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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: ARCHIE DUNLOP (center), 95 years old, a British veteran of World War II, is helped into the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay029.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  The headstone of a World War II Commonwealth soldier in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay002.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  JERRY KARWACKI, (right) from the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Bangkok, Thailand, salutes with a veteran of the British Commonweath during the wreath laying at the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay044.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, salutes after placing a wreath on a memorial for soldiers killed working on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay042.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Thai buglers play during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay040.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay039.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay036.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay034.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay033.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay028.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay027.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay026.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay025.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, pauses at the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay024.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, leaves a cross on the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay023.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, pauses at the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay021.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, leaves a cross on the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay020.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Scottish veterans of the British army look for the headstones of Scottish soldiers buried in Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay019.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, pauses at the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay018.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Scottish veterans of the British army look for the headstones of Scottish soldiers buried in Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay017.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man leaves flowers on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay015.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay014.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery  during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay012.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery  during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay011.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay007.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay006.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay005.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay003.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  J.P. VAN DER MEULEN, left, a veteran of the Dutch Navy, walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery before the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US..     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay001.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, salutes after placing a wreath on a memorial for soldiers killed working on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay043.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, salutes after placing a wreath on a memorial for soldiers killed working on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay041.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay038.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay037.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay035.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay032.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People at the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay031.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People at the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay030.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A Scottish veteran of the British army looks for the headstones of Scottish soldiers buried in Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay022.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man leaves flowers on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay016.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery  during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay013.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A British flag on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay010.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A British flag on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay009.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay008.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay004.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  A detail of a statue of civilian refugees in the Korean War at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. The museum is in the background. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial022.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A teenager looks at a display of M1 Garand rifles at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. The M1 was carried by US soldiers in the Korean War and was the South Korean service rifle for many years. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial012.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Children watch a performance by South Korean honor guards at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial021.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A traditional South Korean honor guard at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial020.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A traditional South Korean honor guard at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial019.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A South Korean military honor guard performs at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial018.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A South Korean military honor guard performs at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial017.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A girl waves South Korean flags at a picture point in the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. The background of the picture point is Dokdo Island, a small islet about midway between Japan and South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial016.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A girl waves South Korean flags at a picture point in the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. The background of the picture point is Dokdo Island, a small islet about midway between Japan and South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial015.