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FILE-In this May 7, 1933 file photo,  German chancellor Adolf Hitler speaks to 30,000 uniformed Nazi storm troopers at Kiel, Germany.  In March 1933, six years before the war began, Adolf Hitler’s storm troopers violently shut down a small German newspaper,  the Munich Post ,  that had devoted close to a decade warning about Hitler’s dangers to a free society.  A recent biography published by The Associated Press called, “Enemy of the People: The Munich Post and the Journalists Who Opposed Hitler” by Terrence Petty, captures the early era of Nazi Germany.  (AP Photo)

FILE-In this May 7, 1933 file photo, German chancellor Adolf Hitler speaks to 30,000 uniformed Nazi storm troopers at Kiel, Germany. In March 1933, six years before the war began, Adolf Hitler’s storm troopers violently shut down a small German newspaper, the Munich Post , that had devoted close to a decade warning about Hitler’s dangers to a free society. A recent biography published by The Associated Press called, “Enemy of the People: The Munich Post and the Journalists Who Opposed Hitler” by Terrence Petty, captures the early era of Nazi Germany. (AP Photo)

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