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  2. Scho-Ka-Kola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scho-Ka-Kola

    Scho-Ka-Kola is a German brand of chocolate consumed for its strong caffeine and kola nut mix. The chocolates have a caffeine content of about 0.2 percent, which is derived from the cocoa content of 58 percent and the addition of 2.6 percent roast coffee and 1.6 percent kola nut.

  3. Manner (confectionery) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manner_(confectionery)

    According to Carl Manner, the company was conscripted as an "army supplier" and produced chocolate and biscuits for the troops of the German Wehrmacht, and the Scho-Ka-Kola known as "Fliegerschokolade" was produced for the Luftwaffe pilots. At that time, Manner was a wartime operation and was allocated cocoa beans until 1945.

  4. Hans Imhoff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Imhoff

    In 1969 he took over the Hildebrand chocolate company in Berlin – Germany's oldest chocolate manufacturer - who held the chocolate brand "Scho-Ka-Kola". In 1972 Imhoff took over the failing Stollwerck chocolate company, and managed to convert it into a successful business.

  5. Category:German confectionery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:German_confectionery

    Scho-Ka-Kola; T. Toffifee; Trolli; V. Vanillekipferl; W. Werther's Original; Z. Zwetschgenkuchen This page was last edited on 24 February 2014, at 09:37 ...

  6. Outline of chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_chocolate

    Scho-Ka-Kola – German chocolate brand containing coffee and kola nut ... Ding Dong – Small chocolate cake of hockey puck size;

  7. Glossary of Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_Nazi_Germany

    Einsatzbereitschaft (Readiness for Service) – label for the courage and willingness of individual Germans to obey and sacrifice for the Nazi cause. Einsatzgruppen – "Special-operation units" that were death squads under the command of the RSHA and followed the Wehrmacht on the Eastern Front to engage in the systematic killing of mostly ...

  8. Themes in Nazi propaganda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Themes_in_Nazi_propaganda

    There was a lot of German pro-Nazi supporters in Danzig, in the early 1930s the local Nazi Party capitalized on pro-German sentiments and in 1933 garnered 50% of vote in the parliament. Hitler used the issue of the status of the city as a pretext for attacking Poland and in May 1939, during a high-level meeting of German military officials ...

  9. Strafgesetzbuch section 86a - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strafgesetzbuch_section_86a

    A restored Me 163B Komet World War II rocket fighter with a historically accurate, low-visibility swastika shown on the fin, as displayed in a German aviation museum in 2005 Participants in a Neo-Nazi march in Munich (2005) resorted to flying the Reichsflagge and Reichsdienstflagge of 1933–1935 (outlawed by the Nazi regime in 1935) due to § 86a.