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Apr 5, 2016 00:09:26   #
RichardQ wrote:
Thanks, SR! I'm happy you find these vignettes worthwhile. I certainly enjoy compiling them.
I also find them very worthwhile, and forward them to my son, who was born in Berlin, while I was stationed there, Dec. 1955, Sept. 1959, Tempelhof Flughafen, U.S.A.F.
I loved that city, and most of its people. Would love to go back, however, as the saying goes, you can never go home again.

Richard, keep up the good work, it is fascinating.

My son was at the tear down of the Berlin Wall, while visiting his German relatives. He also finds these vignettes fascinating.


:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:
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Apr 4, 2016 23:59:00   #
Erv wrote:
My friends!!!! My brain says keep playing on UHH. But my body say go to bed! I am going to bed!:):) Don't have to much fun without me. See you all tomorrow.:):)
Hey folks, he is gone! Let the GOOD TIMES ROLL!



:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Apr 4, 2016 23:54:01   #
Jackel wrote:
As World War II fades into our collective memories, most of its more fascinating tales are glossed over in favor of providing basic data for history books. Consequently, the watering down of riveting tales dilutes the fear, adventure and sheer emotion connected to such critical times for humanity.

But, if Hertha “Hedy” Sheridan’s recent appearance at Eastpointe’s Michigan Military Technical and Historical Museum is any indicator, people are still interested in — and passionate about — one of war’s most grim times. Her role in that era is an intriguing one: She served as a court reporter in Nuremberg, Germany during the post-WWII Nazi War-Crimes Trials.

Although she failed to mention it and recount its connection to genocide for many years after emigrating to the U.S., it affects her more now, she says.

“I saw too much,” she said, shaking her head.

Now 85 and a Fraser resident, Sheridan is a reluctant public figure. Although the diminutive German grandmother is almost shy to share details of the role she played in history, she agreed to speak at the urging of American friends and fellow German members of Utica’s Carpathia Club.

At the well-attended event, her personal stories and those of other audience members kept attendees’ rapt attention.

“The trials began in 1945, and I was 17 and looking for my first job,” she said. “My friend couldn’t get in to work there as her father was high up in the Nazi party, but she told me about it, so I went down there and they interviewed me.”

Sheridan was hired, although her position during war time had been precarious, at best — largely due to her dad’s dislike of Hitler. As a stove-maker by profession, her father was failing to receive deserved promotions for not joining the Nazi Party, and his refusal to let her join the Hitler Youth Movement angered authorities. A subsequent threatening visit from the SS insisted she join or the family would endure greater hardship. Soon thereafter, her father disappeared upon being “drafted” into Germany’s armed forces. His deployment to France and Greece resulted in capture by the Allies, and the family ceased hearing from him, says Sheridan.

Although he was treated well while a prisoner, the family assumed he was dead until he walked through the door of their home in 1946.

“If Hitler had won the war, my family would’ve had to go (to the concentration camp),” she said. Her boss later corroborated that probability through documentation he discovered on her family.

Sheridan staunchly maintains that many Germans were also imprisoned in the camps, a little known fact. And, although she and her neighbors only became aware of the camps’ existence and deeds much later, they knew nothing of them during the war.

“You didn’t dare ask any questions,” said Sheridan. “People just disappeared.”

Just as her one neighbor did after “shooting off his mouth” at a local beer hall. Later, his family received word he’d died of pneumonia at Dachau, although everyone suspected he’d been gassed.

Other German audience members agreed with Sheridan’s overview, sharing additional tales of “disappearances” throughout Nuremberg. In schoolrooms, for example, first Jewish students were moved apart from other students to desks that eventually ended up in the hallway before disappearing altogether; the special-education students also disappeared, then relatives, and teachers — especially those who were outspoken. It created ongoing anxiety.

“That fear is still with you; that fear is still in your blood,” said one audience member.

Sheridan was even taken to task for greeting people with “good morning.” Authority figures corrected her, ordering her to instead say, “Heil, Hitler.”

