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  • {{r|World War II, air war}}
    504 bytes (68 words) - 11:34, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|World War II}}
    191 bytes (22 words) - 18:25, 14 March 2010
  • ...''' (abbreviation '''SFRY''') was the state that existed from the end of [[World War II]] (1945) until it was formally dissolved in 1992 during the [[Yugoslav Wars
    336 bytes (46 words) - 03:28, 23 July 2008
  • {{r|World War II, air war}}
    506 bytes (68 words) - 18:23, 11 January 2010
  • .... islands to the west; part of the divided command for the [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]]
    303 bytes (47 words) - 20:45, 2 April 2024
  • ...d to keep pace with northern cities as its hinterland sank into poverty. [[World War II]] and the [[Cold War]] revived the city, with wave after wave of military s
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
    334 bytes (48 words) - 16:35, 27 June 2009
  • {{r|U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Nazi war criminals}}
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  • {{r|World War II, air war, Pacific Theater strategic operations}}
    542 bytes (72 words) - 11:12, 11 January 2010
  • ...[Vice Admiral]], [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]; commanded the [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]] force primarily through seniority but was not con
    422 bytes (60 words) - 20:45, 2 April 2024
  • ...n August 1942 between U.S. and Japanese forces, and the second of the five World War II battles fought between carrier units; U.S. lost more ships, Japanese lost m
    338 bytes (54 words) - 08:59, 3 July 2010
  • ...p. Obviously, the opposing sides in the Russo-Japanese, Sino-Japanese, and World War II aren't part of this, but what about [[Japanese militarism]] and the leaders
    910 bytes (138 words) - 02:29, 30 December 2010
  • ...ry of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory during the Manhattan Project of World War II and the early postwar years.
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  • {{r|World War II}}
    143 bytes (17 words) - 08:11, 31 May 2023
  • ...Course: Reflections on USAF Strategic Attack Theory and Doctrine: The Post World War II Experience,'' (2003) [http://www.questia.com/read/106965364?title=Plotting% ===World War II===
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  • {{r|World War II, Homefront}}
    508 bytes (68 words) - 11:33, 27 January 2011
  • ...d that he was interned during [[World War II]]. He was interned following World War II, because his American citizenship stripped from him. His citizenship was r ...nying Mirikatani to the [[Tule Lake internment camp]] where he was held in World War II.
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{rpl|World War II}}
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  • === World War II === "In World War II, the militarists "purged" Asahi, but the interlopers were ousted after Japa
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  • ...provided a breeding ground for mass atrocities later committed the Nazis. World War II also included the [[Holocaust]], the state-sponsored murder of 6 million Je ...n. The official histories of the United States refer to the conflict as '''World War II''' or '''World War Two''', and that term is now often used in Canada and th
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II}}
    167 bytes (21 words) - 20:36, 29 November 2008
  • | work = World War II Database | work = WORLD WAR II COMMEMORATIVE SERIES
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  • {{r|Pearl Harbor (World War II)}}
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  • {{r|U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Nazi war criminals}}
    636 bytes (82 words) - 08:58, 23 April 2024
  • ...rd for [[Army]] but the term is specifically applied to the German Army in World War II. That army, however, is commonly and incorrectly known as the [[Wehrmacht]]
    333 bytes (53 words) - 09:26, 5 April 2024
  • {{r|World War II}}
    390 bytes (53 words) - 12:04, 18 May 2023
  • {{r|World War II}}
    356 bytes (46 words) - 12:43, 18 February 2010
  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ...= earned a [[Silver Star]] for his command of [[landing craft]] during [[World War II]] ...f [[landing craft]] during the amphibious assault on [[Tulagi]], during [[World War II]].<ref name=UscgCompass4Silver/>
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  • (1894-1976) '''Walter Warlimont''' finished [[World War II]] as a General of Artillery (lieutenant general equivalent) in the [[Oberko
    1 KB (179 words) - 23:51, 30 December 2010
  • ...hy, William. 2007. American's Fighting Admirals: Winning the War at Sea in World War II. Zenith Press. ISBN 978-0-7603-2985-6. </ref></blockquote>
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
    306 bytes (40 words) - 09:02, 23 June 2010
  • {{rpl|World War II}}
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  • During World War II the Allies maintained a small weather station for most of the war. Germany
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  • {{r|World War II, air war, Mediterranean and European tactical operations}}
