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HAVOC WROUGHT BY R.A.F. BOMBERS.—The damaging effects of aerial bombing by the R.A.F. are clearly shown in these two pictures On the left is seen one of the U-boat pens at Brest, which were considered to be impregnable to air attack. In spite of a roof of reinforced concrete and steel, a forty-foot hole has been blown in it. The picture on the right shows how a bomb tore through ten stories of the Germanused Phillips works at Eindhoven, Holland, rendering the building useless.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19441104.2.85

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 25324, 4 November 1944, Page 8

Word Count
84

HAVOC WROUGHT BY R.A.F. BOMBERS.—The damaging effects of aerial bombing by the R.A.F. are clearly shown in these two pictures On the left is seen one of the U-boat pens at Brest, which were considered to be impregnable to air attack. In spite of a roof of reinforced concrete and steel, a forty-foot hole has been blown in it. The picture on the right shows how a bomb tore through ten stories of the Germanused Phillips works at Eindhoven, Holland, rendering the building useless. Evening Star, Issue 25324, 4 November 1944, Page 8

HAVOC WROUGHT BY R.A.F. BOMBERS.—The damaging effects of aerial bombing by the R.A.F. are clearly shown in these two pictures On the left is seen one of the U-boat pens at Brest, which were considered to be impregnable to air attack. In spite of a roof of reinforced concrete and steel, a forty-foot hole has been blown in it. The picture on the right shows how a bomb tore through ten stories of the Germanused Phillips works at Eindhoven, Holland, rendering the building useless. Evening Star, Issue 25324, 4 November 1944, Page 8

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