The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 06.05.1944, Qupperneq 1

The White Falcon - 06.05.1944, Qupperneq 1
OUR FORCES — ALWAYS ALERT Vol. VI. ICELAND, Saturday, May 6, 19U. No. 7. IBC Corporal Outdoes Looies At Pay Table A broad grin always crosses ^ face of the lieutenant behind the pay table when Cpl. Irvin -Martin of the IBC steps up to got his monthly stipend. The reason? Martin’s pay en- 'elope is fatter than that of the *st Lt. paying him! This is why. Martin is the dad- (|y of eight children and also has ^ght year’s service which brings him 10% “Old Fogey” pay. Con ScQUently, his family allowances, toupled with longevity and over- seas pay, bring Irv’s income to pight around $300. Not bad for a corporal. Cpl. Martin hails from Hou- st°n, Tex., and has had quite a colorful military career. He ser- Ved a hitch in the U.S. Army back in 1931. then served two years with the Civil Technical Corps of the Canadian Army, re- turning to the khaki of Uncle Sam *n 1942. He is in the Air Corps. Gen. Patton In Great Britain Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, who bas commanded the U.S. Seventh Ari«y in the Mediterranean, is Reported to be in Britain for duty, 11 was disclosed .this week. The grim-Iooking, 52-year-old general commanded troops in the “'orth African and Sicilian cam- paigns, led the successful attack Gafsa, beat off the Nazi Tenth anzer Division at El Guettar and to°k part in the final drive in Tunisia. Whether or not Patton "uil be or has been given com- ,r>and of an invasion force was n°t revealed. Long known for his emotional outbreaks and fiery declarations, Old Blood and Guts” Patton told Army after the conquest of Sicily: “Born at sea, baptized in Plood and crowned with victory, y°u have destroyed the prestige the enemy. Your fame shall never die.” Nation's Top Earner Louis B. Mayer, one of Amer- ,ca’s leading film producers, earn- $1,138,992 in 1943, retaining the tenth consecutive year b*s "title" as the biggest-paid U.S. executive. Mayer is managing flip- of Loews Inn; Looking up from a page of the New York Daily News fea- turing • reprints of his illustrated envelopes is Pfc. E. A. Terhune, barber and spare time cartoonist in an Ordnance unit here. Ter- hune has excited much comment among folks back home to whom he has been sending letters enlivened with scenes from GI life in Ice- land. Envelope Cartoons Bring Fame To IBC Soldier Judging from the path that is being beaten to his doorstep these days, Pfc. Edward “Terry” Terhune of an Ordnance outfit here might almost be the man who has constructed the perfect mousetrap. Up until three weeks ago he was just another GI in Iceland — company barber plodding his weary way to vic- tory via comb and shears. Then he started getting letters — doz- ens of them — from people all over the United States, people he neither knew nor had ever heard of before. They had seen a story about him in the New York Daily News and they asked if he wouldn’t please send a letter to them in one of his hand-decorated enve- Jepes from Iceland. The article in the News had suddenly spread Terhune’s name — and hobby — Hollywood Canteen Sued As Result Of ‘Jive Madness’ Radio actress Florida Edwards this week won a damage award of $8,170 in Los Angeles for in- juries sustained when she was sent into a spin during a dance with a “jive mad” Marine in the Hollywood Canteen. Defining the term “jitterbug” as meaning “nervous” and “cra- zy,” Judge Henry M. Willis ruled that the dance constitutes a “real danger for anyone not skilled in its gyrations.” Willis then concluded that since Miss Edwards, as a junior hostess, was a bonafide employee of the Canteen, judgment would be levied. Mains); the Canteen, all over the western world. This unusual hobby of his, on which he spends most of his lei- sure time, is the illustrating of air mail envelopes with scenes from Army life here in Iceland. They represent ideas which occur to him while cutting hair, loung- ing around in the hut, and even while eating his chow in the company mess hall. Terhune’s illustrated envelopes were first done only for his wife, Doreen, now living in Boston, Mass., but he now has so many “customers” that he’s inclined to think there’ll soon be need of a secretary. ‘On one occasion he thought he’d make the postman (Continued on Page 3) ‘Six Jerks On The Jump’ Opens Command Tour Bombers Barely Missed Hitler Adolf Hitler was almost kill- ed recently when he found him- self in Stuttgart, Germany, at the same time with Allied bombers who were also there — on busi- ness. According to reliable reports from Ankara, Turkey, Hitler was aboard a train traveling to Stutt- gart. At the wail of the siren, sounding an air raid warniug, Adolf got off the train and head ed for a shelter. The train con- tinued to the city and was blown to bits in a series of direct hits on the station and all the other passengers were killed. The story of Adolf’s narrow escape was told by a woman, Nele Kapp, who was a confiden- tial clerk to the Gestapo chief at the German embassy in Ankara before her disappearance two weeks ago, but made public only this week. Fraulein Kapp sought the aid of the U.S. embassy and is now out of Turkey. Lady Looks Ahead A far-sighted letter was receiv- ed by a New York hotel this week from a Mrs. J. T. Russell of Newton, Kan. She requested that a room in the hotel be re- served for her on Armistice Day, whenever it occurs. The letter is being kept on file. Well received with plenty of laughs and applause was the new IBC show, “Six Jerks on the Jump,” which played to its first audience of 200 officers and men Thursday night at the Camp Her- skola Theater. Written and en- acted entirely by enlisted men of this Command, it is the first all-soldier show designed to tour every U.S. Army camp on the island. In a brief pre-curtain talk, Capt. Paul Baker, IBC officer in charge of production, declared the opening performance to be “a sort of trial balloon” to sense audience reaction before taking the show to smaller outlying camps. Last night the troupe play- ed to an audience of 14 enlisted men at one of the outposts here. Composed of 16 skits and spec- ialty acts, the show overcomes a rather slow beginning and pro- gresses towards its riotious fin- ale, a number called “The Mop- up Sisters,” with clever satire and comedy. A particularly humorous speci- alty is a skit entitled “Eleanor’s Last Ride,” a take-off on Mrs. Roosevelt’s global wanderings written and played by Pvt. Tom Cavanaugh, outstanding young star of “The Drunkard.” Cavan- augh is dressed for the number in what would appear to be a cross between a Girl Scout uni- form, a barracks bag and a Har- ry Lauder get-up. Sgt. Meyer K. Levy, another “Drunkard” star, brought down the house with his aptly delivered burlesque of a German propaganda broadcast. (Continued on Page 2) Costumes were almost as effective as the actors in bringing laughs when “Six Jerks on the Jump” had Its Command Performance at the Herskdla theater Thursday night. Left “The Mop-Up Sisters” are shown going to work. Left to right, Cpl. Bill Krause, Pvt. Bill Gilmer, Pvt. Leon Lawson, Sgt. Meyer Levy, Pvt. Tom Cavanaugh and Cpl. Terry O’Malley, Right, Pvt. Cay? anaugh, in girl scoflf uniform, flues a cpityjnclng takeoff oq ‘‘Eleanor,"

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The White Falcon

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