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Reading and All That Jazz book cover
Reading and All That Jazz: Tuning Up Your Reading, Thinking, and Study Skills, 2/e
Peter Mather, Glendale Community College
Rita McCarthy, Glendale Community College

Inferences

Point Of View - Selection 2

Directions: Match the statements or actions in Column B with the people listed in Column A (Use Only The Letter).

Column A

A. An infantryman in the Fourth Armored Division of the Third Army
B. General Eisenhower
C. U.S. Military personnel who toured Natzwiller
D. Milton Bracker, of the New York Times
E. General Bradley
F. Robert Abzug, author of Inside the Vicious Heart
G. Margaret Bourke-White
H. Allied strategists

Column B



1

Military victory is the surest way to end Nazi oppression.
2

Natzwiller-Struthof is similar to an American Civilian Conservation Corps camp.
3

In a report to headquarters, every observation was qualified. Despite the evidence, obvious conclusions could not be drawn.
4

There were no prisoners, no screams, no burly guards, no taint of death in the air as on a battlefield.
5

Faced with a revelation so terrible, witnesses could not fully comprehend the evidence of mass murder without meaning or logic.
6

A pyre was located on the edge of the camp. It was a big pit, where they stacked bodies and wood and burned them.
7

The smell of death overwhelmed us even before we passed through the stockade.
8

We are told that the American soldier does not know what he is fighting for. Now at least he will know what he is fighting against.
9

All written statements up to now do not paint the full horrors.
10

In photographing the murder camps, the protective veil was so tightly drawn that I hardly knew what I had taken until I saw prints of my own photographs.