![]() If one day, you become 100% honest, maybe we'll come back. We also warn people about this place not being 100% honest. What's the point of selling a ticket as you know that people will have no time for the complete tour ? Are you scammers ?īecause of this, we removed the museum from our to-do list. This was the conversation during 10 minutes, when suddenly, by somekind of miracle, the reception says that the museum will close very soon, and we'll have no time for everything. It was 30 minutes before the closing time, the tour is more than one hour, we were asking to the reception how long is the tour, and still, the reception only wanted to sell ticket. ![]() The reception was only willing to sell ticket. We've been there, asking how long is the tour. Remove the spaces after ".com" to watch as embedding is disabled.Visiting Roermond, this place seemed like a must go. Bates won a Bronze Star that day for his photography, based primarily on this remarkable movie sequence. As a result, a number of frames suffered from blurring or mis-aiming, which is understandable in a combat situation. Shot at the standard 24 frames per second with relatively grainy, b&w, 16mm film, the image quality was susceptible to any jarring, hand movement, or subject movement. Minutes before this encounter, the Panther had destroyed a 3AD Sherman tank, killing three of its five crewmen.īates was positioned on the mezzanine of a bombed out office building about 100 yards from the Panther as events unfolded. ![]() The Panther was struck by three 90mm rounds from an M-26 Pershing tank of E Co, 32nd Armored Regiment, 3AD. Jim Bates, a First Army Signal Corps photographer attached to the 3AD, shot a now-famous 48 seconds of 16mm footage showing the destruction of a German Mark V Panther tank in the cathedral square of downtown Cologne.
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