WORLD WAR TWO STUDIES ASSOCIATION (formerly American Committee on the History o/the Second World War) Made P. Parillo, CJrainn07l Department of HislOry 208 Eisenhower Hall Kansas State Unive",ity Manhattan, Kansas 66506-1002 785-532-0374 Fax 785-532-7004 pariJ/o(fJlcsu.edu 100atbm Ber!low Elizaveta Zhegaoina AMociale Editors Department of History . 208 Eisenhower Hall Kansas State University Manba1tan. Kansas 66506-1002 DirI!C1iJn Institule fur Military History and 20~ Century Swdies 221 Eisenhower Hall Kansas Slate University Manhatl:m. Kansas 66506-1002 Arch;­ penrJIUIeJtl NEWSLETTER Charles F. Delzell . VanderlJilt Univer.lity ISSN 0885-5668 Dooald S. Detwiler Soulbem illinois Uuiv<lristty The WWTSA is affillllUli wilJr: at Carboudale American Historical Association 400 A Street, SE. Tums expirinr 1006 Washioglon. D.C. 20003 http://www.theaha.org Cm Boyd Old Dcminion Univemty Ale:<an<!er Cochran Carlisle Barrack>, Pa Nos. 75 & 76 Spring & Fall 2006 Roy K. Flful Valle Cruci:l. N.C. John Lewis Gaddis Yaie University Comilt lIuemational d'Histoire de la Dewcieme Guecre Mondiale Institul d'Histoire du Temps Presenl (Centre national de la recherche . scientifique [CNRS]) Ecole Normale SupCrieure de Cachan 61, ave:nue du President WilSOll 94235 Cachan cecIex. France /nseiCUle for Military History and 20'" Century Studies, at Robin Higham Kansas Stale Univ=ity Richard 11 Kohn University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Allan R. Millet! Ohio State University Robert Wolfe Alexandria, Virginia TD"lIU expJrinr 1007 D'Ann Campbell U.S. Coast Guard Foundation Robert Dallek uniw:rsity of California. Los Aageles SlanIey L Fall< .-\Ic:x;mdria, Vuginia David Glantz CMlisle. Pennsylvania World War Two Studies Association General Information The Newsletter Annual Membership Dues Harvard University Gerhard L. Weinberg Univ=iI'J ofNorlh Carolina at Chapel Hill Tums expiring 100/1 1effrey C1arl<e U.S. Army Center of Military HislOry William Ii Cunliffe Noriooal Archives and R<:eords Adminislnoon Edward 1. Orca Department of Defense WaJdo Heinrichs University of Nebraska David Kahn Geeat Neck, New Yori< Agn<s Peterson Hoover lnsritutiOD Ronald H. Spector George WashiogloD Univenity Earl Ziemke University of Georgi. 2 2 2 News and Notes Elections 2007 Membership Report on 2006 Business Meeting Addendum to Business Meeting Report 2007 Business Meeting Earnest R. May Dennis Showalter Col0rnd0 CoUege KansaJ Slate University ",hich suppoltS lbe WWTSA's website on the Inemel at lbe following address (URl): www.Jc-state.edu/history/lnstilute/ wwtsa/ Contents National Coalition for History News Updates 3 3 3 4 4 5 NARA Accessions and Openings 10 Annotated Web Guide by Mark Parillo and Jonathan Berhow 27 Recently Published Articles in English on World War IT 39 Selected Titles from an Electronic Compilation by Jonathan Berhow Recently Published and Reprinted Books in English on World War IT Selected Titles from an Electronic Compilation by Elizaveta Zheganina 51 General Information Established in 1967 "to promote historical research in the period of World War II in all its aspects," the World War Two Studies Association, whose original name was the American Committee on the History of the Second World War, is a private organization supported by the dues and donations of its members. It is affiliated with the American Historical Association, wi th the International Committee for the History of the Second World War, and with corresponding national committees in other countries, including Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovenia, the United Kingdom, and the Vatican. The Newsletter The WWTSA issues a semiannual newsletter, which is assigned International Standard Serial Number [ISSN] 0885-5668 by the Library of Congress. Back issues of the Newsletter are available from the Institute for Military History and 20 th Century Studies, 221 Eisenhower Hall, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506-1002. Please send infonnation for the Newsletter to: Mark Parillo Department of History Kansas State University 221 Eisenhower Hall Manhattan, KS 66506-1002 Tel.: (785) 532-0374 Fax: (785) 532-7004 E-mail: parillo@ksu.edu Annual Membership Dues Membership is open to all who are interested in the era of the Second World War. Arumal membership dues of $15 .00 are payable at the beginning of each calendar year. Students with U.S. addresses may, if their circumstances require it, pay annual dues of $5.00 for up to six years. There is no surcharge for members abroad, but it is requested that dues be remitted directly to the secretary of the WWTSA (not through an agency or subscription service) in U.S. dollars. The Newsletter, which is mailed in bulk rates within the United States, will be sent by surface mail to foreign addresses lIDless special arrangements are made to cover the cost of airmail postage. Spring & Fall 2006 ­ ~ News & Notes all Elections The ballot for the Association Directors serving the 2007-09 term are not included in this newsletter. The ballots will be sent early in 2007 by separate mailing. d 2007 Membership es, The renewal form for 2007 membership in the association is included with this newsletter. Please return your completed form with your annual dues in January. Please be certain to update all pertinent sections of the form, as one of the 2007 newsletters will carry the updated membership directory. Report on 2006 Business Meeting , ·ear. of __ested _cy or within 3 The annual business meeting of the World War Two Studies Association convened at 8 a.m. on Friday, May 19, 2006, on the campus of Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas. Mark Parillo, newly elected chair and past secretary-treasurer, served as the chair of the meeting. As outgoing secretary, Parillo noted the change in leadership of the association, including the vacancy of the secretarial position. He announced his willingness to continue with the functions of the secretary and treasurer until someone agrees to stand for the position. He also reported as treasurer that the association remains solvent, with the steadily growing reserve fund from members' donations now topping $1200. The final official report was on the newsletter. Parillo announced that because of the delay in getting out the spring issue, there was a likelihood there would be a single, expanded issue for the year, to be , issued in the fall. He also noted that past issues of the newsletter will continue to be put on the WWTSA website (located at www.ksu.edu/history/institute/wwtsa) but that the printed version will continue to be issued. With the official reports concluded, Parillo proposed that a resolution of gratitude be extended to outgoing chairman Professor Donald S. Detwiler, Emeritus, for his three decades of selfless service to the World War Two Studies Association and the International Committee for the History of the Second World War. The speaker noted the high standards of Professor Detwiler's scholarly contributions and his dedicated leadership of the association through a number of contentious issues over the years. There was unanimous support for the resolution. The chair then announced that the long range planning group of Comad Crane (chair), Allan R. Millett, Anne Wells, Calvin Christman, and Reina Pennington had been unable to complete their discussions due to the cancellation in the aftermath of Katrina of their scheduled October meeting in New Orleans. He noted that the group's work would continue through correspondence and in a meeting in New Orleans now 4 - Spring & Fall 2006 rescheduled in conjunction with the World War II history conference sponsored by the National World War Two Museum in November. The floor was then opened to discussion of the association's possible options concerning various issues the group is now facing, and a productive exchange of ideas and suggestions ensued. The discussion ranged over several areas of concern, but the three items receiving the most attention were the disappointing growth of membership among the substantial numbers of young scholars currently in the field of World War Two studies, the estrangement of the American association from the international committee, and the general health and mission of the association. While no fonnal proposals were put forward or voted on, the concerns and suggested were noted for transmission to the study group as it continues its work. After a commitment to build upon the work of the study group in the future, the meeting adjourned at 8:55 a.m. Addendum to the Business Meeting Report The study group met as scheduled at the National World War Two Museum in New Orleans on Thursday, November 16, 2006. The group reached fundamental agreement on a slate of suggestions and recommendations to present to the association's board of directors for their consideration. At press time, the group's report is being finalized and will be circulated soon among board members. 2007 Business Meeting The annual business meeting of the association for 2007 will be held in conjunction with the Society for Military History conference, which will convene in Frederick, Maryland, on 18-21 April. Arrangements are still being made for the exact time and location. Notice of the particulars will be sent to all association members in time to make plans for attendance. Spring & Fall 2006 ­ 5 National Coalition for History News Updates III - ber The National Coalition for History presents reports on federal government news ofinterest to historians. The NCH encourages the distribution of its news reports among scholars. For more information on the NCR, visit its website at http://www.h-net.org/'''nch/. Excerpts ojnote Jor World War 11 historians from recent NCH reports Jollow below. Here is the NCH's own description and invitation for use: ::he ill _Iilitary .- nvene ·_l _-\pril. "e for 'ce ofthe iation :or The National Coalition for History (NCH) is a nonprofit educational organization that provides leadership in history related advocacy; it serves as the profess­ sion's national voice in the pro­ motion of history and archives, and acts as a clearinghouse of news and information of interest to history related professionals. Membership in the history coalition is open to organizations that share our con­ cern for history and archives. For information on how your history/ archive organization can become a member, visit our website at http:// www.h-net.org/"'nch/ and click on the "Join the Coalition" web link. /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ that would provide for the preservation of historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were interned during World War II (H.R. 1492). Representative William Thomas (R-CA) first introduced the bill in the House in April 2005. A companion measure waS introduced in the Senate a few months later by Senator Daniel Inouye (D-HI). Certain sections of the bills as introduced were stricken by the Senate and a few paragraphs were added to it before the bill, as amended, passed. According to the legislation, the term "historic confinement sites" refers to ten locations where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II. They include Gila River, Granada, Heart Mountain, and Tule Lake. Other locations could be included at a later date if they are found to be historically significant. Upon approval by the House the measure empowers the Secretary of the Interior to allocate grants up to $38 million to state, local, and tribal governments or other organizations in order to preserve these sites. NCH WASHINGTON UPDATE (Vol. 12, #46; 29 November 2006) by R. Bruce Craig (editor) with Emily Weisner (contributor) The legislation now goes back to the House, where if approved prior to adjournment, the measure will become law. BILLS PASSED: JAPANESE CONFINEMENT SITES PRESERVATION ACT On 16 November 2006, the Senate amended and then passed a House bill /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ 6 - Spring & Fall 2006 NCH WASHINGTON UPDATE (Vol. 12, #44; 16 November 2006) by R. Bmce Craig (editor) with Emily Weisner (contributor) MARINES AND MARTIN LUTHER KING HONORED WITH MUSEUMS AND MEMORIALS Over the Memorial Day weekend, President George Bush attended the dedication ceremony of the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Quantico, Virginia. A few days later the President joined former President Bill Clinton and attended the groundbreaking ceremony for the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial on the Mall in Washington D.C. The Marine Museum event coincided with the 231 st birthday of the Corps. The 118,000-square foot museum is adjacent to the Quantico marine base on lands donated by Prince William County. The museum is the centerpiece of a 135-acre Marine Corps Heritage Center, which, when completed, will include a parade deck, memorial walking trails, a chapel, an lMAX theater, and a hotel complex. On 13 November President Bush and former President Bill Clinton joined thousands on the National Mall in Washington D.C. to dedicate the spot where a memorial to honor Martin Luther King Jr. will be built. The site is along the edge of the Tidal Basin, midway between the Jefferson and Lincoln memorials where King delivered his famous "I Have A Dream" speech in August 1963. The memorial will be the first on the Mall honoring an African American. At the dedication, Bush and Clinton were joined by talk show host Oprah Winfrey, Senator Barack Obama (D­ ILL), poet Maya Angelou, and three of King's grandchildren. Though fund­ raising for the $100 million project is still ongoing (about 2/3rd of the needed money has been raised) the four-acre memorial is scheduled to open in 2008. /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ NCH WASHINGTON UPDATE (Vol. 12, #33; 24 August 2006) by R. Bruce Craig (editor) CONTROVERS~JAPANFRUS VOLUME RELEASED The museum building a gleaming slanted pinnacle that juts our over the trees along Interstate 95 is shaped to suggest the famous photograph of five marines and one Navy corpsman raising the flag at Iwo Jima in 1945. Inside a steel and glass atrium various aircraft are displayed. Throughout the rest of the building visitors can learn about the history of the Marine Corps from its founding to the present. When the museum is fully built out it will encompass 181,000 square feet. Admission is free. After over ten years of sometimes heated negotiation between the State Department and various governmental intelligence agencies, the Department of State History Office (HO) has released a new title in the FRUS series: "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964­ 1968, Vol XXIX, PART 2, JAPAN," the penultimate volume to be published in the Johnson administration sub-series. What makes this volume unique is that it has been nearly ready for publication for over seven years, but owing to a handful Spring & Fall 2006 ­ of controversial documents relating to covert operations in Japan that for years intelligence screeners would not permit the HO to include in the volume, PART 2 JAPAN is only now seeing the light of day...but minus the intelligence agency covert operations documentation. - n ah D­ ":"""'-ee of _- d­ tlS One of the first things a reader of this volume will notice as different is the inclusion of not only the usual "Preface" but also a "Note on U.S. Covert Actions" and an "Editor's Note" posted at the beginning of the volume. Collectively, the preface and these notices serve, in essence, as disclaimers for the HO. In order to comply with the - heated Congressionally mandated FRUS statute the compilers of the series are charged to include in each volume, "comprehensive documentation on major foreign policy decisions and actions." But apparently, in the case of the second Japan volume, because of the intelligence community's concerns, this was not possible. Sources inside the HO characterize its preparation as "the volume from hell" in that it has been extremely difficult and in some cases impossible to get some documents cleared for publication, and, in the end, the HO simply gave up trying. ental ent of _eased a F reign _964­ .-\.."1," the -' ed in :enes. "'" is that it ion for _ nandful The editors had identified 18 documents in full and nine others with excisions of a paragraph or less that the HO considered "key documents [or containing important information] regarding major covert actions and intelligence activities," however, intelligence security screeners would not permit them to be published. After years of negotiation the HO was confronted with the option of continuing to hold the ~-eeded - re =.2008. 