    801 bytes (114 words) - 19:01, 11 January 2010
  • ==World War II==
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  • {{r|U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Nazi war criminals}}
    688 bytes (92 words) - 18:12, 18 September 2009
  • {{r|World War II, air war, Mediterranean and European tactical operations}}
    738 bytes (93 words) - 19:13, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ==World War II==
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II, air war}}
    653 bytes (98 words) - 02:33, 21 January 2009
  • ...d [[Josef Mengele]], some of whom had [[U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Nazi war criminals |U.S. intelligence help in escaping Europe]]. Stroessne
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  • {{r|World War II, air war}}
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  • ===Founding and pre-World War II development=== ...st as a means for achieving racial equality. This began to change during [[World War II]], when the League came out in support of [[A. Philip Randolph]]'s [[March
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  • * Craven, Wesley Frank, and James Lea Cate, eds. ''The Army Air Forces in World War II. Vol. 5. The Pacific: Matterhorn to Nagasaki, June 1944 to August 1945.'' ( ...ina in the War: The Trans-Himalayan `Hump' Airlift and Sino-US Strategy in World War II." PhD dissertation Ohio State U. 2007. 397 pp. DAI 2007 68(4): 1627-A. DA
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • Battle honours awarded the Calgary Highlanders for World War I and World War II follow. ===World War II===
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  • ...was a [[shipyard]] in [[Providence, Rhode Island]]. It was built during [[World War II]] and financed by the [[Maritime Commission]] as part of the country's emer
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  • {{r|World War II, air war, Mediterranean and European tactical operations}}
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  • {{r|U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Japanese war criminals}}
    673 bytes (102 words) - 12:32, 28 September 2010
  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II}}
    256 bytes (36 words) - 08:31, 14 July 2012
  • ...American Armor Doctrine, Training, and Battle Command in Northwest Africa, World War II.'' (Fort Leavenworth, KS: Army Command and General Staff College, 2003). * Craven, Wesley F., and James L. Cate. ''The Army Air Forces in World War II.'' (1983). v. 2, pp. 3-206, the official Air Force history [http://ibiblio.
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  • ...lligence, and other support facilities. At the time of the [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]], it was commanded by Rear Admiral [[Claude Bloch]
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  • {{r|World War II, air war}}
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  • ...to Japan, and the unwise yielding to the needs of the Soviet Union during World War II all led to the defeat of the Chinese Nationalists.
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • ...known as Northern Province) of [[Papua New Guinea]]. After early 1943 in [[World War II]] it was the site of a U.S. advanced base.
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  • {{r|World War II, air war}}
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  • Its fairly slow rate of fire and small magazine made it obsolescent under [[World War II]] conditions, although until production was adequate to the [[U.S. Army]],
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  • {{r|U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Japanese war criminals}}
    819 bytes (111 words) - 19:55, 11 January 2010
  • ...occupied first by the [[Soviet Union]] and then by [[Nazi Germany]]. As [[World War II]] neared its end in 1944 and the Nazis retreated, the Soviet Union reoccupi
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  • {{r|World War II}}, 1941-45
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II in the Pacific}}
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  • **Task Force 8 immediately following [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]]
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  • ...''Washington Command Post: The Operations Division, United States Army in World War II.'' (1950) ...he Political Economy of American Warfare, 1920-1939'' (1998); ''Arsenal of World War II: The Political Economy of American Warfare, 1940-1945'' (2004) [http://www.
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  • {{r|World War II, air war, Mediterranean and European tactical operations}}
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  • {{r|World War II, air war, Mediterranean and European tactical operations}}
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  • {{r|World War II, Russian Front}}
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  • ...the untold story of the Falaise Pocket, the campaign that should have won World War II'' (1993) ...The Untold Story of the Falaise Pocket - the Campaign That Should Have Won World War II.'' 1993. 288 pp.
