Academic literature on the topic '(European Theater of Operation, 1942-1945)'

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Journal articles on the topic "(European Theater of Operation, 1942-1945)"

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Pennington, Loren. "Drea, Macarthur's Ultra - Codebreaking and The War Against Japan, 1942-1945." Teaching History: A Journal of Methods 19, no. 1 (1994): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.33043/th.19.1.35.

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World War II intelligence operations in the Pacific have been of intense interest to historians since the 1940s and the debate over the Pearl Harbor debacle. But in the 1970s, and especially after the publication of F. W. Winterbottom's bestseller The Ultra Secret, interest in intelligence has focused increasingly on the European theater. The time now seems appropriate for a fresh look at intelligence in the Pacific, and Edward J. Drea's MacArthur's Ultra, though limited to the Southwest Pacific, is an excellent beginning.
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Golovlev, Alexander. "Balancing the Books and Staging Operas under Duress: Bolshoi Theater Management, Wartime Economy and State Sponsorship in 1941–1945." Russian History 47, no. 4 (2021): 333–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.30965/18763316-12340016.

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Abstract The article examines the financial history of the Bolshoi within USSR’s mobilized wartime cultural industry as an example of a cultural institution highly placed in the Stalinist establishment and symbolic canon. It explores the income-outcome flows, personnel management, the impact of evacuation, notably on Bolshoi’s hard capital, and relations with supervising authorities. The theater’s perceived importance within the war effort conditioned unshakable financial support, a non-market protective environment, and lenient administrative treatment, contrasting with logistical and personn
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Kehoe, Thomas J., and E. James Kehoe. "Crimes Committed by U.S. Soldiers in Europe, 1945–1946." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 47, no. 1 (2016): 53–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh_a_00941.

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Accounts from victims and observers, including new research in the U.S. National Archives and the Bavarian National Archives, suggest that American soldiers committed crimes against persons—especially rape and various forms of assault—and against property in Europe after World War II more often than statistics about charges and prosecutions at the time indicated. More importantly, previously unexamined statistical summaries of crimes committed by American troops, as recorded by the U.S. Provost Marshal, provide unprecedented quantitative information about these crimes in the European Theater o
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Dykstra, Robert R. "Evident Bias in Thomas J. Kehoe and E. James Kehoe, “Crimes Committed by U.S. Soldiers in Europe, 1945–1946”." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 47, no. 3 (2016): 381–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh_c_01016.

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The horrifying record of rape by Soviet troops in postwar Germany has long been a matter of record. What is new is the argument that the behavior of American GIs in the European Theater of Operations was little better than that of the Russians. Inspired by a new study alleging that some 190,000 German girls and women were raped by U.S. servicemen, the Kehoes maintain that official military statistics from 1945-46 confirm such high levels of sexual predation. It can now be said with confidence, they assert, that “U.S. soldiers raped and assaulted civilians with frightening abandon.” Yet this ge
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Cannon, Jeremy W., and Richard J. Teff. "Combat surgeons before, during, and after war: the legacy of Loyal Davis." Neurosurgical Focus 28, no. 5 (2010): E22. http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2010.2.focus1024.

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By 1942, Loyal Davis had firmly established himself as a preeminent civilian neurosurgeon. With military operations rapidly escalating, he was recruited to serve in the European Theater of Operations as a consultant to the Surgeon General. Davis brought tremendous experience, insight, and leadership to this position; however, he found the military system in which he was suddenly immersed inefficient and impassive. His requests for even basic equipment became mired in endless bureaucracy even as his communiqués to the Chief Surgeon in the European Theater and to the Surgeon General's staff in W
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ROSE, EDWARD P. F. "GORDON LYALL PAVER (1913–1988) AND 42ND GEOLOGICAL SECTION, SOUTH AFRICAN ENGINEER CORPS: MILITARY GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS IN WORLD WAR II SUPPORTING BRITISH ARMY OPERATIONS: PART 2, NORTH AFRICA, THE MIDDLE EAST AND THE MEDITERRANEAN REGION 1941–1945." Earth Sciences History 43, no. 2 (2024): 363–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6187-43.2.363.

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ABSTRACT In September 1940, 42nd Geological Section of the South African Engineer Corps moved from Kenya to an operational base near Cairo in Egypt, continuing to serve within the British Army’s Middle East Command but with leadership by the newly-promoted Major Gordon Lyall Paver (1913–1988). The main part of the Section was employed to support the British 8th Army and operations west of the River Nile, particularly in the Western Desert of Egypt and Libya to Tunisia but also from bases elsewhere in Egypt, with surveys principally by means of electrical earth resistivity: guiding the deployme
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Smith, Jenny Leigh. "Tushonka: Cultivating Soviet Postwar Taste." M/C Journal 13, no. 5 (2010). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.299.

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During World War II, the Soviet Union’s food supply was in a state of crisis. Hitler’s army had occupied the agricultural heartlands of Ukraine and Southern Russia in 1941 and, as a result, agricultural production for the entire nation had plummeted. Soldiers in Red Army, who easily ate the best rations in the country, subsisted on a daily allowance of just under a kilogram of bread, supplemented with meat, tea, sugar and butter when and if these items were available. The hunger of the Red Army and its effect on the morale and strength of Europe’s eastern warfront were causes for concern for t
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "(European Theater of Operation, 1942-1945)"

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Klinek, Eric William. "The Army's Orphans: The United States Army Replacement System in the European Campaign, 1944-1945." Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2014. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/268724.