1:. (Vol. _3ruce 7 publication of the volume in perpetual abeyance or go ahead and publish without the inclusion of the documents, but instead include an explanatory note. Hence, with the blessing of the Advisory Committee on Historical Diplomatic Documentation, the decision was made to release the volume with a statement laying out the broad contents of the excised documents and establish their contextual importance with other released documents. So what was of such concern to intelligence officials? It seems that this volume acknowledges the existence of four covert programs targeting a friendly nation -- Japan, including a small covert program begun in the late 1950s and continuing into the 1960s in which American intelligence operatives supported key pro-American Japanese politicians in an effort to split off the moderate wing of the leftist opposition. The documentation shows that the Johnson administration concluded that this program was neither appropriate nor worth the risk of exposure. As a result, in 1964, the program was phased out, but nevertheless, broader covert programs of propaganda and social action to encourage the Japanese to reject the influence of the left continued at moderate levels until 1968. It is this program, in particular, though well documented in various ambassadorial journals and memoirs, that primarily concerned intelligence agency screeners. In an effort to satisfactorily meet the mandates of the FRUS legislation the editors have included a contextual explanation of the excised documents and their importance within the context of the era. Though readers of this particular FRUS volume are being 8 - Spring & Fall 2006 denied access to the raw documentation by intelligence agencies and there is not the level of detail that one would characteristically expect to see in a volume in the FRUS series, the HO asserts it is not permitting history to be entirely rewritten because of deletions. Nevertheless, one source inside State views the volume as being "minimally acceptable" in terms of meeting FRUS legislative directives. One does wonder, however, whether the JAPAN volume is merely an anomaly, or is this practice expected to be employed more frequently in future FRUS releases in order to sidestep CIA and other intelligence agency objecttions. For example, a FRUS volume on the CONGO has longtime been in the making and is still pending publication; according to inside sources, some of the documentation in it also has been difficult to clear with intelligence screeners. Sources inside the State Department HO concede that during the Bush administration "it is getting harder to get stuff released." But according to FRUS General Editor, Edward C. Keefer, the JAPAN volume "is unique and [does not] reflect a trend." /\/\/\/\ /\/\/\/\/\/\ /\ NCH WASHINGTON UPDATE (Vol. 12, #26; 8 JUNE 2006) by Bruce Craig (editor) CIA DECLASSlFIES NAZI FILES In accordance with the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act of 1998, on 6 June 2006 the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)released some 27,000 files relating to Nazi war criminals and those involved with them. When added to some other 60,000 pages of CIA documents that have been released since 1999, this release of documents provides additional corroboration of what historians have long believed - that the CIA recruited war criminals and protected and supported them during the Cold War era when fighting communism became the thrust of American intelligence efforts. According to historian Timothy Naftali of the University of Virginia (and Nixon Presidential Library Director designee), "Hiring of these tainted individuals brought little other than operational problems and moral confusion to our government's intelligence community." The documents show that many of the former Nazi CIA recruits peddled mostly hearsay and gossip in the hope of advancing personal agendas while at the same time avoiding retribution for their past crimes. Release of the documents was stalled by the CIA last year when the Agency balked at declassifying the more detailed materials (the more revealing documents) relating to the Agency's operational activities, but caved in after Congress intervened. A similar declassification effort relating to Japanese war criminals is expected by the end of summer. /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ NCH WASHINGTON UPDATE (Vol. 12, #21; 4 May 2006) by Bruce Craig (editor) GERMANY AGREES TO OPEN HOLOCAUST FILES Last week, Germany took a major step forward toward opening Nazi era records Spring & Fall 2006 ­ relating to up to 17.5 million Jews, slave laborers, concentration camp prisoners, and other victims of the Holocaust. Germany pledged to work with the United States and other nations to ensure access to some 30 to 50 million documents that are stored in an archives in the German town of Bad Arolsen. -wali )'""ixon _ ee), ur 'ty." -me !:lostly r tthe ilieir ':;:>tailed .~- s after . :ating ~ed by :: Vol. :::-aig Until now, Germany has refused to open the records, citing privacy concerns. Much of the credit in this recent development falls to the Holocaust Museum in Washington D.C. which for nearly two decades has been seeking to pry open the records. As the situation currently stands, some 11 nations jointly oversee the records which for some 60 years have been used nearly exclusively by the International Committee of the Red Cross to help trace missing or dead persons. Reportedly, the Red Cross still gets about 150,000 requests a year. Except for fulfilling those requests, the records have been off limits to historians and the public. Plans now call for eventual digitization ofrecords. Decisions on how best to proceed to open the records will be made during a meeting scheduled for 17 May in Luxembourg. At that time the 1955 treaty regarding the records is expected to be amended. /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ NCH WASHINGTON UPDATE (Vol. 11, #48; 16 DECEMBER 2005) by Bruce Craig (editor) with Nathaniel. Kulyk (contributor BITS AND BYTES: Item #2 -- Paintings Lost in WW II Found, Recovered: Three paintings were discovered at a Pennsylvania art auction and have been returned to their home at the Pirmasens Museum in Germany after sixty years. The recovered art work was among fifty paintings by Heinrich Burkel, a famous 19th century landscape artist, that were removed in 1942 from the museum because of the threat of Allied bombings and placed in an air raid shelter in a nearby school. When the curators went to recover them in 1945, they found they had vanished. This fall, three of the missing paintings appeared on a website advertisement of an auction house located in Concordville, Pennsylvania. The German government and the FBI's Art Crime Team were notified (the FBI's Art Crime Team was created early last year as a response to what is believed to be a growing market for stolen artwork) and auction of the items halted. No charges brought against anyone, as any guilty party is long since deceased though an FBI spokesperson commented, "It is somewhat miraculous, but it does show the power of the Internet, even in things like this." Thus far the FBI Art Crime Team has recovered about 100 items worth approximately $40 million and made 10 arrests. /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ _ step ::-ecords 9 10 - Spring & Fall 2006 U.S. National Archives and Record Administration Accessions & Openings July 1, 2005-September 30,2006 Compiled from official National Archives and Record Administration listings on http://search.archives.gov/. Part I. WASHINGTON, DC, Area A. Documents to National Security Programs, 1954-65; Records Pertaining to Internal Security Policies, Records of the Bureau of Ships (Record Group 19) 6 cubicfeet Contract and preliminary design plans of ships and ship machinery, 1918-65. Materials open. Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510. 194~--63. Materials open. Contact the Archives II Civilian Records Staff, 301-837-3480. Records of the Internal Revenue Service (Record Group 58) 111 cubic feet Program/Policy Records 1917-95; and Records of the Bureau of Naval others. Materials unprocessed. Contact Personnel (Record Group 24) the Archives II Civilian Records Staff, 130 cubicfeet Casualty Case Cards, 1918-77; 301-837-3480. Miscellaneous Casualty Records, 1941­ 71; and others. Materials open. Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510. General Records of the Department of State (Record Group 59) 117 cubic feet General Commodities Files 1950-81; and others. Materials security classified. General Records of the Department of Contact the Archives II Civilian Records the Treasury (Record Group 56) Staff, 301-837-3480. 64 cubic feet Records of Federal Bureau of Policy Papers Pertaining to the National Investigation (Record Group 65) Security Council, 1952-64; Records 726 cubic feet Relating to National Security Council Personnel Files of FBI officials-J. Programs, 1948-65; Records Pertaining Edgar Hoover, Clyde Tolson, Louis B. Spring & Fall 2006 - Nichols, and Clarence Kelley; Official Imperial Government Disclosure Acts, and Confidential Files of 1. Edgar 1946-2003; second release of Name Hoover; FBI Field Office records Files Under the Nazi War Crimes and relating to Tokyo Rose. Materials Japanese Imperial Government unprocessed and some security Disclosure Acts, 1936-2000; Select classified. Documents of the Office of Strategic 11 Services Released Under the Nazi War Select Field Office Case Files from Classification 61 (Treason) Released Under the Nazi War Crimes and Crimes Disclosure Act, 1941-48; and others. Contact the Archives II Civilian Records Staff, 301-837-3480. Japanese Imperial Government Disclosure Acts, 1942-2004, and Records of Naval Operating Forces Accretions. Materials open. Contact the (Record Group 313) Archives II Civilian Records Staff, 301­ 694 cubic feet 837-3480. Aircraft Fleet Marine Force, Pacific; enTIce Administrative Files, 1950--54; Aircraft Records of the Judge Advocate General (Navy) (Record Group 125) :. and tact laff, 207 cubic feet Courts of Inquiry, May 18, 1932, to June 1953; and others. Materials open. Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff,301-837-3510. Fleet Marine Force, Pacific; General Administrative Files, 1950--51; Aircraft Fleet Marine Force, Pacific; Administrative Files, 1948-50; Task Force 24, Secret General Administrative Correspondence, 1942-47; Third Amphibious Force (Amphibious Force, Records of the War Department General South Pacific), Confidential, Secret, and and Special Staffs (Record Group 165) Top Secret General Administrative Files, 1 cubicfoot 1942-45; Service Force, Seventh Fleet, s:ified. U.S. Army Caribbean, Awards Files, Secret General Administrative and ecords 1947-48. Materials open. Contact the Personnel Files, 1943-45; Battleship Archives II Military Records Staff, 301­ Division One, General Administrative 837-3510. Files, 1944-46; Battleship Cruiser Force, ~ 1; Pacific Fleet; Unclassified and .is B. Records of the Central Intelligence Restricted General Administrative Files, Agency (Record Group 263) 1946; Submarine Squadron Ten, Ship 42 cubic feet and Correspondence Files, 1932-45; Second release of Subject Files Under Submarine Force Atlantic Fleet, the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Organizational, Operational, 12 - Spring & Fall 2006 Instructional, and Communication Contact the Archives II Military Records Records, 1941-46; Submarines, Staff, 301-837-3510. Southwest Pacific, Restricted, Confidential, and Secret General Administrative Files, 1942-46; Destroyers, Pacific Fleet; Confidential General Administrative Files, 1945; Destroyers, Pacific Fleet; Restricted and Confidential General Administrative Files, 1947; Pacific Fleet, General and Serial Files, 1941-42; Aircraft, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific; Unclassified Correspondence and Message Files, 1953; Aircraft, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific; General Administrative Files, 1944; Pacific Fleet, Japanese Repatriation Records, 1945-46; Operational Training Command, Pacific, Subordinate Command San Pedro and Small Craft Training Center, Terminal Island; Administrative and Records of the Army Staff (Record Group 319) 49 cubic feet Foreign Personnel and Organizational Files (1947-79; Intelligence/Counterintelligence Sources (1953-74); POWIMIA/Detainee Intelligence (1947-74). Materials unprocessed and some security classified. Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510. Security Classified Intelligence and Investigative Dossiers-Impersonal File, 1939-80; Security Classified Intelligence and Investigative Dossiers-Personal File, 1939-76. Materials open. Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510. Communications Files, 1943-44; Destroyers, Pacific Fleet, Records of the Office of the Secretary of Correspondence and Reports, 1944-45; Defense (Record Group 330) Histories, Reports and Administrative 247 cubic feet Materials, Motor Torpedo Boat Administrative Files, 1942-74; and Squadrons Seventh Fleet; Confidential others. Materials open. Contact the and Secret Diaries and Communications, Archives II Military Records Staff, 301­ Motor Torpedo Boat Squadrons Pacific; 837-3510. First Carrier Task Force, Pacific, Administrative, Historical, and Operational Records, 1944-45; Northwest Sea Frontier War Diaries; Chronological Serial Files, Panama Naval Coastal Frontier, Submarine Squadron 3; and others. Materials open. Records of U.S. Army Commands, 1942- (Record Group 338) 909 cubic feet Forty-fifth Infantry Division, Award Files, 1953; Second Armored Division, Award Files, 1945-48; Fourth Armored Spring & Fall 2006 -ords ~ File, - o. of 301­ d :.SIon, ored 13 Division, Award Files, 1944-45; 17th Occupancy of Foreign Property Reports, Airborne Division, Award Files, 1945; 1944-45; Public Information Agency, Second Infantry Division, Award Files, . General Correspondence, 1940-47; 1944; Fourth Infantry Division, Awards Quartermaster Section, General Files, 1944-45; First Armored Division, Correspondence, 1944-60; Signal Awards Files, 1945-46; 40th Infantry Section, Subject Correspondence, 1943­ Division, Award Files, 1952; 44; Signal Section, General Mediterranean Theater of Operations, Correspondence, 1947-63; Surgeon's Award Files, 1944-45; First Cavalry Office, General Correspondence, 1947­ Division, Award Files, 1945-48; 25th 63; Transportation Section, General Infantry Division, Award Files, 1950; Correspondence, 1948-50; Maneuver Finance Section, General Headquarters, Reports of Maneuvers and Correspondence, 1941-43; Adjutant Command Post Exercises, 1936-43; 4th General, Records Regarding Pearl HQ, General Correspondence, 1943-46; Harbor Defenses, 1946-47; Adjutant 12th HQ, Incoming Correspondence, general, General Correspondence, 1946­ 1945-46; Engineer Section, "Engineer 50; Artillery Section, Correspondence, Intelligence Notes," 1944-45; G-3 Field 1944; Chemical Section, Chemical Orders and Letters of Instruction, 1945; Warfarer Bulletins, 1945; Comptroller G-1 Statistical Personnel Reports; G-2, Section, Administrative Files, 1945-65; General Correspondence, 1948-59; G-2 Engineer Section, Correspondence, Records Relating to Aliens, 1941-45; G­ 1944-45; Engineer Section, General 2, Records Relating to War Crimes, Correspondence, 1946-50; Engineer 1945-48; G-2, Estimates and Studies, Section, Records Relating to the 1943; G-2, Air Mission Reports, 1945; Siegfried Line, 1944-45; Engineer G-2, Records Relating to Operation Section, Technical Bulletins, 1943-45; Paperclip, 1948-53; G-2, Military Engineer Section, Reports, 1943-45; Attache Reports, 1944-48; G-2 Engineer Section, Intelligence Intelligence Summaries; G-3, General Memorandums and Supporting Correspondence, 1948-63; Adjutant Documents, 1944-45; Engineer Section, General, Plans, 1943-47; Adjutant Planning Fdes, 1944-45; Adjutant General, Publications Record Set, 1946­ General, General Correspondence, 63; G-3, reports and Messages, 1944-45; 1940-57; Inspector General Section, G-3, Reports of Operations, 1943-44; G­ Investigation Files, 1948-53; Medical 3 Operational Orders, 1944; G-3, Daily Section, General Correspondence, 1943­ Journals, 1945; G-3, periodic Reports, 50; Ordnance Section, Rental and 1945; G-3 Reports of Observation, 14 - Spring & Fall 2006 1943~5; G-3, Situation Reports, 1945; G-3, Build-Up Priority Tables, 1944; G­ 3, Operations Plans, 194~5; G-5, Publication Record Set, 1942-43; Personnel Correspondence, 1941 ~6; Publication Record Set, 1943; Directives and Handbook on the Military Publication Record Set, 1942-43; Staff Occupation of Gerrnany, 1944; G-5, Memorandums, 1942-43; General Military Government Detachment Correspondence, 1942-44; Publication Reports, 194~5; 35th HQ, General Record Set, 1946; Publication Record Correspondence, 1945; 12th HQ, General Correspondence, 1945~6; Record Set, 1945-46; Publication 39th Set, 1943; Publication Record Set, 1944; HQ, General Correspondence, 1946; Special Services Planning Files, 1946­ Headquarters, Special Troops, 1946-47; 58; Publication Record Set, 1943-46; 28th HQ, General Correspondence, Correspondence Files, 1942~8. Correspondence, 1941-45; Correspondence Files, Operational Files, 195~58; Project Files, 1948-51; Subject Files, 1952-57; Management Improvement Project Files, 1954-63; Correspondence Files, 1949­ 1942~3; 1946~8; General General Correspondence Files, 1941 ~4; Budget Estimates, 1949-51; Planning Files, 1951-56; Administrative Files, 1947-50; Operations Files, 1948-56; Training 50; Publications Record Set, 1946-65; Administration Files, 1951; General History Files, 1945-1964; Publication Correspondence Files, 1943-46; Record Set, 1943~4; Administrative Communications Security Files, 1942­ Files, 1950-59; Publication Record Set, 45; Training Instruction Files, 1950-59; 1944; General Correspondence, 1942­ Correspondence Files, 1951-57; and 44; Commercial Traffic Activity others. Materials open. Contact the Files,[no date provided]; Organizational Archives II Military Records Staff, 301­ Files, 1946-50; Publications Files, 837-3510. 1948-50; Correspondence Files, 1951­ 57; Publication Record Set, 1942~6; Records of Headquarters U.S. Air Force Publication Record Set, 1948-57; (Air Staff) (Record Group 341) Medical Department Historical Files, 8 cubic/eet 1951-53; General Correspondence, JCS Documents, Briefing Packages, 1940-64; Weekly Intelligence Reports, Briefing Sheets, Indices, 1944-77; and 1946~7; others. Materials security classified. Unit History Files, 1949-53; Ammunition Reports, 1943-44; Publication Record Set, 1942~4; Publication Record Set, 1943~4; Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff,301-837-3510. Spring & Fall 2006 - 15 Records of U.S. Air Force Commands, 16 cubic feet Activities, and Organizations (Record Six "MAGIC" Diplomatic Summaries Group 342) Numbers 1360-1365; Nazi War Crimes 80 cubic feet records. Materials open. Contact the Copies of records delivered to NARA Archives II Military Records Staff, 301­ under the Nazi and Imperial Japanese 837-3510. War Crimes Act. Materials unprocessed. Records of U.S. Forces in the China­ Select Documents Released Under the Burma-India Theaters of Operations Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial (Record Group 493) Government Disclosure Acts Relating to 21 cubic feet Japanese War Crimes, 1943--45; Real u.s. Forces China Theater, Awards Property Case Files, 1948-71; and Files, 1944-46. Materials open. Contact others. Materials open. Contact the the Archives II Military Records Staff, Archives II Military Records Staff, 301­ 301-837-3510. 837-3510. Records of U.S. Army Defense --50; 2­ :~59; d Records of the Maritime Administration Commands (World War II) (Record (Record Group 357) Group 499) 88 cubic feet 2 cubicfeet Ship Specification Files. Materials Western Defense Command, Awards unprocessed. Contact the Old Military Files, 1942--45; Southern Defense and Civil Records Staff, 202-357-5396. Command, Awards Files, 1942--45; Eastern Defense Command, Awards General Records of the Department of E 301­ Energy (Record Group 434) 81 cubic feet r orce •. and "cords Files, 1944-45. Materials open. Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510. Oak Ridge Operations Office Series 6, 1947-61; OakRidge Operations Office Records of General Headquarters, Far Classified Portions-Various East Command, Supreme Commander Collections, 1942-65. Materials security Allied Powers, and United Nations classified. Contact the Archives II Command (Record Group 554) Civilian Records Staff, 301-837-3480. 