape and continued to serve under Gribkov on a new Tu-4.[97]

Bohdan Gavrysh[]

(BA)

Bohdan Gavrysh was a farmer on kolkhoz 127. In May 1951, he participated in sowing the collective farm's fields. He used up his grain seed much too soon, but the kolkhoz's headman, Petro Hapochka, didn't seem to care.[98] Later, he proclaimed that Stalin would be pleased by the farm's harvest, and then further announced that without Great Stalin, the Soviet Union would collapse.[99]

In June 1951, the MGB collected Bohdan Gavrysh and Ihor Shevchenko for the fighting in Europe.[100]

Myron Gellar[]

(A)

Myron Gellar was with the U.S. government. He interrogated Istvan Szolovits (in Yiddish) when Szolovits was transferred to Westwood, Los Angeles. He asked about Hungary under Matyas Rakosi. While Szolovits admitted he was only a student when his was drafted, he did seem to think that Rakosi was only in power through the will of Joseph Stalin.[101]

Gellar discussed the refugee camp near Santa Monica, and warned Szolovits to stay away. They also discussed the weather and Szolovits' acclimation to the U.S.[102] Once it was clear Szolovits had nothing left to offer, Gellar gave him an identification, money, and the contact for Herschel Weissman.[103]

Geza[]

(F)

Geza was a lance-corporal in the Hungarian People's Army during World War III. He was captured and sent to the POW camp outside of Lyon, France. He became the captain and striker of the football team the Hungarians put together. In Isztvan Szolovits' estimation, he was small, quick, and dangerous.[104]

Gina[]

(A)

Gina was a student at the Pasadena Junior College. She took classes on English language in the evenings. Istvan Szolovits was a classmate in both classes. In October 1952, they struck up a friendship.[105]

Hyman Ginsberg[]

(BA)

Sgt. Hyman Ginsberg (d. May 1951) was radioman in Major Hank McCutcheon's B-29 crew during the Korean War and the subsequent World War III.[106] After participating in several key missions, he was killed when their bomber was shot down over the Soviet city of Blagoveshchensk.[107]

Ilya Goledod[]

(F)

Ilya Goledod was a Soviet bow gunner during World War III. He was assigned to a T-34/85 under Konstantin Morozov in December, 1951.[108]

The crew was assigned to the regiment of Major Kliment Todorsky, and joined a drive on Paderborn. Todorsky freely admitted he was using the T-34s as point vehicles in his platoons to draw fire, and then using T-54s to finish off the enemy.[109] They survived the drive, and, against all odds, the whole tank crew grew rather fond of their old tank.[110] As March gave way to April, Paderborn was still in American hands. Goledod, Morozov, and the crew were once again part of a drive on the town, under the command of Captain Lezkov. Morozov's tank was the point-tank of the platoon. Upon hearing this, Goledod suggested it would be a shame if the tank suddenly broke down before the attack. Despite his own misgivings, Morozov warned Goledod not to sabotage the tank or he'd be court-martialed and executed in short order. Goledod understood.

In the end, it didn't matter much. After a kilometer and a half, a bazooka round hit the engine compartment, crippling the tank. The crew evacuated safely, and there were no further attacks.[111]

When the time came for a new tank, Morozov flatly refused to be assigned another T-34. He demanded the tank-park sergeant fetch an officer with a great deal of mat. The park's senior officer, a lieutenant colonel, initially threatened Morozov with court-martial and execution, but Morozov stood his ground, assuring the colonel that putting him in the T-34 would have the same result. Convinced, the colonel gave Morozov's crew a T-54. Since they no longer needed a bow gunner, Goledod was reassigned.[112]

Pavel Gordeyev[]

(A)

Pavel Goredyev was a sergeant in the Soviet Red Army during the last months of World War III. He became a company commander after Lt. Stanislav Kosior was killed fighting Polish insurgents. Corporal Ihor Shevchenko was under Gordeyev's command. Gordeyev was careful not to get himself or many of his men killed, which Shevchenko appreciated.[113]

Klement Gottwald[]

(BA)

Klement Gottwald was a Soviet air force radio operator during World War III. He was born a Sudeten German, and spoke German and English. He was assigned to Boris Gribkov's TU-4 during the crew's mission to drop an atomic bomb on Paris in June 1951. He was able to deflect suspicion during the flight by answering a question in English over the radio, allowing the plane to drop the bomb.[114]

Literary Comment[]

This character shares a name with the then-ruler of Czechoslovakia, but is clearly not the same person, nor does he appear to be a relative.

Misha Grinovsky[]

(F)

Misha Grinovsky (c. 1931-1951) was an aspiring pipefitter from Podolsk, a town not too far south of Moscow. Drafted into the Red Army during World War III, he was assigned to the same unit as Ihor Shevchenko, a Great Patriotic War veteran. Shevchenko briefly became a mentor to Grinovsky, showing the younger man how to wrap his feet with footcloths, and how to take care of his rifle.[115] While Shevchenko made a point of collecting Grinovsky prior to the attack on Rheine, it was in vain; Grinovsky did not duck as quickly as Shevchenko and Dmitri Karsavin did during an artillery attack, and was torn to pieces by shell fragments.[116]

Pavel Gryzlov[]

(BA)

Pavel Gryzlov (d. May 1951) was the gunner of the T-54 commanded by Sgt. Konstantin Morozov during the first months of World War III. Like everyone else in the tank, save Morozov, Gryzlov was too young to have served in World War II.[117]

Gryzlov was part of the Soviet invasion of West Germany, with Gryzlov's unit as part of the initial spearhead towards Fulda.[118] The advance pushed west. In April, Morozov's tank was hit by a British or American tank. While the shell killed the tank's engine, it didn't immediately destroy the tank, allowing Morozov and his crew to escape into a Soviet fox hole. The tank was destroyed almost immediately after they'd escaped. The driver, Misha Kasyanov, was shot in the leg. They were able to carry him in as well, and he received treatment.[119]

The crew was issued a new tank within a few week, a repaired one that had previously sustained damage from an armor piercing round.[120] They were also given a new driver, Yevgeny Ushakov.[121] Once the crew was squared away, they were sent to help break into Arnsberg.[122] Their talent as a crew meant that they were frequently the tip of the spear in the Soviet drive.[123]

Gryzlov and the crew, save for Morozov, were killed in Dortmund by a bazooka shell that destroyed their tank.[124]

Oleg Gurevich[]

(BA)

Oleg Gurevich (born after 1927) was a captain in the Soviet Red Army and Konstantin Morozov's company commander in Meiningen, East Germany. In the first week of January 1951, Gurevich alerted Morozov that it appeared that the U.S. would use atomic weapons against China, and that Joseph Stalin was prepared to retaliate if the U.S. did. When Morozov asked about the possibility of the U.S. using atomics against Soviet ground troops, Gurevich assured him that there would be support from the Red Air Force. Morozov could not quite hide his skepticism.[125]

The fateful day came on 23 January 1951 when the U.S. dropped several atomic bombs in Manchuria[126], and Stalin ordered retaliatory attacks in Europe on 1 February.[127] Stalin also ordered the Red Army west, to the border between Soviet zone and the American zone under the cover of darkness a few days after the European bombings, Guervich's company included.[128] Gurevich was part of the Soviet invasion of West Germany, with Gurevich's company as part of the initial spearhead towards Fulda.[129]

Somewhere between Frankenberg and Arnsberg, Sgt. Morozov's tank was destroyed. While the whole crew escaped, the driver, Misha Kasyanov, was wounded[130] so Captain Gurevich arranged for a new driver along with a reconditioned T-54. After Morozov and his crew were squared away, they headed for regimental headquarters. They came across Gurevich who sent them on towards Arnsberg to help create a breakthrough.[131]

Randolph Hackworth[]

(F)

Brigadier General Randolph Hackworth commanded a U.S. Army division in South Korea after the Korean War was folded into World War III. In December 1951, he responded to a complaint from South Korean army Captain Pak Ho-san about U.S. Captain Cade Curtis after Curtis prevented Pak from abusing one of his men. However, when Curtis quite earnestly pointed out the U.S. Army would not have allowed the abuse that the South Koreans committed, and further made it clear that he would stand his ground, Hackworth sent him back to the lines without punishment.[132]

Lois Hanafusa[]

(A)

Lois Hanafusa was a Japanese-American resident of the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles. She ordered a television from Blue Front in May 1952. Aaron Finch and Jim Summers delivered the television. Hanafusa gave them both orange juice and a two-dollar tip each. Summers commented on this, as a white woman had offered them nothing.[133]

Petro Hapochka[]

(BA, A)

Petro Hapochka (b. 1905) was the chairman of kolkhoz 127 outside of Kiev. He'd served in the Red Army during World War II, losing his left foot in 1943 to a German landmine.[134]

In April 1951, after World War III was only a few months old, a farmer on the kohlkoz, Ihor Shevchenko, presented a slab of pork ribs to Hapochka. He also asked Hapochka if he'd heard when Kiev, which had been destroyed by an American atomic bomb the month before, would be rebuilt. Hapochka didn't know.[135]

Hapochka oversaw the sowing in May.[136]

Irina Hapochkova[]

(BA)

Irina Hapchkova was the wife of Petro Hapochka, the headman of kohlkohz 127.[137]

Matt Harrison[]

(BA)

Matt Harrison (born c. 1895) was a brigadier general in the United States Air Force. He commanded a base near Pusan, South Korea before and after the Korean War became part of World War III.[138]

In January 1951, he informed the base that President Harry Truman had authorized the use of atomic bombs against China, and that all of the atomic bombs at the base now had pits in them. He gave the pilots under his command a chance to withdraw if they had qualms of conscience, and promised that their would be no black marks on their record (which was almost certainly an empty promise). He scowled when several flyers left.[139]

A few weeks later, Harrison informed the base that Truman had transferred the final decision making to MacArthur, authorizing the general to use them if, in MacArthur's view, their use was the only way to improve the situation. The situation had certainly worsened, as the Chinese had relentlessly marched south throughout December and into January, recapturing Seoul, the South Korean capital.[140] Harrison also informed the base that aerial reconnaissance showed that the Soviets were moving fighters and bombers onto airstrips in southeastern Siberia. One pilot, Bill Staley, asked about the possibility that the Soviets might paint their Tu-4's to look like B-29s, the model the Soviet bombers were copies of. Harrison hoped that U.S. forces would be alert, but admitted they may not always be.[141]

After the U.S. and the Soviet Union traded a series of atomic attacks that led to World War III, Harrison oversaw several other attacks early in 1951, including attacks on several Soviet port cities.[142] In mid-April, Harrison ordered a massive bombing raid against Pyongyang, in an effort to kill Kim Il-sung. The attack used conventional explosives, rather than atomic weapons.[143] However, after the planes left, Harrison's base was attacked and destroyed by enemy planes. Whether Harrison himself survived was unknown.[144]

Hawkeye[]

(A)

Hawkeye was a surgeon with the U.S. Army in the Korean theater of World War III. Captain Cade Curtis was one of his patients.[145]

Literary comment[]

Hawkeye is never described in any detail. His nickname, profession, and the Korean War setting are suggestive of fictional character Benjamin "Hawkeye" Pierce from the M*A*S*H* franchise.

