1945

Articles from 1945

The Nice Jewish Boy and the Nazi (Collier’s Magazine, 1945)

I have always said that there are no good Jews, but that boy proved me wrong.

-so spake the Nazi king-pin Julius Streicher (1885 – 1946) upon being confronted by the goodness of one American serviceman who went out of his way to be kind and identified himself as a Jew.

This small piece is an excerpt from a longer article; to read the entire magazine article, click here.


Julius Streicher had an IQ that measured 106 – click here to read about the IQs of the other lunatics in Nazi leadership…


Click here to read about the inmate rebellions that took place at Auschwitz, Sobibor and Triblinka.

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The Wonderful World of the Panzerfaust (Volkischer Beobacher, 1945)

Although the attached cartoon illustrations from Volkischer Beobacher depicts a German soldier using a Panzerfaust anti-tank weapon, the intended readership was actually the old men and under-age boys who made up the out-gunned and under-manned Volkssturm militia units at the close of the war. The panzerfaust (tank fist) has been characterized as the first expendable anti-tank RPG. Also included in this file is the U.S. Army study concerning this weapon.

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When YANK Closed It’s Doors (Maptalk, 1945)

When the flaks had all said their bit and the Japanese and Germans had all signed on the dotted line, YANK MAGAZINE did what everybody else was doing – they demobilized. When YANK published their last issue numerous magazine and newspaper editors were pretty choked-up about it and they wrote columns about how sad they all were to see it go; this one appeared in another U.S. Army rag.


More on this magazine can be read HERE…


Read about the time when THE STARS & STRIPES ceased printing…

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Winding Down (Newsweek Magazine, 1945)

The Battle of the Ardennes was practically over. The salient which once poked 52 miles into Belgium from the German frontier had been ground down to a nub by last week…. The German retreated slowly and in good order. In the sleet and fog of the Ardennes they pulled back their armor and other vehicles while their artillery and infantrymen put up stiff rearguard actions.

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Dreading the Winter (Newsweek Magazine, 1945)

When this article was published the war was over and Paris had experienced her second German-free autumn – but life was still difficult in the city. Coal was still rationed, the lines in the shops were long and the average French child was drastically underweight. NEWSWEEK dispatched two gumshoe reporters to get the full picture for the folks at home (where, happily, rationing had ended the the previous August).

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The Paris Winter Collection (Newsweek Magazine, 1945)

After years of material shortage, the accent is definitely on the feminine, with all of its flounces… A look at all the collections shows that black is the outstanding color for afternoon and dinner. Drapings, wrappings and swathings that girdle the hips are the outstanding line. The favored fabrics are velvet , velveteen, corduroy (used horizontally, as are other striped materials) monotone tweeds, Kashas (a twill-weave fabric of wool mixed with Cashmere), and some Scotch plaids.

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