622 cubic feet Philippines Command. Office of the Records of the National Security Agency/Central Security Service (Record Group 457) Transportation Officer. Historical Data Files, 1942--46; Philippines Command. Office of the Transportation Officer. 16 - Spring & Fall 2006 Message Files, 1945--49; Philippines Ryukyus Command. Adjutant General Command. Guerrilla Affairs Division. Section. General Correspondence Files, Records Related to the U.S. Army 1947-56; Ryukyus Command. Adjutant Recognition Program of Philippine General Section. Publications Record Guerrillas, 1949; Philippines Command. Set, 1947-56; Ryukyus Command. Office of the Enemy Property Custodian. Adjutant General Section. Planning Investigations and Accounts Files, Files, 1950-56; Ryukyus Command. 1945--49; Philippines Command. Office Adjutant General Section. Historical of the Enemy Property Custodian. Reports, 1950-54; Ryukyus Command. Correspondence Files, 1945--49; Adjutant General Section. Military Philippines Command. Office ofthe Government General Correspondence Transportation Officer. General Files, 1949-51; Ryukyus Command. Correspondence Files, 1946--49; Office of the Comptroller. General Philippines Command. Office of the Correspondence Files, 1951; Ryukyus Judge Advocate. Special Court-Martial Command. Office of the Engineer. Case Files, 1947--49; Ryukyus General Correspondence Files, 1947-52; Command. Office of the Assistant Chief Philippines Command. Office of the of Staff, G-2. Intelligence Report Files, Surgeon. General Correspondence Files, 1951-56; Philippines Command. 1947--49; Ryukyus Command. Office of Adjutant General Section. Records the Judge Advocate. Special Court­ Related to the Discharge of Enlisted Martial Case Files, 1951; Ryukyus Men, 1947--49; Philippines Command. Command. Office of the Post Engineer. Army Graves Registration Service­ General Correspondence Files, 1951-52; Philippines Zone. History Files, 1947­ Ryukyus Command. Troop Information 48; Philippines Command. Office of the and Education Section. Publications, Surgeon. Reports of Disposition Board 1952-56; Ryukyus Command. Office of Proceedings, 1945--46; Philippines the Surgeon. Medical Reports, 1950-52; Command. Office of the Surgeon. Ryukyus Command. Special Services Evacuation Orders, 1945-46; Philippines Section. General Correspondence Files, Command. Adjutant General Section. 1949-52; Ryukyus Command. Office of Awards and Decorations Files, 1945-49; the Signal Officer. General Philippines Command. Office of the Correspondence Files, 1950; Ryukyus Surgeon. Radio Message Files, 1948--49; Command. Ryukyus Service Command. Philippines-Ryukyus Command. General Correspondence Files, 1953; Chemical Service, Philippines. Ryukyus Command. Office of Publications Record Set, 1947--48; Purchasing and Contracting. General Spring & Fall 2006 - 17 Correspondence Files, 1953; Ryukyus Advocate Section. War Crimes Trials Command. Office of the Provost Officer. Division. Supporting Documentation for Security Correspondence Files, 1947­ War Crimes Trials, 1946-48; 56; Ryukyus Command. Office of the Philippines-Ryukyus Command. Provost Officer. Prisoner Rosters and Quartennaster Service, Philippines. Reports, 1950-56; Ryukyus Command. Publications Record Set, 1947-48; Office ofthe Ordnance Officer. General Philippines Command. Adjutant General Correspondence Files, 1947-50; Section. General Correspondence Files, Philippines-Ryukyus Command. Judge 1948-49; Ryukyus Command. Medical Advocate Section. War Crimes Trials Service. Issuances, 1948-51; and others. Division. Witness Files, 1945-47; Materials reallocated from Record Ryukyus Command. Office of the Judge Group 338. Contact Archives II Military Advocate. Claims Correspondence, Records Staff, 301-837-3510. 1947-52; Philippines Command. Adjutant General Section. Publications 7-52; Record Set, 1948-49; Ryukyus e Command. Office of the Inspector Files, -ceof .­ General. Investigations Files, 1949-53; Ryukyus Command. Headquarters Special Troops. Office of the Personnel Officer. General Correspondence Files, eer. .~5l-52; ation Records of U.S. Anny Forces in the Caribbean (Record Group 548) 1 cubic/oot U.S. Anny Caribbean, Awards Files, 1947-48. Materials open. Contact the Archives II Military Records Staff, 301­ 837-3510. 1952; Ryukyus Command. Headquarters Special Troops. General Correspondence Files, 1951-52; Ryukyus Command. B. Electronic Records Headquarters Special Troops. -ce of Publications Record Set, 1947-52; -0-52; Philippines-Ryukyus Command. Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense (Record Group 330) ces Adjutant General Section. General 2,195,470 logical data records Files, Correspondence Files, 1947-48; Foreign Military Sales, ca. 1950-FY Philippines-Ryukyus Command. 2005 (686,986 logical data records). Adjutant General Section. Publications Defense Incident-Based Reporting Record Set, 1947-48; Philippines­ System (DIBRS), 30 December 2004 Ryukyus Command. Office of the (1,508,484 logical data records). Headquarters Commandant. General Materials partially restricted. Contact the Correspondence Files, 1946-47; Reference Staff, Center for Electronic ce of eral Philippines-Ryukyus Command. Judge 18 - Spring & Fall 2006 Records, at 301-837-0470, or e-mail included Classified drawings that were cer@nara.gov. separated and secured. Materials open and processed. Accession NN3-019-05­ Records of the National Institutes of 001. Health (Record Group 443) 12,238 logical data records Records of the U.S. Coast Guard Epidemiologic Studies of Occupational (Record Group 26) Groups: Ceramic Workers Study, 1939­ 1 cubicfoot 85 (12,238 logical data records). The accession, "Armed Forces Materials open. Contact the Reference 'Newsmap' 1942-1945," consists of200 Staff, Center for Electronic Records at posters from WorId War Two. 301-837-0479, or e-mail cer@nara.gov. Newsmaps were a weekly issuance of the US. Army, which was published to Donated Historical Materials from the American Defenders ofBataan and relay news about the progress of World War Two in the Pacific and the Corregidor (Historical Materials Group European Theaters to members of the ADBC) military. The publications featured 28,833 logical data records photographs and maps and were World War II Prisoners of the Japanese designed for posting on bulletin boards (28,833 logical data records). Contact or other display areas. Materials the Reference Staff, Center for processed and open. Accession NN3­ Electronic Records, at 301-837-0470, or 026-04-006. e-mail cer@nara.gov. Records of the Bureau of Aeronautics (Record Group 72) 865 cubic feet "Engineering Drawings for Naval C. Special Media Aircraft, 1942-1962," consist of Records ofthe Bureau of Ships (Record engineering drawings for the Group) 19) construction and development of US. 999 cubic feet Navy and U.S. Marine Corps aircraft. This series, "Booklet of General Plans" This is the fifth reporting of partial 1943-65, consists of ship engineering processing of this accession. An drawings that show profile and deck additional 865 cubic feet of drawings ar plans of a variety of US. Navy now processed and open; 4,446 cubic commissioned ships. This accession Spring & Fall 2006 - 19 feet are still unprocessed. Accession 7.2 cubic feet NN3-181-80-02f. This series is titled Photographs Relating Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers (Record Group 77) to Facilities, Activities, Grounds, and Residents of the Old Soldiers Home in Washington, DC, ca. 1890-1998. 15 cubic feet Materials processed and open. Accession "Aerial Photographic Film, 1942-1954," NN3-231-004-00 1. consists of aerial photography from the f200 Walla Walla District Office. The photography includes coverage of the Records of the Defense Intelligence Agency (Record Group 373) 2,025 cubic feet -e of Snake, Salmon, and Columbia Rivers. This accretion to a series of aerial :"ed to Materials processed and open. Accession photographic film, 1940-70, consists of ONC-77-89-0l4. 45 accessions including vertical and • 'orld oblique sequential photographic :the e hDards s _~3- tiCS :: .S. aft. a1 gs are :ubic Records of Naval Districts and Shore negatives in roll format. Both urban and Establishments (Record Group 181) rural areas of the United States are 64 cubic feet represented with emphasis on coastal This series, Operations Crossroads and navigable inland harbors and [Classified] 1946, consists of vertical waterways, military installations, and and oblique photographic images of the airfields throughout the country. The preparations for, the executing of, and coverage for areas of the world outside the aftermath of the atomic bomb tests of the United States is concentrated on July 1, 1946, and July 25, 1946 areas of World War II and immediate (Operation Crossroads). These tests took post war U.S. military activities and place at the Bikini Atoll and included a facilities. Materials open and processed. target fleet that consisted of surface Accessions: NN3-373-05-201 through ships and submarines. Cameras were NN3-373-05-247. mounted on towers on Bikini Atoll and Enyu Island as well as on airplanes. Records of the Defense Mapping These records were moved to cold Agency / Records of the Office of the secure stacks. Materials are processed. Chief of Engineers (Record Groups 456 / Accession NN3 -181-00-002. m 71 cubic feet Records of the Armed Forces Retirement This series, Topographic Map Dossiers Home (Record Group 231) (German), 1931-55, consists of dossiers 20 - Spring & Fall 2006 related to individual map sheets covering 1 cubicfoot most of Germany and some adjoining Logbook and Field Notes from the areas in Poland, France, Belgium, Izembek and Aleutian Refuges, 1949­ Luxembourg, the Netherlands, 2000. Switzerland, Czechoslovakia, and Italy. Dossier contents are primarily in the German language and include triangulation charts, topographic Records of the Forest Service (Record Group 95) sketches, and maps created by the 12 cubic feet German Reich Bureau for Regional Special Use Permits, 1954-74 [1941, Planning (Reichsstelle fUr 1943-78, 1980J; Historical Photograph Raumordnung) for use by the German Files, 1908-94; and others. Army. Also included are revisions to and resurveys of triangulation points and in a Records of the National Oceanic and few cases related photographs and Atmospheric Administration (Record correspondence. In addition there are Group 370) French-language triangulation charts of 13 cubic feet Alsace-Lorraine, Italian-language triapgulation charts of Italy, sketches of Italian triangulation markers, and Italian and English explanations of geodesy. Juneau, Alaska, Auke Bay Laboratory. Project case files, 1921-99. Includes photographs. Materials processed and open. Accession NN3-456-93-00 1e. Atlanta-NARA's Southeast Region Contact archival operations, 404-968­ 2100. Part II. REGIONAL ARCHIVES Records of the Public Buildings Service All records are open for research unless (RG 121) noted otherwise. 73 cubic feet Progress photographs of public buildings Anchorage-NARA's Pacific Alaska in the Southeast, 1903-74. Region Contact archival operations, 907-271­ Records of the Tennessee Valley 2441. Authority (Record Group 142) Records of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Record Group 22) 9 cubicfeel Historic Photograph Collection, 1933­ Spring & Fall 2006 - ,9­ 80, from the River Systems Operations to proposed projects, 1939-74; and and Enviromnent Division, Knoxville, records relating to water rights, 1942­ TN. Ca. 20,000 items. 2001. Reclamation Service Center, Boston-NARA's Northeast Region 21 Denver, CO: Records relating to Contact archival operations, 781-663­ encampments and cooperative projects, 0121 or 866-406-2379. 1937-41; and Register of contracts, 1952-79; Upper Colorado River Records of District Courts of the United -H, _ aph :md I rd States (Record Group 21) 2 cubicfeet es Information Management Division, of Rhode Island. Naturalization Records , Denver, CO: Case files on Yangtze 1942-91. Gorge and Three Gorges Dam, China Denver-NARA's Rocky Mountain 5740. Records of the Department of Energy (Record Group 434) 2 cubic feet Grand Junction (Colorado) Projects Group 95) Office: Records relating to uranium 9 cubicfeet milling, 1950-2002. Bridger-Teton National Forest, Jackson, 68­ WY. Special use permit files, 1946-94; Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Fort Collins, CO: Research papers, publications, and reports, 1952-80; and others. . :933­ 1943-96; and others. Records of the Forest Service (Record ion uildings Technical and project reports, 1943-94. Federal courts in Rhode Island: District Region Contact archival operations, 303-407­ <llory. Regional Office, Salt Lake City, UT: Records of the Bureau of Reclamation (Record Group 115) 85 cubic feet Lower Colorado River Regional Office, Boulder City, NY: Speeches and addresses, 1947-83; Durango Area Office, Durango, CO: Records relating Laguna Niguel- NARA's Pacific Region Contact archival operations, 949-360­ 2641 Records of District Courts of the United States (Record Group 21) Federal courts in California: Southern District of California, Central Division (Los Angeles). Civil Dockets, 1974; Rough Minutes, 1979 (6 cubic feet); United States Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of California, Central 22 - Spring & Fall 2006 Division (Los Angeles); Bankruptcy National Forest, CA: Numeric Subject Dockets, 1972-74 (82 cubic feet); and Files, 1969-99; Timber Resources United States Bankruptcy Court, Management Planning, 1969-99 (32 Southern District of California, Southern cubic feet); Los Padres National Forest, Division (San Diego), Bankruptcy Dockets, 1978 (5 cubic feet). Federal courts in Arizona: District of CA: Numeric Subject Files, 1972 (1 cubic foot). Inyo National Forest, CA: Numeric Subject Files, 1963-64 (1 cubi< foot). Forest Fire Laboratory, Riverside, Arizona, Tucson Division. Civil CA: Forest Fire Planning and Dockets, 1977-79 (1 cubic foot); District Prevention, 1935-59 (8 cubic feet). of Arizona, Phoenix Division. Judgments and Orders, 1975-79 (4 cubic Records of Naval Districts and Shore Establishments (Record Group 181) feet); and United States Bankruptcy 2 cubicfeel Court, District of Arizona, Phoenix Long Beach Naval Shipyard, Long Division, Bankruptcy Dockets, 1972-94 Beach, CA. Photographs, 1938-84 (11 cubic feet). Records of the Forest Service (Record Group 95) Inyo National Forest, CA: Grazing New York City-NARA's Northeast Region Contact archival operations, 212-401­ 1620 or 866-840-1752. permit files, 1912-46 (1 cubic foot); Records of District Courts of the United Coconino National Forest, AZ: Numeric States (Record Group 21) Subject Files, 1946-99 (10 cubic feet); 655 cubic feet Kaibab National Forest, AZ: Numeric Federal Courts in New Jersey: District 0 Subject Files, 1954-74 (1 cubic foot); New Jersey, Trenton Division. Minutes, Prescott National Forest, AZ: Numeric 1947-80; criminal docket books, 1929­ Subj ect Files, 1908-73 (2 cubic feet); 69; civil docket books, 1938-80; Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, AZ: declarations of intention, 1930-79; Numeric Subject Files, 1955-99 (2 cubic petitions for naturalization, 1931-88. feet): San Bernadino National Forest, CA: Numeric Subject Files, 1925-99; Records of the U.S. Coast Guard Press Releases and Press Clippings, (Record Group 26) 1993-95 (14 cubic feet); Angeles 168 cubic feet National Forest, CA: Numeric Subject New York Sector. Civil engineering Files, 1962-70 (1 cubic foot); Cleveland records, equipment and systems Spring & Fall 2006 drawings, original as-built drawings, Records of the Bonneville Power 1930-98. Administration (Record Group 305) 23 26 cubic feet Seattle--NARA's Pacific Alaska Region Portland Headquarter Office: Power Transactions, 1939-79; and others. Contact archival operations, 206-526­ 6501. Part III. PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES Records of the Bureau of Public Roads (Record Group 30) A. Accessions 70 cubic feet Primary proj ect documentation, 1919­ 68. Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers (Record Group 77) 5 cubicfeet east Seattle District. Civil Works Project Photographs and Negatives-Howard · 1­ Hanson Dam, ca. 1940-61; and others. Dwight D. Eisenhower Library Accretions to the papers of Robert B. Anderson, Oliver M. Gale; Jarold A. Kieffer, and the World War II Participants and Contemporaries collection. Additional papers of Christian A. Herter, 1935-67. Additional papers of Arthur Stanley, 1918-2001. Papers of James H. Guilfoyle, 1951--.­ Records of the Forest Service (Record 2000 . Papers of Charles D. Hyson, Group 95) 1944-95. Papers of Gladys V. Leahy, 99 cubic feet 1953-72. Papers of Wallace Sullivan Caribou-Targhee National Forest. regarding Mamie Eisenhower's medical _ 'ct of Directives (mixed series), 1937-76; Nez history from 1931 to 1955. Additional utes, Perce National Forest Directives, 1909­ papers of Walter Bedell Smith, 1961-68, 78; Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National totaling 2,400 pages. - 8. Forest Advisory Boards, mixed series, 1938-73; Special Use Permits, mixed Gerald R. Ford Library series, 1945-61; Land Acquistion, mixed World map allegedly used by Dorothy series, 1955-60; Special Use Permits, Ford to chart the travels of Gerald and 1990-93; Directives/Special Use Tom Ford during World War II. Permits, 1927-67; Fire Presuppression, mixed series, 1941-61; and others. 