Wally Hickman[]

(A)

Wally Hickman was a burly man from Texas. He served as Bruce McNulty's co-pilot during Operation Long Reach. Like McNulty and the rest of the crew, Hickman was dubious about the plan to attack Petrozavodsk by going over Finland, which wasn't actually in the war, but would likely notify the Soviets. Hickman resolved to start praying for real. The crew was horrified by the plan, but carried it out, successfully destroying Petrozavodsk despite the tremendous risk.[146]

Walter Hoblitzel[]

(F)

Walter Hoblitzel (d. 1951) was an American soldier killed by Hungarian soldier Isztvan Szolovits during the Soviet drive to the west in July 1951. Szolovits stumbled on Hoblitzel and another American. Reflexively, Szolovits shot from hip, hitting Hoblitzel in the head. The other American surrendered. Ironically, Szolovits actually wanted to surrender to Americans, but the situation would not allow it. Szolovits went through Hoblitzel's corpse, and apologized to it.[147]

Horst[]

(BA)

Horst was a grocer in Fulda, West Germany. After the Soviet Union occupied Fulda early in World War III, they began supplying Horst with their unwanted foodstuffs, such as beets and sardines. He warned one of his customers, Luisa Hozzel, that the food wasn't very good. He did sell her some strawberries because she was a good customer.[148]

Mary Ann House[]

(A)

Mary Ann House was an administrative assistant in the history department at UCLA. Richard House was her husband, and they had a young son. In 1952 they purchased a refrigerator which was delivered to their home by Blue Front. She tipped deliverymen Aaron Finch and Istvan Szolovits two dollars apiece.[149]

Richard House[]

(A)

Richard House taught medieval history at UCLA. Mary Ann House was his wife, and they had a young son. In 1952 they purchased a refrigerator which was delivered to their home by Blue Front.[150]

Pete Huntington[]

(BA)

Pete Huntington was a resident of Fakenham, England when World War III broke out. The Owl and Unicorn was his local and he would hustle both the American and British airmen from nearby Sculthorpe at darts. They generally didn't know that he had won tournaments throughout East Anglia and so would be willing to accept his challenges.[151]

Billy Hurley[]

(F)

Billy Hurley was a logger with the Shasta Lumber Corporation in Weed, California. In December 1951, he was working Tom Andersen when Andersen lost control on an icy road a truck down a scree slope. Hurley was thrown clear, but Andersen was badly injured. Hurley made his way to the road, flagged down a car, and got a ride back to the company office, where he asked the secretaries present to call Dr. Christopher Toohey for help. Secretary Marian Staley administered first aid, helping to staunch Hurley's bloody nose and the gash in his forehead. Hurley hadn't thought he was badly hurt until he saw the blood Staley had sopped up with tissues. When Toohey arrived, Hurley led him to Andersen.[152] After gathering up Andersen for the eighty-mile drive to the nearest hospital, Toohey put a bandage on Hurley's head and dropped him off at the office again.[153]

Ivan Ivanov[]

(F)

"Ivan Ivanov" was the name a GRU major used when he interrogated Boris Gribkov about the suicide of Leonid Tsederbaum in June 1951. Gribkov doubted the name was real.

While Ivanov followed the Soviet line that "weaklings" didn't belong in such important military positions, he also informed Gribkov that his crew would not be grounded and that they would be getting a new navigator.[154]

Ezra Jacobs[]

(A)

Ezra Jacobs served as Bruce McNulty's radioman during Operation Long Reach. Like McNulty and the rest of the crew, Jacobs was dubious about the plan to attack Petrozavodsk by going over Finland, which wasn't actually in the war, but would likely notify the Soviets. Jacobs was convinced that their superior wanted them to get shot down. The crew carried out their part, successfully destroying Petrozavodsk despite the tremendous risk.[155]

Daniel Philip Jaspers[]

(BA)

Daniel Philip Jaspers was a refugee at Camp Nowhere. In April 1951, he attempted to break into the vehicle and de facto home of fellow inmate, Marian Staley. When he saw Staley approaching with her young daughter Linda and their elderly neighbor Fayvl Tabakman, he charged them. Tabakman picked up a rock and threw it, hitting Jaspers in the head.[156] Jaspers was taken into custody,[157] and subsequently convicted after Marian Staley testified against him.[158]

Johnson[]

(BA)

Johnson was an American soldier during the Korean War before it became part of World War III. He was part of the failed evacuation to Hungnam. On November 23, when the troops were suddenly attacked by Red Chinese forces, Lt. Cade Curtis ordered Johnson and another soldier, Masters[159], to man an LMG and cover the retreat of the remaining troops, ordering them to hang on to the position as long as they had to. When Masters asked how long that was, Curtis answered again for as long as they had to. All three knew that meant that Johnson and Masters had to stay until the Chinese killed them.[160]

Literary Comment[]

William H. Masters and Virginia E. Johnson (commonly referred to as Masters and Johnson) pioneered research into the nature of human sexual response. Hence the pairing of the names of the two soldiers.

Dmitri Karsavin[]

(F)

Dmitri Karsavin was a Russian veteran of World War II. Despite losing half of his right buttock to shrapnel in Budapest, leaving him with a profound limp, by mid-1951, the Soviet Union drafted him back into service during World War III. He met fellow veteran Ihor Shevchenko; the two were the only experienced fighters in their unit.[161]

Karsavin participated in Soviet Union's successful capture of West German town of Rheine.[162] By July 1951, the unit was near Hörstel when Shevchenko sat on a glass bottle and cut up his left buttock. Karsavin was charged with taking Shevchenko back to Hörstel. That night, the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on the unit's position. Shevchenko, safely in the hospital, never knew how many in the unit survived.[163]

Elizabeth Kasparian[]

(BA)

Elizabeth Kasparian and her husband Krikor were neighbors of Aaron Finch and his family. Both had survived the Armenian Massacres during World War I. In Glendale, the two sold chickens and eggs to their neighbors. After a Soviet atomic bomb destroyed downtown Los Angeles, the Kasparians found their costs for feed had gone up, and had to pass those costs onto their customers.[164]

Krikor Kasparian[]

(BA)

Krikor Kasparian and his wife Elizabeth were neighbors of Aaron Finch and his family. Both had survived the Armenian Massacres during World War I. In Glendale, the two sold chickens and eggs to their neighbors. After a Soviet atomic bomb destroyed downtown Los Angeles, the Kasparians found their costs for feed had gone up, and had to pass those costs onto their customers.[165]

Misha Kasyanov[]

(BA)

Mikhail "Misha" Kasyanov was the driver of the T-54 commanded by Sgt. Konstantin Morozov during the first months of World War III. Like everyone else in the tank, save Morozov, Kasyanov was too young to have served in World War II.[166]

Kasyanov was part of the Soviet invasion of West Germany, with Kasyanov's unit as part of the initial spearhead towards Fulda.[167] The advance pushed west. In April, Morozov's tank was hit by a British or American tank. While the shell killed the tank's engine, it didn't immediately destroy the tank, allowing Morozov and his crew to escape into a Soviet fox hole. The tank was destroyed almost immediately after they'd escaped. Kasyanov, was shot in the leg. They were able to carry him in as well, and he received treatment. He was replaced by Yevgeny Ushakov.[168]

Kitty[]

(F)

Kitty was a resident of Fakenham, United Kingdom. She'd survived the Soviet atomic attack of 11 September 1951 on nearby Sculthorpe that also leveled Fakenham, as did her brother, Stuart. Both had known Daisy Baxter all of her life; Kitty had gone to school with Daisy.

Stuart and Daisy ran into each other at a club on New Year's Eve, 1951. He told her that Kitty had also survived the bombing, and was waiting tables at a café in Wells-next-the-Sea.[169]

Stanislav Kosior[]

(F)

Stanislav Kosior (d. 1952) was a lieutenant in the Soviet Red Army during World War III. He was Ukrainian and a devout communist.[170]

In January 1952, he informed Ihor Shevchenko that he'd been promoted to corporal. Kosior struck Shevchenko as one of the so-called "New Soviet Men", parroting slogans that showed his absolute devotion to communism and Stalin. Shevchenko did his best to appear that he agreed with Kosior's enthusiasm.[171] A few days later, he oversaw another attack on Paderborn, West Germany, where the Soviets had become increasingly bogged down.[172]

In May 1952, Kosior's division was pulled out of the lines and sent east to help put down an uprising in the Polish People's Republic. Kosior was shot dead in the first engagement with the rebels.[173]

Arkady Lapshin[]

(BA, F)

Arkady Lapshin was a captain in the Soviet Red Army during World War III. He commanded a company of tanks. In May 1951, Sgt. Konstantin Morozov was transferred to Lapshin's command after returning to duty from being wounded. Lapshin immediately assigned Morozov to a new tank.[174]

Lapshin helped command the drive on Bocholt.[175] That drive stalled out quickly, as Bocholt's defenders were too numerous.[176]

Geza Latos[]

(F)

Geza Latos (or perhaps Latos Geza) was a secret policeman of the Hungarian People's Republic stationed in Magyarovar during World War III. He took protective custody of Soviet pilot Boris Gribkov after Gribkov was forced to bail out of his plane over Bratislava, in Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, and arranged for a Soviet convey to pick Gribkov up. While Gribkov awaited the convey, he and Geza Latos (or Latos Geza) drank the wine called the Bull's Blood of Eger. The Hungarian congratulated Gribkov for attacking the uprising in Bratislava, and disparaged the Slovaks. However, Geza Latos was also forced to admit that the uprising brewing in Bratislava had crossed the border, and parts of northern Hungary were also proving restive.

