<p>The famous journalist was arrested for stowing away on a hospital ship to cover the action on Normandy, writing a more compelling article than did her husband, Ernest Hemingway.</p>
<p><span class="deck">An eyewitness recreates a wonderful, wacky day in August, 1944, when Hemingway, a handful of other Americans, and a s</span>eñorita <span class="deck">named Elena helped rekindle the City of Light. Champagne ran in rivers, and the squeals inside the tanks were not from grit in the bogie wheels.</span></p>
<p><span class="deck"><span class="typestyle">A single great photograph has become an indelible symbol of the Marines’ heroic fight for the Japanese island. But hours earlier a now-almost-forgotten platoon had raised the first American flag on Mt. Suribachi’s scarred summit—and under enemy fire</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"> American forces had returned to the Philippines, and the Japanese Navy was about to make its last, desperate attempt to stave off defeat. Suddenly, by miscalculation, nothing stood between its most powerful task force and the American beachhead at Leyte Gulf but a small group of U.S. escort carriers. Could little Taffy 3 hold off Admiral Kurita’s gigantic battleships?</span> </p>
<p><span class="deck"> So thought many a weary Marine after the bloody, interminable battle for Guadalcanal. It was only a dot in the ocean, but upon its possession turned the entire course of the Pacific war</span> </p>
<p><span class="deck">A carefree Sunday lay ahead for one of the mess cooks on <em><span class="typestyle">USS Oklahoma</span></em>. His pockets jingled, and a pretty girl awaited him for a picnic on a warm, white beach. Minutes later he lay entombed at the bottom of Pearl Harbor </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"><span class="typestyle">It was the first time in history that British sovereigns had come to see what they lost in 1776. George and Franklin, Elizabeth and Eleanor, hit it off like old friends; even Texas congressmen melted under the royal charm. Brewing was a crucial World War II alliance</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"> <span class="typestyle"> Japanese naval air power was wrecked at the Battle of the Philippine Sea, but, says a U. S. carrier admiral who was there, our Navy missed a chance to destroy the enemy fleet and shorten the war.</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"><span class="typestyle">The Allied drive toward Rome had stalled. Was the destruction of a historic monastery justified in an effort to break the German line and get the campaign moving again?</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"> <span class="typestyle"> Outgunned by the Nazi raider, the</span> Stephen Hopkins <span class="typestyle"> could have struck her colors. Instead she elected to fight</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"><span class="typestyle">Eisenhower dreamed of serving under Patton, but history reversed their roles. Their stormy association dramatically shaped the Allied assault on the Third Reich.</span></span></p>
<p>The admiral who commanded "the ship that wouldn't die" recalls the hellish and heroic hours after a kamikaze turned the carrier <em>Franklin</em> into an inferno.</p>
<p><span class="deck"> The G.I.’s were far more numerous than any army that ever occupied Britain; none left so little visible trace, none so touching a legacy</span> </p>
<p><span class="deck">The furious speaker was Field Marshal Kesselring. The time was 1944. And the “shadow” was cast by Italian partisans and a handful of brave Americans from General Bill Donovan’s O.S.S.</span></p>
<p><span class="deck"> In this final installment from our series on General Joseph W. Stilwell, Barbara W. Tuchman recounts the story of the old soldier’s finest hour</span> </p>
<p><span class="deck"><span class="typestyle">Army newspapers in World Wars I and II were unofficial, informal, and more than the top brass could handle</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"><span class="typestyle">It was the most devastating enemy surprise attack since Pearl Harbor—but what mysterious affliction were people dying of two days later?</span> </span></p>
<p>Ridgeway commanded the 82nd Airborne in World War II, became Supreme Allied Commander in Europe and Army Chief of Staff, and played important roles in the Korean and Vietnam Wars.</p>
<p><span class="deck"> <span class="typestyle"> to Joseph P. Lash for Roosevelt and Churchill, 1939–1941: The Partnership That Saved the West</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"> <span class="typestyle"> In his reassessment of a tragic World War II battle, General Gavin concludes that, for the Germans, holding the Huertgen Forest was Phase One of the Battle of the Bulge. For the Americans, trying to occupy the forest was a ghastly mistake.</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"> <span class="typestyle"> During three harrowing years as a prisoner of the Japanese, an American woman secretly kept an extraordinary journal of suffering, hope, ingenuity, and human endurance</span> </span></p>
<p><span class="deck"><span class="typestyle">His newly discovered diary reveals how the President saw the conference that ushered in the Cold War</span> </span></p>