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ...focuses on some of the main types of bomber aircraft used operationally in World War II.
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  • {{rpl|World War II}} ===World War II===
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • {{r|U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Japanese war criminals}}
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  • ...an Army during World War I, and was officially a propaganda adviser to the World War II German Army. His personal goal, in the special camp he established at Daben
    1 KB (176 words) - 03:46, 10 January 2011
  • ...picting the activities of Britain's [[Home Guard]] in the early years of [[World War II]]. It was created by [[Jimmy Perry]] based on his own wartime experiences,
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  • ...in 1945, during the U.S. invasion of Japan during [[World War II, Pacific|World War II]]. The castle was destroyed by the U.S. bombardment of the island. Over 33,
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  • * Craven, Wesley and James Cate, eds. ''The Army Air Forces In World War II''] official history. (1948-55)
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  • ...e James Battle served as a fireboat, in Halifax, during the later years of World War II. Halifax experienced a large munition explosion, and the ''James Battle''
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  • ...to using the H-1 freeway and provides easy access to both [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|Pearl Harbor Naval Station]] and [[Hickam Air Force Base]]. ...ommander of the [[United States Navy]] in the [[Pacific Theater]] during [[World War II]]. The route was constructed during the war in the 1940s in order to serve
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  • * Craven, Wesley Frank and J. L. Cate. ''The Army Air Forces in World War II'' (5 vol 1949), detailed official U.S. history; see vol 2 and 3 [http://w ...d. ''Luftwaffe over America: The Secret Plans to Bomb the United States in World War II.'' (2004). 256 pp.
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  • * Sloan, Bill. ''The Ultimate Battle: Okinawa 1945--The Last Epic Struggle of World War II'' (2007) 416pp
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  • ...an Navy was small during the interwar years, but rapidly expanded during [[World War II]], when Canada operated a large fraction of the escort vessels in the [[Bat ...ntators say that Canada had the world's third largest Navy at the end of [[World War II]], but most of these were small escort vessels displacing less than 2,000 t
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  • {{r|World War II}} {{r|Pearl Harbor (World War II)}}
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  • ...tate became a republic, but was absorbed by Nazi Germany in 1938. After [[World War II]], Austria again established a republican government, although it was occup
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  • *[[World War II]]
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  • ...t and eccentric, who devised, in 1921, the fundamental Allied strategy for World War II in the Pacific: a campaign of "island-hopping" closer and closer to Japan.
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  • * [[SS Richard Montgomery|SS ''Richard Montgomery'']], a US World War II Liberty Ship that eventually sank in the Thames Estuary, UK
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  • ...g man. In 1908, Pound settled in Europe, where he would stay until after [[World War II]]. Pound became a prominent literary figure, and was closely associated wit
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  • The [[Royal Air Force]] inflicted heavy damage on Lübeck during [[World War II]], as most of the historic center was ruined after an air raid on March 28,
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  • ==During World War II==
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}} {{r|World War II, air war, nuclear warfare}}
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • ...', with a pair of 18" guns, built in [[World War I]] and briefly used in [[World War II]].
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ...Cause of Freedom."<ref name= JonesAward>{{citation | title = Honoring Two World War II Heroes | url = https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intellig ...the Air Staff and later the British Intelligence Service, Reg Jones during World War II masterminded a combined effort. He was a sort of one-man, all-source intell
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  • ==World War II==
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  • ...British [[welfare state]]. He chaired a major government committee during World War II with responsibility for planning the reorganization of government social pr
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  • ...ved among the leading Allied commanders against the Empire of Japan during World War II &mdash; as commander of the Southwest Pacific Theater &mdash; and presided
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ...yard, building tankers for the [[Standard Oil Company]]. At the start of [[World War II]], it was one of the country's five largest shipyards, with a total of eigh
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  • | title = Official Chronology of the U.S. Navy in World War II
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  • ...firefighters who received bravery awards during the [[London Blitz]] of [[World War II]]. ...led a plaque honouring women who were awarded the [[George Medal]], during World War II, [[Gillian Tanner]] was one of just six who were still alive.<ref name=Bbc2
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  • ...hter Command and Bomber Command, the RAF was a vitally important factor of World War II. Fighter Command won the [[Battle of Britain]] in 1940 and, from 1941 to 19
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • Three atomic bombs were detonated by the United States during World War II. The first was a test explosion at [[Alamogordo]], [[New Mexico (U.S. state
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  • ...known as the '''"Battle of Los Angeles"''' was a peculiar occurrence of [[World War II]] hysteria experienced by the residents of [[Los Angeles, California]] in t ...bor]], the event which had brought the [[United States of America]] into [[World War II]].