Gribkov was never quite clear which order the man's name was.[177]

Ledesma[]

(A)

Mr. Ledesma was a senior customs agent for the Port of San Francisco at the end of World War III. A plump little man with a lounge lizard moustache, he was initially skeptical of Major Cade Curtis' claim that a Korean going by the name Jimmy Curtis was a legal immigrant to America. A careful review of the papers Major Curtis handed him, convinced Ledesma of Jimmy's legitimacy. The war medals on the Major's uniform did not hurt Ledesma's faith in him either.[178]

Lefty[]

(BA)

Lefty was a GI during the Korean War before it became part of World War III. He was part of the failed evacuation to Hungnam. On November 23, 1950, he asked Lt. Cade Curtis for reassurance that they would make it to the port.

Lefty was from one of the smaller industrial cities in Ohio. Curtis could not remember which one.[179]

Lengyel[]

(BA)

Lengyel was a Hungarian soldier in Isztvan Szolovits's squad. In April 1951, their sergeant, Erno Gergely, announced that their particular stretch of West Germany had become the slum of World War III. When Lengyel asked him what he meant, Gergely called Lengyel an idiot before informing his men that the Soviets had positioned Polish troops next to the Hungarians.[180]

Lezkov[]

(F)

Captain Lezkov was the CO for a Soviet Red Army tank regiment during World War III. He was the lead tank in a drive on Paderborn, West Germany in April, 1952, the latest in a series of attacks on the U.S.-held town.[181]

Avram Lipshitz[]

(A)

Avram Samuelovich Lipshitz was a Soviet tank-driver, serving as Konstantin Morozov's driver from mid-1952 to the end of World War III.[182] Lipshitz informed Morozov that Juris Eigims had deserted.[183]

Lipshitz was still Morozov's driver when they were transferred to Lithuania. In October 1952, while escorting a truck convoy of Soviet supplies from Vilnius to Ukmerge. A running firefight took place between the convoy and bandits a kilometer outside of Ukmerge. Then the lead tank hit a landmine outside of Pabaiskas. While Morozov ordered his Lipshitz to ram buildings, bandits used Molotov cocktails on the tank, forcing the crew bailout.[184]

Literary comment[]

Lipshitz' fate is unknown.

Lucille[]

(A)

Lucille was a maid in the employ of a Mrs. Blankenship of Pasadena. In late summer of 1952, Mrs. Blankenship ordered an ice box from Blue Front. Aaron Finch and Istvan Szolovits delivered. Lucille was the first colored person Szolovits had ever seen. When Mrs. Blankenship grew frustrated with Aaron Finch's directions on how to use the ice box, she had Lucille listen to them. Szolovits noticed that Finch spoke to Lucille in the exact same manner he'd spoken to Mrs. Blankenship.[185]

Madinov[]

(BA)

Colonel Madinov commanded the air base the Soviet Union established near Munich during World War III.[186] In June 1951, he oversaw Boris Gribkov's mission to atom bomb Paris.[187] He was upfront about the fact that he didn't want to destroy Paris, but made it clear that it was necessary for the war effort.[188]

Orest Makhno[]

(BA)

Orest Makhno was a farmer on kolkhoz 127. He was one of several people from the collective farm who went to Kiev to see the city after it was destroyed by an American atomic bomb. Unlike others who went to Kiev, Makhno did not return. While some hoped that he'd found a stash of gold and struck out on his own, he most likely ran into an MGB agent and was summarily executed for looting.[189]

Volodymyr Marchenko[]

(BA)

Volodymyr Marchenko resided on the same kolkhoz (collective farm) as Ihor and Anya Shevchenko. At a feast on 15 February 1951, as World War III was about to erupt, Marchenko toasted Joseph Stalin and to victory.[190] A week later, the MGB came to the kolkohz to collect men for the infantry, ultimately taking Marchenko and three others.[191]

Olga Marchenkova[]

(BA)

Olga Marchenkova was the wife of Volodymyr Marchenko. At a feast on 15 February 1951, as World War III was about to erupt, Olga turned on the radio for Radio Moscow.[192]

Nathan Marcus[]

(A)

Lt. Colonel Nathan Marcus an U.S. Army doctor stationed in South Korea during World War III. After a nurse named Vera alerted her superiors to Cade Curtis' plan to adopt a Korean soldier nicknamed Jimmy, Marcus met with Curtis. When he was satisfied that Curtis was adopting Jimmy for noble reasons, and not because he wanted Jimmy as a homosexual lover, Marcus gave his support to Curtis' plan.[193] When the adoption was completed, Marcus also helped Curtis and Jimmy get transport back to the U.S.. He tried to reassure Curtis that he still had a bright future ahead of him.[194]

Masters[]

(BA)

Masters was an American soldier during the Korean War before it became part of World War III. He was part of the failed evacuation to Hungnam. On November 23, when the troops were suddenly attacked by Red Chinese forces, Lt. Cade Curtis ordered Masters and another soldier, Johnson, to man an LMG and cover the retreat of the remaining troops, ordering them to hang on to the position as long as they had to. When Masters asked how long that was, Curtis answered again for as long as they had to. All three knew that meant that Johnson and Masters had to stay until the Chinese killed them.[195]

Literary Comment[]

William H. Masters and Virginia E. Johnson (commonly referred to as Masters and Johnson) pioneered research into the nature of human sexual response. Hence the pairing of the names of the two soldiers.

Helen McAllister[]

(F)

Helen McAllister was a resident of Los Angeles during World War III. Her home was located in one of the neighborhoods that survived the Soviet atomic attack in March 1951. In June 1952, she ordered an icebox and washer from Blue Front. Aaron Finch and Jim Summers delivered it to her home. She thanked them by giving them lemonade made with lemons from the tree in her back yard, then complained about the colored family that was moving in down the block. Summers, a racist, was extremely sympathetic.[196]

McMullin[]

(F)

Captain McMullin was the co-pilot aboard President Harry Truman's plane, the Independence, when the Soviet Union atom bombed Washington, DC. He agreed with the pilot Major Pesky's plan to divert to Richmond, overruling Truman's request that they go to Baltimore. He also monitored the radio and relayed information to Truman as he received it.[197]

Bela Medgyessy[]

(F)

Bela Medgyessy was a colonel in the Hungarian People's Army during World War III. He was captured during the fighting, and sent to a prisoner of war camp outside Lyon, France. He was the senior officer at the camp for most of 1951.[198]

Medgyessy greeted Isztvan Szolovits when he arrived in the camp in December, 1951. While unenthusiastic about Szolovits' status as a Jew, Medgyessy gave Szolovits the lay of the land, and further drafted Szolovits onto the football team the Hungarians had put together.[199]

Arkady Medvedev[]

(A)

Arkady Medvedev was a lieutenant in the Soviet Red Army. He was assigned to meet Boris Gribkov and his crew when they arrived in Kem in May, 1952, and escort them to the train to Petrozavodsk. When Gribkov asked if he and his men could clean up first, Medvedev firmly told him that they needed to get on the train immediately.[200]

Mei Ling[]

(BA)

Mei Ling was a server at a teahouse in Harbin during World War III. Vasili Yasevich was sweet on Mei Ling for a time, and she seemed inclined to reciprocate. However, after the Chinese government began investigating Yasevich, he fled China altogether, and any chance for romance was stillborn.[201]

Miecyslaw[]

(A)

Miecyslaw was an anti-Soviet Polish fighter whose cousin had been killed in the Kaytn Forest. In May 1952, he encountered Ihor Shevchenko as they were each about to raid an abandoned house. Shevchenko proposed a temporary truce. Miecyslaw agreed. After they looted a few items, they nearly came to blows over Shevchenko's refusal to defect. However, neither wanted to risk dying, and so they parted.[202]

Osip Milyukov[]

(BA)

Osip Milyukov was a lieutenant colonel in the Soviet Air Force during World War III. He was stationed at a base outside Leningrad. In April 1951, he assigned Boris Gribkov and his crew to drop an atomic bomb on Bordeaux, France. The route was quite complex to allow the bomber to slip into and out of France. He did provide Leonid Tsederbaum, the navigator, precise bearings and distances prior to take-off.[203]

Misha[]

(A)

Misha was a Soviet Red Army private during and after World War III. He was in Ihor Shevchenko's company in Poland. Prior to a fight with Polish bandits, Misha helped to dig a grave for the fallen Volodya. Later, as the Red Army was preparing to attack, Misha asked Schevchenko just what they were doing in Poland. As Schevchenko was not one to denounce his men, he simply reaffirmed that they were trying to survive.[204]

Mogamed[]

(A)

Mogamed was imprisoned in the same camp as Luisa Hozzel and Trudl Bachman. One day, after the end of World War III in Europe, Mogamed informed Hozzel that Bachman had decided to have sex with one of their guards in order to avoid work.[205]

Moishe[]

(BA)

Moishe was a Jewish resident of Everett, Washington. He was a Byelorussian, and survived World War II and the Holocaust. He survived the Soviet atomic bombing of the Everett-Seattle area on March 2, 1951. He was reunited with friends Fayvl Tabakman and Yitzkhak in a refugee camp some weeks after the bombing. All three had definite opinions of Stalin. Moishe remembered that, as a young man, he'd seen Stalin in Minsk, and felt lucky that Stalin had not seen him.[206]

Mykola[]

(BA)

Mykola was a farmer on Kolkhoz No. 127 in the Ukrainian S.S.R. Ihor Shevchenko thought he wasn't particularly good at farming but was very handy at fixing mechanical objects so kept him in mind as someone he could make a trade with when he slaughtered Nestor, a personal pig he kept.[207]

Nestor[]

(BA)

