Commons:Deletion requests/File:Panzer-Kaserne Böblingen 1958.jpg
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Revision as of 10:27, 24 March 2013
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This looks real to me. I lived in the building to the right in 1955..
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=== [[:File:Panzer-Kaserne Böblingen 1958.jpg]] ===
=== [[:File:Panzer-Kaserne Böblingen 1958.jpg]] ===
Taken from [http://www.usarmygermany.com/Communities/Stuttgart/Partials_Panzer%20Ksn%201955%20b.htm], where it says this image is from "author's collection". It's not clear at all if this is really an official Army photo qualifying for PD-USGov-Military-Army. [[User:Rosenzweig|Rosenzweig]] [[User talk:Rosenzweig|'''''τ''''']] 15:54, 23 March 2013 (UTC)
Taken from [http://www.usarmygermany.com/Communities/Stuttgart/Partials_Panzer%20Ksn%201955%20b.htm], where it says this image is from "author's collection". It's not clear at all if this is really an official Army photo qualifying for PD-USGov-Military-Army. [[User:Rosenzweig|Rosenzweig]] [[User talk:Rosenzweig|'''''τ''''']] 15:54, 23 March 2013 (UTC)
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This looks real to me. I lived in the building to the right in 1955.. 38.124.32.96
{{keep}} because: I'll try to explain to the ignorants. The photo was made in the 1950s, sowith during the cold war. To make photos inside military facilities at that time was illegal and only possible (against the law) by military personel. Civilian visitors (if they had a camera) must drop them at the guardhouse. Official signs allover the fence around military facilities says: "Absolutes Fotografierverbot" and at the guardhouse: "Fotoapparate sind an der Wache abzugeben". Because the cameras wasn't as small as today, it was impossible for an civillian to carry them along the guards. Otherwise, every civilian made illegal photos inside a military facility and caught was suspected as a spy and prosecuted by nervous communist fearing american CIC - not an easy thing to risk for a simple photo anyway. Sowith the photo was made with 99,99% by an memeber of the US Army and under PD US-Gov. (By the way, why should an US Army member not have a "author's collection" ?) -- [[User:Steinbeisser|Steinbeisser]] ([[User talk:Steinbeisser|talk]]) 07:34, 24 March 2013 (UTC)
{{keep}} because: I'll try to explain to the ignorants. The photo was made in the 1950s, sowith during the cold war. To make photos inside military facilities at that time was illegal and only possible (against the law) by military personel. Civilian visitors (if they had a camera) must drop them at the guardhouse. Official signs allover the fence around military facilities says: "Absolutes Fotografierverbot" and at the guardhouse: "Fotoapparate sind an der Wache abzugeben". Because the cameras wasn't as small as today, it was impossible for an civillian to carry them along the guards. Otherwise, every civilian made illegal photos inside a military facility and caught was suspected as a spy and prosecuted by nervous communist fearing american CIC - not an easy thing to risk for a simple photo anyway. Sowith the photo was made with 99,99% by an memeber of the US Army and under PD US-Gov. (By the way, why should an US Army member not have a "author's collection" ?) -- [[User:Steinbeisser|Steinbeisser]] ([[User talk:Steinbeisser|talk]]) 07:34, 24 March 2013 (UTC)