The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 24.12.1943, Side 3

The White Falcon - 24.12.1943, Side 3
3 Proving that all First Sergeants aren’t rough and gruff, 1/Sgt. Herbert A. Williams of Colorado Springs, Colo., decorates a Christmas tree in his Medics messhall. What’s more, Williams bought the tree in town for “my boys.” Veteran Vaudeville Hoofer To Dance, Sing In ‘Drunkard* War Dept. Authorizes New Awards For Infantrymen ' For 20 years, Pvt. Michael Ep- polito of this Command was a top-notch vaudeville star in the good old U.S.A. He was hoofing it on the stages of American theaters when vaudeville was en- joying its gaudy, brawling hey- day, and he stuck with the game through the dark days that some- times saw the customers out- numbered by the performers. So it is little wonder that Mike is enthusiastic about “bringing vaudeville back” for the GI’s in Iceland. His love for what he calls the greatest business in the world hasn’t diminished a bit since he arrived here, and at pre- sent he is touching up the rough edges on some of his old routines before he makes his bow in “The Drunkard.” In this show Mike, who will be remembered by vaudeville fans as Jack Clifford, will treat GI audiences to rhythm' dances and will also team up with pretty Betty McCabe of the USO in a song or two. Mike says he is not so sure about his voice any more. “This climate may have cracked it a bit,” he admitted this week. But he grins and says that “the old itch” is still in his feet. He has had that urge to dance ever since he was 17 years old, when he started competing in amateur shows on New; York’s glorious East Side. Shortly after that he was auditioned by the famous old minstrel man, Eddie Leonard, and was promptly em- barked on a lengthy career that was interrupted only by the beck- oning right hand of Uncle Sam. Thirty-seven-year-old Mike did two a day on the famous Keith circuit, teamed with comedian Tom Healey in song and dance acts for ten years Mike has worked the same theaters with Rudy Vallee (“It was when Rudy was just break- ing in,” says Mike), Bill Robin- son, the Condos brothers and the great Houdini. “There was the guy,” Mike says of Houdini. “When he was on stage you could hear a pin drop in the back row. He used to have ’em all in a trance.” There was a saying a couple of years ago that it would take a Houdini to bring vaudeville back, but Mike doesn’t agree. “It’s just had a slight relapse,” he says as he goes into his dance. U.S. Jargon Is Simple For G retar By CPL. JOHN MORAN. Gretar Burtman, nine-year-old Icelandic newsboy, accepted an Infantry soldier’s invitation to a game of chess the other day— and won hands down! Making no distinction as to rank, he subsequently checkmat- ed the entire chess-playing per- sonnel of an Infantry camp here, his opponents ranging all the way from privates to captains. Gretar has also shown himself astonishingly proficient at black- jack, pinochle, poker and “gallop- ing dominoes.” What has impressed his soldier clientele more than onything else, however, is Gretar’s great flu- ency in English—or rather in “American.” At the drop of a chess board he can rattle off colloquialism representative of the United Kingdom, Flatbush or the Deep South. He calls paper money “bloody notes!” and in>chats with soldier friends he has been heard to make such remarks as: “I reckon ya’ll jest cain’t wait to git back home!” A Reykjavik schoolboy at pre- sent, he says that one of his chief aims in life is to visit the United States and to see in action the famed Brooklyn Dodgers baseball club. If this ambition is realized, he certainly won’t go hungry throug inability to yell out: “One on a bun — with everything!” The jeep, most highly public- ized of all Army vehicles, has proved its worth from the swamps of New Caledonia to the rocky roads of Iceland, but ex- perts are of the opinion that it is “too wild” to be placed in the hands of civilians. George W’. Ritter, vice-pres. of Willys Over- land Motors, came out with the statement this week that civilians “can’t be trusted with jeeps.” Ritter told a Congressional committee that unless the jeeps were geared down before they were sold to civilians it would be extremely dangerous because The War Dept, has just author- ized two new awards for infan- trymen—the Expert Infantryman Badge, and the Combat Infantry- man Badge. The former bears a miniature silver rifle mounted on a blue field with a silver border, is three inches long and half an inch wide, and will be awarded to officers and men of the in- fantry whose action in combat is satisfactory. The latter medal—similar in SSO Receives 25 New Films A new batch of movies fresh from the States and including several- current favorites on the home-front arrived in Iceland this week and will be placed on the regular circuits as soon as possible. Most of them, how- ever, will be shipped to outlying sections of the Command. In all, there are 25 films. they take off so fast. Revealing that Willys has al- ready perfected plans for 36 dif- ferent tasks jeeps could perform on a farm, he declared that the jeeps as now constituted could not be expected to plow fields, although they could easily be ad- justed to “be turned loose on the farm.” He suggested that the jeeps be turned back to Willys after the war because otherwise the auto- mobile market might be ruined by the “junk price” jeeps not suited for civilian uses. design except that a wreath Is added—will be awarded to sol- diers whose conduct in combat is outstanding or whose combat action occurs in a major opera- tion. Infantry units will not go un- rewarded either. If 65 per cent of the men and officers of a com- pany, battalion or regiment win the Expert Infantryman Badge, the unit will be awarded a white streamer for its color or stan- dard. Final Count Swells Total In Aid Drive Pvt. Ralph Chin and associate leaders in the drive for the China Relief Fund in Iceland finished digging their way through a huge pile of kronur this week and readied a check of close to 30,000 krOnur for the United States China Relief Committee. After completing the counting of the unexpectedly large dona- tions, Pvt. Chin reported that high honors go to the Engineers. The men of the Air Corps, In- fantry and Medics also earned themselves high ratings in the field of generosity. However, it was difficult to ascertain just who the biggest contributors were, because nearly half of the kronur pieces were collected from boxes in theaters and Red Cross and PX boxes. Jeeps Risky For Civilians, Auto Authority Points Out I KNOW IT— ^ mama places too MUCH CONFIDENCE IW ME/ ,------- HELLO, TOOTSIE. I CALLED TO TELL VOU I'M SENDING ALEXANDER v" OVER WITH A HALF-DOZEN ) CHOCOLATE < CUP-CAKES ) JUST FOUR ^ HERE, < 'ALEXANDER/ YOUR MOTHER > TOLD ME ^ L SHE WAS ) if SENDING 4 VL SIX r-K ^ OH, ^ &LONDIE, ► HOW . ’LOVELY . > •,i +>SNf/\S;)oi V- r : World rights focrvt^r by Chic Young: Blondie

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