Charles Nicolosi (From Brooklyn http://cityrecord.engineering.nyu.edu/data/1941/1941-02-13.pdf) is in the above, 2nd from left, and below, 3rd from the left
The job of the Tinian Hunt Club was to find and remove Japanese soldiers
hiding throughout the islands in the countless limestone caves; they wouldn’t surrender for cultural
reasons and also because their high command told them the GI’s would eat their children.
Many GI’s and Japanese soldiers died in these efforts. Sam Weintraub came up with an
alternative (described in his daily war diary), using psychological warfare, by using
captured Japanese collaborators to talk the Japanese soldiers out of the caves by promising them good
treatment and food and bribing them with cigarettes and chocolate bars.
In this way, he and his
squad, who became known as the “Tinian Hunt Club,” safely brought out around 500 Japanese
soldiers, without further loss of the lives of GI’s
If you can help out Larry, the comment and photo thread is at https://business.facebook.com/latest/inbox/all?asset_id=1111861348900582&mailbox_id=&selected_item_id=100041789900888
By the way, you can read online scans of the Daily Iowan, like the one I'm looking at from June 26, 1945, if you'd like to, with no subscription nonsense. Even has the comic strips
This newpaper clipping talks about a guy named Toughy, who worked with Maj Sam Weintraub, whose obit mentions him on page 7 of the
http://dailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1945/di1945-06-26.pdf so that's quite the connection between sources that collaborate the Tinian Hunt Club
From where you find these pieces of history, I do not know. What I do know is that you bring our history to the fore. I hope that followers of your blog include young people who never lived through these years.
ReplyDeleteHe has talent that's for sure. I wish I could write about things like he does,I try but all I do is confuse people. I think history is important and if its lost its a shame.
ReplyDelete