Nestor was a pig raised by Ihor Shevchenko on Kolkhoz No. 127 in the Ukrainian S.S.R. He lived a pampered life, being personally raised with kindness by Ihor. Ihor was quite fond of Nestor, and caressed him gently before slaughtering him. As much as Ihor liked Nestor as an animal, he knew would like him even better as meat. Ihor made a deliberate effort to ensure that Nestor died with as little pain as possible. Nestor provided a good supply of food for Ihor and his wife Anya, as well as a generous amount of meat to trade with neighbors such as Mykola. A bit of Nestor became a bribe to Kolkhoz Chairman Petro Hapochka, so that Ihor would stay in the latter's good graces.[208]

Ninel[]

(F)

Ninel ("Lenin" spelled backwards) was a sergeant at a Soviet tank park located near Dassel, West Germany. In April, 1952, Ninel tried to place Konstantin Morozov and his crew in a T-34. Morozov flatly and obscenely refused, prompting Ninel to get his superior officer, lieutenant colonel. The colonel threatened Morozov with court-martial and execution, but Morozov stood his ground, assuring the colonel that putting him in the T-34 would have the same result. Convinced, the colonel ordered Ninel to give Morozov's crew a T-54, one that was not a lemon.[209]

Nowak[]

(F)

Captain Nowak was Gustav Hozzel's company CO in July 1951. He would not have approved of Hozzel's schemes to sneak out at night and enter enemy territory to procure supplies and weapons, so Hozzel didn't tell him.[210]

Mrs. O'Byrnne[]

(BA)

Mrs. O'Byrnne was a housewife in Torrance, a suburb of Los Angeles that was not badly damaged by the Soviet atomic bombing of downtown L.A. on March 2, 1951. She had a young daughter, only a few months old.[211] In April 1951, she ordered a refrigerator via letter from Blue Front, an appliance company in Glendale.[212]

Bernie O'Higgins[]

(BA)

Bernie O'Higgins was a sergeant in Lt. Cade Curtis' company. In April, 1951, in an effort to slow down an advance of T-34s, Curtis ordered O'Higgins to fire a burst of machine gun fire at the T-34s, then take the gun off its tripod, retreat from their position, and use the machine gun as a light gun. When O'Higgins protested that he would get more accuracy with the tripod, Curtis remained firm, asking O'Higgins how long he thought his position would stand up to shelling. Reluctantly, O'Higgins agreed.[213]

Yulian Olminsky[]

(F)

Yulian Olminsky was a brigadier in the Soviet Air Force during World War III. He commanded the Soviet airbase at Prague in July 1951. Although he was a general, he could still be overridden by the MGB. Thus, even though one of his flyers, Boris Gribkov was a decorated Hero of the Soviet Union eager to fly again, Olminsky had to keep him grounded as Gribkov was also judged unreliable after his navigator Leonid Tsederbaum committed suicide the month before. When Gribkov begged Olminsky to let him fly again, Olminsky was fairly forthcoming about why he would not.[214]

Finally, after a couple of months which saw the Soviet Union's forward positions in Europe destroyed, followed by a slow retreat back east, Olminsky gave Gribkov's crew a mission. This time, Antwerp, on of the key ports to which the Allies shipped men and materiel. Gribkov successfully completed the mission.[215] A few weeks later, an uprising in Slovakia managed to seize Bratislava. Olminsky tasked Gribkov with helping to put the coup down. To Gribkov's relief, he would not be using another atom bomb (there were none to spare) but conventional ordinance with the goal of leveling Bratislava. Olminsky was forced to concede that the Slovaks would have air defenses, including flak. As the TU-4 was actually quite vulnerable to such defenses, Gribkov was alarmed by this knowledge.[216] When he informed his crew, most had the same unspoken concern about attacking a country that was supposed to be a Soviet ally.[217]

Opium-addicted Commissar[]

(BA)

In April 1951, Vasili Yasevich was approached by a Commissar addicted to opium. He said that Comrade Wang's Wife had told him that Yasevich could get him whatever he wanted and he wanted opium. Yasevich denied having any since the penalty for possession was death. The Commissar first offered him a handful of gold coins but Yasevich continued to deny having any. The Commissar became angry, raged at Yasevich then slapped him and stormed off. Yasevich did have a glass jar of opium which he quickly took from his dwellings and hid in an abandoned blacksmith's shop three blocks away.[218] A few weeks later, Yasevich fled Harbin after he spotted a jeep parked in front of his shack.[219]

Andras Orban[]

(BA-F)

Andras Orban was a soldier in Isztvan Szolovits' squad. When he saw the Jewish Szolovits eating ham, Orban threatened to tell Szolovits's rabbi on him. Szolovits retorted that the rabbi wouldn't hear Orban, as Orban had his head up his own ass so far no sound would come out. When Orban seemed ready to fight Szolovits, Sergeant Erno Gergely intervened, thoroughly shaming Orban.[220]

Orban maintained his antagonistic relationship with Szolovits throughout the Soviet drive west, and Szolovits treated Orban "like the asshole he was."[221]

Orban was present near Wesel when the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on the Soviet positions there. Like most of the Hungarians, Orban was too far away to be directly killed in the blast, but he did stare too long at the initial flash, and was blinded as a result.[222]

Grigol Orbeliani[]

(A)

Grigol Orbeliani was a Georgian sergeant and tank commander in the Soviet Red Army during World War III. During the 1952 ceasefire, with strongmen Joseph Stalin dead and Lavrenty Beria deposed, Georgia's unduly favored position within the USSR was threatened. Orbeliani decided to desert and defend his homeland from Russian reprisals.[223]

Frank Pagliarone[]

(A)

Colonel Frank Pagliarone was the commander of the USAF base near Dundee, Scotland. After the war in Korea ended in August 1952, pilot Bruce McNulty approached Pagliarone about leaving the USAF. While Pagliarone initially tried to convinced McNulty to stay, McNulty's guilt about deploying atomic bombs was too much. Convinced, Pagliarone began the paperwork.[224]

Pak Ho-san[]

(F)

Pak Ho-san was a captain in the South Korean army. In the fall of 1951, almost a year after the Korean War had been folded into World War III, Pak led a company that placed into a regiment commanded by U.S. Captain Cade Curtis. It was hoped that the South Koreans would fill out the thinning American lines. Curtis, who remembered how badly the Republic's soldiers had fought when the war broke out, was not enthusiastic about this plan at first. He was also disturbed by the fact that many of the South Korean officers used a model of discipline patterned on one the Japanese had used. When Curtis approached Pak Ho-san to suggest that the South Koreans integrate in with the Americans, Pak declined, determined to prove that he and men could fight.[225]

That night, the Chinese launched an what was intended to be a surprise attack. However, one American was able to fire off a burst before he was killed, alerting his comrades, who launched flares and met the Chinese, who ultimately retreated. The ROK soldiers proved their mettle. However, when Curtis when to congratulate Pak Ho-san, Pak Ho-san met Curtis half way, and attempted to present Curtis with the decapitated head of a Chinese soldier. Curtis was horrified, and Pak was surprised by how soft Curtis was.[226]

In the weeks that followed, Curtis grew increasingly disgusted with the way Pak and his non-coms beat on their subordinates. He finally resolved to intervene the next time he saw Pak being abusive to one of his men, a scheme Howie Sturgis counseled against.[227] When Curtis saw Pak upbraiding a soldier named Chun Won-ung for having a muddy uniform (from the muddy trench), he ordered Pak to leave the man alone. He also pointed his PPSh at Pak for good measure. While Pak was initially astonished to see an American officer chastise him, the gun forced Pak to break off from the conflict, and Curtis had Chun join his unit.[228] Pak complained to the U.S. Army brass, but Curtis stood his ground with Brigadier General Randolph Hackworth, and avoided punishment.[229]

Pavlov[]

(A)

Captain Pavlov served in the Red Army during World War III, and then fought the rebellion in Poland that raged after the war ended in July 1952. A devotee of the Soviet Union's professed egalitarianism, Pavlov was troubled by reports of whole units of non-Russians surrendering en masse to the Poles, as well as reports of easterners deserting so they could head home and participate in the fight against the Soviet Union. He shared these concerns with Sgt. Ihor Shevchenko, a Ukrainian veteran who'd earned the respect of his men.[230]

In September 1952, western Ukraine joined other rebellious satellites. Shevchenko requested a transfer back home. Pavlov forwarded the transfer-request to the division commander, Colonel Vsevolod Rogozin, whose brother-in-law was the assistant chief of staff in the Kiev Military District, and so Shevchenko was sent home to become an instructor.[231]

Igor Pechnikov[]

(BA)

Igor Pechnikov was a corporal in the Soviet Red Army during World War III. He was an RPG man. In the spring of 1951, most of his squad was killed, so he was in the process of being transferred to another unit. During his stay at the assignment depot, he shared a cigarette with Sgt. Konstantin Morozov. When he found out what Pechnikov did, Morozov suggested that they probably couldn't be friends. Morozov was called in for reassignment before he could further elaborate on his joke.[232]

Simon Perkins[]

(F)

Simon Perkins (b. c. 1899) was a chemist in East Dereham. A confirmed bachelor, Perkins rented out a room above his shop to Daisy Baxter in the first part of 1952. Baxter found him precise and neat, and wondered about his sexuality. Because of his fussiness, Baxter had to maintain the sexual part of her relationship with Bruce McNulty in places other than her room.[233]

Major Pesky[]

(F)

Major Pesky was piloting President Harry Truman when the Soviet Union atom bombed Washington, DC. He was diverted to Richmond, overruling Truman's request that they go to Baltimore.[234]

Volodymyr Petlyura[]

(A)

Colonel Volodymyr Petlyura was the commandant at the air base at Mogilev. Although he was Ukrainian, he was loyal to the Soviet Union. In August 1952, while various airmen made inappropriate remarks while listening to Radio Moscow, Pelyura stood up and demanded the appropriate attitude and obedience.[235]

He maintained this general dogmatic devotion to the Soviet Union even as his airmen were bombing rebellious satellites back into submission.[236]

Plummer[]

(A)

Plummer was one of several Geiger-counter-wielding technicians from the Defense Department, who escorted President Harry Truman through the ruins of Washington, DC after it was hit by a Soviet atom bomb. He had stormcloud-grey eyes behind his spectacles. As he was the son of a Polish immigrant (who had changed his name from Plazynski to Plummer), he was hopeful that Poland would succeed in rebelling against the Soviet Union.[237]

Pyotr Polikarpov[]

(A)