Much later, when truth emerged about the camps’ existence, she and her neighbors found out about the associated atrocities connected there, she says. “Like the medical experiments — bacteria inserted in open cuts on people’s legs, heart experiments on Jewish people and so on.”

At the war’s conclusion, the Three Big Powers (United States, Russia and Britain) unanimously had agreed to try Nazi leaders who were responsible for war crimes. After sparring about the proper location, The Palace of Justice in Nuremberg was chosen to conduct 218 trial days, introducing 360 testimonies and the most infamous of the era’s Germans. The prosecutor, Robert Jackson, was “very competent,” in Sheridan’s estimation.

During the post-war era, although she’d prepared to work in the insurance industry, Sheridan became part of the war-crimes trials’ secretarial pool. Later, she moved up in the ranks to the interrogation branch of the more than 1,000 personnel who were active in the judicial procedures. From November, 1945 until October, 1946 the International Military Tribunal oversaw trials of 24 major war criminals in addition to six German organizations: the Gestapo, SS (party police) and SD (security police), Hitler’s Cabinet, the SA and German Army’s General Staff/High Command. The main trials started in 1946, with the lesser ones held later.

Sheridan worked with four attorneys, and the Americans provided her with ample opportunity to learn English. She traveled to other cities, often toiling in the car enroute, and recorded what the defendants had to say. Those trips included visits to cities near the death camps, and listening to witnesses who testified, spelling out the horrific details of the medical experiments performed in the camps.

“Most defendants said, ‘We didn’t do anything,’ and were arrogant,” she said. “Hermann Goering was very arrogant and he’d harass other prisoners so much, he’d have to end up eating in his cell alone. No one could stand him.”

Goering/Goring, a highly-decorated WWI soldier who created WWII’s Secret Police, later developed it into the Gestapo. He was very intimidating, says Sheridan, although she was not personally fearful; a guard and her boss were present at all times. Goering was very attentive when in the courtroom, says Sheridan, but he didn’t cooperate in the proceedings, like most of the other generals.

Goering was found guilty on all four counts he was tried on and sentenced to death. On the night before his execution, however, he committed suicide by ingesting cyanide through an as-yet unexplained ability to procure poison while detained. Several of the guilty also committed suicide while imprisoned.

Other German players in WWII war crimes included Rudolph Hess, who was reputed to be crazy. Sheridan attests to his mental illness, adding, “Even his doctor thought he was a hypochondriac.”

No women were put on trial, although the wives of the higher-ups were separated from them and under considerable scrutiny.

Sheridan also preferred not to have to traverse the work hallways on days when the Russian guards were on duty, she says. The Americans, French and British guards were polite and gentlemanly, but the Russians made passes at her, particularly when they passed in the close quarters of the hallways.

She also babysat the children of American generals, frequently interacting with the American military stationed in and around Nuremberg. There was a cost to her, however. When she returned home with stories of her days and tales of the trials, she shared some with her mother, who then told others.

“The neighbors wanted me to move out,” Sheridan said. “They didn’t believe the things I said; they were in total denial.”

She worked overtime during much of her job, receiving a much-appreciated dinner during the overtime, in an area ravaged by food shortages. Earning either money or cigarettes for those extra hours, she used the latter to barter for the few meager goods in town. Schools helped feed hungry children, and Sheridan ate at the American motor pool — formerly the German one — where her mom worked.

“Hitler made all women work unless they had small children to care for,” she said, adding that her mom waited tables. “The motor pool is where I had my first taste of fruit cocktail.”

Sheridan, who remembers air raids and bombings during childhood, said many Nazi rallies were held in the surrounding zeppelin fields, where the Third Reich was active. Residents were bussed there for promotional purposes and Nazi events, holding flags and saluting with, “Heil, Hitler!”

“Nuremberg was the main route to other European cities; it had four towers from Medieval times, one at each of the corners of the city,” Sheridan said. “We used those towers as bomb shelters, due to their thick walls; we had so very little time to get to shelters after the air raids. Often, bombs dropped right in front of those towers and smoke was so thick, no one could see.”

