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Features
The Goat of Pearl Harbor
Husband Kimmel, commander of the US Pacific Fleet, took the fall for the Japanese attack. But was that just a convenient way for the navy to pass the buck? By Anthony Summers and Robbyn Swan
Day of Infamy, Part Two
Smoke was still rising over Pearl Harbor as Japanese forces arrived at Wake Island to deliver more destruction. The American defenders weren’t about to make that easy. By Drew Ames
The Birth of Round-the-Clock News
No story was bigger than the Pearl Harbor attack. And no medium was better equipped than radio to spread it day and night. By Ken Bush
A Silent Night Torpedoed
Viewed through a periscope soon after Pearl Harbor, Los Angelenos appeared arrogantly indifferent to the Japanese threat. The insulted skipper of a lurking sub went on the attack, just before sunrise on Christmas Eve. By Donald J. Young
Departments
Kilroy
A Note from Our Editor
V-Mail
Letters from Our Readers
Home Front
The First Wartime Christmas
Pinup
Carole Landis
Landings
Ike’s England: Grosvenor Square, Bushy Park, and Southwick House
I Was There
“Trapped on the USS Arizona”
War Stories
Memories from the War Years
Books and Media
Our Latest Reviews
Theater of War
1944’s The Memphis Belle: A Story of a Flying Fortress and 1990’s Memphis Belle
78 RPM
“O Little Town of Bethlehem”
WWII Events
A Calendar of Present-Day Happenings
GIs
“Witness to the War’s End”
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