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  1. Jane Anderson (January 6, 1888 – May 5, 1972) was an American-Spanish war reporter journalist who broadcast Nazi propaganda in Germany during World War II. She was indicted on charges of treason in 1943, but charges were dropped after the war for lack of evidence.

    • Highlights
    • Experience
    • Education
    Longtime medical journalist after beginning her career as a reporter with the Associated Press
    Gluten-free since 2003 (back before most people had ever heard of celiac disease, non-celiac gluten sensitivity, or the gluten-free diet)
    Former Washington bureau chief for the Medical Tribune, a newspaper for physicians, and editor of Inside Health, an educational newsletter for patients

    Over the course of her career, Jane has written about numerous common health problems, including celiac disease as well as diabetes, cardiovascular disease and asthma, for a wide variety of publications. She also covers the business and politics of health care. Since going gluten-free in 2003, Jane has developed extensive expertise in food industry...

    Jane graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English with a minor in journalism from the State University of New York at Albany.

    • Medical Journalist
    • Axis Sally (Mildred Gillars) Several American Nazi sympathizers worked as broadcasters for German state radio, but perhaps none was as famous as Mildred Gillars.
    • Lord Haw Haw (William Joyce) Beginning in 1939, millions of Britons regularly tuned in to a German propaganda broadcast hosted by a smug Nazi sympathizer nicknamed “Lord Haw Haw.”
    • Tokyo Rose (Iva Toguri) More than a dozen female Japanese broadcasters were dubbed “Tokyo Rose,” but the nickname was most famously linked to an American named Iva Toguri.
    • Sefton Delmer. As the head maestro of Britain’s “black propaganda” radio programs, Sefton Delmer used cloak-and-dagger methods to turn the airwaves into a tool for psychological warfare.
  2. Dubbed “Lady Haw-Haw” by the British, Jane Anderson broadcasts over short wave to North America from the powerful Zeesen transmitter in Germany.

  3. She was at one time or another in her life a writer, a journalist, a war correspondent, a gorgeous seductress, a demi-monde, a suspected spy, an alcoholic, a drug addict, and a Nazi propagandist. She hobnobbed with distinguished political and military leaders on the international stage.

    • Wilkes, E Donald
    • 1995
  4. Jane Anderson (January 6, 1888 – May 5, 1972) was an American broadcaster of Nazi propaganda during World War II. She was indicted on charges of treason in 1943 but after the war the charges were dropped due to lack of evidence.

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  6. When Nazi Germany surrendered in May 1945, American authorities tried to locate and capture Anderson, who with her husband eluded pursuers and hid out in various places in Germany and Austria. Finally, on April 2, 1947, Jane Anderson was arrested in Austria and delivered over to American military custody.

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