24 - Spring & Fall 2006 Herbert Hoover Library book Government-Not Politics (Covici Friede, 1932), one of which was Prentiss Gray scrapbook detailing European relief. John F. Kennedy Library inscribed to his wife, Eleanor Roosevelt. Historical materials from Samuel and Frederick Neusner, a 1932 letter from Franklin Roosevelt to their father, Jacob Personal Papers of Allan Webb, PT boat Neusner. Papers of Malcolm Ross, Sr., veteran; oral history program interview Chairman of the Fair Employment with William C. Battle, PT boat veteran; Committee during the Roosevelt accretion to the Personal Papers of John administration. Papers of John Wesley Kenneth Galbraith; and accretion to the Hanes, totaling approximately 70 linear Personal Papers of Kay Halle. feet; this significant addition to the library's holdings was a transfer donatior Lyndon B. Johnson Library The oral history transcripts of Miguel Aleman (President of Mexico, 1946--52), 23 pages; Victor Jaeggli, National Youth Administration member and state director of the Works Progress Administration, 25 pages; B.F. "Tom" Donald, Jim Wells County Democratic Party Secretary during the 1948 Democratic senatorial campaign, 4 pages; Roland Boyd, Sam Rayburn's campaign manager for Collin County and campaign worker for LBJ in the 1940s and through the 1960s, 44 pages; and Pat Adelman, manager of KTBC television station, 1944-46, 30 pages. Available for research. from the University of Wyoming's American Heritage Center. Photograph ofFDR in his wheelchair while on board Vincent Astor's yacht Nourmahal in April 193 5 (only the third photograph of FDR in his wheelchair in the library's collection). Accretion of 14 linear feet to the papers of Henry Field, on operation of secret "M" Project for President Roosevelt. Accretion of 5 linear feet to the papers of Henry Morgenthau, Sr. Two stenograph notebooks containing shorthand notes of the Casablanca Conference, January 14-24,1943, take by Frank Terry, assistant to President Roosevelt's naval aide. Papers and memorabilia of Henry Charles Spruks, State Department protocol officer durin Franklin D. Roosevelt Library Historical materials from Donald C. Carmichael, three original Roosevelt documents and two editions ofFDR's the Roosevelt administration. Correspondence between Curtis B. Dall and the Roosevelt family and a carbon copy of the 1957 agreement between th children of President and Mrs. Rooseve Spring & Fall 2006 and Dore Schary for the production of The papers of Raphael W. Green, an Sunrise at Campobello. official with the US. Reparations 25 Mission in the Far East after World War Harry S. Truman Library The papers of Thomas E. Murray, member ofthe U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (about three linear feet, ca. 1950-60). The papers of Monte Poen, author and historian (about three linear feet, ca. 1978-97). The papers of Eric Fowler, document collector (less than II (less than 1 linear foot, ca. 1946-81). The papers of James Robert Coe, a scientist (about 2 linear feet, ca. 1912­ 57). Accretion to the papers ofReathe1 M. Odum, personal secretary to Bess Truman (about 1 linear foot, ca. 1926­ 96). Closed pending processing. B. Openings one linear foot, ca. ·1890-1900). The s _ ph ard h of "s on to g :ak:en t records of the Harry S. Truman Library Institute for National and International Affairs (about four linear feet, ca. 1957­ 2000). The Papers of Emmet O'Neal, US. Ambassador to the Philippines, consisting of writings by Filipinos recalling their experiences during the "uring n the ".:evelt 1968-78; papers of Henry A. Byroade, 1937-94; and papers of 1. Robert Schaetzel, 1943-95. John F. Kennedy Library (2 linear feet, ca. 1947-50). The papers Scrapbooks belonging to John F. of Marino Floresca, steward, US. Navy, Kennedy from the period 1940-52 and consisting of menus and drafts of menus containing news clippings and articles, for meals served to President Truman 6.5 cubic feet; Personal papers of and his party during their vacation trips William Flick. Letters, clippings, and to Key West, Florida, and on board the photographs related to a 1950s West U.S.S. Williamsburg, with related items Point cheating scandal, 0.25 cubic feet. The papers of James M. Pendergast, Democratic Party leader and friend of Harry S. Truman, ca. 1934-87 (less than Dall Additional papers of Henry S. Aurand, Japanese occupation of the Philippines (less than one linear foot, ca. 1949-50). uks,a Dwight D. Eisenhower Library one linear foot). The papers of Harry Truman Browne, a Democratic Party figure and admirer of Harry S. Truman (less than 1 linear foot, ca. 1952-65). Harry S. Truman Library Papers of Maurice Solomon, a rabbi and personal friend of Harry S. Truman (less than 1 linear foot, 1945-81). Papers of Arnold B. Crank, an officer in the US. Army Air Forces and Air Force Reserve , 1937-78 (less than one linear foot). Unpublished autobiography of Edwin W. Pauley, Ambassador and U.S. 26 - Spring & Fall 2006 Representative on the Reparations Commission from 1945 to 1947, ca. 1973 (less than one linear foot). Transcribed oral history interviews with Greta Kempton (painter of the official portraits of President Truman and Mrs. Truman), Edwin W. Pauley, and Raphael Green (a member of Pauley's staff during his service on the Reparations Commission). Papers of Dale M. Rellegers, historian, concerning U.S. military occupation of Japan after World War II (11.2 linear feet, 1915-96). Papers of Richard C. Rolbrooke, diplomat and author of Counsel to the President (less than one linear foot, 1987-88). Papers of Oscar Peace, an officer in the U.S. Navy (less than one linear foot, 1945-47). Papers of Russell P. Andrews, Special Assistant to the Assistant to the President (less than one linear foot, 1940--54). An oral history interview with Raphael Green, a membe of the secretariat of the 1946 mission to Korea and Manchuria headed by Ambassador Edwin W. Pauley. Spring & Fall 2006 - e 27 An Annotated Guide to World War II Websites by Mark Parillo and Jonathan Berhow ne ber to In the world of scholarship, the Worldwide Web in the last decade has developed from an intriguing novelty to an invaluable and often essential tool for research and teaching. While the Internet is not about to replace the reference library, archival collection, or classroom instructor, it can enhance the effectiveness of such traditional resources. The great anomaly of the Worldwide Web is that its advantages for the researcher and teacher (flexibility of presentation, low cost, ease of use, accessibility) are also the reasons for disadvantages that undercut its very usefulness. Building websites is now relatively simple enough for virtually anyone with a will to create one. The Worldwide Web is flooded with sites on every conceivable topic. The sites vary in usefulness, quality, and reliability. A Holocaust denier can construct a website as easily as a serious scholar. So can garners, re-enactors, modelers, and other hobbyists and buffs. Important contributions may be made by the untrained amateur, but sifting the wheat from the chaff-and the authentic from the intentionally or unintentionally altered-is sometimes difficult but always time-consuming. "Surfmg the 'net" can be recreational, but for the serio' - olar and teacher it is more often a . ::: and cumbersome ~. down to two: one's project :::'e .::.~.; g multitude of websites out there and assessing the reliability and value of what one may find. The standard search engines, such as the ubiquitous Google, help the web user with the first task, but there are few aids or shortcuts for tackling the second. One response from scholars can be to ignore the Worldwide Web and continue with tried and true methods, which after all have worked for generations. This may be an attractive option for the many arnong us who are technophobes or who were not trained as researchers and educators in the Internet age. In the twenty-first century, however, this puts the scholar and teacher at a disadvantage. The Web can substantially stretch our research time and funding. And its misuse by our students, who are venturing into cyberspace all the time regardless of how we may view it, is a threat to the effectiveness of our teaching. It becomes harder for historians to ignore the Web with each passing day. An annotated guide to websites can be of notable use in overcoming the disadvantages of the Web. Such resources already exist, though many suffer from limitations in the scope, quality, or comprehensiveness of their website assessments. The Institute for Military History & 20 th Century Studies at Kansas State University is launching an online annotated guide to World War II websites that is intended to be a reliable and easy-to-use reference for 28 - Spring & Fall 2006 will soon be available. It will be continuously expanded and updated.· scholars. The URL for the guide is http://www.kstate. edu/history/institute/wwiisiteguide. html. The site is not yet open for use but Some sample site assessments follow. Note: The terms used in the "categories" field have specific connotations, as described below. More than one term may be used. antiquarian: contains much technical data on equipment, weapons, uniforms, or other minutiaE a vocational: intended for gamers, re-enactors, modelers, etc. bibliographic: contains bibliographic listings, bibliographic essays, annotated bibliographies, book reviews, historiographic essays, or other such material educational: has resources for students and/or teachers experiential: intended to invite interaction from the site visitor, such as a site with a message board political: contains materials selected to support a political position or theory recreational: intended for the pure enjoyment of vicariously experiencing historical events (e.g.:might include stories, photographs, and video clips selected for interest rather than scholarly value; might also include actual games or other interactive features) reference: contains very basic information and/or links to other sites scholarly: intended for researchers who are pursuing scholarly projects * * * * * Website Title: "The Avalon Project at Yale Law School: Documents in Law, History and Diplomacy" URL: http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/avalon.htm Subject: General World War II. Category: Scholarly Educational Bibliographic Author: Yale Law School Table of Contents: [See text below.] Description: "The Avalon Project at Yale Law School: Documents in Law, History and Diplomacy" is a repository of digital transcripts of documents that date back over 2000 years. The scores of available primary sources relating to World War II, listed in their entirety via the "Document Collections" page and then under "World War II: Document 1940-1945," cover agreements, conferences, declarations, surrender documents, treaties; and include the "British War Bluebook" and the "French Yellow Book." Unlike other Spring & Fall 2006 - 29 sites presenting similar material, "The Avalon Project" does not include links to external sources, galleries of images, or secondary resources beyond a bibliography. Simply, the website is a list of historic, economic, political, and government documents and how to find them. Between this website and "Documents of World War IT" below, a browser should be able to locate the lion's share of what is accessible in online, digital, primary source documents of the Second World War. Links: None Last Updated: 21 December, 2006 Technical Aspects: Nothing of note to report. Presentation Quality: As the content of this website is not limited to World War II, first time visitors looking for documents on the war years may find the multiple number of search categories confusing. The five major categories cover the 18 th through 21 st centuries and documents prior to these periods, within which sources are listed alphabetically by document name. Beyond this, searches can be conducted by author, subject, title, and "Document Collections" as well as through a standard search engine. The home page URL is listed here as a starting point because the "World War II: Documents" page lacks some of the searchable categories created for ease of finding a particular document. Visiting the "Helpdesk & Frequently Asked Questions" page, especially the section on ''Navigating the Avalon Project," is recommended for new browsers to the site. Despite these minor caveats, "The Avalon Project" is unadorned; designed to allow for quick, direct access to documents, which are free and downloadable. Reliability of Content: A full bibliography for the sources ofthe documents presented is provided on the "Bibliography of Sources" page. Audience: Scholars, teachers and students. Rating: **** * * * * Website Title: "Documents of World War II" URL: http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/ww2.htm . and .J()O II ents, .. ties, er Subject: General World War II. Category: Scholarly Educational Reference * 30 - Spring & Fall 2006 Author: Vincent Ferraro, Professor of Intemational Politics at Mount Holyoke College. Table of Contents: Documents categorized yearly from 1938 to 1946 in addition to a final section on "General Documents and References." Description: "Documents of World War II" is a list oflinks to political documents from the war as well as some links to websites with general information such as "World War I Timeline" and the "Adolf Hitler Historical Archive." Each link provides direct access to the document, most of which are transcriptions and not facsimiles of the original. As a reference guide to the political aspects of the war, the majority of the documents are speeches, telegrams, letters, and memoranda from the various principals involved, with a few of the speeches provided as audio files. Transcriptions of conferences, general orders, and even excerpts from the "U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey" appear. This website is part of the "Documents" section of links from Vincent Ferraro's home page at Mount Holyoke College. Links: Literally, hundreds of direct links to documents are provided by this website, onl a very few of which do not function. Last Updated: Unknown. Technical Aspects: Nothing of note to report. Presentation Quality: A utilitarian but extensive list of links. Finding a particular document may prove difficult due to the volume of links provided. They are, however, listed chronologically. Reliability of Content: Reliability varies depending on the link. A great many of the links provided are to university primary document projects, such as "The Avalon Project at Yale Law School," or similar scholarly archival data bases. Audience: Researchers, students and educators. Rating: **** * * * * * Website Title: "HyperWar: A Hypertext History of the Second World War" URL: http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/ Subject: General World War II. Category: Spring & Fall 2006 - 31 Scholarly Avocational Educational Reference Bibliographic Experiential Author: Patrick Clancey of the HyperWar Foundation Table of Contents: . only "What's New at HyperWar" "General Accounts" [Contains four chapters from Maurice Matloff, American Military History (Office of the Chief of Military History, U.S. Anny, 1973).J 20. World War II: The Defensive Phase 21. Grand Strategy and the Washington High Command 22. World War II: The War Against Germany and Italy 23. World War II: The War Against Japan "Political Papers, Policy Statements, Treaties, etc." "Pacific Theater of Operations" "East Wind, Rain" (War Comes to China and the Pacific, 1900-1941) "Rising Sun" (Japanese Conquests (Philippines, Wake, Guam, Malaya, East Indies, etc., 12/41-5/42)) r e • 'ect The Tide Turns (Doolittle Raid, Coral Sea, Midway, 4/42-7/42) ".. .I've Served My Time in Hell" (The Struggle for Guadalcanal, 8/42-1/43) The Bismarks (New Georgia, Bougainville, etc.) New Guinea (MacArthur's war in the jungle) "Their Only Annor..." (The Seizure of Tarawa and the Gilberts, 11/43) Seizure of the Marshalls (Kwajalein, Roi-Namur, 1944) Seizure ofthe Marianas (Guam, Saipan, Tinian, 1944) "Prelude to the Philippines" (Seizure of the Admiralties, Carolines, & Palaus (Peleliu), 1944) "I Have Returned" (Liberation of the Philippines) "Uncommon Valor" (The Battle for Iwo Jima, 2-3/45) "The Final Battle" (The Seizure of Okinawa, 4-5/45) "The Fat Lady Sings" (Victory in the Pacific (Air War, Surrender, Occupation)) "European Theater of Operations" "Round One" (Poland, Scandinavia, Low Countries, France, Battle of Britain, 1939­ 1941) Battle of the Atlantic (The war against the U-boats, Iceland) "Bolero" (The U.S. Build-up in the U.K.) The Eastern Front (Balkans, Greece, Russia) North Africa (The desert war, Torch) The Mediterranean (Sicily, Italy) Southern France The Mediterranean Air War 32 - Spring & Fall 2006 Overlord (Normandy invasion, 1944) Northern France (From break-out to the Rhine, 1944) The Ardennes (Battle of the Bulge) The Last Campaign (Germany, Central Europe) The Air War over Europe Surrender & Occupation (After the war, Nuremberg trials) "China-Bunna-India Theater of Operations" "The American Theater of Operations" "By Country and Service" "Bibliography" "Appendices and Other Useful Source Material" Glossary of Abbreviations, Acronyms, Codewords, & other tenns Statistical Review, World War II "Other Useful Sources" Description: The "HyperWar" website is a mix of primary and secondary sources on World War II. Secondary sources rely primarily on official U.S. government histories, and historical monographs from bodies of work such as the Leavenworth Papers, the U.S Anny Center of Military History publications, and from experts in the field such as Davi( Glantz. While the section on "Political Papers, Policy Statements, Treaties, etc." contains the bulk of the primary sources, a few others can be found interspersed in the sections on the various theaters of operation. As its title suggests, the main page for primary sources is a collection of diplomatic and political documents that are transcribed from the originals and organized by geographic region and date, from the "Neutrality Act" of 193~ to Japanese surrender documents and the Nuremberg war crimes trial. Though the author's personal interest is the war in the Pacific, "HyperWar" is a useful introduction tc general primary and secondary sources on the entire war. Links: Links to other World War II websites can be found in the section on "Other Useful Sources." Generally, only a few links to external sites do not work. While disappointing, these errors do not detract from the overall usefulness of the site. Last Updated: 28 July 2006 Technical Aspects: Nothing of note to report. Presentation Quality: Though not as extensive in its source material as similarly ambitious projects, "HyperWar" is very well organized and cross-referenced, allowing a browser to search by country and branch of service. While the website's content is presently limited to the Allied nations, other nations should be added in the future, as thi site is a work in progress. Though furnishing no search engine, there is an annotated list of pending projects and a feedback link for comments and contributions. Reliability of Content: Apart from the bibliography page, each of the major theater of operations sections includes links to additional external resources and bibliographical notes. Primary sources and their links Project at Yale Law School." re~:.- =e.=: _ Audience: Designed as an academic resource for the ~~ __ . .:. . ~ ­ documents are far from comprehensive, with not much ew :-;:::...::.