Pyotr Polikarpov was a tank-gunner in the Soviet Red Army. He was assigned to Konstantin Morozov's tank after Juris Eigims deserted, after the ceasefire that ended World War III. He was young and not very bright, and Morozov didn't like him much.[238]

Portland Newsstand Man[]

(A)

A newsstand owner at the train station in Portland, Maine informed Bruce McNulty that his stock was so low because most periodicals were physically published in New York City, which had been destroyed by a Soviet atom bomb in May 1952. The newsstand man also explained that while the train to San Francisco still went through Boston (another atom bomb victim), McNulty would change trains in Worcester.[239]

Anatoly Privshin[]

(F)

Anatoly Privshin was a sergeant in the Soviet Red Army during both World War II and World War III. He was deeply suspicious of non-Russians. When Ihor Shevchenko was transferred to his section, Privshin made it clear that he had his eye on the Ukrainian Shevchenko, heaping verbal abuse on him. He was also hard on Armenian Aram Demirchyan.[240]

While located near Paderborn, West Germany, nearby American troops fired on the Soviet positions with a German MG-42. Privishin decided his section would take the gun, much to Shevchenko's horror. However, Privishin proved to be a brave and reasonably competent sergeant. The section took the gun, and Shevchenko even killed an American who was about to ambush Privishin, an act he rather regretted. Privishin never thanked him.[241]

As the fighting outside Paderborn continued, Sgt. Privishin earned the hatred of his command more and more. Shevchenko in particular had no use for Privishin's abusiveness. Finally, during an assault on Paderborn, which sent Soviet troops into the path of an American machinegun, Privishin went too far, commanding his men to take the machinegun nest. Instead several Soviet men were killed. Seeing the carnage, Shevechenko shot Privishin in the back, killing him.[242]

Gyula Pusztai[]

(BA)

Gyula Pusztai (d. 1951) was part of the same unit of the Hungarian People's Army as Tibor Nagy and Isztvan Szolovits. When they were first moved west on 1 February 1951, he asked Nagy to confirm that their sergeant, Erno Gergely, had announced that they were on the verge of fighting the United States. When Nagy did confirm it, Pusztai announced that the Americans would slaughter them. Sgt. Gergely, instead of disciplining Pusztai, gave him cold comfort, first by reminding Pusztai the he, Gergely, had survived World War II, but then also pointing out that many of the men he'd served with had been slaughtered.[243]

Pusztai was killed in combat in April.[244]

Pyotr[]

(BA)

Pyotr resided on the same kolkohz (collective farm) in the Ukraine as Ihor and Anya Shevchenko. He was a Russian, but no one held that against him. At a feast on 15 February 1951, as World War III was about to erupt, Pyotr toasted the soldier's hundred grams.[245]

Red-Tie[]

(BA)

An MGB agent and his partner, Vanya, went to kohlkohz 127 in June 1951 to collect Ihor Shevchenko and Bohdan Gavrysh for the fighting in the West. As Shevchenko never learned the name of Vanya's partner, he thought of him as Red-Tie.[246]

Rodney[]

(A)

Rodney was a student in Mrs. Valentine's English lit class with Istvan Szolovits. He wondered why they had to read Hamlet. Mrs. Valentine made a point trying to show Rodney and the rest of the class the value of the work.[247]

Mike Rogers[]

(A)

Mike Rogers became President Harry Truman's personal secretary after Rose Conway was killed in May 1952. Truman found Rogers capable, but he did miss Conway. Truman also wondered whether Rogers was a homosexual.[248]

Rogers informed Truman that Richard C. Patterson, Jr., the U.S. ambassador to Switzerland, had sent a cable to Philadelphia. When Truman asked Rogers if he'd read it, Rogers seemed shocked.[249]

Vsevolod Rogozin[]

(A)

Colonel Vsevolod Ivanovich Rogozin was a division commander in the Red Army during and after World War III. In September 1952, he approved a transfer-request made by Captain Pavlov on behalf of Sgt. Ihor Shevchenko. Rogozin's brother-in-law was the assistant chief of staff in the Kiev Military District, and so Rogozin sent Shevchenko home to become an instructor.[250]

Roland[]

(F)

Roland ran a motor court in Weed, California. He rented to Marian and Linda Staley when they arrived in town in September 1951. They'd been referred there by Babs, a waitress at a local greasy spoon. Roland gave Marian a discount when she told him about Babs.[251]

Mrs. Rubin[]

(A)

Mr. Rubin was a customer of Blue Front. Aaron Finch and Istvan Szolovits delivered a washer and dryer to her on Szolovits' first day. When they realized she was not originally from the United States, Finch offered to speak in Yiddish. When Mrs. Rubin learned that Szolovits had just come from the war, she cried in sympathy, and tipped him five dollars to Finch's two, which Finch found amusing.[252]

Mogamed Safarli[]

(BA)

Mogamed Safarli (c. 1930-1951) was the loader of the T-54 commanded by Sgt. Konstantin Morozov during the first months of World War III. Like everyone else in the tank, save Morozov, Safarli was too young to have served in World War II. He was a so-called "blackass" from Azerbaijan or some other such part of the Soviet Union.[253]

Safarli was part of the Soviet invasion of West Germany, with Safarli's unit as part of the initial spearhead towards Fulda.[254] The advance pushed west. In April, Morozov's tank was hit by a British or American tank. While the shell killed the tank's engine, it didn't immediately destroy the tank, allowing Morozov and his crew to escape into a Soviet fox hole. The tank was destroyed almost immediately after they'd escaped. The driver, Misha Kasyanov, was shot in the leg. They were able to carry him in as well, and he received treatment.[255]

The crew was issued a new tank within a few week, a repaired one that had previously sustained damage from an armor piercing round.[256] They were also given a new driver, Yevgeny Ushakov.[257] Once the crew was squared away, they were sent to help break into Arnsberg.[258] Their talent as a crew meant that they were frequently the tip of the spear in the Soviet drive.[259]

Safarli and the crew, save Morozov, were killed in Dortmund by a bazooka.[260]

Safir Safarli[]

(A)

Safir Safarli was an Azerbaijani who served as a junior sergeant in the Red Army during and after World War III. In mid-1952, he was in the same company as Ihor Shevchenko. Safarli soon noticed that Shevcheko treated him with the same respect he would have treated a Russian. When Safarli asked why, Shevchenko explained that he was a Ukraininan, not a Russian, and so he was used to shabby treatment himself.[261]

Frank Sanderson[]

(F)

Frank Sanderson was a PFC in the U.S. Army, serving in the Korean front after it had been folded into World War III. In July 1951, Sanderson assisted Lt. Cade Curtis in destroying a Red Chinese Maxim gun with bazookas. Both survived and returned to their own lines safely.[262]

Del Shanahan[]

(BA)

Lt. Colonel Del Shanahan was with United States Air Force Intelligence during World War III. Shanahan met with Aaron Finch a few days after the Soviets successfully atom bombed several U.S. cities, including Los Angeles. Shanahan clarified a few points about Finch's capture of Lt. Yuri Svechin, one of the flyers who'd bombed L.A., including how they communicated (Finch's Yiddish was close enough to German, which Svechin spoke), and that Svechin was willing to surrender when he saw Finch wasn't going to hurt him.[263] The two discussed the fact that other Soviets who had parachuted into the L.A. area had been killed by angry mobs, and some of the international legal issues those deaths had raised. Once Shanahan was convinced Finch was merely a "chance passerby" rather than a spy, he sent Finch home.[264]

Simmons[]

(F)

Mr. Simmons was a U.S. government accountant assigned to Camp Nowhere. In July 1951, he informed Marian Staley that she was getting $15,000 from her late husband's government life insurance policy. This was enough for her and her daughter to get out of Camp Nowhere.

Marian Staley thought Simmons looked more like an auto mechanic than an accountant.[265]

Simpkins[]

(BA)

Simpkins was a soldier in the British Army during World War III. He was a "Geordie", probably hailing from north England. He was part of the detail that cordoned off and patrolled Norwich after the Soviets dropped an atomic bomb on 1 February 1951. Towards the end of February, he and a captain caught Daisy Baxter near the edge of Norwich proper. When she gave the two the impression she resided nearby, the captain ordered Simpkins to take Daisy to nearby Bawdeswell. During the drive, Daisy was able to get Simpkins' impression of what the center of Norwich looked like now. He said that spots of the road were fused to glass, and most of the buildings had been leveled. She told him that her husband had been killed in the last war, he shared this his own cousin had been as well. When they reached Bawdeswell, Daisy got on her bike and returned home.[266]

Dave Simpkins[]

(A)

Dave Simpkins was a young man who interviewed prospective personnel for United Airlines' Oakland office just after World War III ended. He told applicant Bruce McNulty that McNulty's record was impressive, but that the airline had no openings for a pilot.[267]

Mrs. Simpkins[]

(F)

Mrs. Simpkins was a middle-aged woman who survived the atomic bombing of Sculthorpe on 11 September 1951. She was placed in a British Army tent along with Daisy Baxter and six other women while she recovered from radiation sickness and a wounded leg. Given her condition, she, like the rest of the women, required the aid of the sisters on staff to do simple things like use a bedpan. There was effectively no privacy, so everyone in the tent heard when the sister announced that there was almost no blood in Mrs. Simpkins' urine.[268]

Smushkevich[]

(F)

Lt. Smushkevich was a company commander in the Soviet Red Army during World War III. In June 1951, Smushkevich was placed in command of a hastily assembled regiment of young draftees and some veterans. He asked two veterans of World War II, Ihor Shevchenko and Dmitri Karsavin to keep an eye on the new kids in the unit.[269]

Smushkevich participated in Soviet Union's successful capture of West German town of Rheine.[270] By July 1951, the unit was near Hörstel when Shevchenko sat on a glass bottle and cut up his left buttock. After examining the wound, Smushkevich deemed it serious enough to transfer Shevchenko back to Hörstel, and ordered Karsavin to drive him. That night, the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on the unit's position. Shevchenko, safely in the hospital, never knew how many in the unit survived.[271]

Soviet Tank Park Corporal[]

(BA)

When Sgt. Konstantin Morozov's T-54 was destroyed, a corporal in a tank park showed him a replacement T-54 that had been repaired. The corporal was apologetic about the stink of kerosene in the fighting compartment but indicated the Soviet Red Army needed all the tanks they could get. Morozov knew that the repair crew had used it to mask the smell of decaying flesh and blood from the dead, previous crew.

