The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 06.03.1943, Blaðsíða 2

The White Falcon - 06.03.1943, Blaðsíða 2
2 U.S. Forces Take Sbeitla In Africa American forces in Africa, re- coiling from former setbacks in the Kasserine Pass area, are speeding south and west through Sbeitla and Feriani in central Tunisia in pursuit of Rommel’s fleeing panzer columns. Mean- while, British First Army forces are counter-attacking in north- ern Tunisia, and British Eighth Army units in the south are pounding Mareth Line positions. Lt. Gen. Mark Clark’s Amer- ican Fifth Army, coming from Kasserine through Feriani, has joined forward elements of the British Eighth Army in the regi- on of Gafsa. Some British units have ad- vanced around the southern flank of the Mareth Line across the Shott el Djerid marsh to Gafsa. The main British forces facing the Mareth Line have been bringing up siege artillery and howitzers to demolish Axis posts. A second American Ujrust from the Kasserine Pass is headed north along the railway toward Kairouan and Sousse. The Am- erican drives, which at present are meeting little resistance, are placing Axis African forces in the precarious position of fight- ing off attacks on both the north- ern and southern extremities of the' Tunisian corridor, while warding off slashes at central Tunisian points such as Sbeitla and Feriani. In northern Tunisia, the Axis offensives in the vicinity of Beja and Mejez el Bab have been entirely stopped by the Brit- ish First Army, which has clear- ed the enemy from all ground taken recently, including the Mateur area where the fighting has been heavy. German losses in the north have been severe. Ai recent setback cost 25 tanks and 1,000 prisoners. Infantrymen Stage Gay Show (Continued from Page 1) successfully dodged insults from the crowd. The climax of the evening’s entertainment was a contest to decide the comparative merits of swing and hill-billy music. The “Kentucky Colonels,” swing addicts, lined up against the “Orange Blossom Rascals,” Corp. Burns Jarrel, Pfc. Paul F. Varal- la, Pfc. Richard R. Cline and Pfc. Leonard C. Childress, who were helped by the “West Vir- ginians,” S/Sgl. Noah A. Hender- son, Corp. Elias Damron, Pfc. Oscar T. Riffe and Pvt. Woods W. Ellis. Then the battle began. Amid banjos, guitars and harmonicas pn one side and beating drums and screaming cornels on the other, the “Kentucky Colonels” won. The show was directed and produced by T/5G, Hy Kapf- nmn, ‘Gl Farmers’ Won’t Pick Cotton Crop The on-again off-again cotton /picking by Uncle Sam’s soldiers is off-again today, having been cancelled by the War Depart- ment on advice hy Agriculture Secretary Wickard. Wickard told the House Agri- culture Committee that approxi- mately 1,200 civilian cotton pick- ers quit their jobs near Phoenix, Ariz., because of low wages paid in the vicinity. However, since 18,000 farm hands are available, Wickard stated no emergency exists, and therefore it is un- necessary to enlist support from the Army. Wickard also revealed that in conversations he has held with President Roosevelt it was de- cided the War Dept, could not assign soldiers to harvest crops without permission of the Agri- culture/ Dept. —Russia (Continued from Page 1) 1 has resulted in the loss of 11,000 troops of the German 10th army. The Nazis also lost their big de- fensive position at Demiansk, and Timoshenko’s forces now have reconquered 900 square miles and liberated 320 inhabited loca- lities. Furious tank battles now are raging to the north of Rzhev as the Red Army thrusts westward from the Demiansk zone. The Germans were reported to have lost at least 300 tanks during these operations in the past ten days. Berlin radio admitted that the Russians 'have resumed large- scale attacks on a broad front from Velikye Luki to Kholm. Fierce fighting still rages on the southern front where the Rus- sians report new gains west of Rostov and west of Kursk. Desperate German resistance has slowed the Soviet sweep in the Kramatorskaya sector. But Nazi counter-attacks have failed dismally, merely costing the Ger- mans heavily in equipment and men. Meanwhile, reports from Washington and London stale that tremendous lend-lease as- sistance has aided the Russians considerably in their successful offensive. The figures reveal, in part, that more than 5,000 planes and 6,000 tanks have been trans- ported safely to Russian ports. This supply boost, plus the per- sistent aerial battering of Nazi- held Europe, is playing an im- portant part in ridding 1hp So- viet of German forces, The camera stopped Jimmy Simmons’ rapid juggling act at 1/10,000th of a second here. Actu- ally, two of the balls are in motion, but this time the eye was quicker than the hand. —Camp Shows (Continued from Page 1) up balloons, then manipulating them into shapely figures or ani- mals, and he also dances. Another tpp-nolch attraction is Freddy Reeves, garrulous comedian. A fixture in New York City for several seasons, Reeves’ outstanding contributions were in Rio Rita and Earl White’s