=- -._-_ is a good, accessible introduction to source material for non-sc' school and college students, and veterans or their families. Rating: **** * * * * * Website Title: "Dad's War: Finding and Telling Your Father's World War II Story." URL: http://members.aol.com/dadswar/index.htm Subject: General World War II. Category: Scholarly Recreational Educational Reference Bibliographic Experiential Author: Wesley Johnston Table of Contents: My Web Pages First Steps to Finding Your Dad's Story My Own Pages Links to Other People's Web Pages World War II Personal Stories Telling Someone's World War II Story People Telling Their Dad's Story on Web Pages People Telling Their Dad's Story in Books World War II Veterans Telling Their Own Story Collections of Veteran's and Home Front Stories World War II Military and Related Resources Special Groups World War II History Sites Sites to Post World War II Queries Sites to Find Dad's Wartime Buddies Web Search Engines 34 - Spring & Fall 2006 Description: Johnston has created in "Dad's War" a how-to guide to popular and oral history of World War II. Through a hefty list of links, this website provides a vehicle by which the general public can research the history of a friend or family member involved in World War II. The interactive nut of Johnston's effort is "First Steps to Finding Your Dad's Story," a step-by-step worksheet, complete with links, designed to lead the amateur or novice through the process of her or his own research. Secondary source material is generally limited to bibliographic lists and links. The majority of links to primary sources connect not only to the personal accounts of veterans, but also to institutional databases maintained by the National Archives, the Veteran's Alumni Association, the U.S. Army Center for Military History, and the like. With some exceptions, the coverage of the website is limited to the Allies, a fimction of the needs 01 its intended audience. In response to questions from his readers on "How do I find my Dad's Story?" and the primary documentation lost in the 1973 National Personnel Records Center fire, Johnston's "Dad's War" is a useful and accessible exercise in what can be done to aid the public in online historical research and to help broaden the popul understanding of the war and those who fought it. Links: "Dad's War" maintains extensive links - such is the purpose of the site - many 0 which are similar private efforts while others are bibliographic or institutional productions. Of note, and in spite of the title, is the section of links on "Special Groups.­ Here a browser can find World War IT resources on women, African Americans, Japanes Americans, POWs, children, and even Quakers. As the site appears to receive much care from its author, the reliability of the links is high. Last Updated: 7 August 2006 Technical Aspects: Nothing of note to report. Presentation Quality: The website is design-poor, which hurts navigability. However, both breadth of accessible sources of information and an active hierarchical overview till can be accessed via a link at the bottom of the main page compensate for this flaw. Each section is further broken down by the war's geographic regions, the land or air forces involved, nationality, and medium (e.g. books or webpages). For those unacquainted wi' the internet, Johnston offers an annotated and ranked list of search engines. Reliability of Content: Varies depending on the link. Audience: General public and students, oral history researchers. Rating: **** * * * * * Spring & Fall 2006 - 35 Website Title: "American Memory: War, Military" URL: http://memory.loc .gov/ammemlbrowse/ListSome.php?category=War, +Military Subject: General America in World War II. Category: Scholarly Avocational Recreational Educational Reference Bibliographic Experiential Author: The Library of Congress Table of Contents: Adams, Ansel. Japanese-American Internment: Photographs, 1943. "Suffering Under a Great Injustice": Ansel Adams's Photographs of Japanese­ American Internment at Manzanar. Arendt, Hannah. Papers, 1898-1977. The Hannah Arendt Papers at the Library of Congress Depression Era to World War II: FSAJOWl Photographs, 1935-1945 America from the Great Depression to World War II: Photographs from the FSA and OWl, ca. 1935-1945. Manuscript Division: Selected Highlights Words and Deeds in American History: Selected Documents Celebrating the Manuscripts Division's First 100 Years. Pearl Harbor and Public Reactions: Audio Interviews, 1941-1942. After the Day of Infamy: "Man-on-the-Street" Interviews Following the Attack on Pearl Harbor. World War II Maps: Military Situation Maps, 1944-1945. World War II Military Situation Maps. Description: "American Memory: War, Military" is a "Browse Collections by Topic" page from The Library of Congress's "American Memory" homepage (accessible from the URL above), which was created as part of the National Digital Library Program to provide free, online access to digital records chronicling the American experience. The contents listed are links to the available primary sources specifically related to World War II. A broad audience can access this retrievable, well organized, though limited, data from an otherwise outstanding online source. Links: The linked primary sources are just as the topic titles indicate, but a few notes are in order. Ansel Adams's photographs are displayed in a categorized gallery of highlights 36 - Spring & Fall 2006 from the library's collection. While over 25,000 items from the papers of Hannah Arendt have been digitized by the Library of Congress, including transcripts of Adolf Eichmann's trial proceedings, not all of them are available online. The collection of photographs from the Great Depression to World War II comprises roughly 160,000 black-and-white and 1600 color images. Though there are relatively few primary documents available via the "Manuscript Division" link, they are easily located and are downloadable facsimiles ofthe originals. On hand digitally and as transcripts are audio files of the public's reaction to Pearl Harbor, a project instigated by Alan Lomax, when working with the Archive of American Folk Song. Finally, the military situation maps an extensive for the period covered, organized by date, and viewable to a high degree of detail. Last Updated: Unknown. Technical Aspects: Audio files are offered in Wav and IvfP3 formats. The maps can be viewed in various window sizes and degrees of zoom. Photographs are presented as thumbnails and as larger, high-resolution images. All of the site's source material is readily downloadable. Presentation Quality: One of the positive features of this website is a high level of navigability due to its graphic presentation, notes on how to use the resources provided, and finding aids. Each of the subjects from the "Browse Collections by Topic" page links to an overview page containing a summary of the collection, often with guides on "Understanding the Collection" and "Working with the Collection" for the larger digital archives. From there, the collections can be browsed and searched by place, subject, title, keyword, date, or other such categories. Should a browser encounter a problem or have a question, there is an "Ask a Librarian" link on the "American Memory" homepage. Reliability of Content: All the online sources are well referenced and documented, as may be expected from the archives of an institution such as the Library of Congress. Audience: General public, researchers, students and teachers. The "Collection Connection" and "The Learning Page" (see links on the homepage or on the left hand column of linked pages) are special classroom resources for teachers. Rating: **** * * * * * Spring & Fall 2006 - 37 Website Title: "Voices of World War II: Experiences from the Front and at Home" URL: http://www.umkc.edu/lib/spec-coVww2/index.htm Subject: General America in World War II. Category: Recreational Educational Reference Bibliographic Experiential Author: University of Missouri - Kansas City, with the Truman Presidential Museum and Library. Table of Contents: 1939-1941: Rumors of War - The War before Pearl Harbor h Pearl Harbor: Day of Infamy - Dec i , 1941 Europe & D-Day: D-Day and the War in Europe Home Front: How America Heard the War Pacific Theater: War in the Pacific Post War World: Looking Ahead: The Post-War World This Project: Project Infonnation and Sources for Further Study, including Links to Resources and Programs at the Truman Presidential Museum and Library Description: "Voices of World War II" is a collection of primary source, audio files relating to the American experience in World War II, both at home and abroad. Based on digitized sound materials from the Marr Sound Archives in the Miller Nichols Library at the University of Missouri - Kansas City, the files offer browsers a sample of what an American citizen or soldier might have heard on the radio during the war years. Each of the subjects listed above are subdivided into six categories based on the genre of audio file presented. "The War's Voices" covers speeches and interviews by the likes of Winston Churchill, Edward R. Murrow, Franklin Roosevelt, and Walter Winchell. Radio advertisements, entertainment, and war propaganda can be found under "Winning the Home Front." Popular music, usa shows, and Armed Forces Radio programs are stored in "G.!. Jive" and "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boys," with facsimiles of the original sheet music along with the audio files of the recorded versions included. "We Interrupt this Program" is all about news reports, while "Now Hear This" tells the story of contemporary broadcasting and recording technology. The files are many and frequently accompanied by video compilations of captioned photographs taken during the war. For what it sets out to accomplish and the subject it aims to cover, as well as being augmented by links to more general infonnation, this website is an excellent resource. Links: The site's "This ProjectIFurther Study" page supplies several extemallinks, grouped under the same topic headings as the rest of the site. In addition to the resources 38 - Spring & Fall 2006 available at the Truman Presidential Museum and Library, these entries link to other reputable websites that afford a broader view of World War II. Last Updated: 3 February, 2005 Technical Aspects: Enabling JavaScript and the Flash 6 player are required for the multimedia version. A text-based version is also available. Presentation Quality: "Voices of World War II" is direct, visually appealing, engaging, fun, and easily navigable. The organizational structure of the website is standardized throughout. Each audio file is accompanied by a summary description of its content and context. To aid in searching for specific material, a "Topic Index" is provided at the bottom of the main graphic on each page. Reliability of Content: The source material for "Voices of World War II" is well documented. The basis of its content derives from 100 glass and metal acetate transcription discs from the Arthur B. Church-KMBC Radio Collection (see "About this Project" via the "This Project" or "Further Study" links). Audience: General public, researchers, teachers and students. Rating: ***** Spring & Fall 2006 - 39 Recent Articles in English on World War II Selected Titles from an Electronic Compilation By Jonathan Berhow Adler, Eliyana. "No Raisins, No Ahnonds: Singing as Spiritual Resistance to the Holocaust." Shofar 24(4) (2006): 50-66. Anderson, Julie. "British Women, Disability, and the Second World War." Contemporary British History 20(1) (2006): 37-53. Astley, Ian. "The Continuing Conclusion to the Pacific War: Samuel Yamashita's Leaves from an Autumn ofEmergencies." International Journal ofAsian Studies 3(2) (2006): 269-276. Baker, A. D., III. "Historic Fleets." Naval History 20(4) (2006): 12-13. Barkawi, Tarak. "Culture and Combat in the Colonies: The Indian Army in the Second World War." Journal ofContemporary History 41(2) (2006): 325. Barnes, Trevor. "Geographical Intelligence: American Geographers and Research and Analysis in the Office of Strategic Services 1941-1945." Journal ofHistorical Geography 32(1) (2006): 149. Bartlett, Randolph. "The Big E's Impatient Virgins." Naval History 20(6) (2006): 44-50. Bedard, Kelly, and Oliver Deschenes. "The Long-Term Impact of Military Service on Health: Evidence from World War II and Korean War Veterans." The American Economic Review 96(1) (2006): 176. Berdanier, Carolyn. "Food Shortages during World War II: Can We Learn from This Experience?" Nutrition Today 41(4) (2006): 160. Bergstrom, Janet. "Jean Renoir and the Allied War Effort: Saluting France in Two Languages." Historical Journal ofFilm, Radio and Television 26(1) (2006): 45­ 56. Berkowitz, Michael. "The Nazi Equation of Jewish Partisans with 'Bandits' and Its Consequences." European Review ofHistory 13(2) (2006): 311-333. Bernstein, Mark. "'Orchestrated Hell'." Air & Space Smithsonian 21(1) (2006): 64. Berntsen, Dorthe, and David Rubin. "Flashbulb Memories and Posttraumatic Stress Reactions Across the Life Span: Age-Related Effects of the German Occupation of Denmark during World War II." Psychology and Aging 21(1) (2006): 127. 40 - Spring & Fall 2006 Best, Antony. "The 'Ghost' of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance: An Examination into Historical Myth-Making." The Historical Journal 49(3) (2006): 811. Bischof, GUnter. "Between East and West: The Origins of Post-World War II Austrian Diplomacy during the Early Occupation Period." Contemporary Austrian Studie: 14 (2006): 113-142. Blewett, D. K. "The Atomic Bomb and the End of World War II: A Collection of Primary Sources." Choice 43 (2006): 206. Bowd, Gavin. "Romanian Voices of the Second World War: Remembrance and Repression." East European Quarterly 40(1) (2006): 109-133. Bowles, Brett. "Jean Renoir's Salut a la France: Documentary Film Production, Distribution, and Reception in France, 1944-1945." Historical Journal ofFilm, Radio and Television 26(1) (2006): 57-86. Boyne, Walter. "B-24 Liberator." Air Force Magazine 89(6) (2006): 96. Brands, Hal. "The Emperor's New Clothes: American Views ofHirohito after World War II." Historian 68(1) (2006): 1-28. Brands, Hal. "Who Saved the Emperor? The MacArthur Myth and U.S. Policy toward Hirohito and the Japanese Imperial Institution, 1942-1946." Pacific Historical Review 75(2) (2006): 271. Breschi, Danilo. "Torquato Nanni: Dilemmas of the Socialist Who Admired Mussolini." Telos 133 (2006): 155-154. Brooke, Stephen. "War and the Nude: The Photography of Bill Brandt in the 1940s." Journal ofBritish Studies 45(1) (2006): 118-138. Browne, Merv. "The Courage of a Conscientious Objector." Peace Review 18(2) (2006 221. Brunt, Rodney. "Special Documentation Systems at the Government Code and Cypher School, Bletchley Park, during the Second World War." Intelligence & Nationa Security 21(1) (2006): 129. Bryant, Chad. "The Language of Resistance? Czech Jokes and Joke-Telling under Nazi Occupation, 1943-45." Journal of Contemporary History 41(1) (2006): 133-151 Chen, Anthony. '''The Hitlerian Rule of Quotas': Racial Conservatism and the Politics Fair Employment Legislation in New York State, 1941-1945." The Journal of American History 92(4) (2006): 1238-1264. Spring & Fall 2006 - 41 Cienciala, Anna. ''The Katyn Syndrome." Russian Review 65(1) (2006): 117-121. Clout, Hugh. "Beyond the Landings: The Reconstruction of Lower Normandy after June 1944." Journal ofHistorical Geography 32(1) (2006): 127. C1ow, Oliver Ryan. "Ottawa Calling: Canadian Psychological Warfare, 1943-1945." RUSI Journal 151(2) (2006): 76-81. Cohen, Sharon Kangisser. "The Experience of the Jewish Family in the Nazi Ghetto: Kovno - A Case Study." Journal ofFamily History 31(3) (2006): 267-288. Daniels, Roger. "Immigration Policy in a Time of War: The United States, 1939-1945." Journal ofAmerican Ethnic History 25(2/3) (2006): 107. de Matos, Christine. "Diplomacy Interrupted? Macmahon Ball, Evatt and Labor's Policies in Occupied Japan." Australian Journal ofPolitics and History 52(2) (2006): 188. Denisov, Valerii. "The Red Army Campaign on the Pacific." International Affairs 52(1) (2006): 149-160. Dickson, Paul. "The Tragedy at Puys." MHQ: The Quarterly Journal ofMilitary History 18(2) (2006): 70-80. Dorn, Charles. "'The World's Schoolmaster': Educational Reconstruction, Grayson Kefauver, and the Founding of UNESCO, 1942-46." History ofEducation 35(3) (2006): 297-320. Dudney, Robert. "Of Airpower and Morality." Air Force Magazine 89(6) (2006): 2. Dwyer, Ellen. "Psychiatry and Race during World War II." Journal ofthe History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 61(2) (2006): 117. Edele, Mark. "Soviet Veterans as an Entitlement Group, 1945-1955." Slavic Review 65(1) (2006): 111. Ellis, Frank. "Dulag-205: The German Army's Death Camp for Soviet Prisoners at Stalingrad." Journal o/Slavic Military Studies 19(1) (2006): 123. : Everest-Phillips, Max. "Reassessing Pre-War Japanese Espionage: The Rutland Naval Spy Case and the Japanese Intelligence Threat before Pearl Harbor." Intelligence & National Security 21 (2) (2006): 258. Ewan, Shane. "Preparing the British Fire Service for War: Local Government, Nationalism and Evolutionary Reform, 1935-41." Contemporary British History 20(2) (2006): 209-231. 42 - Spring & Fall 2006 Falk, Stanley. "The General Who Defeated MacArthur." Army 56(9) (2006):70-74. Feinstein, Margarete Myers. "Jewish Women Survivors in the Displaced Persons Camp~ of Occupied Gennany: Transmitters of the Past, Caretakers of the Present, and Builders of the Future." Shofar 24(4) (2006): 67-89. Foot, M. R. D. "The Death of General Sikorski." Intelligence & National Security 21(3) (2006): 457. Francis, Martin. "Cecil Beaton's Romantic Toryism and the Symbolic Economy of Wartime Britain." Journal ofBritish Studies 45(1) (2006): 90-117. Garfield, Seth. "Tapping Masculinity: Labor Recruitment to the Brazilian Amazon durin World War II." The Hispanic American Historical Review 86(2) (2006): 275. Gazeley, Ian. "The Levelling of Pay in Britain During the Second World War." Europea Review ofEconomic History 10(2) (2006): 175-204. Gehler, Michael, and Gunter Bischof. "Austrian Foreign Policy after World War II." Contemporary Austrian Studies 14 (2006): 1-24. Gerstle, Gary. "The Crucial Decade: The 1940s and Beyond." The Journal ofAmerican History 92(4) (2006): 1292-1299. Gilderhus, Mark. "The Monroe Doctrine: Meanings and Implications." Presidential Studies Quarterly 36(1) (2006): 5-16. Glueckstein, Fred. "General George S. Patton, Jr., and the Lipizzaners." Army 56(6) (2006): 48-54. Goeschel, Christian. "Suicide at the End of the Reich." Journal of Contemporary Histo 41(1) (2006): 153-173. Goldstein, Ivo. "Ante Pavelic, Charisma and National Mission in Wartime Croatia." Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 7(2) (2006): 225-234. Grant, Rebecca. ""Magic and Lightning." Air Force Magazine 89(3) (2006): 62. Gray, Geoffrey. "The Anny Requires Anthropologists: Australian Anthropologists at War, 1939-1946." Australian Historical Studies 37(127) (2006): 156-180. Grivetti, Louis, Jan Corlett, and Cassius Lockett. "Food in American History: Part 8. Potatoes: World War II: Home Front and Abroad (1941-1945)." Nutrition Toda. 41(3) (2006): 125. Spring & Fall 2006 - 43 Gross, Alan. "Habennas, Systematically Distorted Communication, and the Public Sphere." Rhetoric Society Quarterly 36(3) (2006): 309-330. Guc1u, Yucel. "The Controversy over the Delimitation of the Turco-Syrian Frontier in the Period between the Two World Wars." Middle Eastern Studies 42(4) (2006): 641. Guglielmo, Thomas. "Fighting for Caucasian Rights: Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and the Transnational Struggle for Civil Rights in World War II Texas." The Journal ofAmerican History 92(4) (2006): 1212-1237. Hall, Ian. "Power Politics and Appeasement: Political Realism in British International Thought, c. 1935-1955." British Journal ofPolitics & International Relations 8(2) (2006): 174. Herf, Jeffrey. "Convergence - The Classic Case: Nazi Gennany, Anti-Semitism and Anti-Zionism during World War II." Journal ofIsraeli History 25(1) (2006): 63­ 83. Herf, Jeffrey. "Narratives of Totalitarianism: Nazism's Anti-Semitic Propaganda during World War II and the Holocaust." Telos Summer (2006): 32. Higgs, Robert. "How U.S. Econortlic Warfare Provoked Japan's Attack on Pearl Harbor." Freeman 56(4) (2006): 36-37. Hone, Trent. "Triumph of U.S. Navy Night Fighting." Naval History 20(5) (2006): 52-59. Homfischer, James. "Street Fight in Sunda Strait." Naval History 20(6) (2006): 16-21. Hsiao-ting, Lin. "War of Stratagem? Reassessing China's Military Advance towards Tibet, 1942-1943." The China Quarterly June (2006): 446. Ingham, Mary. "Using the War: Changing Memories of World War Two." History Workshop Journal 61(1) (2006): 295-299. Jing, Yang. "The Unforgettable B-29s: A Tribute." Air Power History 53(1) (2006): 22­ 27. Jones, Edgar. '''LMF': The Use of Psychiatric Stigma in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War." The Journal ofMilitary History 70(2) (2006): 439-458. Kapralski, Slawomir, and Ewa Wolentarska-Ochman. "The Jedwabne Village Green? The Memory and Counter-Memory of the Crime/Response to Slowomir Kapralski." History and Memory 18(1) (2006): 179-199. Karlsgodt, Elizabeth Campbell. "Recycling Heroes: The Destruction of Bronze Statues tmder the Vichy Regime." French Historical Studies 29(1) (2006): 143. 44 - Spring & Fall 2006 Keogh, Dennot. "Irish Refugee Policy, Anti-Semitism and Nazism at the Approach of World War Two." German Monitor 63(1) (2006): 37-74. Kitson, Simon. "Spying for Gennany in Vichy France." History Today 56(1) (2006): 45. 3~ Korczynski, Marek. "Instrumental Music? The Social Origins of Broadcast Music in British Factories." Popular Music 25(2) (2006): 145-165. Koshiro, Yukiko. "Parallax of the Asia-Pacific War." Diplomatic History 30(1) (2006): 147-151. Kriner, Douglas. "Examining Variance in Presidential Approval: The Case ofFDR in World War I1." Public Opinion Quarterly 70(1) (2006): 23-47. Krowlikowski, Hubert. "On the Organization of Air Assaults and Paratroopers in Polanl before the Second World War." Journal ofSlavic Military Studies 19(1) (2006): 67. Krystal, Arthur. "My Holocaust Problem." American Scholar 75(1) (2006): 37-47. Lang, Berel. "The Jewish 'Declaration of War' against the Nazis." The Antioch Review 64(2) (2006): 363-374. Larsen, Stein Ugelvik. "Charisma from Below? The Quisling Case in Norway." Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 7(2) (2006): 235-244. LaVo, Carl. "The Destroyer Aviator." Naval History 20(6) (2006): 52-58. Litvak, Meir. "The Islamic Republic of Iran and the Holocaust: Anti-Semitism and An Zionism." Journal ofIsraeli History 25(1) (2006): 267-284. Lee, Kristen Schultz. "Gender Beliefs and the Meaning of Work among Okinawan Women." Gender & Society 20(3) (2006): 382. Lee, Sabine. '''In No Sense Vital and Actually Not Even Important'? Reality and Perception of Britain's Contribution to the Development of Nuclear Weapons.' Contemporary British History 20(2) (2006): 159-185. Lichtenstein, Alex, and Eric Arnesen. "Labor and the Problem of Social Unity during World War II: Katherine Archibald's Wartime Shipyard in Retrospect." Labor 3(1) (2006): 113-146. Lindenberger, Herbert. "Heroic or Foolish? The 1942 Bombing of a Nazi Anti-Soviet Exhibit." Telos 135 (2006): 127-155. Spring & Fall 2006 - 45 Looseley, Rhiannon. "Paradise after Hell." History Today 56(6) (2006): 32-38. Lotchin, Roger. "Turning the Good War Bad." Journal o/Urban History 32(2) (2006): 324-333. Ludi, Regula. "The Vectors of Postwar Victims Reparations: Relief, Redress and Memory Politics." Journal o/Contemporary History 41(3) (2006): 421. Lundstrom, John. "Sinking the Shoho." Naval History 20(2) (2006): 26-34. Lynch, Frances. "Finance and Welfare: The Impact of Two World Wars on Domestic Policy in France." Historical Journal 49(2) (2006): 625-633. Mackay, Robert. "'No Place in the Corporation's Service': The BBC and Conscientious Objectors in the Second World War." Media History 12(1) (2006): 37-46. Mackenzie, Hector. "Delineating the North Atlantic Triangle: The Second World War and Its Aftermath." Round Table January (2006): 101. Macklin, Graham. '''Hail Mosely and F'Em All': Martyrdom, Transcendence and the 'Myth' ofIntemment." Totalitarian Movements and Political Regions 7(1) (2006): 1-23. Marples, David. "Stepan Bandera: The Resurrection of a Ukrainian National Hero." Europe-Asia Studies 58(4) (2006): 555-566. Maslov, Aleksei Gavri10vich. "I Returned from Prison, Part III" Journal 0/ Slavic Military Studies 19(2) (2006): 377. Mas10v, Aleksei Gavrilovich. "I Returned from Prison!" Journal o/Slavic Military Studies 19(3) (2006): 627. Mason, H. M., Jr. "The National Museum of the Pacific War." Leatherneck 89(2) (2006): 42-47. McChesney, Anita. "On the Repeating History of Destruction: Media and the Index in Sebald and Ransmayr." MLN 121(3) (2006): 699-720. McComb, David. "Destroyers at Tokyo Bay." Naval History 20(1) (2006): 32-36. McCormack, David. "Return to Tarawa." Naval History 20(5) (2006): 48-51. Merridale, Catherine. "Culture, Ideology and Combat in the Red Army, 1939-45." Journal o/Contemporary History 41(2) (2006): 305. 46 - Spring & Fall 2006 Meyers, Mark. "Feminizing Fascist Men: Crowd Psychology, Gender, and Sexuality in French Antifascism, 1929-1945." French Historical Studies 29(1) (2006): 109­ 142. Miller, Cynthia. "The 'B' Movie Goes to War in Hitler, Beast ofBerlin (1939)." Film ( History 36(1) (2006): 58-64. Miller, Jerry, and James Delgado. "Curiosity at the Crossroads." Naval History 20(4) (2006): 16-23. Moeller, Robert. "On the History of Man-Made Destruction: Loss, Death, Memory, ane Germany in the Bombing War." History Workshop Journal 61 (2006): 103-134 Moore, Bob. "Unwanted Guests in Troubled Times: German Prisoners of War in the Union of South Africa, 1942-1943." The Journal ofMilitary History 70(1) (2006): 63-89. Mukhina, Irina. "New Revelations from the Former Soviet Archives: The Kremlin, the Warsaw Uprising, and the Coming of the Cold War." Cold War History 6(3) (2006): 397-411. Neumaier, Christopher. "The Escalation of German Reprisal Policy in Occupied Franc 1941-1942." Journal of Contemporary History 41(1) (2006): 113. Neville, Peter. "The Dirty A-Word." History Today 56(4) (2006): 39-41. Okazaki, Tetsuji. "'Voice' and 'Exit' in Japanese Firms during the Second World War: Sanpo Revisited." The Economic History Review 59(2) (2006): 374. O'Reilly, Dec1an. "Vesting GAP Corporation: The Roosevelt Administration's Decisi to Americanise 1. G. Farben's American Affiliates in World War II." History a Technology 22(2) (2006): 153-186. Pattinson, Juliette. '''Playing the Daft Lassie with Them': Gender, Captivity and the Special Operations Executive during the Second World War." European Revi ofHistory 13(2) (2006): 271-292. Pege1ow, Thomas. "Determining 'People of German Blood', 'Jews' and 'Mischlinge': The Riech Kinship Office and the Competing Discourses and Powers of Nazis 1941-1943." Contemporary European History 15(1) (2006): 43-65. Pemberton, Joanne. "The Middle Way: The Discourse of Planning in Britain, Australi and at the League in the Interwar Years." Australian Journal ofPolitics and History 52(1) (2006): 48. Spring & Fall 2006 - 47 Peszke, Michael. "Polish Special Duties Flight No. 1586 and the Warsaw Uprising." Air Power History 53(2) (2006): 32-37. & Petrov, I. "Moscow-Bern: Restoration of Diplomatic Relations." International Affairs 52(2)(2006): 135-143. Pope, Alan. "The House of Being Still Stands: Nuclear Holocaust and Human Meaning." The Journal ofHumanistic Psychology 46(3) (2006): 303. Puri, Samir. "The Role of Intelligence in Deciding the Battle of Britain." Intelligence & National Security 21(3) (2006): 416. Raack, R. C. "Breakers on the Stalin Wave." Russian Review 65(3) (2006): 512-515. Reicher, Stephen, Clare Cassidy, Ingrid Wolpert, Nick Hopkins, and Mark Levine. "Saving Bulgaria's Jews: An Analysis of Social Identity and the Mobilization of Social Solidarity." European Journal ofSocial Psychology 36(1) (2006): 49. Rosenberg, Emily. "National Geographic: Remembering Pearl Harbor." The Journal of American History 93(2) (2006): 626-627. Russell, Ronald. "Changing Course: The Hornet's Air Group at Midway." Naval History 20(1) (2006): 48-53. Sanford, George. "The Katyn Massacre and Polish-Soviet Relations, 1941-43." Journal of Contemporary History 41(1) (2006): 95. Sarantakes, Nicholas Evan. "One Last Crusade: The British Pacific Fleet and Its Impact on the Anglo-American Alliance." The English Historical Review 121(491) (2006): 429. Sato, Shigeru. "Indonesia, 1939-1942: Prelude to the Japanese Occupation." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 37(2) (2006): 225. Schneider, James. "The Cobra and the Mongoose: Soviet Defensive Doctrine during the Interwar Period and the Problem of Strategic Dislocation." Journal ofSlavic Military History 19(1) (2006): 57. Schwonek, Matthew. "Kazimierz Sosnkowski as Commander in Chief: The Govemment­ in-Exile and Polish Strategy, 1943-1944." The Journal ofMilitary History 70(3) (2006): 743-780. Scott, Ian. "From Toscanini to Tennessee: Robert Riskin, the OWl, and the Construction of American Propaganda in World War II." Journal ofAmerican Studies 40(2) (2006): 347. 48 - Spring & Fall 2006 Serge, Richard. "The Roosevelt Corollary." Presidential Studies Quarterly 36(1) (2006 17-26. Seritan, Andreea, Glen Gabbard, and Lloyd Benjamin. "War and Peace: Psychotherapy with a Holocaust Survivor." The American Journal 0/ Psychiatry 163(10) (2006 1705-1709. Simic, Zora. "A New Age? Australian Feminism and the 1940s." Hecate 32(1) (2006): 152-173. Snyder, Logan Thomas. "'Broader Ribbons Across the Land'." American History 41 (2) (2006): 32-40. Soh, Sarah. "In/Fertility among Korea's 'Comfort Women' Survivors: A Comparative Perspective." Women's Studies International Forum 29(1) (2006): 67-80. Solonari, Vladimir. "'Model Province': Explaining the Holocaust of Bessarabian and Bukovinian Jewry." Nationalities Papers 34(4) (2006): 471. Sorabji, Cornelia. "Managing Memories in Post-War Sarajevo: Individuals, Bad Memories, and New Wars." Journal o/the Royal Anthropological Institute 12(1 (2006): 1-18. Spence, Dustin. "Unraveling the Mysteries ofthe First Flag Raising." Leatherneck 89(1 (2006): 34-43. Stockwell, A. J. "The Audit of War." History Today 56(3) (2006): 48-54. Stokes, Lawrence. "Secret Intelligence and Anti-Nazi Resistance: The Mysterious Exil of Gottfried Reinhold Treviranus." International History Review 28(1) (2006): 42-93. Strachan, Hew. "Training, Morale and Modem War." Journal o/Contemporary Histo 41(2) (2006): 211-227. 'I Streeter, Gregory, Dick Kirschten, and Daniel Felger. "To Honor Our Navy at Normandy." Naval History 20(3) (2006): 56-61. Testar, Jason, and Ed Drea. "Early Victories Raise Japanese Expectations." A1HQ: The Quarterly Journal o/lvlilitary History 18(2) (2006): 38-41. Thomas, Evan. "Writing Thunder at Sea." Naval History 20(6) (2006): 26-29. van Tubergen, Frank, and Wout Ultee. "Political Integration, War, and Suicide: The Dutch Paradox?" International Sociology 21 (2) (2006): 221. Spring & Fall 2006 - 49 Tmmainen, Pasi. "The Battle of Encirclement at Ilomantsi in July-August: An Example of the Application of the Idea ofCannae in the Finnish Art of War." Journal of Slavic lVlilitary Studies 19(1) (2006): 107. Ventresca, Robert. "Mussolini's Ghost: Italy's Duce in History and Memory." History and Memory 18(1) (2006): 86-121. Villa, Brian, and Timothy Wilford. "Signals Intelligence and Pearl Harbor: The State of the Question." Intelligence and National Security 21(4) (2006): 520. Wachsmann, Nikolaus. "Looking into the Abyss: Historians and the Nazi Concentration Camps." European History Quarterly 36(2) (2006): 247. Wagner, Breanne. "U.S. Identifies Remains of 11 World War II Airmen." Air Force Magazine 89(6) (2006): 23. Waters, Odale, Jr. "Piddly Poom to Spectacular Boom." Naval History 20(4) (2006): 24­ 28. Weeks, Gregory. "Understanding the Holocaust: The Past and Future of Holocaust Studies." Contemporary European History 15(1) (2006): 117-129. Weeks, Theodore. "A Multi-Ethnic City in Transition: Vilnius's Stormy Decade, 1939­ 1949." Eurasian Geography and Economics 47(2) (2006): 153. Wetterhahn, Ralph. "Fire and Ice." Air & Space Smithsonian 20(6) (2006): 64. Winter, P. R. 1. "Libra Rising: Hitler, Astrology, and British Intelligence, 1940-43." Intelligence & National Security 21(3) (2006): 394. Winthrop-Young, Geoffrey. "The Third Reich in Alternate History: Aspects of a Genre­ Specific Depiction of Nazi Culture." Journal ofPopular Culture 38(5) (2006): 878-896. Wolentarska-Ochman, Ewa. "Collective Remembrance in Jedwabne: Unsettled Memory of World War II in Postcommunist Poland." History and Memory 18(1) (2006): 152-179. Wolfgram, Mark. "The Holocaust through the Prism of East German Television: Collective Memory and Audience Perceptions." Holocaust and Genocide Studies 20(1) (2006): 57-79. Wolk, Herman. "Ike and the Air Force." Air Force Magazine 89(4) (2006): 84. 50 - Spring & Fall 2006 Wouters, Nico. "Municipal Government during the Occupation (1940-5): A Comparativ Model of Belgium, the Netherlands and France." European History Quarterly 36(2) (2006): 221. Yoshibumi, Wakamiya, and Watanabe Tsuneo. "Yasukuni, War Responsibility, and Japan's Diplomacy." Japan Echo 33(2) (2006): 10. Zinoviev, Alexander. "My Era: On the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945." Russian Politics and Law 44(3) (2006): 83-97. Spring & Fall 2006 e 51 Recently Published and Reprinted Books in English on World War II Selecled Titles from an Electronic Compilation by Elizaveta Zheganina Adelman, J. Hitler and His Allies in World War Two. London & New York: Routledge, 2006. Aldrich, Richard. The Faraway War: Personal Diaries of the Second World War in Asia and the Pacific. London: Corgi, 2006. Allen, Martin. Himmler's Secret War: The Covert Peace Negotiations of Heinrich Himmler. New York: Carroll & Graf, 2006. Alter, James. From Campus to Combat: A College Boy Becomes a WWII Army Flier. Philadelphia: Garrett Country, 2006. Althoff, William F. Forgotten Weapon: U.S. Navy Airships and the U-Boat War in the Atlantic. Washington: Potomac, 2006. Amos, S. 1. Shades of War: World War II and the Families that Endured. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Annussek, Greg. Hitler's Raid to Save Mussolini: The Most Infamous Commando Operation of World War II. Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo, 2006 Babcock, John B. Taught to Kill: An American Boy's War from the Ardennes to Berlin. Washington: Potomac, 2006. Bailey, Kenneth Kyle. Memories of World War II: A Mississippi Farm Boy's Story. Bloomington, Ind.: Authorhouse, 2006. Balkoski, Joseph. Utah Beach: The Amphibious Landing and Airborne Operations on D­ Day, June 6, 1944. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Banning, Jan. Traces of War: Survivors of the Burma and Sumatra Railways. London: Trolley, 2006. Barclay, C. N. History of the Royal Northumberland Fusiliers in the Second World War. London: Naval & Military, 2006. Barry, John W. The Midwest Goes to War: The 32 nd Division and the Great War. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow, 2006. Bartholomew-Feis, Dixee. The OSS and Ho Chi Minh: Unexpected Allies in the War Against Japan. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas, 2006. Bastable, Jonathan. Voices from Stalingrad. Cincinnati: David & Charles, 2006. 52 - Spring & Fall 2006 Benfey, Christopher, and Karen Remmler. Artists, Intellectuals, and World War II: The Pontigny Encounters at Mount Holyoke College, 1942-1944. Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press, 2006. Benz, Wolfgang, and Thomas Dunlap. A Concise History of the Third Reich. Berkeley, Cal.: University of California Press, 2006. Bercuson, David, and Holger H. Herwig. One Christmas in Washington: The Secret Meeting between Roosevelt and Churchill that Changed the World. London: Phoenix, 2006. Bergamini, David. Japan's Imperial Conspiracy: How Emperor Hirohito Led Japan into War against the West. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen, 2006. Bernstein, Chuck "Bernie." Blackhawk Mission: From Europe to the Pacific in World War II. Lincoln, Neb.: iUniverse, Inc., 2006. Berthon, Simon, and Joanna Potts. Warlords: An Extraordinary Recreation of World Wa II through the Eyes and Minds of Hitler, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin. Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo, 2006. Bess, Michael. Choices under Fire: Moral Dimensions of World War II. New York: Knopf, 2006. Bessel, Richard. Nazism and War. New York: Modem Library, 2006. Best, Geoffrey. Churchill at War. London: Hambledon & London, 2006. Biess, Frank. Homecomings: Returning POWs and the Legacies of Defeat in Postwar Germany. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2006. Billings, Richard N. Battleground Atlantic: How the Sinking of a Single Japanese Submarine Assured the Outcome of World War II. New York: NAL Caliber, 2006. Bishop, Chris. The Military Atlas of World War II. London: Amber, 2006. Black, Robert W. The Battalion: The Dramatic Story of the 2 World War II. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. nd Ranger Battalion in Boog, Horst, Gerhard Krebs, DetlefVogel, and Derry Cook-Radmore. Germany and th Second World War, Volume VII: The Strategic Air War in Europe and the War the West and East Asia. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - 53 Bourke, Roger. Prisoners of the Japanese: Literary Imagination and the Prisoner-of-War Experience. St. Lucia, Australia: University of Queensland Press, 2006. Bowen, Wayne H. Spain During World War II. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 2006. Bowman, Martin. Echoes of UK.: The 8th Air Force in World War Two. Stroud, UK.: Tempus, 2006. Bowman, Martin. Flying into the Flames of Hell: Flying with Bomber Command in World War II. Bamsley, UK.: Pen & Sword, 2006. Bowman, Martin. The Reich Intruders: RAF Light Bomber Raids in World War II. Bamsley, U.K.: Pen and Sword, 2006. Boyne, Walter J. World War II Aircraft: Great American Fighter Planes of the Second World War. San Diego: Thunder Bay, 2006. Bright, Paul. Air War over East Yorkshire in World War II. Ottringham, U.K.: Flight Recorder, 2006. Browning, Christopher R. Nazi Policy, Jewish Workers, German Killers. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Buel, Hal. Uncommon Valor, Common Virtue: Iwo Jima and the Photograph the Captured America. New York: Berkley, 2006. Bums, Dwayne. Jump: Into the Valley of the Shadow: The War Memoirs of Dwayne Bums Communications Sergeant - 50S th P.I.R. Havertown, Pa.: Casemate, 2006. Busha, Jim, Donald J. Blakeslee, and John M. Dibbs. The High Battlefront: Air to Air with World War II's Greatest Combat Aircraft. Erin, Ont.: Boston Mills, 2006. Butler, Susan, ed. My Dear Mr. Stalin: The Complete Correspondence between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph V. Stalin. New Haven, Corm.: Yale University Press, 2006. Camp, Dick. Battleship Arizona's Marines at War: Making the Ultimate Sacrifice, December 7, 1941. St. Paul, Mirm.: MBI, 2006. Carafano, James Jay. GI Ingenuity: Improvisation, Technology, and Winning World War II. Westport, Corm.: Praeger, 2006. Carlton, Dennis. Yours Always: Letters between George and Vi during the Second World War. Victoria, B.c.: Trafford, 2006. 54 - Spring & Fall 2006 Carroll, Peter N., Michael Nash, Melvin Small, and Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives Staff. The Good Fight Continues: World War II Letters from the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. New York: New York University Press, 2006. Center for Military History, US. Army. Pictorial Record: The War Against Germany all Italy, Mediterranean and Adjacent Areas. Washington: Office of the Chief of Military History, Dept. of the Army, 2006. Center for Military History, U.S. Army. Pictorial Record: The War Against Germany, Europe and Adjacent Areas. Washington: Office of the Chief of Military History Dept. of the Army, 2006. Centner, James L. Codename: MAGPIE: The Final Nazi Espionage Mission against the US. in WWII. Charleston: BookSurge, 2006. Chapman, Reid, and Deborah Miles. Asheville and Western North Carolina in World War II. Charleston: Arcadia, 2006. Chorley, W. R. Royal Air Force Bomber Command Losses of the Second World War. Leicester, O.K.: Midland, 2006. Christofferson, Thomas, and Michael Christofferson. France during World War II: From Defeat to Liberation. New York: Fordham University Press, 2006. Clark, George B. Six Marine Divisions in the Pacific: Every Campaign of World War II Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2006. Collier, Basil. Hidden Weapons: Allied Secret and Undercover Services in World War IJ Bamsley, O.K.: Pen and Sword, 2006. Conroy, Denis. The Best of Luck: In the Royal Air Force, 1935-1946. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Cooke, Alistair. The American Home Front: 1941-1942. New York: Atlantic Monthly, 2006. Cooper, Gisela. My Life in the Third Reich: Nightmares and Consequences. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Copeland, Jeffrey S. Inman's War: A Soldier's Story of Life in a Colored Battalion in WWII. St. PaUl, Minn.: Paragon, 2006. Copp, Terry. Cinderella Army: The Canadians in Northwest Europe, 1944-1945. Toro & Buffalo: University of Toronto Press, 2006. .- Spring & Fall 2006 - 55 Cosway, W. A. Earthquake McGoon: A Memoir of the "Forgotten War" in South East Asia. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Cottrell, Robert C. Smokejumpers of the Civilian Public Service in World War II: Conscientious Objectors as Firefighters. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2006. Crocker, Vincent A. There's a Soldier at the Gate: Second World War Memoirs of a Tenth Royal Hussar. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Crowell, Bill. The Best of Times, The Worst of Times: A Story of World War II. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Dallas, Gregor. 1945: The War that Never Ended. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2006. Davis, James M., and David L. Snead. In Hostile Skies: An American B-24 Pilot in World War II. Denton, Tex.: University of North Texas Press, 2006. Davison, John. The Pacific War: Day by Day. St. Paul, Minn.: Zenith, 2006. Delaney, Douglas E. The Soldiers' General: Bert Hoffmeister at War. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2006. Delattre, Lucas, and George A. Holoch Jr. A Spy at the Heart of the Third Reich: The Extraordinary Story ofFlitz Kolbe, America's Most Important Spy in World War II. New York: Atlantic Monthly, 2006. DeRosa, Christopher S. Political Indoctrination in the U.S. Army from World War II to the Vietnam War. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2006. Derose, James F., and Roger W. Paine. Unrestricted Warfare: How a New Breed of Officers Led the Submarine Force to Victory in World War II. New York: Wiley, 2006. DiLisio, Rock. Firings from the Fox Hole: A World War II American Infantryman Writes Home. Lincoln, Neb.: iUniverse, Inc., 2006. Dinardo, R.L. Germany's Panzer Army in World War II. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Diner, Dan. Bevond the Conceivable: Studies on Germany, Nazism, and the Holocaust. Berkeley, Cal.: University of California Press, 2006. Dives, William D. F. C. A Bundu Boy in Bomber Command: Memoirs of a Royal Air Force Lancaster Pilot from Rhodesia. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. 56 - Spring & Fall 2006 Dodkin, Marilyn. Goodnight Bobbie: One Family's War. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2006. Doherty, Richard. None Bolder: The History of the 51 st (Highland) Division in the Second World War. Stroud, UK.: Spellmount, 2006. Dorr, Robert F. Air Combat: An Oral History of Fighter Pilots. New York: Berkley Caliber, 2006. Doscher, J. Henry. Subchaser in the South Pacific: A Saga of the USS SC-761 during World War II. New York: Ibooks, 2006. Douglas, W. A Blue Water Navy: The Official Operational History of the Royal Canadian Navy in the Second World War, 1943-1945. Vol. II, Part 2. St. Catharines, Ont.: Vanwell, 2006. Durflinger, Serge Marc. Fighting from Home: The Second World War in Verdun, Quebec. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2006. Eldredge, Michael S., and Arthur O. Naujoks. Shades of Gray: Memoirs of a Prussian Saint on the Eastern Front. Salt Lake City, Utah: Mill Creek Press, 2006. Ellsworth, Ted. Yank: Memoir of a World War II Soldier (1941-1945) - From the Desel War of North Africa to the Allied Invasion of Europe, From German POW Ca.rm to Home Again. New York: Thunder's Mouth, 2006. Everett, Gudrun (Koppe). I Can't Forget: A Journey Through Nazi Germany and World War II. Charleston: BookSurge, 2006. Evica, George Michael. A Certain Arrogance: US. Intelligence's Manipulation of Religious Groups and Individuals in Two World Wars and the Cold War - And the Sacrificing of Lee Harvey Oswald. Philadelphia: Xlibris, 2006. Faryon, Cynthia J. Unsung Heroes of the Canadian Army: Incredible Tales of Courage and Daring during World War II. Canmore, Alta.: Altitude, 2006. Felton, Mark. The Fujita Plan: Japanese Attacks on the United States and Australia during the Second World War. Barnsley, UK.: Pen & Sword, 2006. Ferguson, Niall. The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent 0 the West. New York: Penguin, 2006. Feuer, A. B., and Elmer E. Haynes. The B-24 in China: General Chennault's Secret Weapon in World War II. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006 Spring & Fall 2006 - 57 Feuer, A. B., Jack Read, and Paul Mason. Coast Watching in World War II: Operations against the Japanese in the Solomon Islands, 1941-43. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Feuer, A. B., and Bob Dole. Packs On! Memoirs of the 10 th Mountain Division in World War II. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Feuer, A. B. Australian Commandos: Their Secret 'War against the Japanese in WWII. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Fletcher, David, and Tony Bryan. Swinuning Shermans: Sherman DD Amphibious Tank of World WarII. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Ford, Douglas. Britain's Secret War against Japan. London & New York: Routledge, 2006. Fortier, Louis R. Before the Fields of Crosses. Victoria, B.c.: Trafford, 2006. Forty, George. Germany at War. London: Carlton, 2006. Franklin, Robert J. Medic! How I Fought World War II with Morphine, Sulfa, and Iodine Swabs. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2006. Gamble, Bruce. Darkest Hour: The True Story of Lark Force at Rabaul- Australia's Worst Military Disaster of World War II. St. Paul, Minn.: Zenith, 2006. Garvey, John. San Francisco in World War II. Charleston: Arcadia, 2006. Gawne, Jonathan. Finding your Father's War: A Practical Guide to Researching and Understanding Service in the World War II U.S. Army. Philadelphia: Casemate, 2006. Gesin, Michael. The Destruction of the Ukrainian Jewry during World War II. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen, 2006. Gibney, Frank. Sens: The Japanese Remember the Pacific War: Letters to the Editor of Asahi Shimbun. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 2006. Glantz, David M. Red Storm over the Balkans: The Failed Soviet Invasion of Romania, Spring 1944. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas, 2006. Goldman, Kenneth H. USS Charles Carroll APA28: An Amphibious History of World War II. Victoria, B. c.: Trafford, 2006. Gordin, Michael D. Five Days in August: How World War II Became a Nuclear War. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2006. 58 - Spring & Fall 2006 Gordon, Joseph Furbee. Flying Low: And Shot Down Twice during World War II in a Spotter Plane. Middletown, Corm.: Southfann, 2006. Grant, R. Gordon. Barbarossa: The Gennan Campaign in Russia - Planning and Operations (1940-1942). Victoria, B.c.: Trafford, 2006. Griehl, Manfred. Luftwaffe over America: The Secret Plans to Bomb the United States World War II. London: Greenhill, 2006. Griehl, Manfred. Luftwaffe X-Planes: Gennan Experimental and Prototype Planes of World War II. London: Greenhill, 2006. Gruhl, Werner. Imperial Japan's World War Two: 1931-1945. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction, 2006. Guppy, Walter. Bushbums and Buzzbombs. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Gywrm-Browne, Arthur: F.S.P.: An N.C.O.'s Description of His and Others' First Six Months of War, January 1st - June 1st 1940. Bridgend, U.K.: Seren, 2006. Hackett, David A. Elusive Justice: War Crimes and the Buchenwald Trials. Oxford: Westview, 2006. Hallstead, William, and Jack Race. I'll Fly Away: A World War II Pilot's Lifetime of Adventures from Biplanes to Jumbo Jets. Scranton, Pa.: University of Scranton Press, 2006. .. Hammer, Joshua. Yokohama Burning: The Deadly 1923 Earthquake and Fire that Hel Forge the Path to World War II. New York: Free Press, 2006. Hancock, Peter. Cornwall at War. Tiverton, U.K.: Halsgrove, 2006. Handy, Ned, and Kemp Battle. The Flame Keepers. New York: St. Martin's, 2006. Han1e, Donald J. Near Miss: The Army Air Forces' Guided Bomb Program in World \1 II. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow, 2006. Hannon, Christopher c., and Naval War College Press. "Are We Beasts?" Churchill the Moral Question of World War II "Area Bombing." Newport, R.I.: Dept. of Navy, 2006. Hayward, James. Myths and Legends of the Second World War. Anstey, U.K.: Ulverscroft, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - 59 Heden, Karl E. Sunken Ships, World War II: US. Naval Chronology Including Submarine Losses of the United States, UK., Germany, Japan, Italy. Boston: Brandenbooks, 2006. Henderson, Kristin. While They're at War: The True Story of American Families on the Homefront. Boston: Houghton Miffm, 2006. Herf, Jeffrey. The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda during World War II and the Holocaust. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap, 2006. High School Students of Ronan High School. We Remember: Oral Histories of Montana World War Two Veterans. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Hionidou, Violetta. Famine and Death in Occupied Greece, 1941-1944. Cambridge & New Yark: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Hogan, David W., Jr. A Command Post at War: First Army Headquarters in Europe, 1943 -1945. Ingram, Tenn.: University Press of the Pacific, 2006. Hogg, Ian V. German Secret Weapons of World War II. London: Greenhill, 2006. Holmes, Richard, and Martin Marix Evans. Battlefield: Decisive Conflicts in History. Oxford & New Yark: Oxford University Press, 2006. Holmes, Wayne B. I Remember Ou and World War Two. Bloomington, Ind.: Authorhouse, 2006. Hooper, Ed. Knoxville in World War II. Charleston: Arcadia, 2006. Hordern, Marsden. A Merciful Journey: Recollections of a World War II Patrol Boat Man. Carlton, Australia: Melbourne University Press, 2006. Hunter, Kenneth E., and Center of Military History, US. Army. Pictorial Record: The War against Japan. Washington: Office of the Chief of Military History, Dept. of the Army, 2006. Hymel, Kevin. Patton's Photographs: War as He Saw it. Washington: Potomac, 2006. Iannarelli, Anthony N. The Eighty Thieves: American POWs in World War II Japan. Phoenix: Bridgewood, 2006. Indianer, L. E. A Bridge to Elne: Epic Novel of French Resistance to the Nazi Occupation. Bloomington, Ind.: Authorhouse, 2006. Ireland, Bernard. The War at Sea, 1914 - 1945. London: Collins, 2006. 60 - Spring & Fall 2006 Isby, David C. Fighting the Bombers. London: Greenhill, 2006. Jackson, Ashley. British Empire and the Second World War. London & New York: Hambledon & London, 2006. Jackson, Kathi. They Called Them Angels: American Military Nurses of World War II, Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2006. Jessen, Morten. Junkers m 52: The Luftwaffe's Workhorse. London: Greenhill, 2006. Johnson, Paul Louis. Horses of the German Army in World War II. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffe 2006. Johnson, Thomas M. German Swords of World War II: A Photographic Reference: Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine, SA, SS. Atglen, PA: Schiffer, 2006. Jones, John Bush. The Songs that Fought the War: Popular Music and the Home Front. 1939-1945. Baltimore, Md.: Brandeis University Press, 2006. Jordan, Roger W. World's Merchant Fleets, 1939: The Particulars and Wartime Fates 6,000 Ships. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2006. 0; Jowett, Philip, Brent Snodgrass, and Raffaele Ruggeri. Finland at War, 1939-1945 (Elite). Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Kaplan, Philip. Two-Man Air Force: Don Gentile and John Godfrey, World War II Flving Legends. Barnsley, U.K.: Pen and Sword, 2006. Keegan, John. Collins Atlas of World War II. New York: Collins, 2006. Keith, Don. Final Patrol: True Stories of World War II Submarines. New York: NAL Caliber, 2006. Kenrick, Donald. The Final Chapter: The Gypsies during the Second World War. Hatfield, U.K.: University of Hertfordshire Press, 2006. Kerner, John A. Combat Medic: World War II. New York: !books, 2006. Kersten, Andrew. Labor's Home Front: The American Federation of Labor during Wo War II. New York: New York University Press, 2006. Kogon, Eugen, Nikolaus Wachsmann, and Heinz Norden. The Theory and Practice of Hell: The German Concentration Camps and the System Behind Them. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - 61 Konerding, Erhard. World War II Facts Quiz: Europe. Middletown, Conn.: Southfann, 2006. Konerding, Erhard. World War II Facts Quiz: The Pacific. Middletown, Conn.: Southfarm, 2006. LaGrandeur, Philip G. We Flew, We Fell, We Lived: Second World War Stories from RCM Prisoners of War and Evaders. St. Catharines, ant.: Vanwell, 2006. Lambert, John W. The Long Campaign: The History of the 15 th Fighter Group in World War II. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer, 2006. Lanckoronska, Karolina. Those Who Trespass Against Us: One Woman's War against the Nazis. London: Pimlico, 2006. Langellier, John. The War in Europe: From the Kasserine Pass to Berlin, 1942-1945. London: Greenhill, 2006. Leder, Jane Mersky. Tanks for the Memories: Love, Sex, and World War II. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2006. Lee, Andy, and Andreas Wachtel. The Dambusters in World War 2,617 Squadron. Bamsley, UK.: Pen & Sword, 2006.­ Lee, David. Beachhead Assault: The Story of the Royal Navy Commandos of World War II. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2006. Leff, Murray. Lens Ofan Infantryman: A World War II Memoir With Photographs from a Hidden Camera. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2006. Lemay, Curtis E. Superfortress: The Boeing B-29 and American Airpower in World War II. Yardley, Pa.: Westholme, 2006. Leonard, Kevin Allen. The Battle for Los Angeles: Racial Ideology and World War II. Albuquerque, N.M.: University of New Mexico Press, 2006. Leonard, Thomas M. Latin America during World War II. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2006. Litoff, Judy Barrett, and Virginia d'Albert-Lake. An American Heroine in the French Resistance: The Memoirs and Diary of Virginia D' Albert-Lake. New York: Fordham University Press, 2006. Logan, Edward F. Jump, Damn It, Jump! A Memoir of a Downed B-17 Pilot in World War II. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2006. 62 - Spring & Fall 2006 Lukacs, John. June 1941: Hitler and Stalin. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2006. Lutton, Nancy. My Dearest Brown Eyes: Letters Between Sir Donald Cleland and Dam Rachel Cleland During World War 2. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2006. Lyman, Robert, and Howard Gerrard. Iraq 1941: The Battles for Basra, Habbaniya, Fallujah and Baghdad. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Lynde, Adam Norman. The Mediterranean Theater: British and American Combined Operations 1942-1945. Wilmington, Del.: Scholarly Resources, 2006. MacKay, Ron, and Paul Wilson. The Sky Scorpions: The Story of the 389 th Bomb Gro in World War II. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer, 2006. Mackenzie, Paul. British War Films, 1939-1945: The Cinema and the Services. London: Hambledon & London, 2006. MacKenzie, S. P.. The Colditz Myth: British and Commonwealth Prisoners of War in Nazi Germany. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press, 2006. Macksey, Kenneth. Kesselring-Softbound. London: Greenhill, 2006. Margerison, Russell. Boys at War. London: Northway, 2006. Mariinskiy, Evgeniy. Red Star Airacobra: Memoirs ofa Soviet Fighter Ace 1941-45. Solihull, U.K.: Helion, 2006. Martel, Gordon. Companion to Europe 1900-1945. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2006. Matthews, Mark. Smoke Jumping on the Western Fire Line: Conscientious Objectors during World War II. Norman, Ok.: University of Oklahoma Press, 2006. Mawdsley, Evan. Thunder in the East: The Nazi-Soviet War, 1941-1945. London: Hodder Arnold, 2006. McCabe, James. The Neutral Heart: Irish Poetry and World War II. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2006. McCarter, Robert S., and Douglas Taggart. One-Man Pneumatic Life Survival Kits of World War II. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer, 2006. McFarland, Stephen L. Conquering the Night: Army Air Forces Night Fighters at War. Ingram, Tenn.: University Press of the Pacific, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - 63 Macintyre, Donald. The Battle of the Atlantic (Fortunes of War). Miami, Fl.: Cerberus, 2006. McLaughlin, Robert L., and Sally E. Parry. We'll Always have the Movies: American Cinema during World War II. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2006. Meeres, Frank. Norfolk in the Second World War. Chichester: Phi1limore, 2006. Mellinger, George, and Jim Laurier. Soviet Lend-Lease Fighter Aces of World War 2. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Merrida1e, Catherine. Ivan's War: Life and Death in the Red Army, 1939-1945. New York: Metropolitan, 2006. Mielke, Lee. Curtains, Wall and Skewed History: A Soldier's View of World War II. Conshohocken, Pa.: Infinity, 2006. Miller, Donald L. Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys who Fought the Air War against Nazi Germany. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006. Miscamb1e, Wilson D. From Roosevelt to Truman: Potsdam, Hiroshima, and the Cold War. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Molesworth, Carl, and Jim Laurier. Very Long Range P-51 Mustang Units of the Pacific War. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Moore, Deborah Dash. GI Jews: How World War II Changed a Generation. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap, 2006. Morgan, Ted. My Battle of Algiers: A Memoir. Washington: Smithsonian Inst., 2006. Morris, Rob. Untold Valor: Forgotten Stories of American Bomber Crews over Europe in World War II. Washington: Potomac, 2006. Morrison, Jim. Letters for Joe. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Mosier, John. Cross of Iron: The Rise and Fall of the German War Machine, 1918-1945. New York: Henry Holt, 2006. Mowat, Farley. Aftermath: Travels in a Post-War World. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Murphy, Christopher J. Security and Special Operations: SOE and Mi5 During the Second World War. Basingstoke, U.K. & New York: Pa1grave MacMillan, 2006. 64 - Spring & Fall 2006 Nadler, John. A Perfect Hell: The Forgotten Story of the Canadian Commandos oftl Second World War. Toronto: Anchor Canada, 2006. Nagorski, Tom. Miracles on the Water: The Heroic Survivors of a World War II U-I Attack. New York: Hyperion, 2006. Nelson, Hank. Chased by the Sun: The Australians in Bomber Command in World \; II. Crows Nest, Australia: Allen & Unwin, 2006. Newcourt-Nowodworski, Stanley. Black Propaganda: In the Second World War. Strl Sutton, 2006. Newpower, Anthony. Iron Men and Tin Fish: The Race to Build a Better Torpedo dt World War n. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2006. Newton, Steven, and Bill McCroden. German Anny Order of Battle for World War] 1939-1945. New York: Savas Beatie, 2006. Nicholas, Lynn H. Cruel World: The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web. New Yorl Vintage, 2006. Nijboer, Donald, and Dan Patterson. Cockpit: An Illustrated History of World War IJ Aircraft Interiors. Erin, Ont.: Boston Mills, 2006. Noakes, Lucy. Women in the British Anny: War and the Gentle Sex, 1907-1948. London; New York: Routledge, 2006. Nordyke, Phil. Four Stars of Valor: The Combat History of the 505 th Parachute Infan Regiment in World War II. St. Paul, Minn.: Zenith, 2006. 480 pp O'Donnell, Patrick. Operatives, Spies, and Saboteurs: The Unknown Story of World II's OSS. New York: C Trade Paper, 2006. Otunnu, Olara A., Zlata Filipovic, and Melanie Challenger. Stolen Voices: Young People's War Diaries, from World War I to Iraq. New York: Penguin, 2006. Overton, Richard E., and Gary Toyn. God Isn't Here: A Young American's Entry ir World War II and His Participation in the Battle for Iwo Jima. Clearfield, U1 American Legacy Media, 2006. Owens, Emiel W. Blood on German Snow: An African American Artilleryman in Ii War II and Beyond. College Station, Tex.: Texas A&M University Press, 2C 160 pp. Parnell, Ben. Carpetbaggers: The Only Full Account of the Top Secret Special Operations War in Europe during World War II. New York: IBooks, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - 65 Paterson, Lawrence, Kan.. Weapons of Desperation: German Frogmen and Midget Submarines of the Second World War. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2006. Pettibone, Charles D. The Organization and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II: Volume II - The British Commonwealth. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Phillips, Justin. C. S. Lewis in a Time of War. New York: Harper San Francisco, 2006. Pierson, Howard. Why I Wasn't There: A Soldier's Memoir of World War II. Philadelphia: Xlibris, 2006. Pogue, Forrest C. Pogue's War: Diaries of a WWIT Combat Historian. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2006. Pollock, Ethan. Stalin and the Soviet Science Wars. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2006. Priesman-Bogaardt, Louisa. Dark Skies over Paradise. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Proctor, Robert. Racial Hygiene: Medicine under the Nazis. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2006. Rabey, Steve. Faith under Fire: Stories of Hope and Courage from World War II. Nashville, Tenn.: Nelson, 2006. Ragnarsson, Ragnar, and Jim Laurier. U.S. Navy PBY Catalina Units of the Atlantic War. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Ralph, Barry. The Crash of Little Eva, The Ultimate World War IT Survivor Story. Gretna, La.: Pelican, 2006. Redmann, Kerry P. Unfinished Journey: A World War II Remembrance. Guilford, Conn.: Lyons, 2006. Redzic, Enver. Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War. London & New York: Frank Cass, 2006. Renouf, Vera. Forfeit to War. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006.384 pp. Reuth, Ralf Georg. Rommel: The End of a Legend. London: Haus, 2006. 250 pp. Reynolds, David. From World War to Cold War: Churchill, Roosevelt, and the International History of the 1940s. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press, 2006. 66 - Spring & Fall 2006 Rhea, Milton A. War is Hell- WWII Pacific. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. Robertson, Gordon Bennett. Bringing the Thunder: The Missions of a World War II J Pilot in the Pacific. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Rodogno, Davide, and Adrian Belton. Fascism's European Empire: Italian Occupatio during the Second World War. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge Universi Press, 2006. Rolfe, Mel. Hell on Earth: Dramatic First-Hand Experience of Bomber Command at London: Grub Street, 2006. Rosen, Robert N., and Alan M. Dershowitz. Saving the Jews: Franklin D. the Holocaust. New York: Thunder's Mouth, 2006. Roosevelt~ Roskill, S.W., Captain, DSC. RN. War at Sea 1939-45. Volume II: The Period of Balance. Official History of the Second World War. Uckfield, U.K.: Naval & Military, 2006. Roskill, S. W., Captain, DSC. RN. War at Sea 1939-45. Volume III, Part 2: The Offensive 1sl June 1944- 14 th August 1945. Official History ofthe Second Wo War. Uckfield, UK.: Naval & Military, 2006. Roskill, S. W., Captain, DSC. RN. War at Sea 1939-45. Volume III, Part 1: The Offensive 151 June 1943 - 31 May 1944. Official History of the Second Worl War. Uckfield, UK.: Naval & Military Press, 2006. Rottman, Gordon, and Howard Gerrard. Marine Rifleman in World War II: Pacific Theater. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Rottman, Gordon, and Peter Dennis. US. World War II Amphibious Tactics: Mediterranean & European Theaters. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Rottman, Gordon, and Peter Dennis. World War II Airborne Warfare Tactics. Oxfor, Osprey, 2006. Rovit, Rebecca, and Alvin Goldfarb. Theatrical Performance during the Holocaust: Documents, Memoirs. Baltimore: PAJ, 2006. Russel, Jerry C. Ultra and the Campaign against the U-Boats in World War II. Ingr Tenn.: University Press of the Pacific, 2006. Russell, Ciment, and Thaddeus Russel. The Home Front Encyclopedia: United Stat Britain, and Canada in World Wars I and II. Santa Barbara, Cal.: ABC-Clio, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - 67 Russell, Lord, of Liverpool. Scourge of the Swastika: A Short History of Nazi war Crimes. London: Greenhill, 2006. Russell, Lord, of Liverpool. The Knights ofBushido-Hardbound: A Short History of Japanese War Crimes. London: Greenhill, 2006. Rynecki, George J. Surviving Hitler in Poland: One Jew's Story. Victoria, B.c.: Trafford, 2006. 118 pp. Schrader, Helena Page. Sisters in Arms: The Women who Flew in World War II. Barnsley, u.K.: Pen and Sword, 2006. 240 pp. Scott, Mark. Eyewitness Accounts of the World War II Murmansk Run, 1941-1945. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen, 2006. Seib, Phillip. Broadcasts from the Blitz: How Edward R. Murrow Helped Lead America into War. Washington: Potomac, 2006. Seth, Ronald. Operation Barbarossa. Miami, Fl.: Cerberus, 2006. 192 pp. Seth, Ronald. Stalingrad: Enemy at the Gates. Miami, F1.: Cerberus, 2006. 192 pp. Sevensma, Noel. My Guardian Angel Was There: Memoirs ofWW2. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 2006. 175 pp. Short, Neil, and Chris Taylor. German Defense in Italy in World War II. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Showalter, Dennis. Patton and Rommel: Men of War in the Twentieth Century. New York: Berkley Caliber, 2006. Shull, Michael S., and David E. Witt. Hollywood War Films, 1937-1945: An Exhaustive Filmography of American Feature-Length Motion Pictures. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland,2006. Singer, P. W. Children at War. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 2006. Slepyan, Kenneth. Stalin's Guerrillas: Soviet Partisans in World War II. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas, 2006. Sloan, Bill. Brotherhood of Heroes: The Marines at Peleliu, 1944 - The Bloodiest Battle of the Pacific War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006. Smart, Nick. The Second World War. Aldershot, u.K., & Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2006. 68 - Spring & Fall 2006 Smith, Peter C. Fist from the Sky: Japan's Dive-bomber Ace of World War II. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Stanton, Shelby L. World War II Order of Battle: An Encyclopedic Reference to U.S. Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division, 1939-1946. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole, 2006. Stargardt, Nicholas. Witnesses of War: Children's Lives under the Nazis. New York: Knopf, 2006. Stephenson, Charles, and Chris Taylor. Fortifications of the Charmel Islands 1941-44: Hitler's Impregnable Fortress. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Stewart, Neil J. Tales of a Tankman: Between the Battles. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford, 200 Stranack, David. Schools at War: A Story of Education, Evacuation and Endurance in t Second World War. Chichester, u.K.: Phillimore, 2006. Strege, John. When War Played Through: Golf during World War II. New York: Gotham, 2006. Suleiman, Susan Rubin. Crises of Memory and the Second World War. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2006. Sullivan, Rosemary. Villa Air-Bel: World War II Escape, and a House in Marseille. Ne York: HarperCollins, 2006. Tagaya, Osamu, and Jim Laurier. Aichi 99 Kanbaku 'Val' Units of World War 2. Oxf< Osprey, 2006. The Library of Congress. 1'11 Be Home for Christmas: The Spirit of Christmas during World War II. New York: Gramercy, 2006. Thompson, Joe, and Tom Delvaux. Tiger Joe: A Photographic Diary ofa World War Aerial Recormaissance Pilot. New Westminster, B.C.: Eveready, 2006. Thompson, Peter. The Battle for Singapore: The True Story of the Greatest Catastroph of World War II. London: Piatkus, 2006. Tillman, Barrett, and Stephen Coonts. Clash of Carriers: The True Story of the Maria.ru ' Turkey Shoot of World War II. New York: NAL Caliber, 2006. Tillman, Barrett. The Dauntless Dive Bomber of World War Two. AImapolis, Md.: N Institute Press, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - 69 Tobin, James. Ernie Pyle's War: America's Eyewitness to World War II. New York: Free Press, 2006. Trentmann, Frank, and Flemming Just. Food and Conflict in Europe in the Age of the Two World Wars. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Tsouras, Peter. Hitler Triumphant: Alternative Decisions of World War II. London: Greenhill, 2006. Tucker, Jonathan B. War of Nerves: Chemical Warfare from World War I to Al-Qaeda. New York: Pantheon, 2006. Tuyl, Jocelyn Van. Andre Gide and the Second World War: A Novelist's Occupation. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 2006. Ungvary, Krisztian, and John Lukacs. The Siege of Budapest: One Hundred Days in World War II. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2006. Van Der Bijl, Nick, and Robert Chapman. No.1 0 (Inter-Allied) Commando 1942-45: Britain's Secret Commando. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Volkov, Shulamit. Germans, Jews, and Antisemites: Trials in Emancipation. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. von Hassell, Agostino, and Sigrid MacRae. Alliance of Enemies: The Untold Story of the Secret American and German Collaboration to End World War II. New York: Thomas Dunne, 2006. Von Luttwitz, FreiheIT. Fighting the Breakout: The German Anny in Normandy from COBRA to the Falaise Gap. London: Greenhill, 2006. Von Rosenstiel, Werner H. Hitler's Soldier in the U.S. Anny: An Unlikely Memoir of World War II. Tuscaloosa, Ala.: University of Alabama Press, 2006. Wagner, Sharon Wells. Red Wells. Charleston: BookSurge, 2006. Warner, Jeff. Sailors in Forest Green: USN Personnel Attached to the USMC. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer, 2006. Weingartner, John. The Arts as a Weapon of War: Britain and the Shaping of National Morale in World War II. London; New York: Tauris, 2006. Werner, Max. Battle for the World: The Strategy and Diplomacy of the Second World War. New York: Hesperides, 2006. 70 - Spring & Fall 2006 Wette, Wolfram, and Deborah Lucas Schneider. The Wehrmacht: History, Myth, Reality. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2006. Wetterhahn, Ralph. The Last Flight of Bomber 31: Harrowing Accounts of American and Japanese Pilots Who Fought in World War II's Arctic Air Campaign. New York: Carroll & Graf, 2006. Wheeler, Richard. A Special Valor: The U.S. Marines and the Pacific War. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2006. Whitby, Michael. Commanding Canadians: The Second World War Diaries of A.F.e. Layard. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2006. 416 pp. White, David Fairbank. Bitter Ocean: The Battle of the Atlantic, 1939-1945. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006. Whitehead, Don, Benjamin Franklin, John B. Romeiser, and Rick Atkinson. Combat Reporter: Don Whitehead's World War II Diary and Memoirs. New York: Fordham University Press, 2006. Wilcox, Robert K., and James A. Lovell. First Blue: The Story of World War II Ace Butch Voris and the Creation of the Blue Angels. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 2006. Williams, Greg H. World War II Naval and Maritime Claims against the United States: Cases in the Federal Court of Claims, 1937-1948. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2006. Williamson, Gordon, and Gerry Embleton. World War II German Police Units. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Williamson, Gordon, and Malcolm Mcgregor. German Commanders of World War II: Waffen-SS, Luftwaffe & Navy. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Williamson, Gordon. Wolf Pack: The Story of the U-Boat in World War II. Oxford: Osprey, 2006. Wilson, Joe. 784 th Tank Battalion in World War 2: History of an African American Armored Unit in Europe. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2006. Winter, Jay. Remembering War: The Great War between Memory and Histo Century. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2006. Winters, Dick, and Cole C. Kingseed. Beyond Band of Brothers: The War Memoirs of Major Dick Winters. New York: Berkley, 2006. Spring & Fall 2006 - -' '5 _ • "orshipping the Myths of World War II: Reflections on De - a 'on to War. \Vashington: Potomac, 2006. . One :gt:are of Hell: The Battle for Tarawa. New York: NAL Caliber, Yenne, B" ~,,---,=--.....:..;...;-ar=. St. Paul, ~1inn.: Zenith, 2006. mean Aircraft Factory' in World War II. St. Paul, Minn.: Zenith, "orId \"ar II Diaries. Philadelphia: Xlibris, 2006. ~=:....:.:.·-=---=-T~'i"'=o. London; Zimm...l..L..:.<:.U.. :\ew York: Routledge, 2006. - : Canada's Month of Hell in World War II Italy. " " IcIn~Te, 2006. Zue Zumbro, -. S. B - eo' e Ruh!: The German Annv's Final Defeat in the West. : "ni....ersity Press of Kansas, 2006. L~u...,'?T'lt'·". 71