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  • * Hogan. David W. ''The U.S. Army Campaigns of World War II: India Burma'' [http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/USA-C-India/ online edi
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • {{r|World War II, Homefront, U.S.}}
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ...government]], in existence from 1936-1950. From 1939 through the end of [[World War II]], MARCOM funded and administered the largest and most successful [[merchan ...erchant ships to replace those lost to German submarines in the runup to [[World War II]]. This role continued through the war, and was significantly expanded seve
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  • * Baldwin, Ralph B. ''The Deadly Fuze: Secret Weapon of World War II.'' (1980)
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  • The most advanced production U.S. [[carrier-capable]] fighter aircraft of [[World War II], replacing the [[F4F Wildcat]], also made by [[Northrop Grumman|Grumman]].
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  • She began the [[Second World War]] in the Atlantic. "With the outbreak of World War II in Europe in early September 1939, Quincy began [[Neutrality Patrol]] activ
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  • ...heorists suggest the exceptionally fast US ''Iowa-class'' battleships of [[World War II]] were really battlecruisers. Indeed, they were faster than the previous tr
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  • {{r|World War II, air war}}
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  • ...10 October 1970) was the Prime Minister of [[France]] on the outbreak of [[World War II]]. Daladier was minister in several posts during the coalition governments
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  • ...ous aircraft, introduced during the 1930s, that saw extensive use during [[World War II]].<ref name=cbc2017-06-19/>
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  • ...headquarters complex, the [[IG Farben Building]], was minimally bombed in World War II, and was used until 1995 for Allied and U.S. command offices, and memorials
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  • ...ducated in the U.S., but did early fieldwork in Vilna, Poland, just before World War II. After war's end, she returned for both rescue and research. She was chair
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  • {{r|World War II, Homefront}}
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  • ==World War II==
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ...orkheimer]] and [[Walter Benjamin]]. Adorno was very influential in post-[[World War II|war]] [[Germany|West Germany]]. Critical Theory spread from its base at the
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  • | footnotes = received the [[George Medal]], for bravery, during [[World War II]] ...s an auxiliary firefighter, in [[London, United Kingdom|London]], during [[World War II]].<ref name=Bbc2005-07-08/><ref name=Bbc2005-07-09/> For most of the war s
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • ...in Baltimore, but who also served, notably, as a war correspondent, during World War II.<ref name=nytimes1981-12-22/>
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  • {{r|Pearl Harbor (World War II)}}
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  • {{r|World War II, air war, Mediterranean and European tactical operations}}
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  • {{r|World War II, air war, Mediterranean and European tactical operations}}
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  • {{r|World War II, Origins}}
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  • ...an, Roy Edgar, et al. ''Okinawa: the last battle'', (United States Army in World War II: The war in the Pacific) (1948), very thorough U.S. Army official history [ * Craven, Wesley, and James Cate, eds. ''The Army Air Forces in World War II.'' (1958). Official history in 7 vol; [http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/AAF
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  • ...development, in contrast with Britain's influence on the Navy. Prior to [[World War II]], the Army saw the [[Soviet Union]] as its expected final opponent, althou
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ==World War II== ...due to doctrine than equipment; a Sa'ar 5 is only slightly smaller than a World War II Fletcher-class destroyer.
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  • The trench coat has been associated with spies and [[detective]]s since [[World War II]]. Trench coats stirred a controversy and moral panic following the [[Colum
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  • ==World War II==
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  • ...pally for air superiority. It was superior to any Allied aircraft in the [[World War II, air war, European Theater strategic operations |strategic bombing offensiv
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  • ...first marriage, to Flora Parkinson, lasted from 1940 to 1945. During the [[World War II|2nd World War]] he served as a photographer with the U.S. Navy.