Her mother hid her in coal bins and through other methods, especially when the Americans were around — or the Moroccans rode their bikes into town. Soon, however, German residents realized they’d been lied to about Nazi enemies and befriended the Allies. One of the stranger tales perpetrated by the Germans includes the stories they fed their people about black soldiers.

“There was a rumor that black soldiers loved sugar,” said Sheridan. “So when they came to town, everyone hid their sugar.”

In short time, the overview of Americans changed, and during post-war many helped feed the Germans. Numerous military wives helped with orphanages and other institutions, bringing in food from the U.S., the Netherlands and Denmark.

“Of course, they weren’t mean; they were really very friendly,” said Sheridan.

Afterward, the German people were blamed for losing the war, says Sheridan. Blame had been plentiful from Hitler and others in top Nazi leadership.

Still, the allure of the Allies was so strong that Sheridan fell in love with one — a young soldier she met in a Munich souvenir shop. By 1947, Sheridan deemed things in Germany “very boring” and married her American the following year. They moved to Cleveland, then Detroit, where her husband studied languages at Wayne State University on the GI Bill and they raised two children.

Today, Sheridan is an American citizen, a role she is quick to praise.

“I never regretted coming over and I’m glad I’m an American,” she said. “I’m lucky — and I’m happy.”
As World War II fades into our collective memories... (show quote)
Thank your very much, for the history. It is too quickly forgotten, usually by people only to eager to forget. I was stationed at Tempelhof Flughafen, in Berlin, Dec. 1955, to Sept. 1959, married a German girl refugee from East Berlin. I heard a lot of stories, especially from her father, and uncle who lived in West Berlin. What this courageous lady has to say pretty much mirrors some of the things I heard about "disappearances".
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Mar 29, 2016 17:30:46   #
pipesgt wrote:
You don't know who to believe anymore.

This is a seven minute video. Quite interesting implications.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKkuWX406q4

Not there anymore.


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Mar 29, 2016 14:21:03   #
Rathyatra wrote:
Only photographers will truly appreciate this lol!



:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: Tech writers do too!
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Mar 23, 2016 22:24:20   #
mullumby wrote:
Wisdom - From The Manual

"If the enemy is in range, so are you."
Infantry Journal

---------------------------------------------

"It is generally inadvisable to eject directly over the area you just bombed."

U.S. Air Force Manual

---------------------------------------------

"Whoever said the pen is mightier than the sword obviously never encountered automatic weapons."

- General MacArthur

---------------------------------------------

"You, you, and you .... Panic. The rest of you, come with me."

- U..S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt.

---------------------------------------------

"Tracers work both ways."

- U.S. Army Ordnance

---------------------------------------------

"Five second fuses only last three seconds."

- Infantry Journal

---------------------------------------------

"Any ship can be a minesweeper....Once."

---------------------------------------------

"Never tell the Platoon Sergeant you have nothing to do."

- Unknown Marine Recruit

---------------------------------------------

Clean it, if it's Dirty.

Oil it, if it Squeaks.

But: Don't Screw with it if it Works!

USAF Electronic Technician

----------------------------------------------------------------

"If you see a bomb technician running, keep up with him."

USAF - Ammo Troop

---------------------------------------------

"Yea, Though I Fly Through the Valley of Death ,

I Shall Fear No Evil.

For I am at 80,000 Feet and Climbing."

---------------------------------------------

"You've never been lost until you've been lost at Mach 3."

- Paul F. Crickmore ( test pilot )

---------------------------------------------

A Navigator's Definition of Latitude & Longitude:

Latitude is Where We are Lost,

&

Longitude is How Long We've been Lost There!

USAF Navi-guesser

---------------------------------------------

"The only time you have too much fuel is when you're on fire."

---------------------------------------------

"If the wings are traveling faster than the fuselage, it's probably a helicopter --

however, it's probably unsafe in any case "

---------------------------------------------

"When one engine fails on a twin-engine airplane, you always have enough power left to get you to the scene of the crash."

---------------------------------------------

"What is the similarity between air traffic controllers and pilots?