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History<br>Ph.D.<br>Military historians have been debating the U.S. Army's World War II replacement system for decades, but no one has completed a detailed study of the War Department's policies and practice. Authors have focused primarily on how combat units overcame the system's limitations, but they have not conducted an in-depth examination of its creation, structure, and function. Nor did they question why infantry divisions had to devise their own replacement policies in the first place. The extant literature is too celebratory of the army and utilizes ultimate victory as a measure of ef
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Koehler, Kurt C. "Strategic Bombing in the European Theater of Operations During World War II: Experiment and Conclusion." Thesis, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/4976.

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Books on the topic "(European Theater of Operation, 1942-1945)"

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United States. National Security Agency/Central Security Service, ed. American signal intelligence in Northwest Africa and Western Europe. National Security Agency, 2010.

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Lamb, Albert Richard. The 2nd general hospital: An account of the Army-Affiliated Unit of the Presbyterian Hospital in the City of New York in the European Theater of Operations, World War II, 1942 to 1945. Columbia University Office of Publications, 1997.

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Enjames, Henri-Paul. Government issue: U.S. Army European Theater of Operations collector guide. Histoire & Collections, 2003.

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Cosmas, Graham A. The medical department: Medical service in the European theater of operations. Center of Military History, United States Army, 1992.

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Rohwer, Jürgen. Allied submarine attacks of World War Two: European theatre of operations, 1939-1945. Greenhill Books, 1997.

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Rohwer, Jürgen. Allied submarine attacks of World War Two: European theatre of operations, 1939-1945. Naval Institute Press, 1997.

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Gorman, John Wayne. Compass: U.S. Army Ranger, European theater, 1944-45. iUniverse, 2009.

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Gorman, John Wayne. Compass: U.S. Army Ranger, European theater, 1944-45. iUniverse, 2009.

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9

409th Bombardment Group (L) Association., ed. History of the 409th Bomb Group (L): European Theater of Operations, World War II. s.n., 1996.

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10

1949-, Billstein Reinhold, and Illner Eberhard, eds. You are now in Cologne, compliments: Köln 1945 in den Augen der Sieger : hundert Tage unter amerikanischer Kontrolle. Emons, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "(European Theater of Operation, 1942-1945)"

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Laslie, Brian D. "The European Theater of Operations." In Architect of Air Power. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169989.003.0005.

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Chapter Four follows the architects of the air war as they were shipped overseas to gain combat experience. General Hap Arnold knew that his most trusted subordinates would need combat missions on their records if they were going to be leaders in a post-war Air Force. Kuter was deployed overseas in October 1942 to take command of the First Bombardment Wing. When General Kuter assumed command he found four understrength groups of B-17's (Flying Fortresses) operating separately. He succeeded in welding the individual squadrons and groups into a coordinated fighting force. Despite his desire to s
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Bassiouni, M. Cherif. "Nuremberg Legacy’." In Perspectives on the Nuremberg Trial. Oxford University PressOxford, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199232338.003.0025.

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Abstract On August 8, 1945, the London Charter was signed, opening the way for the prosecution of the major war criminals of the European theater of operations before the International Military Tribunal (IMT) sitting at Nuremberg.² The following year the Allies established the International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE) in Tokyo, a counterpart tribunal for the major war criminals of the Asia-Pacific theater of operations. The two, however, are legally distinguishable. The IMT was established by a treaty, originally signed by the Four Major Allies and acceded to by nineteen Europea
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"5. Serving in the European Theater of Operations, January 1945-March 1946." In To Serve My Country, to Serve My Race. New York University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814763247.003.0011.

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Edy, Carolyn M. "Outstanding and Conspicuous Service." In Reporting World War II. Fordham University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9781531503093.003.0009.

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This chapter explores how three war correspondents—Iris Carpenter, Lee Carson, and Ann Stringer—outmaneuvered rapidly shifting battlelines and military regulations to become part of an elite group attached to the “Fighting First” Division of the United States Army in the European Theater of Operations. Despite military policies preventing female war correspondents from covering the front, all three women—Carpenter for the Boston Globe, Carson for International News Service, and Stringer for United Press—used their reporting skills, and the military connections these skills earned them, to find
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Caldwell, John. "Tradition and Avant-Garde, 1945–1975." In The Oxford History of English Music. Oxford University PressOxford, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198162889.003.0006.

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Abstract If ever a musical event had symbolic importance it was the first performance of Britten’s opera Peter Grimes at the Sadler’s Wells Theatre on 7 June 1945, almost one month after Victory in Europe. The opera was, however, the fruit of a long gestation of fully four years, and initial reactions were decidedly mixed; with hindsight one is in a better position to judge of its significance than at the time, yet the coincidence of material and artistic recovery was rapidly confirmed by the international success of the work in the immediately following years. Indeed a striking feature of the
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Dallek, Robert. "Balancing Needs." In Franklin D. Roosevelt and American Foreign Policy, 1932-1945. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195097320.003.0014.

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Abstract IN THE SUMMER AND fall of 1942, Roosevelt impatiently awaited the as sault on North Africa. Eager for a victory over German arms that would open the way to a European campaign and answer domestic and Russian demands for action, he pressed all concerned “to start the attack at the earliest possible moment. Time is of the essence,” he told Churchill at the end of August, “and we are speeding up preparations vigorously.” When facing a choice in the following month between a full-scale convoy to Russia and TORCH as scheduled, he refused to delay the attack for “a single day. We are going
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Litvinenko, V. A. "Historical memory of the liberation of Europe as a theater of military operations in the struggle of global development projects." In Liberation of Europe from nazism (1944-1945): Actual problems of scientific interpretation. Nestor-Historia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31754/nestor4469-1820-1.07.

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