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Towards the end of 1943 and during all of 1944 the war on all
Fronts was relentlessly and violently building to a dangerous and
complex climax Although the Allies had massively invaded Europe in
the early summer of 1944, we didn't see German capitulation for
almost a year and even then only after the Russians, renewed from
their awful Battle of Stalingrad, were rolling west into the very
heartland of Germany, taking Berlin block by block, building by
building. With equal ferocity the Allies had rolled east.
Eisenhower was poised fifty miles west at the Elbe River. April
30th, Hitler killed himself. Two days later Berlin capitulated.
American losses in "Europe" totaled 170,000. The German end came
fast. Although the World celebrated Victory in Europe on May 5th
Germans had been surrendering in big numbers through late April and
early May. By May 15th Allies had imprisoned five million German
military personnel. Some of the best news I heard was the surrender
of 153 German submarines. The foe in the Pacific would prove as
implacable. In contrast to the land war in Europe, for us the war
in the Pacific had always been a sea war with island invasions and
battles taking place over great distances. A few months after Pearl
Harbor the author went to war in the Engineering Department of a
shipyard in Los Angeles Harbor and enjoyed a brief but rigorous
engineering apprenticeship.earning an "Industrial Deferment," which
required draft board renewal every six months. In late summer of
1943 the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy accepted him but with a
"string attached." Unlike the other three Federal academies, this
Academy required a six-month "tour of duty" at sea, preceded by
ninety days of "Basic Training," wartime or peacetime.
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