If a pilot screws up, the pilot dies;

If ATC screws up, .... The pilot dies."

---------------------------------------------

The three most common expressions (or famous last words), in aviation are:

"Why is it doing that?"
Wisdom - From The Manual br br "If the enemy... (show quote)


Hints and tips from a USAF Technical Instructor (me) to students:
"When working with electronics, my best advice is to do whatever it takes to prevent the smoke from leaking out of the components. Electronic parts require the smoke to stay inside to function correctly!"
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Mar 23, 2016 22:10:54   #
waegwan wrote:
This is too funny to see the current youth experience 20 year old PCs.
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8ucCxtgN6sc
My first computer was an 8080 processor, built the thing myself, ran cassette basic, had a horridly large amount of RAM, an WHOLE 32 kBits! Forget the actual manufacturer of the kit, but, man, did I love that thing. Monitor was a TV, and when the computer wasn't one, we threw the switch, and watched TV.
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Mar 15, 2016 20:25:28   #
Huey Driver wrote:
Landing a seaplane as I would do it?

Landing like a boss !


Ever want to fly a seaplane? As this was a controlled maneuver,
check the control surfaces during the "ride".

http://www.liveleak.com/ll_embed?f=ff51fc4378cc
I want to see the video from inside the cockpit on that maneuver!
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Mar 14, 2016 17:50:51   #
tusketwedge wrote:
Sent today by a friend in the U.S .Been a strong Rep. since I've known him.Guess he's having second thoughts D.T.addressed a major gathering of American Indian Nation.He spoke for almost an hour about his plans for increasing every Native American's present standard of living.Though vague in detail,he spoke about his ideas for helping his "red sisters and brothers".
Afterwards,the Tribes presented him with a plaque inscribed with his new Indian name,"Walking Eagle",which he proudly accepted.After D.T.left,a news reporter asked the chiefs how they came to select this name.
They explained that"Walking Eagle"is the name given to a bird so full of S--t that it can no longer fly.
Sent today by a friend in the U.S .Been a strong R... (show quote)
Isn't that most all politicians?
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Mar 14, 2016 17:31:08   #
Jay Pat wrote:
http://www.cheyennedepotmuseum.org/depotdays

About 2 months away.
I won't make it in May.
Hope someone goes and posts about it.

Below is a video from a couple of years ago. The video guy found someone that knows a lot about the locomotive #844. What a wealth of info.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThovA89TTG8

Pat

Remove the "s' from https (stands for secured)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThovA89TTG8

Great video.
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Mar 13, 2016 21:56:34   #
jerryc41 wrote:
I had never heard of brake checking, but apparently it's a thing - a bad thing.

http://jalopnik.com/why-you-never-ever-brake-check-another-driver-1764147377
I just turn on my windshield washers, before changing lanes out of their road. Did that on city streets one day when being tailgated by a large SUV. She turned on her windshield wipers, and the windshield just went black with mud. I turned into a store lot, went into the store, and when I came out, she was there with a cop. Cop asked me why I threw water on her windshield. I told him I didn't throw water on her windshield, I never even saw her, I just washed by windshield to get some bugs off. He asked her why she didn't just turn on her windshield washer, and she said, so help me God "What windshield washer?" The cop said "You can leave sir." I left. Works every time.
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Mar 11, 2016 17:27:28   #
jerryc41 wrote:
Excellent video, but who thought it needed loud music?

Recent college graduate with no hearing.
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Mar 7, 2016 18:12:23   #
An fof all things, A WartHog! Love it. I worked at Kaiser Electronics in Santa Clara, Ca., 09-80 to 05-81, and was working on the Gunsight Display for the 30 MM gatling gun. Fascinating.
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Mar 6, 2016 19:23:46   #
kjfishman wrote:
You can't fix stupid.
Actually, if we wait long enough, they manage to "fix" themselves.
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Mar 6, 2016 19:17:06   #
Mollie wrote:
THAT was FAST!!!!
That was so fast, I ran out of breath just watching!
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