Scandals, and he’s a nightclub lure ,from ’way back. Len Gunn is the mystifying magician of the unit, while Jim- my Simmons combines an intri- cate juggling routine with breezy patter. Mitchell Davidson serves as the “orchestra,” playing eith- er piano or accordian, and also has arranged all the musical numbers for the others. The second performance will, he staged at White Rose Monday evening. Then the Navy will host the cast Tuesday, while the No. 1 Kec Center will he the scene of Wednesday’s showing. Fri- day evening the troupe will in- vade the No. 2 Rec Center. Present plans call for a lengthy tour of outlying districts before playing in this area on a large scale. The talented Engineer orch- estra and Mel Goldberg, Special Service, will participate in to- night’s performance. Allies Hit Berlin With Heavy Bombs —Pacific (Continued from Page 1) Island in the Dutch East Indies, while a medium size Jap am- munition ship was destroyed at Wide Bay, New Britain, when a bomber scored a direct hit on the stern with a 500-pound pro- jectile. An Allied airfield af Darwin, Australia, was attacked by 15 Jap fighters in a daylight raid. Dam- age was slight, and when Amer- ican fighters intercepted, six-Jap- anese planes were shot put of action. The 10th U.S. Air Force dam- aged Gokteik Viaduct, one of the railway engineering marv- els of the Far East. This vital link in the railway between Mandalay and Lashio is 2,000 feet long and its many steel tow- ers are buttressed on a natural bridge 550 feet above the'river gorge. Direct hits on the viaduct were reported hy the crews. A Chungking report says that all Japanese attacks in the east- ern coastal provinces of China have been unsuccessful, except for the Jap occupation of the former French territory of Kwapgchowan, southwest of Canton. In the Hupeh province, three Nipponese columns with strong artillery and air support were repulsed while trying to cross the Yanglze River. Japs Hit New Low In Clothing Dept. European clothing, including hats and silk stockings, will do a disappearing act from the ward- robes of all civilians in Japan, according to recent notice by the Nip Ministry of Industry. Men will wear grey suits of a uniform pattern and women will return to the ancient cos- tume of the kimona with its nar- row sleeves, it was revealed. Pfe. Keith T. Pitzer sketches .a typical maiden of Poland as Kentucky Colonels play “Musical Salute to Our A Hies" in “Sec* Unit Eight,” newest local musical revue. Residents of Berlin were cal- led upon this week to leave their offices and homes long enough to clear the German capital’s streets of debris, the result of a huge bombing raid by Amer- ican and RAF planes. Many sections of the city lay devastated after the fierce raid —the most powerful assault against Berlin—and flames were reported to be visible two days later from Hamburg and Brem- en. Repeated waves of “Thund- erbolts” roared over the capital shortly before midnight and dropped almost 1,000 tons of bombs on industrial targets. Many of the projectiles were powerful 4,000-pound and 8,000- pound “block busters.” The Ger- mans admited that more than 200 persons had been killed or injured in the attack, and it was indicated rescue workers still are removing bodies from shattered buildings. The RAF reported that 19 bombers failed to return, bub British pilots said Berlin’s anti- aircraft defenses were noticeably weak. The Germans claimed only 10 RAF planes had been dest- royed. Cologne also was subjected to a severe aerial assault as the Allies maintained their 24-hour- per-day schedule over Nazi-oc- cupied Europe. It was the strong- est sortie over Cologne since the 1,000-plane raid of last May. Ten planes were lost. Fast Mosquito planes blasted factories at Hengelo in Holland and Liege in Belgium, while Whirlwinds repeated their visit to Maupertius, near Cherbourg, France. No planes were lost in the operations, and it was the fourth straight day RAF raiders had silenced the radios of Eur- ope. The RAF prepared for its blow against Berlin by lashing out at Wilhelmshaven, Nurnberg, Dun- kirk, Cherbourg Peninsula and Rennes. Heavy damages were inflicted upon military objects, according to British reports. Lorient, vital link in the Nazi production program, is just a shell of its former self, a news- paper correspondent .revealed. He said that less than five per- cent of the city had escaped de- molition at (he hands of Allied bombers. . Spain Offered Aid “America is willing to help Spain so long as she keeps war from her land,” declared Carl- ton J. Hayes, American Ambassa- dor to Spain, at an American Chamber of Commerce meeting at Barcelona, Spain, this week. Spain’s importation of petro- leum products in the last six months has equalled the capa- city of the large Spanish tanker fleet, Hayes explained. He stress- ed that shipments of gasoline had been made available for non- military uses only

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The White Falcon

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