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A girl waves South Korean flags at a picture point in the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. The background of the picture point is Dokdo Island, a small islet about midway between Japan and South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial014.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A teenager looks at a display of US and Soviet bloc small arms at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial013.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  School girls at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, read about the UN intervention to aid South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial011.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Students at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, read about the UN intervention to aid South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial010.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: People walk through a display meant to look like a military cemetery at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial009.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Children in a school group at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, walk past a memorial to countries who contributed troops to the UN effort in South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial008.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Children in a school group at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, play on a replica of the PKM-357 patrol boat sunk by the North Korean navy in 2002. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial007.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A school girl at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, walks down the stairs on a replica of the PKM-357 patrol boat sunk by the North Korean navy in 2002. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial006.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Children in a school group at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, look at a static display of tanks. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial005.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Children in a school group at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, play on a replica of the PKM-357 patrol boat sunk by the North Korean navy in 2002. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial004.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Children in a school group at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, look at a static display of tanks. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial002.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A school group walks past a static display of armor and artillery at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial001.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders file out of Glendale Cemetery after the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneralBW009.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneralBW007.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneralBW003.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneralBW002.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Children in a school group at the War Memorial of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, play on a replica of the PKM-357 patrol boat sunk by the North Korean navy in 2002. With the near constant threat of invasion from North Korea, many South Koreans take great pride in the ability of their armed forces. Some observers believe there is a possibility that a peace agreement between South and North Korea could be signed following the Trump/Kim summit in Singapore. The War Memorial and museum opened in 1994 on the former site of the army headquarters to exhibit and memorialize the military history of Korea. When it opened in 1994 it was the largest building of its kind in the world. The museum features displays about the Korean War and many static displays of military equipment.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SeoulWarMemorial003.jpg
  • 29 AUGUST 2020 - RUNNELLS, IOWA: A man in a replica of Revolutionary War era Continental Army uniform at the funeral for Pvt. Roy Brown Jr. in Runnells, IA. Pvt. Brown was a US Army soldier in World War II. He was an infantryman in the 126th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Infantry Division, serving in the Australian Territory of Papua (now Papua New Guinea). He went missing in action on Dec. 2, 1942. Unidentified remains were recovered on Feb. 2, 1943 and were eventually interred in the Manila American Cemetery. On May 14, 2019, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency using dental records, circumstantial evidence and DNA identified the remains as Pvt. Brown's. He was reinterred in the Lowman Cemetery in Runnells Saturday.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RoyBrownFuneral005.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders file out of Glendale Cemetery after the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneralBW008.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral043.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: The hearse carrying the remains of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker arrives in Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral004.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: RICHARD SCHWERDTFEGER, a Vietnam era US Air Force veteran, carries the Gold Star flag to the grave side service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral003.jpg
  • 09 MARCH 2006 - HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM: A tourist climbs on a captured American armored vehicle at the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), the former capital of South Vietnam. The War Remnants Museum displays American weapons and material captured by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces during the US war in Vietnam. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 29 AUGUST 2020 - RUNNELLS, IOWA: A man in a replica of Revolutionary War era Continental Army uniform at the funeral for Pvt. Roy Brown Jr. in Runnells, IA. Pvt. Brown was a US Army soldier in World War II. He was an infantryman in the 126th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Infantry Division, serving in the Australian Territory of Papua (now Papua New Guinea). He went missing in action on Dec. 2, 1942. Unidentified remains were recovered on Feb. 2, 1943 and were eventually interred in the Manila American Cemetery. On May 14, 2019, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency using dental records, circumstantial evidence and DNA identified the remains as Pvt. Brown's. He was reinterred in the Lowman Cemetery in Runnells Saturday.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RoyBrownFuneral006.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders file out of Glendale Cemetery after the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral048.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders file out of Glendale Cemetery after the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral047.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral045.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment of Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral044.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral019.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChanningWhitakerFuneral018.jpg
