Introduction
				Hostilities in Korea did not end in 1953.  A cease-fire took effect on July 27, 1953, but no peace 
				treaty was ever signed between the warring countries.  Since that cease fire, over a million troops 
				from the United States have served in Korea.  Many of them were stationed on the demilitarized zone 
				(DMZ)--a narrow strip of land that separates Communist North Korea from the Republic of Korea.  On 
				that same strip of land, dozens of American veterans have been wounded and killed since the open war activities 
				of 1950-1953 ceased.  In fact, from 1961 t0 2010 alone, 89 United States veterans died on the 
				Korean peninsula.  This page of the Korean War Educator is dedicated to those Americans who served 
				in Korea after July 27, 1953. 
				Our DMZ page is still under construction.  DMZ veterans are invited to help build this page as a 
				means to educate the general public about the fact that, though open hostilities in Korea "officially" ended 
				in 1953, the DMZ has always been and still remains a perilous duty station for American armed forces.  
				It is a place where American military personnel have been maimed and murdered.  Always remember that 
				freedom is not free--even after government officials say that the war is "over." 
				To post your photographs and non-fictional materials about Korea's DMZ on this page of the KWE, send 
				them to: Lynnita Brown, 111 E. Houghton St., Tuscola, IL 61953.  E-mail
				lynnita@koreanwar-educator.org or
				lynnita@thekwe.org.  Phone 217-253-4620 (Illinois) if you would 
				like to discuss your contribution prior to mailing it. 
				 
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