It's Over 1975
This nameplate was used in 1975
Elvis Presly is dead 1977
This nameplate was used in 1977

This website was created and maintained from May 2020 to May 2021 to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Stars and Stripes operations in the Pacific.
It will no longer be updated, but we encourage you to explore the site and view content we felt best illustrated Stars and Stripes' continued support of the Pacific theater since 1945.

From the Archives

Oki doughfeet slogging on, searching for own lost PWs

Oki doughfeet slogging on, searching for own lost PWs

Stars and Stripes frontpage for June 27, 1945 - Pacific edition

Stars and Stripes frontpage for June 27, 1945 - Pacific edition.


Stars and Stripes presents these archive reports as they were written by the reporters in the field. The graphic and politically incorrect language used may be offensive to some readers. Researchers Norio Muroi and Catharine Giordano contributed to this archive collection.

WITH 96TH DIV., OKINAWA – There are no front lines on Okinawa, but that doesn’t mean there is any rest for the doughboy. Infantrymen are still combing the island for bypassed Japs and for clues to the mystery of Okinawa – what happened to the American fighting men captured there.

It is felt that many of the men listed as missing in action could have been taken prisoner, but no trace of them, dead or alive, has yet been uncovered.

Continued cave-sealing activities have driven some enemy solider to seek shelter in the canefields, where they have bent over cane stalks to form cave-like shelters.

Hideouts Spotted

While interpreters and Jap prisoner-volunteers urged some remaining Japs to surrender, battle-wised doughboys, catching on to the Nip trick, climbed on rocks and spotted the hideouts.

Doughboys don’t mind these “rabbit hunts,” because the Japs are seldom found armed with more than a few grenades and pistols. Bu they are bitching over policing details, picking up “everything that doesn’t grow,” on the former battle fields. The most sickening job is burying the stinking Jap bodies.

Seventeen members of the Co. “M,” 383rd Infantry, were wounded Monday by grenades thrown by five Japs hiding in a pile of rubble. Said Pfc. Carl E. Link, Bloomington, Ill., “How they got in there is a mystery. We’d been in the area two days. When we were through with them they looked like a hamburger.”

Take To Mountains

Rear echelon units have bene killing Jap soldiers every night. The Nips have apparently been working their way to the mountainous country of northern Okinawa. More than 25 have been killed in the 96th division CP area.

Pfc. Cecil W. Rufener, Elmo, Kansas, “M” Co., 383rd Infantry, said “we saw two figures trying to infiltrate into our CP last night and opened fire on both. In the morning we found they were women, one dead, one wounded. Both had grenades.”

Pfc. Hugh W. Fusilier, Amamou, La., Co. “D,” 321st Medical battalion, related, “Yesterday we found five Jap soldiers and one Jap nurse hiding in a canefield near the division clearing station. The nurse and one of the solider committed hara kiri and doughfeet killed the other four.”