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  • ...g at the U.K. Embassy in [[Oslo]], [[Norway]], in the very early days of [[World War II]], the '''Oslo Report''' was an annotated collection of documents on Nazi w
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  • | known_for = Captured by during World War II while serving as a war correspondent After World War II ended in Europe, Denny was visiting his sister, in Des Moines, when he suff
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  • {{rpl|World War II, Homefront, U.S.}}
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  • The city is particularly remembered for the Japanese [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]] which took place on December 7, 1941, as a result
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • ...e commands can be sent by a [[radio]] data link, as with the [[Fritz-X]] [[World War II]] [[anti-shipping missile]].
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • ...in London, [[United Kingdom]]. She worked as a war correspondent during [[World War II]], starting in 1941 for the ''[[New York Sun]]'' bureau in England, and lat | title = Miss Yourlovin: GIs, Gender and Domesticity During World War II
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  • In the first months of World War II in the Pacific, Rear Admiral Spruance commanded a cruiser division.
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  • {{r|World War II}}
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  • Of Mills, a man "who came out of World War II with a blinding obsession: the eradication of Nazi butchers," the ''New Yor
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  • ...nge Case of Hellish Nell: The Story of Helen Duncan and the Witch Trial of World War II
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}}
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  • ==World War II== Shortly after the United States entered World War II, Dr. Morison proposed to his friend President Roosevelt, to write the opera
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  • ...e the [[Nazi death camps|death camps]] operated by the [[Nazis]], during [[World War II]].<ref name=1LongNight/><ref name=newyorker2019-06-21/><ref name=Esquire201
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  • ...icial support, and all three of the working models were destroyed during [[World War II]]<ref name="Zuse1">{{cite book|url=http://www.amazon.com/Portraits-Silicon-
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  • ...lation topped half a million, including many European immigrants. During [[World War II]], Pittsburgh contributed more than 95 million tons of steel to the allied Following World War II, the city launched a clean air and civic revitalization project known as th
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  • | title = Sage Prophet or Loose Cannon? Skilled Intelligence Officer in World War II Foresaw Japan's Plans, but Annoyed Navy Brass
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  • During the [[World War II|Second World War]], Swanson created a [[patent]]s company which helped four
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  • The '''Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA)''' was a [[World War II]] [[theater of operations]] under the command of [[General of the Army]] [[
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  • ...er British cities, Belfast saw some of the heaviest bombing raids during [[World War II]] - the heaviest outside [[London, United Kingdom|London]]. Cave Hill, just
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  • ...perated by the [[United States Navy]] in [[Oakland, California]]. During [[World War II]], it was a major source of supplies and war materials for ships operating
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  • * Eubank, Keith. ''The Origins of World War II'' (2004), short survey * Goldstein, Erik & Lukes, Igor, eds. ''The Munich crisis, 1938: Prelude to World War II'', (1999) ISBN 0-7146-8056-7.
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  • ...in 1945, during the U.S. invasion of Japan during [[World War II, Pacific|World War II]]. The castle was destroyed by the U.S. bombardment of the island. Over 33,
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  • Prior to World War II her assignments included covering the trial of [[Bruno Hauptman]], the kidn ...''[[International News Service|INS]]'' and ''[[New York Post]]'' during [[World War II]].<ref name=WomensAngle/>
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  • ...rked contrast to his previous [[film]] and [[television]] career. During [[World War II]], Pertwee worked in naval intelligence, tasked with [[spying]] on subversi
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  • ...to Japan, and the unwise yielding to the needs of the Soviet Union during World War II all led to the defeat of the Chinese Nationalists.
