The White Falcon - 27.02.1943, Síða 4
4
FALCON
NAYS ALERT
lCllisj?eli\^ arfJ fel tie Imelic
ican Forces, under the super-
vision of G-2 Section. Managing Editor, T/3G. Gene Graff; Asso-
ciai&Ed'^f’vr^W- Joseph X. Koren; News Editor* T/5G. George
Bartl(fjJknjjc|sS jAjflt Editor* T/iG. Harrison Standley; Wire Edi-
tor, Pvf. Orlando Aguero; Circulation Manager, Pfc. Anthony J.
Schajte. phptographs are by the U.S. Army Signal Corps un-
less otherwise credited ,
Tills‘paper has been passed by Censor and may be mailed
lionie*'for' one cent.*1" " ?•>$:/"
.At ..1 .i.-.i ,;i..■ ■ i....... vV" W- ■ ■
Entertainment
rVt'iai’iitifln iirid suitable entertainment are vital to
Americans jvhenev^ they are far from home, especi-
ally.iif nthqir, \yai;7time, assignment ”p'eiinti,t,s’'d{iiiti(iii4'' liV- “
ing..of at garrison life in the fidcl', TIjis‘‘peculiar'.*£plic£,!
of- wpfmvcul safety1 and constant, ,aiertn^„raj^ght,„p<?iV|
haps bd' uhsavbry td all concerned,..unLess.defLnite.stepsu
are t%en ,Io. provide diversion for the men when they
hay.y.cftwpjeted .their daily chores. ,
Movies,,,and athletics are -the two main souridd toif[
recreation;' df;'course.1 But now a new field is being en-
listed1 With anlh£ing Tegulari'ty. Wherever three erstfl
while a guitar player and a singer can be
bailed,, together, Uie result is a, “musical revue,” not
a ibnlby. troupe billed as THE " flonlihand■ ■ sho’tv,,|! but"
merely a handful of performers Who1 ti'ttVfcl 'frigidly '
to ttnit^ 'ih thfeir o'tvh particular drgahizatibn' in this,
,j|, , ,|. jJJj) ,<| ;| | , i- l*- ii. II »r. Ilf-
way,. transportation (Jifficultie?,,, aresl ej|mipate^> it8%4.t£-
enttpp \paitS; are permitted to see.!the producStioniuFi via..
such.gsoups are now either making the rounds 'orl[pre*i'
parihg-'to1 do so:, and Several others'are seriously cdiv-"1
sidbfing‘,h 'silhilar fhfrve; 1 ' ..... ' ’ ' ' l,lu
Perhap^ seeing; three , shows in as many nights—as
did,,,ope of our lpckle^s . reporters who was. assigned
the, “social cirouiturm.might,,prove boring because they
conform to fhe usual routine pat^rnt, wi‘ttt lfUtovIHria^
/tiorlii Bu't'fo the'feilowS Who See only one, itVenfertain-\,
ment in the finest form, and a welcome relief from
movies, reading, and the o them igtockn at tractions!" ■>! "i
So let’s trot out the hidden talent;"hnd"conti'nu^'the '
music&l revue boom. The. hlearV-eydd 'rdJSWtbr lihs^aii
.i iL . o- J • I r. O }■' is if •• Li/*, /tin
iron-c&|istitUtioH, and men in Ihe (^oiji^iand.arp, enthusi-^;
astic in their reception. And hiat should be copipcasa7
tion enough for the hard-working actors and musicians
° iu.r.i r,ul| | „i,tr.un i.l JunlB .,1)
7A& Jnquifdn^.
OepoAteh
(Food always appeals to The
Inquiring Reporter, so this week
he asked four members of the
Command what their favorite
dishes are. Here are the an-
swers:)
“My mother fixes the best
Boston baked
beans with bac-
on that you ever
tasted, but Army
slum burners
1 have , tbftir p-wp
re.WP,e„, Iftr,
wpli,e.d
aFiYh-.
i...... M?lloy,!..,2Q:
here
l» >u tiiJ vfir.u! 1 # 1*t f»u
r«i i I.i/1
um» is
iJLKL
I of
it t, rtl linn f lOJUOi i.-^rtuiti
the Air Corps. Malloy, a former
lathe machinist, comes from
ektiMnlK fJcul. Idbleiy^
ANC, smacked
she thought of
tlije11*-1 "spaghetti,1
1'cheese,'iomktbes' B
and ■’ hamburger
sli'e1 uked' tb brd-
’drj in' her 'home
itowirof Indiana-
polis, Ind., where
slit1'worked as1 a- nurse1 in the1
'V^teHiimi’'. T lospifal: "Thdt’s my
‘dish,w-she1 'beanAted! • “•
Give Pvt. KRvyn'M. Th'oifipsoil,'
‘i- "i> ■'< ii ••24fcyenrUoM,‘- Inu
• i fair fry in an,ill,a
helping of scab
loped"i lpdtatoerf
} til^,A^yjgk• • ahti' 'ham and
,he,H |)t. ihappy.
