The walls of this power plant on Ennubirr Island were two feet thick byt that wasn't thick enough to take the Navy's shelling.Read the full story by Sgt. Merle Miller: HERE
YANK 10 March 1944
Excerpts and pictures from the soldier's "Yank" Magazine as well as other references of the life and times of the World War II era.
The walls of this power plant on Ennubirr Island were two feet thick byt that wasn't thick enough to take the Navy's shelling.YANK 10 March 1944
GIs who captured Hitler's mountain hideaway found rubble and magnificence. Amid the ruins there was still plenty of evidence of the high style in which the Nazi Fuehrer used to live.
YANK Cover for 4 Feb 1945 Continental Edition. When this picture was taken by YANK's Sgt. Kenny, S/Sgt. Joseph Arnaldo of New Bedford, Mass., had just come off the line after 10 successive days of fighting. His hood and face covered with snow, Arnaldo had recovered from a temporary blindness when an 88 mounted on a jerry tank was fired a few yards from him.
Isolated and facing starvation, the Jap forces launched a desperate assault against two seasoned U. S. divisions. When the battle was over, 7,000 of the Japs were dead.







Rommel Count Your Men!
by Sgt. Bill Davidson
. . . And when Rommel counted, he was short a whole tank full of Nazis, for this crack 155-mm. howitzer outfit dropped a shell marked "From Harlem to Hitler" neatly through the turret of a German tank nine miles away. They have thrown more than 10,000 rounds against the Aryan Superman myth.
Artwork by Jack Coggins.
YANK 3 Sept 1944 British Edition
Read the entire article: HERE