The corporal also showed Morozov the patch welded onto the frontal armor where the AP round had penetrated. Morozov thought he would hang spare track links over the spot just in case it remained a weak spot. The corporal agreed that was a good idea and stayed with the refurbished machine when Morozov went to get his crew.[272]

Heber Stansfield[]

(F)

Heber Stansfield ran the Rexall in Weed, California. In Spring 1952, he and Marian Staley talked about the recent death of Leroy van Zandt, and agreed that the logging companies that ran the town at a minimum should do more for their injured employees. Stansfield cautioned Staley about being too vocal, since she worked for Shasta Lumber Corporation.[273]

Willi Stoiber[]

(BA)

Willi Stoiber was the Burgomeister of Fulda just prior to the outbreak of World War III. He was a fat blowhard. Fulda resident Gustav Hozzel wondered how Stoiber had gotten past the denazification process.[274]

Stuart[]

(F)

Stuart was a resident of Fakenham, United Kingdom. He survived the Soviet atomic attack of 11 September 1951 on nearby Sculthorpe that also leveled Fakenham. He'd known Daisy Baxter all of her life; she'd gone to school with his sister, Kitty.

Stuart and Daisy ran into each other at a club on New Year's Eve, 1951. He told her that Kitty had also survived the bombing.[275]

Susanna[]

(A)

Susanna was a West German zek held in the same camp as Luisa Hozzel and Trudl Bachman. When Bachman decided to exchange sexual favors for food and other benefits, Hozzel worked with Susanna, and another German woman named Elena. Both were happy to allow Hozzel to do the heaviest work.[276]

Ralph Sutton[]

(A)

Ralph Sutton ran the electronics of Bruce McNulty's B-29, including the radar. As such he was part of the successful attack on Petrozavodsk as part of Operation Long Reach.[277]

Yuri Svechin[]

(BA)

Lt. Yuri Svechin was part of one of the Soviet bomber crews that atom bombed Los Angeles on March 2, 1951. The crew parachuted after the attack. Several members went missing, others were attacked and killed by angry civilians. Svechin landed near Glendale, where he was promptly captured by appliance deliveryman Aaron Finch, and taken to the Glendale police station. Svechin knew German and Finch knew Yiddish, so the two were able to communicate.[278]

Svyatoslav Sverdlovsk[]

(A)

Svyatoslav Sverdlovsk was a lieutenant in the MGB during World War III. He investigated the desertion of Juris Eigims, and interrogated Eigims' superior, Konstantin Morozov. A devoted officer, Sverdlovsk concluded that Morozov had nothing to with Eigims' desertion. He was disgusted with the recent unofficial ceasefire between the Soviet Union and the United States.[279]

Szulc[]

(A)

Szulc was the name of a crewmate of Aaron Finch when he was in the Merchant Marine during World War II. Although Finch read the Polish written name as "Zulk," it was pronounced "Schultz." Finch remembered this trivia in 1952 when discussing alphabetical culture shock with Istvan Szolovits.[280]

Rivke Tabakman[]

(Posthumous references throughout)

Rivke Tabakman (d. c. 1944) was a Jewish citizen of Poland before the Second World War. When the Nazis invaded Poland, Rivke, together with her husband Fayvl and their son and daughter, joined a resisting band of partisans. Eventually the family were captured and sent to Auschwitz. Rivke and her children died there, and Fayvl was the only member of the family to survive the war.

Tank-park Colonel[]

(F)

A grey-haired lieutenant colonel commanded a Soviet tank park located near Dassel, West Germany. In April 1952, when the park's sergeant tried to place Konstantin Morozov and his crew in a T-34. Morozov flatly and obscenely refused, prompting Ninel to get the lieutenant colonel. The colonel threatened Morozov with court-martial and execution, but Morozov stood his ground, assuring the colonel that putting him in the T-34 would have the same result. Convinced, the colonel ordered Ninel to give Morozov's crew a T-54, one that was not a lemon.[281]

Mrs. Thompkins[]

(A)

Mrs. Thompkins was a resident of Glendale, California. In May, 1952, she ordered a new automatic washing machine from Blue Front. Aaron Finch and Jim Summers delivered it, but Finch installed it by himself. Mrs. Thompkins told Finch that she'd hated her old wringer washing machine because she was afraid it would pull her in. She offered neither tip nor refreshment, a fact that upset Summers.[282]

Kliment Todorsky[]

(F)

Major Kliment Todorsky was a Soviet soldier during World War III. In December 1951, he commanded a regiment that participated in a drive on Paderborn, West Germany. Todorsky used the T-34s as point vehicles in his platoons to draw fire, and then using T-54s to finish off the enemy.[283]

Christopher Toohey[]

(F)

Christopher Toohey was a doctor in Weed, California. In December 1951, he called to the office of Shasta Lumber Corporation to treat loggers working Billy Hurley and Tom Andersen. The two had been driving lumber when Andersen lost control on an icy road and sent their truck down a scree slope. Hurley was thrown clear, but Andersen was badly injured. Hurley made his way to the road, flagged down a car, and got a ride back to the company office, where he asked the secretaries present to call Dr. Toohey for help. When Toohey arrived, Hurley led him to Andersen.[284] After gathering up Andersen for the eighty-mile drive to the nearest hospital, Toohey put a bandage on Hurley's head and dropped him off at the office again.[285]

In December 1952, he told Marian Tabakman that she was pregnant, and that her child was due in July.[286]

Vic Torre[]

(A)

Vic Torre was a heavily five-o-clock-shadowed young man who interviewed prospective personnel for Continental Airlines' Oakland office, just after World War III ended. He told applicant Bruce McNulty that McNulty's was very well qualified, but that the airline had no openings for a pilot. When Torre suggested that McNulty rejoin the Air Force, McNulty stated his desire never to drop another atom bomb, and Torre looked at McNulty as if the latter were a werewolf. He tried to console McNulty by telling him he was a hero, but McNulty already had enough medals to his supposed heroism that he was too jaded to be moved by the assertion.[287]

Vitya Trubetskoi[]

(BA)

Corporal Vitya Trubetskoi was the rear gunner in Boris Gribkov's Tu-4. He survived the water landing in the Pacific after the crew dropped an atomic bomb on Seattle. Gribkov was pleased; he was sure that Trubetskoi would drown as the plane had landed tail first.[288]

US Air Force Major[]

(BA)

One morning in May 1951 in Camp Nowhere, Marian Staley had just dropped off Linda at the camp kindergarten when the loudspeakers called her name and asked her to report to the administrative center. She did so and was taken by a clerk to a private nook behind some file cabinets to met a US Air Force Major. After he verified her identity, he told her that her husband Bill had been killed during a bombing mission. It took a moment to sink in, but when it did Marian let out a shriek and then tried to strike him. The Major grabbed her wrist before she could connect, showing he had done this duty before.[289]

Yevgeny Ushakov[]

(BA)

Yevgeny Ushakov was a Soviet T-54 driver during World War III. He was assigned to Konstantin Morozov's tank in April 1951.[290] He participated in the breakthrough at Arnsberg.[291] He and the rest of the crew, save Morozov, were killed by a bazooka in Dortmund in May.[292]

Valentine[]

(A)

Mrs. Valentine was an English literature instructor at Pasadena Junior College. Istvan Szolovits enrolled in one of her evening classes in the Fall of 1952. While he found the topic dry, Szolovits did find the topic to be an interesting one, he didn't find her that an interesting of an instructor. She was still an enthusiastic educator, and tried to get her students to see the value of the works they were reading.[293]

Van Zandt[]

(A)

Mr. van Zandt was an English language instructor at Pasadena Junior College. Istvan Szolovits enrolled in one of his evening classes in the Fall of 1952. While he found the topic dry, Szolovits did find van Zandt to be an interesting instructor.[294]

Leroy van Zandt[]

(F)

Leroy van Zandt (d. 1952) was a driver for the National Wood and Timber company in Weed, California. In the spring of 1952 he swerved to avoid a deer and went down a steep slope. The truck caught fire. While van Zandt was able to get out, he was burned before he could. As Weed had no ambulance, van Zandt died in the back of the car of Doctor Christopher Toohey on the way to the nearest hospital.[295] This being the latest in a series of accidents that emphasized Weed's lack of an ambulance, Marian Staley began working with local journalist Dale Dropo to convince the logging companies to collectively buy a new ambulance.[296]

Vanya[]

(BA)

Vanya was one of two MGB agents who went to kolkhoz 127 in June 1951 to collect Ihor Shevchenko and Bohdan Gavrysh for the fighting in the West.[297]

Alexei Vavilov[]

(F-A)

Commander Alexei Vavilov was the skipper of the Soviet submarine S-71 during World War III. In May 1952, the S-71 collected the Tu-4 crew commanded by Boris Gribkov after they destroyed Washington, DC. Vavilov toasted the crew as heroes. Later, Vavilov and Gribkov discussed the future of warfare.[298]

The S-71 carried Gribkov's crew to Kem. Gribkov quickly came to admire Vavilov's skill and efficiency as a commander.[299]

Vera[]

(A)

Vera an U.S. Army nurse stationed in South Korea during World War III. She helped care for Cade Curtis after he was injured by shrapnel and lost his leg. She was bigoted, describing Koreans as "gooks" without a second thought, and was disgusted by Curtis's relationship with Jimmy.[300]

When Jimmy and Howie Sturgis visited Curtis in the hospital, Vera could not hide her disapproval. She grew even more horrified when Curtis proposed to adopt Jimmy to insure he would escape South Korea after the fighting was done, calling Jimmy a "gook" to his face. Sturgis had to remind Jimmy that Vera was an officer, though he took Jimmy's side during the confrontation. Vera raised concerns with her superiors, but Lt. Colonel Nathan Marcus agreed with Curtis' plan.[301]

Volodya[]

(A)

Volodya (d. 1952) was a Soviet soldier killed in Poland in 1952. He'd greedily tried to collect an apparently discarded bottle of vodka. This was actually a booby trap set by Polish anti-Soviet rebels. He was killed by the bomb immediately. His sergeant, Ihor Shevchenko, oversaw the digging of Volodya's grave, making sure it was deep enough to keep scavengers away. Otherwise, Volodya was not mourned or remembered.[302]