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  • ...Jr.''' (1885-1945) was a celebrated and controversial American general in World War II, famed for his successes in armored warfare against the Germans in 1944-45. ==World War II==
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  • ...Iowa-class]] [[battleship]] of the [[U.S. Navy]] which was active during [[World War II]]. She is famous as the vessel on whose deck the Japanese surrender was sig
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  • ...he 1960s. His voice became well-known when he reported from Europe during World War II and it seemed he could do no wrong. A heavy smoker, Murrow became a major t
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  • She served in Toronto, up until [[World War II]]. During World War II the ''Rouille'' was transferred to [[Halifax, Nova Scotia]], the port where
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  • Especially in World War II implementations when it might be in a quad mount on a vehicle, or on a [[B-
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  • The population of Cutnall Green had been gradually declining since the [[World War II|Second World War]]. Since the 1960s, the push-pull factor of housing afford
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  • ...s fanaticism in battle and for its control of the death camps during the [[World War II, Holocaust|Holocaust]]. It was first established in 1925 as Adolf Hitler� ==World War II==
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  • ===World War II===
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  • Orlando remained in retirement until the liberation of Rome in [[World War II]], when he became a member of the consultive assembly and President of the
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  • ...and effective Head of State and unifying figure during the hard years of [[World War II]], refusing to leave London during the Blitz.
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  • ...1,250,000 tons of shipping was sunk or damaged in the last five months of World War II. Once the mission was accepted, it was executed with vigor, since it both
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  • ...lly created to control [[airplane]]s. They were also used in the 1940s in World War II to direct and guide [[bomb]]s and [[rocket]]s. The [[Atari]] standard joys
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  • *1939 [[World War II]] War between the Allies (most notably the UK, US and Soviet Union) and th
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  • ...h are directly under the 509th Bomb Wing, the "owner" of the facility. In World War II, the 509th was responsible for the nuclear missions against Japan.
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  • * Served in [[Churchill, Manitoba]] until [[World War II]]
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  • ...icted, possibly due to his support of [[U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Japanese war criminals|U.S. postwar programs]].
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  • ===World War II===
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  • The group's work before World War II was published in the ''Travaux Linguistique'' and its theses outlined in a
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  • ...i Nakajima, and Roger Pineau. ''The Divine Wind: Japan's Kamikaze Force in World War II'' (1994) [http://www.amazon.com/Divine-Wind-Japans-Kamikaze-Force/dp/155750
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  • A powerful faction in Japanese military politics leading to [[World War II]], the '''Three Crows''', [[Tetsuzan Nagata]], [[Toshiro Obata]] and [[Yasu
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  • ...ates Supreme Court cases dealing with the [[Japanese Internment]] during [[World War II]]. Unlike in the other three, the Court ruled against the internment measur ...ent camps in the interior of the United States to prevent espionage during World War II. Following an [[executive order]] authorizing the exclusion of "any and all
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  • ...h as [[actor]]s [[Audie Murphy]] (interestingly, the most highly-decorated World War II veteran) and [[Lee Marvin]], [[writer]] [[Dashiell Hammett]], bandleader [[
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  • ==World War II==
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  • ...with the [[LCVP]] and [[LCM]], it was a mainstay of the amphibious Navy in World War II.
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  • ...Belgium|Belgian villagers in mass retribution for resistance activity. In World War II, Nazism|Nazis carried out a form of collective punishment to suppress resis
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  • Just after the [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]], he headed a task force with the mission of reinf
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  • ==World War II== | title = Embracing defeat: Japan in the wake of World War II
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  • ...ew hours after their surprise attack of The Netherlands. Near the end of [[World War II]] Arnhem was the object of a heroic but unsuccessful attempt by British a
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  • | publisher = World War II Database ..., he believed it was necessary to attack the Philippines and Pearl Harbor (World War II)|Pearl Harbor. "If we tried to carry out an operation only against the Dutc
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  • {{r|U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Japanese war criminals}}
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  • ...an admiral of the [[United States Navy]] in 1948, after a distinguished [[World War II]] career best known for his victory at the [[Battle of Surigao Strait]]. He
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  • ====World War II==== Early in the 1940s, the [[German]] invasion of [[World War II]] also destroyed many lives, both military and civilian. Between 20-28 Sept
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  • ...anization within the [[United Nations]]. It was formed in 1945 because of World War II, with the idea that the world needed moral, educational and spiritual reple
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  • Work accelerated rapidly with the advent of [[World War II]], when Raytheon became one of the first US firms involved in [[radar]], th
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  • From its beginning during the [[Meiji Restoration]] in 1869, to its [[World War II]] defeat in 1945, the '''Imperial Japanese Navy''' (''Nihon Kaigun'') was t ...yū – 22,250 ton Soryu-class carrier which took part in the [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]] and was sunk at the [[Battle of Midway]]
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  • *[[Air (warfare)]]: as in "The air campaign in World War II" or "There was close air support" or "The air defense system"
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  • ...feudalism|feudal]] period of Japan and the bombing of the country during [[World War II]]; one of the reasons that Himeji Castle is today a UNESCO [[World Heritage
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  • ==World War II==
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  • By the end of World War II, its role had expanded to furnish such devices to the other military servic
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  • ...[[Gehlen Organization]], working with [[U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Nazi war criminals|U.S. intelligence against the Soviet Union]], before Ge
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  • ...mer Games in 1964, and was the original choice for the 1940 Games before [[World War II]] intervened.<ref>''BBC'': '[http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/24002795
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  • ...21 and was educated in Rindern. He served in the German air force during [[World War II]], and in 1943 his aeroplane crashed in a very cold area of the [[Crimea]].
