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Unearthing Artifacts of WWII Horror

Discussion in 'WWII Today' started by Bill Murray, Nov 18, 2005.

  1. Bill Murray

    Bill Murray Member

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    Unearthing artifacts of WW II's horror
    Archeologists find doomed victims' items at Nazi camp

    By Ryan Lucas
    Associated Press
    Published November 18, 2005


    LUBLIN, Poland -- A child's ring. Twisted reading glasses. A few gold coins. These scraps of personal dignity were hurriedly buried in a last act of defiance to keep them from Nazi hands.

    Israeli archeologists helped by survivors are writing a new chapter in the terrible history of the German death camp at Majdanek, Poland, by excavating grounds long thought to be empty.

    Their findings show how the doomed Jews furiously dug into the grassy ground with their hands to bury what personal possessions they had with them before they were killed in the camp's gas chambers.

    The objects aren't worth much financially, but "the value as a human story is immeasurable," said Yaron Svoray, an Israeli journalist who made his name infiltrating neo-Nazi groups some 10 years ago...

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0511180156nov18,1,1916609.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true
     
  2. Bill Murray

    Bill Murray Member

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    A 60-year-old mystery
    Congress honors the 2 dozen airmen who disappeared over the Bermuda Triangle

    By Elisabeth Goodridge
    Associated Press
    Published November 18, 2005


    WASHINGTON -- The disappearance of Flight 19, a Navy mission that began the myth of the Bermuda Triangle, is unexplained but not forgotten 60 years later.

    More than two dozen Navy airmen who disappeared off Florida's coast on Dec. 5, 1945, were honored in a House resolution Thursday. Rep. Clay Shaw (R-Fla.) said he hoped the gesture would help bring closure to surviving families.

    What happened is the question that has befuddled, entertained and tormented both skeptics and believers in the Bermuda Triangle, a stretch of ocean between Puerto Rico, Bermuda and Miami that many believe is an area of supernatural phenomena.

    "There's just so many weird things here that experienced pilots would have not acted this way," Shaw said. "Something happened out there."

    Five U.S. Navy Avenger airplanes left Naval Air Station Ft. Lauderdale on a routine training mission over the Bahamas. The five pilots and nine crewmen, led by instructor Lt. Charles Taylor, were to practice bombing and low-level strafing on small coral shoals 60 miles east of the naval station. They were then to turn north to practice mapping and then southwest to home. The entire flight should have lasted three hours.

    From radio reports overheard by ground control and other airplanes, the compasses on Taylor's plane apparently malfunctioned 90 minutes into the mission.

    With no instruments to guide him over the open ocean, Taylor thought the flight had drifted off-course and was actually south over the Florida Keys. As a result, he directed the planes to fly due north to hit land.

    Just about the time the squadron was to have landed back at Ft. Lauderdale, a last radio message from Taylor was received: They would keep flying "until we hit the beach or run out of gas." Due to weakening radio signals, the planes' direct location could not be determined.

    The mystery deepened when, a few hours later, a Navy rescue airplane, a Martin PBM Mariner with 13 crewmen, also vanished. A passing ship reported seeing bright lights in the sky indicating what could be an in-air explosion, but no evidence of the Mariner was found.

    The next morning, David White, who at the time was a flight instructor stationed at Ft. Lauderdale, became part of one of the largest rescue missions in U.S. naval history. Civilian vessels and units of the Coast Guard, Army and Navy searched an area of more than 250,000 square miles, but no wreckage was found.

    "In all the times I remember we never had one plane missing," White said. "Five all qualified pilots missing at one time? I couldn't believe it."

    Even the official review offered little explanation. The Navy Board of Inquiry report concluded, "We are not able to even make a good guess as to what happened."

    Did Flight 19 turn east? Was landfall ever reached? Where was the debris?

    Gian Quasar, author of "Into the Bermuda Triangle," believes electromagnetic anomalies in the area's atmosphere led to the demise of Flight 19. Such "electronic fog" can cause needles on compasses and other instruments to spin. This fog comes and goes and can leave pilots disoriented, Quasar said.

    In the years that David White flew out of Ft. Lauderdale, none of his instrumentation ever malfunctioned. He thinks the planes crash-landed east of Florida and the airmen died on impact or drowned in the stormy waters. And the Mariner? That type of plane had such a history of accidents it was known as the "flying gas can," he said.

    "It was pure and simple pilot error," said Joan Pietrucha, the niece of Howell Thompson, one of the navigators on Flight 19. "I don't believe in wacky compasses."

    Copyright © 2005, Chicago Tribune

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0511180169nov18,1,3555013.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed
     

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