Phil Vukovich[]

(A)

Phil Vukovich was a veteran of World War II. He became a lawyer, then rejoined the service after the outbreak of World War III. He served as Bruce McNulty's navigator during Operation Long Reach. Like McNulty and the rest of the crew, Vukovich was dubious about the plan to attack Petrozavodsk by going over Finland, which wasn't actually in the war, but would likely notify the Soviets. Vukovich realized that their part was likely a diversion. The crew carried out their part of the plan, successfully destroying Petrozavodsk despite the tremendous risk.[303]

Jeff Walpole[]

(BA)

Jeff Walpole was a major in the U.S. Army. He was Cade Curtis' superior officer in Korea in April 1951. He explained to Curtis that a psy-ops colonel named Linebarger, an officer with substantial clout and fluency in Chinese, created a program for American troops to broadcast via loudspeaker at the Chinese and North Korean troops across no-man's land. The program used the Chinese words for "love" and "virtue" and "humanity", which when taken together also sounded like English for "I surrender", allowing the Reds to surrender without losing face.[304]

In May 1951, he informed Cade Curtis and Sgt. Lou Klein that the U.S. had atom bombed Khabarovsk and Blagoveshchensk.[305] Shortly after making that announcement, their position came under shelling, and Walpole was injured in the leg.[306]

Comrade Wang[]

(BA)

Comrade Wang was a Chinese communist commissar from Peking. He and his wife were sent to Harbin to help rebuild it after the U.S. used an atomic bomb on the city.[307] His wife approached Vasili Yasevich about getting her husband something to perk him up. Yasevich provided her with ma huang.[308]

Comrade Wang's Wife[]

(BA)

The wife of Comrade Wang approached Vasili Yasevich about getting something to perk her husband up. Yasevich provided her with ma huang, after some harsh haggling between them. Despite her status as the wife of a communist official, she didn't demonstrate many egalitarian qualities. She did recommend Yasevich to other women she knew.[309]

Emma Watson[]

(A)

Emma Watson (b. c. 1921) lived in a neighborhood that had just barely escaped the atomic bombing of Los Angeles during World War III. The broken stump of City Hall was visible to the north. Shortly after the war, Blue Front drivers Aaron Finch and Istvan Szolovits delivered a television and washing machine to her. Mrs. Watson was the first Negro of Szolovits' acquaintance who could afford luxuries like these.[310]

Roger Williamson[]

(BA)

Roger Williamson was the navigator aboard the B-29 commanded by Major Hank McCutcheon.[311] After participating in several key missions, he was killed when their bomber was shot down over the Soviet city of Blagoveshchensk.[312]

Witold[]

(A)

Witold was a druggist in Warsaw with ties to the anti-Soviet rebels led by Casimir. In September 1952, Casimir and Vasili Yasevich entered Warsaw to get supplies from Witold. However, Russians recognized Casimir, and he was killed in the ensuing shoot-out. Yasevich made his way to Witold's shop, and met Witold's daughter, Ewa.[313]

Wu[]

(BA)

In April 1951 at a ceremony celebrating the reopening of the rail-line through Harbin, a man named Wu approached Vasili Yasevich for ma huang. Feeling uncertain about the stranger, Yasevich told Wu he'd meet him the next day after work. Wu insisted twice that he could go home with Yasevich for the ma huang. When Yasevich told Wu no and insulted him, Wu looked ready to fight so Yasevich reached for the straight razor in his pocket. He didn't have to use the razor; Wu stomped off.[314]

Yakov Benyaminovich[]

(F)

Yakov Benyaminovich was the dentist in Smidovich. He extracted an infected tooth from Gleb Sukhanov in spring of 1952.[315]

Alexei Yakovlev[]

(A)

Alexei Yakovlev (b. 1935) was a Soviet soldier who served as Konstantin Morozov's bow gunner in Lithuania in 1952. Morozov was astonished by Yakovlev's youth.[316]

Yitzkhak[]

(BA)

Yitzkhak was a Jewish resident of Everett, Washington. He'd been born in Eastern Europe, and survived World War II and the Holocaust. He survived the Soviet atomic bombing of the Everett-Seattle area on March 2, 1951. He was reunited with friends Fayvl Tabakman and Moishe in a refugee camp some weeks after the bombing. All three had definite opinions of Stalin.[317]

He and Fayvl didn't care for camp life but acknowledged the food was better and more plentiful than those in Nazi and Soviet camps. Nor were they being worked to death. Their stories of previous hardships both fascinated and horrified Marian Staley, who realized she was just a comfortable American.[318]

Yuri[]

(A)

Yuri was a Soviet soldier. He was a veteran of World War II. While fighting in Poland in 1944, he was shot in the buttock. In June 1952, he was again fighting in Poland during World War III. He was amused to find himself in the exact same town where he'd been shot in 1944. He explained this to Vasili Yasevich, who was also somewhat amused. The experienced Yuri became something of a role model for Yasevich.[319]

References[]

