Word: reich
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...condemned men had been charged by a U.S. military court with killing in the name of a "macabre science." High-altitude tests, freezing, deliberate infection and liquid gas were among their means. Their victims were prisoners of war and the inmates of concentration camps. Brandt, as Reich Commissioner for Health and Sanitation, was held responsible for the deaths of 275,000 lunatics and cripples...
...whores, he made a fortune out of his relationship with the Führer, pumped vast amounts of narcotics, stimulants, aphrodisiacs and plain colored water into his boss, undermined his resistance, helped speed the physical breakdown which nearly crippled Hitler during the last days of the Third Reich...
Professor Schneider is a native of Hesse, Germany, but left the Reich in 1933 after he had been dismissed from the University Library of Giessen by the Nazis
Their prototype was Hans Heinrich Lammers, an old man of whom few Germans and few Americans had ever heard; yet on every Third Reich decree his name had appeared, in a bold, inch-high sweep below the scrawl "Adolf Hitler." In his defense Lammers claimed that, as chief of the Reich Chancellery, he had merely acted as a sort of "notary public" or "glorified mailman." The prosecution thought otherwise. Next to Hitler, Lammers had been one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany...
Under his real name of Colonel General August Heiszmeyer, Stuckebrock had been head of the "Ubergestapo"-the Supreme SS Tribunal, the Gestapo of the Gestapo. As Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, Frau Stuckebrock was Hitler's No. 1 Nazi woman, director of all the women's organizations in the Reich. According to Nürnberg's war criminals' list, Heiszmeyer was "presumed dead," Scholtz-Klink was "dead." Witnesses had "identified" her body among those removed from Hitler's Berlin air-raid bunker...