N o h 6 d y"'cim
k’*J. prepare tliat1 dish
like nty Wife*'’
1,J i •■■..ti ijir.>ho-k1sTed,nt hle
‘fb|'nKmrelectticicompany, link?man1
' f r o m > IP or t H uron, Mich."1:
jPytviMferman•> Du Waters,"20,'
Fi^Id u Artillery* " ji "M1'
l,c 'two ■ ori lhn i
smothered ui in r..,7«)7 >■••»
■onions!” Waters’ home is in Cin-
cinnati, 0,""‘And don’t > forget
Ihe dessert,” was his parting
shot.
1H I 1 J
CHAPLAIN’S CHALLENGE
History has taught us that
• luxury 'and "unrestrained in*
:dulgeneie are- corrupting influ-
ences. Character, morality, in-
tellectuality—all seem to have
la queer way of degenerating
■under conditions hi idleness
•and case. It is true that “a
person is the victim of his
own environment.” Too much
money, too much vacant time,
and too little restriction—and
an individual becomes slug-
gish, stagnant, and in the end,
wholly deteriorated. Remem-
ber—he who lives temperate-
ly, lives wisely. For it is much
easier to prevent such decay
than to overcome it.
„ MAW.R hpopep,, TIDING
FLfQT—,, jCioiynan t,
in h.qpthiJUi^ia.iCaij bp, cppip.ar-
,edi tfti? s^K.yjit^.jAs.iffloutli,#
the^ ,«:pssjngs,,„/?j..thfi .p^egfir,
gti eprQR^{f 9,VJ>^ Ahd
,2dBfteo?j)en. ,TJhyfi9i.„ptAc.esl, had,
beepuj,frftiR, , Attack
nqpih^ASti.by
possession, qf;,th^ gjftut ^J.^Pk
er pfu (vh9(-kpy. ..feiar^qy
fet!,, ,th,q. .dapgec ,,tpu .tlte^, river
crossings, li>qcA!W Afutf,, Now .the,
.Russians are advancing directly
upon these points—in fact are
only a day>*;Jivfcrfh fjvfy ligcpnf
theni..
r I X J 1 i * lUlMllli) 1‘ImIIO 1«» yttlJ**.»tll /
Ml Thpre, i A)ie ,po terrain . features
.Snc^.rA,?,: .riiVftrs,, fountains ,qr,
marshes tq, deJajj.. tire ,Jtussians’
advance to the Dnieper..,^houfii
the Russians occupy the vital
river"'cities "of Dhepropetrovs'if
■and i Zanerrszhe. within A he next
few? days,/as nckv \e6ms very
likely, all the German armies de-
| ii.-.i, i. TTii Ti I,-, i.n.,.i 711" ,i
i.thbSi’ wealib'hs whibli Already :
tiavtt1'beebme the baby killing"1"
.hqrror of madkitid. 11 *’ '1 ' 11 1 1 ■
• j\S*ye*ve lived1' in1 internationai
: i.,v id it'll,,'
anarchy --------
fending the line along the Donets
’from" ’Sfarin'h1 (o ' Ta'ganrog, 'will
be ehfireiy snriouiiiled ana their
fate would be as certain as that
of flic Germans trapped at Vor-
onezh, - Stalingrad or in Ihe
Caucasus. ■ ... .
DOROTHY THOMPSON.—The
greatest singfe post-war problem
will be control of the air. Arm-
ed airpover has not only to an
immense extent supplanted
classical armed seapower; if'is
seapower as it is Iandpowcr.
Unless from the outset we limit
armed airpower to a police syst- hri
em open to all nations who live me
under law, we’ll see the start
of a new armament race in
irchy ever Siiiee the tiifth of "
nations, iii the world of yester-
day when total war was unirivent-
ed and the ether had not become
the chief battleground wq.could ^
endure international' lawlessness
land survive; ;But internataohal
liiw. ,cannot,, ba,,.enforce^t,.by ..p,
si"",V,i»ilt'Oin.„9r! CX9nl,:ah" ,
.anlcp,,,0^, naAiqns^,, .,-tof.al.
*gloh]:il \yar .and Ujere lpu.st be
total global pegee, JThe. victqrj-
ous.quist qreAte a wqrjld qommon-
.wealth an^l the,yonquened must
*0'I> .il.’li l.-.lil.: ! .ill |, .1,1 I ■ I
Walter1 1 ijppman:—Events
"s low thal iiV Addition to the
n .ilftary’ decisions‘ iiia'de ’ a't1 Casa-
blanca th^re was very substan-l
_tial 'progress' made to\vard pol-
itical' agreeihent. Immediately
afterward’1' (jiiurcliii|'' went to
Turkey anil soon it was evident
■ t i | ‘ K, ,. . (.. | [ r . ■
that Russo-Turkish relations had
improved to a point where an
understanding about the war and
postwar settlement had been
reached or was -iq sight. Field
jdarshall Sir John DiH and Gen- ^
eral "Arnold iWent to Chungking
and- India from ■ Casablanca and
obvihUs'ly they didn’t go as sight-
seeing tourists,'" .'A I, "! ■ .tut
| Upon his return from Casa-
blanca the President told us; “We
don’t expect to spend our time
ringing "Japan to final defeat
erely by. inching our way for-
ward-island by island, across
'(Continued on Rage 8)
.•••I'
r*lo f'Ac'jj