  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders stand at attention during the reinterment service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders walk into the reinterment service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker at the Glendale Cemetery. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.            PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 22 NOVEMBER 2019 - DES MOINES, IOWA: RICHARD SCHWERDTFEGER, a Vietnam era US Air Force veteran, carries the Gold Star flag to the grave side service for Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing Whitaker. Whitaker died in the Battle of Tarawa on Nov. 22, 1943 during World War Two. He was buried on Betio Island, in the Gilbert Islands, and his remains were recovered in March 2019. He was identified by a DNA match with surviving family members in Iowa. Whitaker was reintered in the Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines exactly 76 years after his death in World War Two. About 1,000 US Marines and sailers were killed in four days during the Battle of Tarawa.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 09 MARCH 2006 - HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM: An American M48 tank on display at the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), the former capital of South Vietnam. The War Remnants Museum displays American weapons and material captured by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces during the US war in Vietnam.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 09 MARCH 2006 - HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM: A tourist stands next to an old American helicopter at the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), the former capital of South Vietnam. The War Remnants Museum displays American weapons and material captured by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces during the US war in Vietnam. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: HOPE SALINAS greets her father, PAUL SALINAS, an Arizona National Guard soldier, after he came home Sunday from a year long deployment to Afghanistan. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: The family members of Arizona National Guard soldiers wait for their loved ones to come home from Afghanistan in an Air Force hanger in Phoenix, AZ, Sunday. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: The family members of Arizona National Guard soldiers wait for their loved ones to come home from Afghanistan in an Air Force hanger in Phoenix, AZ, Sunday. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders line the tarmac in Phoenix, AZ, as a Southwest Airlines charter bringing Arizona National Guard soldiers home arrives in Phoenix Sunday. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: Members of the Patriot Guard Riders line the tarmac in Phoenix, AZ, as a Southwest Airlines charter bringing Arizona National Guard soldiers home arrives in Phoenix Sunday. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 26 JUNE 2006 - SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA: SUM KHAT, 64, sits in her dorm room at Handicapped International in Siem Reap. She was walking through the jungle collecting firewood in 1983, during one of the civil wars that consumed Cambodia after the Vietnam war, when she stepped on a small plastic landmine and blew off her foot. Handicapped International helps Cambodians maimed by mines and unexploded ordinance as well as traffic accidents and disease adjust to a life without limbs. Cambodians are still wrestling with the legacy of the war in Vietnam and subsequent civil wars. At one time it was the most heavily mined country in the world and a vast swath of Cambodia, along the Thai-Cambodian border, is still mined. In 2004, more than 800 people were killed by mines and unexploded ordinance still found in the countryside.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: Arizona National Guard Lt. DENNIS CHAMBERLAIN, hugs his daughters, CHLOE CHAMBERLAIN, 7, KACI CHAMBERLAIN, 4, and CAMRYN CHAMBERLAIN, 2, after he returned to Phoenix Sunday from a year long deployment to Afghanistan. Chamberlain, a platoon commander in D Company, commanded the rescue of US Senators Chuck Hagel, John Kerry and Joe Lieberman after their helicopter made a hard landing on a mountain top during a blizzard in Afghanistan in February 2007. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: Arizona National Guard soldiers greet their loved ones after they returned to Phoenix, AZ, Sunday from a year long deployment to Afghanistan. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion march into an Air Force hangar during their arrival ceremony Phoenix, AZ, Sunday after a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 30 MARCH 2008 -- PHOENIX, AZ: TINA DuBOSE, from Avondale, AZ, and a member of the Patriot Guard Riders, wait for Arizona National Guardsmen to return from Afghanistan Sunday. About 250 members of the Arizona Army National Guard's 158th Infantry Battalion returned to Phoenix, AZ, from a year long deployment in Afghanistan Sunday. The unit, also known as the "Bushmasters" from their service in World War II, was part of the largest single-unit deployment of the Arizona National Guard since the second World War. Two members of the battalion were killed in action during their deployment. The battalion, a combat unit, engaged in counter insurgency operations through out their deployment. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
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  • 29 AUGUST 2020 - RUNNELLS, IOWA: The Veterans' Memorial in Lowman Cemetery in Runnells, IA. Pvt. Roy Brown Jr. was interred in the cemetery today. He was a US Army soldier in World War II. He was an infantryman in the 126th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Infantry Division, serving in the Australian Territory of Papua (now Papua New Guinea). He went missing in action on Dec. 2, 1942. Unidentified remains were recovered on Feb. 2, 1943 and were eventually interred in the Manila American Cemetery. On May 14, 2019, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency using dental records, circumstantial evidence and DNA identified the remains as Pvt. Brown's. He was reinterred in the Lowman Cemetery in Runnells Saturday.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 29 AUGUST 2020 - RUNNELLS, IOWA: DAWN BALDWIN plays the bagpipes at the funeral for Pvt. Roy Brown Jr. in Runnells, IA. Pvt. Brown was a US Army soldier in World War II. He was an infantryman in the 126th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Infantry Division, serving in the Australian Territory of Papua (now Papua New Guinea). He went missing in action on Dec. 2, 1942. Unidentified remains were recovered on Feb. 2, 1943 and were eventually interred in the Manila American Cemetery. On May 14, 2019, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency using dental records, circumstantial evidence and DNA identified the remains as Pvt. Brown's. He was reinterred in the Lowman Cemetery in Runnells Saturday.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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