Word: nauheim
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Throughout the U.S. zone the scene was repeated. Husbands rushed aboard to sweep into their arms wives they had not seen for months; shy fathers nervously admired babies they had never seen before. In Bad Nauheim, Mrs. Alve Brooks threw herself happily into her husband's arms (see cut), proudly found that he had been promoted from sergeant to second lieutenant a few days before...
...more of a sight to the doughboys was the fabulous Adlerhorst (Eagle's Nest), Hitler's 20th-century eyrie on a peak west of Bad Nauheim. The rock-hewn retreat, served by three miles of subterranean corridors, sported 1,000 air-conditioned rooms with hidden exposures of the rustic scene below...
...pass a fanaticism test. A devout and amoral Junker, he gives his basic loyalty to the German military tradition rather than to the Nazi Party. After his dismissal last week, a Stockholm rumor promptly had him under house arrest. More probably he retired to his country place in Bad Nauheim with his phonograph records (all military marches by brass bands) and his collection of buttons and epaulets of all the world's armies...
After Pearl Harbor, Bob Best was interned with other U.S. newsmen at Germany's Bad Nauheim Spa. He displayed no animosity toward the U.S. there, but he did get special privileges (he slept in a hotel while other correspondents were confined in a train on a siding; he gained weight while others lost from...
...American foreign correspondents, stayed too long in Europe. Unless you came home sometimes you began to go European. Best never came home, even for a brief vacation." TIME merely said that Best was a South Carolinian. Said he in his biography written for the internees' paper at Bad Nauheim Spa: "Born Sumter, S.C., 4/16/ 96; Wofford College (Spartanburg), B.A. '16 . . . Abroad since...