The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 17.04.1943, Síða 4

The White Falcon - 17.04.1943, Síða 4
4 * ■■■■ I I. »■■■■■■ ML. —I .1 . ■ ■ I I—Ml .11. I.ll .. ■■I...!.- THE WHITE FALCON OUR FORCES - ALWAYS ALERT Published by and for the American Forces, under the super- vision of G-2 Section. Managing Editor, T/3G. Gene Graff; Asso- ciate Editor, T/5G. Joseph T. Koren; Art Editor, T/4G. Harrison Standley; Wire Editor, Pvt. Orlando Aguero; Circulation Manager, Pfc. Anthony J. Schulte. All photographs are by the U.S. Army Signal Corps unless otherwise credited. This paper has been passed by Censor and may be mailed home for one cent. The Path Is Rough .One of the most dangerous manifestations of the tradi- tional American loathing of war as an instrument of international policy is the current wishful thinking that Germany will collapse suddenly and completely as a result of defeats in Africa, on the Russian front, or be- cause of concentrated bombing from the air of Ger- man industry. The wish has also been father to the thought in the case of those who have seen in stories of strife between the Wehrmacht and the Nazi Party an imminent break- down in the German military machine and will to re- sist. Still others nurture tlie belief that the overwhelm- ing mass of the German people are fed up with the war and that a revolution overthrowing Hitler and his stooges might pave the way for a relatively bloodless victory. Happily, the “unconditional surrender” terms of the Casablanca Conference reassure us that United Nations leaders are not deluded by these flights of imagina- tion. Victory over Germany must come “the hard way.” There will be “blood bath^” in profusion as the United Nations forces advance step by step into the German- occupied territories and across the German borders into the very heart of Berlin. Not until our troops march down Unter Den Linden in a Germany brought to its knees by annihilation of its misguided troops and systematic destruction of farms, factories and public works will the world he guarante- ed against a resurgence of the despised Prussian mili- tarism which has plunged the world into two cataclysmic j struggles within a quarter century. i That Germany must he crushed finally and comple- tely is evident from its post-Versailles hislory. At the time the armistice was signed in 1918, millions of Ger- man soldiers felt that they had been slabbed in the back by the workers on the home front and that they could have gone on to victory in 1919. Iiardly before the ink was dry on the treaty ending the war, German Junkers, industrialists, generals and even the republi- can leaders were planning to evade its terms step by step. Proving themselves no better qualified for democratic government than the Fiji Islanders, the German people handed the reins of their governmnt hack to the jingo- istic military clique in a matter of months after renounc- ing the Kaiser. Private armies numbering in the mil- lions and dedicated to scrapping the Treaty of Versa- illes flourished and indeed were encouraged by a pup- pet republican government which actually ruled by mili- tary fiat. Nothing could be further from the truth than that Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party are solely responsible for this war. It is a war that the vast mass of the Ger- man people wanted and have prepared for since 1918. There’s no distinction between the Nazis and the Ger- man people. One is merely the symbol and embodi- ment of the ideology of the other. There is no room for sentiment in this war. We must beat Germany on the battlefields and on the home- front so decisively that every man, woman and child in that country becomes firmly convinced that Ger- many must abandon forever its anachronistic “might it right” philosophy or cease to exist as a nation. 4 * BACKBONE OF THE NEW ORDER IN EUROPE. (By Fitzpatrick in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.) They Say.... 7A& lnquLhiM.%. Eepo-fitah. (What is the first thing you are going to do after you get home? This was the question The Inquiring Reporter asked this week. Here are the answers:) “First I am going to take a good rest, then go back to my old job of Surg- ical Supervisor and wait for leap year,” laughed 1st Lt. Genevi- eve G. Thorpe. A native of Clarksburg, W. Va., Miss Thorpe is a member of the local Army Nurse Corps. Pvt. Norman Burg, Signalman from New York City, said, “I’ll have to convince myself that I am home, and see what has chang- ed, and then I’ll probably go to college.” Burg is 23. “1 want to see my mother as soon as I can and then just pick up where I left off,” replied lorp. Schilling, 23-year-old mem- ber of the Air Corps. Max hails from the Bronx in New York. Member of the Merchant Mar- ine, James Mc- Loughlin said, “Try to get back my old job as s u p e ri n t e nd- e n t of apart- ment houses and settle down.” McLoughlin is 45 years old and is a fireman on his ship. His home is in Brooklyn, N.Y. CHAPLAIN’S CHALLENGE * “What great conflict I have.” Col. 2:1. * It is said that man “can adapt himself to any constant circumstance.” The overseas soldier is a classic example of this cultivation of mind over matter. A guest in a strange land, removed from his customary pleasures, he soon learns he must provide entertainment out of his own resources or disrupt internal- ly. Under such living condi- tions, the soldier whd can maintain consistently a per- fect balance—who can pre- vent a sense of ijytor conflict —proves agais that every- thing is only a matter pf will. Harry Hershfield, clown of “Can You Top This?” claims that Italy is getting out a new issue of stamps. It seems, so Hersh- field says, they had a stamp with J the picture of Hitler and Musso- i lini, and people were spitting on the wrong side of the stamp! • Ann Thomas, the eternal secre- tary of radio and the Broadway stage, has a new GI title, present- ed to her by several hundred soldiers. They voted her “The Secretary We Would Rather Dance With Than Any.” • Bob Hope says he has new woman trouble. Met a girl in a revolving door last week and has been going around with her ever since. Bob says it was love at first sight, but he changed his mind—he took another look. • Jack Benny has long used the faces the acid test. He’s slated to bring his radio troupe to St. Joseph (Mo.) for an all-soldier audience. • Ralph Edwards seems to have started a habit of making his ‘consequences” blessings in dis- guise. Last week a Pvt. Barney Malone, whose wife is expecting a baby, performed on the “Truth or Consequences” show and re- ceived a complete layette, plus a crib, plus a high chair, as his prize. • Lou Costello’s description of his recent visit to the White House: “I walked up the steps, rang the front door bell, the door opened, and, boy, was I surpris- ed. Eleanor was home.” • “We, the People” recently turn- ed up a woman who holds the strangest job of all. She’s 21- year-old Gale Volchok, who teaches Judo to American soldi- vaudevillian gag, “But they sure loved me in St. Joe.” Now he'ers.

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The White Falcon

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