  1. ,Armistice pgs. 382-384.
  2. Bombs Away, pgs. pgs. 307-311, ebook.
  3. Ibid., pgs. 428-430.
  4. Bombs Away, pg. 328, ebook.
  5. Ibid., pg. 328-329.
  6. Ibid., pg. 330.
  7. Ibid., pgs. 331-332.
  8. Fallout, loc. 2302, E-book.
  9. Armistice, pgs. 79-80, ebook.
  10. Ibid., pgs. 232-234.
  11. Ibid. pgs. 319-320.
  12. Fallout, loc. 4558-4570.
  13. Ibid., loc. 4583.
  14. Armistice, pg. 280, ebook.
  15. Fallout, loc. 911-925, ebook.
  16. Ibid., loc. 3094-3167.
  17. Ibid., loc. 3646-3682.
  18. Ibid, loc. 3694.
  19. Ibid., loc. 3706-3718.
  20. Ibid, pgs. 353-356.
  21. Fallout, loc. 3292-3304, ebook.
  22. Ibid., loc. 3608.
  23. Bombs Away, pg. 18-19, e-book.
  24. Bombs Away, pgs. 108-109, ebook.
  25. Bombs Away, pg. 168, ebook.
  26. Ibid., pg. 376.
  27. Bombs Away, pgs. 41-42, ebook.
  28. Bombs Away, pg. 283-287, ebook.
  29. Ibid., pg. 376.
  30. Fallout, loc. 4482-4543, ebook.
  31. Ibid., loc. 4482-4531.
  32. Ibid., loc. 4520-4543.
  33. Ibid., loc. 5641.
  34. Ibid, loc. 5691-5704.
  35. Ibid., loc. 5989-6024.
  36. Ibid. loc, 6036-6049.
  37. The character is misidentified as Vladislav Kalyakin, but logically it should be Demyan Belitsky. See Inconsistencies in Turtledove's Work
  38. Ibid., pgs. 66-69.
  39. Fallout, loc., 4335-4361.
  40. Armistice, pgs 38-39, ebook.
  41. Armistice, pgs. 287-288, ebook.
  42. Fallout, loc. 5046-5059.
  43. Fallout, loc. 2046-2062, e-book.
  44. Armistice, pgs. 306-307, ebook.
  45. Fallout, loc. 2152-2213, ebook.
  46. Bombs Away, pg. 132, ebook.
  47. Armistice, pgs 203-206, ebook.
  48. Ibid., pgs. 294-296.
  49. Fallout, loc. 4074-4086.
  50. Ibid., loc. 4688-4721.
  51. Fallout, loc. 4888-4950, ebook.
  52. Ibid., loc. 7041-7104.
  53. Fallout, loc.5099-5109.
  54. Ibid., loc. 6905-6966.
  55. Armistice, pg. 247, loc. 3932, ebook.
  56. Fallout, loc. 5253.
  57. Bombs Away, pg. 61.
  58. Ibid., pg. 346.
  59. Fallout, loc. 2428-2487, ebook.
  60. Armistice, pgs. 16, ebook.
  61. Fallout, loc. 7041-7104, ebook.
  62. Armistice, pgs. 16-18, ebook.
  63. Fallout., loc. 3743.
  64. Ibid., loc. 3718.
  65. Ibid., loc. 3743.
  66. Ibid., loc. 3766-3778.
  67. Ibid., loc. 4609-4680
  68. Armistice, pgs. 174-177, ebook.
  69. Fallout, loc. 4558-4583.
  70. Ibid., loc. 4583.
  71. Bombs Away, pgs. 28-29, ebook.
  72. Ibid., pgs. 141-159, generally.
  73. Ibid., pgs. 176-177.
  74. Fallout, loc. 4609.
  75. Ibid., loc. 6150-6199.
  76. Armistice, pgs. 199-201.
  77. Bombs Away, pgs. 155-159, ebook.
  78. Ibid., pgs. 176-178.
  79. Ibid. pg. 176.
  80. Fallout, pgs. 68-69, loc. 1290-1322, ebook.
  81. Armistice, pg. 167, ebook.
  82. Ibid.
  83. Ibid., pgs. 166-169.
  84. Armistice, pgs. 36-37, ebook.
  85. Bombs Away, pgs. 105-107, ebook.
  86. Fallout, loc. 4780-4815
  87. Fallout, loc. 4964-5023, ebook.
  88. Ibid., loc. 6541-6615.
  89. Ibid., loc. 6692-6762.
  90. Armistice, pg. 386, loc. 6123-6133, ebook.
  91. Bombs Away, pgs. 5-6, ebook.
  92. Bombs Away,pg. 96, ebook.
  93. Fallout, loc. 1290, ebook.
  94. Armistice, pg. 122, ebook.
  95. Ibid., pg. 148.
  96. Bombs Away, pg. 143, ebook.
  97. Ibid., pgs. 155-159.
  98. Bombs Away, pg. 369-370, ebook.
  99. Ibid., pg. 370.
  100. Ibid. pgs. 419-423.
  101. Armistice, pgs. 150-151.
  102. Ibid., pgs. 150-153.
  103. Ibid., pgs. 212-213.
  104. Ibid., loc. 5253.
  105. Armistice, pgs. 363-364, ebook.
  106. Bombs Away, pg. 53, ebook.
  107. Ibid., pg. 376.
  108. Fallout, loc. 4482-4543, ebook.
  109. Ibid., loc. 4520-4543.
  110. Ibid., loc. 5641.
  111. Ibid, loc. 5691-5704.
  112. Ibid., loc. 5989-6024.
  113. Armistice, pgs. 6-10, ebook.
  114. Bombs Away, pgs. 428-430, ebook.
  115. Fallout, p. 36-39.
  116. Ibid., p. 73-74.
  117. Bombs Away, pgs. 74-75, ebook.
  118. Ibid., pgs. 110-113.
  119. Ibid., pgs. 209-213.
  120. Ibid., pg. 235.
  121. Ibid. pg. 237.
  122. Ibid., pg. 238.
  123. Ibid., pg. 289.
  124. Ibid., pg. 356.
  125. Bombs Away., pgs. 20-22, ebook.
  126. Ibid., pgs. 55-58.
  127. Ibid., pgs. 64-65, 70.
  128. Ibid., pgs. 74-78.
  129. Ibid., pgs. 110-113.
  130. Ibid., pgs. 209-213.
  131. Ibid., pgs. 235-238.
  132. Fallout, loc. 4425-4482.
  133. Armistice, pg. 26, ebook.
  134. Bombs Away, pg. 258, ebook.
  135. Ibid., pg. 259.
  136. Ibid., pgs. 369-370.
  137. Bombs Away, pg. 331, ebook.
  138. Bombs Away, pgs. 24-25, ebook.
  139. Ibid.
  140. Ibid., pg. 38.
  141. Ibid., pgs. 40-41.
  142. Ibid., pg. 165.
  143. Ibid., pgs. 283-287.
  144. Ibid., pgs. 286-287.
  145. Armistice, pg. 167.
  146. Armistice, pgs. 72-77, ebook.
  147. Fallout, loc. 1106-1121, ebook.
  148. Bombs Away, pgs. 405-406, ebook.
  149. Armistice, pgs. 391-392.
  150. Armistice, p. 391-392.
  151. Bombs Away, pg. 222, HC.
  152. Fallout, loc. 4558-4570.
  153. Ibid., loc. 4583.
  154. Fallout, loc. 868-911, ebook.
  155. Armistice, pgs. 72-77, ebook.
  156. Bombs Away, pgs. 234-235, ebook.
  157. Ibid., pg. 324.
  158. Ibid., pg. 378.
  159. See also Literary Allusions in Turtledove's Work#Masters and Johnson
  160. Bombs Away, pg. 4-5, e-book.
  161. Fallout, loc. 1214, e-book.
  162. Ibid., loc. 1260-1275.
  163. Ibid., loc. 2030-2093.
  164. Bombs Away, pgs. 207-209, ebook.
  165. Bombs Away, pgs. 207-209, ebook.
  166. Bombs Away, pgs. 74-75, ebook.
  167. Ibid., pgs. 110-113.
  168. Ibid., pgs. 209-213.
  169. Fallout, loc., 4926-4938, ebook.
  170. Fallout, loc. 5034.
  171. Ibid.
  172. Ibid., loc. 5071.
  173. Ibid., loc. 7116-7176.
  174. Bombs Away, pgs. 400-402.
  175. Fallout, loc. 739-768.
  176. Ibid, loc. 784-799.
  177. Fallout, loc. loc. 4194-4255.
  178. Armistice, p. 348.
  179. Bombs Away, pgs. 1-2., ebook.
  180. Bombs Away, pg. 296, ebook.
  181. Fallout, loc. 5691, ebook.
  182. Armistice, pg. 122.
  183. Ibid.
  184. Ibid., pgs. 348-353.
  185. Armistice, pgs. 287-288, ebook.
  186. Bombs Away, pg. 427.
  187. Ibid., pgs. 427-428.
  188. Ibid., pg. 429.
  189. Bombs Away, pg. 201, ebook.
  190. Bombs Away, pg. 102, ebook.
  191. Ibid. pgs. 118.
  192. Bombs Away, pg. 103, ebook.
  193. Armistice, pgs. 264-268, ebook.
  194. Ibid., pgs. 308-309.
  195. Bombs Away, pg. 4-5, ebook.
  196. Fallout, loc., 723.
  197. Fallout, loc. 6620-6680.
  198. Fallout, loc. 4274.
  199. Ibid., loc. 4267-4291.
  200. Armistice, pgs 22-23, ebook.
  201. Bombs Away, pgs. 365-369, ebook.
  202. Armistice, pgs. 57-62, ebook.
  203. Bombs Away, pgs. 309-310, ebook.
  204. Armistice, pgs. 288-292, ebook.
  205. Armistice, pgs. 188-189, ebook.
  206. Bombs Away, pgs. 175-176, ebook.
  207. Bombs Away, pg. 260, HC.
  208. Bombs Away, p. 259-261.
  209. Fallout, loc. 5989-6024, ebook.
  210. Fallout, loc., 940, e-book.
  211. Bombs Away, pgs. 263-264, ebook.
  212. Ibid., pgs. 259-260.
  213. Bombs Away, pg. 275, ebook.
  214. Fallout, loc. 2000-2015, e-book.
  215. Ibid., loc. 3094-3131.
  216. Ibid., loc. 3646-3682.
  217. Ibid, loc. 3694.
  218. Bombs Away, pgs. 319-322, HC.
  219. Ibid., pgs. 369-371.
  220. Bombs Away, pgs. 252-253, ebook.
  221. Fallout, loc. 1091, 1121e-book.
  222. Ibid, loc. 1781.
  223. Armistice, pg. 148, ebook.
  224. Armistice, pgs. 282-283, ebook.
  225. Fallout, loc. 3371-3422, ebook.
  226. Ibid., loc. 3434-3446.
  227. Ibid, loc. 4408-4419.
  228. Ibid., loc. 4432-4444.
  229. Ibid., loc. 4425-4482.
  230. Armistice, pgs 225-228.
  231. Ibid. pgs. 319-322.
  232. Bombs Away, pg. 400, ebook.
  233. Fallout, loc. 5361.
  234. Fallout, loc. 6620-6680.
  235. Armistice, pg. 234, ebook.
  236. Ibid. pgs. 272-276.
  237. Armistice, pgs. 3-7.
  238. Armistice, pgs. 146-149, ebook.
  239. Armistice, pg. 330, ebook.
  240. Fallout, loc. 3718-3743.
  241. Ibid., loc. 3766-3778.
  242. Ibid., loc. 4609-4680
  243. Bombs Away, pg. 68-69, ebook.
  244. Ibid., pg. 229.
  245. Bombs Away, pg. 102, ebook.
  246. Bombs Away, pg. 419-422, ebook.
  247. Armistice, pgs. 363-364, ebook.
  248. Armistice, pg. 101, ebook.
  249. Ibid. pgs. 101-102.
  250. Ibid. pgs. 319-322.
  251. Fallout, loc. 3304, ebook.
  252. Armistice, pg. 219, ebook.
  253. Bombs Away, pgs. 74-75, ebook.
  254. Ibid., pgs. 110-113.
  255. Ibid., pgs. 209-213.
  256. Ibid., pg. 235.
  257. Ibid. pg. 237.
  258. Ibid., pg. 238.
  259. Ibid., pg. 289.
  260. Ibid., pg. 356.
  261. Armistice, pg. 224, ebook.
  262. Fallout, loc. 1141-1200, e-book.
  263. Bombs Away. pg. 170, ebook.
  264. Ibid., pgs. 171-172.
  265. Fallout, loc. 1536, ebook.
  266. Bombs Away, pgs. 132-134, ebook.
  267. Armistice, p. 380.
  268. Fallout, loc. 2703-2715, ebook.
  269. Fallout, loc. 1230.
  270. Ibid., loc. 1260-1275.
  271. Ibid., loc. 2030-2093.
  272. Bombs Away, pgs. 237-239, HC.
  273. Fallout, loc. 6137-6150.
  274. Bombs Away, pg. 78, ebook.
  275. Fallout, loc., 4926-4938, ebook.
  276. Armistice, pg. 190, ebook.
  277. Armistice, pgs. 72-77, ebook.
  278. Bombs Away, pgs. 153-155, ebook.
  279. Armistice, pgs. 123-124, ebook.
  280. Armistice, pg. 421.
  281. Fallout, loc. 5989-6024, ebook.
  282. Armistice, pgs. 24-25, ebook.
  283. Fallout, loc. 4520-4543, ebook.
  284. Fallout, loc. 4558-4570.
  285. Ibid., loc. 4583.
  286. Armistice, pg. 422.
  287. Armistice, pgs. 380-381.
  288. Bombs Away, pg. 158, ebook.
  289. Bombs Away, pgs. 376-380, ebook.
  290. Bombs Away, pg. 237, ebook.
  291. Ibid., pg. 290.
  292. Ibid., pgs. 356.
  293. Armistice, pgs. 363-364, ebook.
  294. Armistice, pgs. 363-364, ebook.
  295. Fallout, loc. 6137, ebook.
  296. Ibid., loc. 6150-6199.
  297. Bombs Away, pg. 419-422, ebook.
  298. Fallout, loc. 6692-6762.
  299. Armistice, pgs. 19-22, ebook.
  300. Armistice, pgs. 199-203, ebook.
  301. Ibid., pgs. 264-268.
  302. Armistice, pg. 288, ebook.
  303. Armistice, pgs. 72-77, ebook.
  304. Bombs Away, pgs. 311-315, ebook.
  305. Ibid., pg. 382.
  306. Ibid., pgs. 385-386.
  307. Bombs Away, pg. 185, ebook.
  308. Ibid.
  309. Bombs Away, pg. 185, ebook.
  310. Armistice, pgs. 420-421.
  311. Bombs Away, pg. 167, ebook.
  312. Ibid., pg. 376.
  313. Armistice, pgs. 294-297, ebook.
  314. Bombs Away, pgs. 268-270, ebook.
  315. Fallout, loc. 6991, ebook.
  316. Armistice, pgs. 300-306, ebook.
  317. Bombs Away, pgs. 175-176, ebook.
  318. Ibid., pgs. 231-235.
  319. Armistice, pg 105-109, ebook.
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