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  • ...al]] and remained a staunch [[isolationist]] until the American entry into World War II. Becoming minority whip in 1943, Arends helped create the powerful [[Conser
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  • ...and [[Taiwan]], have varied from cordial to strained since the close of [[World War II]].
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  • ...ed a Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, but after America joined [[World War II]] Libby was transferred to the [[Manhattan Project]] which developed the [[
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  • {{r|World War II, Pacific}} {{r|World War II, submarine operations}}
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  • In 1939 - 1945 Aachen has to endure many attacks through World War II, since it is located on the western border towards Netherlands. In 1941 the
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  • ...the book ''The Admirals' Advantage: U.S. Navy Operational Intelligence in World War II and the Cold War''.
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  • ...ods Bliss and housed at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, DC. He spent most of World War II in Switzerland, where he drew on his high-level, Europe-wide connections to
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  • ...eader" in I. C. B. Dear, and M. R. D. Foot. eds. ''The Oxford Companion to World War II'' (1995)) see also the Bibliography at [[World War II, Origins]]
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  • ...introduced in the [[First World War]] (WW1) and subsequently improved in [[World War II]] (WWII). The first version was impure [[dichloroethyl sulfide|2,2'-dichlo ==World War II==
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  • ...30, with the exception of 1942 and 1946, when it was not held due to the [[World War II|Second World War]]. It is the most widely-viewed sporting event on [[televi
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  • ...ts population in 2020 was 43,385 people, a decline of 10% from 2010. In [[World War II]], the [[Battle of Saipan]] was fought between 15 June 1944 to 9 July 1944,
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  • ...is the final resting place of 2617 soldiers, mainly Canadian, killed in [[World War II]]. It is located 2 miles North of the Dutch town of [[Groesbeek]]. The cem
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  • ...(CAR). Army Air Forces received the Air Medal for five combat missions in World War II. ...er Oak Leaf Cluster on it if they have already received the award. Durinng World War II being KIA and DOW also meant the U.S. armed forces automatically awarded yo
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  • | title = (Book Review) We the Japanese People: World War II and the Origins of the Japanese Constitution
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  • | contribution = Chapter 16: Japanese Biomedical Experimentation during the World War II Era
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  • '''Axis & Allies''' is a board game that is set during World War II. Players play as one of the 5 powers: the United States, Great Britain, Rus
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  • Canada operated a fleet of tugs built during [[World War II]], which were also called the Glen class.<ref name=SfuGlenLargeTugs/> The World War II vintage ''Glenevis'' was still in civilian service as late as 2007.
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  • ...he ships were converted by the [[United States Navy]] for service during [[World War II]]. The commercial versions were operated by the government during the war. ...r Victory: A History of Shipbuilding under the U.S. Maritime Commission in World War II, by Frederic C. Lane ISBN 0-8018-6752-5
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  • ...ited Kingdom]] to Huntingdon in 1941 after being bombed out of London in [[World War II]].
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