The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 12.08.1944, Síða 2

The White Falcon - 12.08.1944, Síða 2
2 Mrs. Louis G. Dreyfus, wife of the recently-ap- pointed U.S. min- ister to Iceland, is shown above at the information desk in the ARC Club in Reykja- vik where she acts as hostess to Allied servicei men. —Contest (Continued from Page 1) from each contestant. 3. Verses and drawings must be original. 4. Any member of the U.S. armed forces may par- ticipate. 5. All entries should be turned in on comple- tion. 6. Drawings may be made up in four colors or less, and should be of paper stock suitable for reproduction. Size doesn’t matter. 7. All entries must be ap- proved by the Base Cen- sor. 8. All entries should be turned in to Sgt. Rich- ard A. McAnnailly at the Reykjavik Post Ex- change and Restaurant. Pretty Expensive! World War II is costing the U.S. $2,837 a second! T wenty StatesMakeFederal Ballot AvailableTo Soldiers THE CANDIDATES— Democratic: Franklin D. Roosevelt (New York) Harry S. Truman (Missouri) Republican: Servicemen from any of the following 20 states may use the Federal ballot in the November election (provided, of course, that they are eligible to vote in the first place) — California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hamps- hire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Ore- gon, Rhode Island, Texas, Utah, Vermont, and Washington. States not authorizing use of the Federal ballot, but authoriz- ing use of the state absentee bal- lot only are — Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Idaho, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsyl- vania, South, Carolina, South Da- kota, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyo- ming. In order to vote you must be 21 years of age by the day of election (Nov. 7) unless you come from Georgia — in which case you may vote if you’re 18. If you live in one of the states which recognizes only the state absentee ballot, you must wait until you receive this ballot before you can vote. In some instances men who use the Federal ballot may later get the state ballots for which they upplied. Those who do, should fill out the ballots and mail them anyway. If they get back to the voters’ home states in time, they will be counted instead of the Federal ballot. Servicemen who are on their way back to the U.S. from over- seas stations, but "who won’t ar- rive until after Qct t, will also be able to vote. Wife Of U.S. Minister Helps At ARC Club Many servicemen dropping in at the Red Cross Center in Reykjavik recently have noticed a charming new member of the Red Cross group there, but few know that she is Mrs. Louis G. Dreyfus, wife of the U.S. Min- ister to Iceland. Devoting two afternoons a week to Red Cross work, she also find time to visit the sick wards of many enlisted men in the various Base hospitals be- sides entertaining GIs in her home each week. Not a pseudo- morale-builder, Mrs. Dreyfus speaks a soldier’s language, und- erstandingly — enjoys a GI joke — likes to “josh” her boys wher- ever she meets them. ‘AWOL’ Spends Honeymoon In Police'Squad Car A private stationed at Camp Carson, Colo., was jailed last week in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on the charge of being absent with out leave from his post. Civilian police, however, didn’t allow t e situation to interfere with the soldier’s preparations for marri age. They took the AWOL an his bride to the justice of the peace in a squad car and then rode them around for a feW blocks’ “honeymoon” before re turning him to jail. • • • " Ernest Hemingway Dodges Artillery Shells In Normany Mrs. Dreyfus has long been known for her welfare work in other parts of the world. In Te- heran, where she was Chairman of the Red Cross, she was per- sonally decorated by Shah Pahl- evi of Iran, being awarded the highly coveted Order of Elmi, the top award of the country, for her establishment of a medical clinic and school for impoverished chil- dren. Founding the clinic in the early part of 1942, she was in- strumental in the saving of many lives while the typhus epidemic raged there in 1942 and 1943. She finds “real beauty” in Ice- land, comparing many parts of it to Valencia, Spain, and the lakes of Killarney in Ireland. Author Ernest Hemingway ant Life photographer Robert Capa narrowly escaped injury in ^ °r mandy this week when a German antitank shell hit three 3-arts in front of them. Machine Sun bullets clipped the bushes a fe^ inches above Hemingway’s he£* as he feigned dead in a ditc ■ The famed author and Capa la el made a dash for safety. “Parachute Battalion” On Fieldhouse Screen Robert Preston in “Parachute Battalion” will be on the Field- house screen tomorrow evening at 2009 hours. ____ Sgt. Zangkowski of the MPs was mighty happy and proud the other day for he at last had a chance to run off a roll of 8mm. film from home showing his wife and baby. Carrying the film around in his pocket for about six weeks, he finally located an 8 mm. projector .... If you guys think you have been in Iceland a long time, look up Miss Gunn- laug Solvang, a Norwegian nurse who sometimes drops in at Club 14. She has been in Iceland ex- actly four years .... Many GI’s were casting nostalgic glances at some gen-u-ine American Zoot- Suiters at the Reykjavik Center last night. Merchant seamen in port are not required to wear their uniforms unless they choose to, and these two did not. You GI’s who have longed for an American girl to take to din- bay boasts of one of Icelan s few millionaires, Haraldur B® varsson, active in the fish free2 ing plants, fishing trawlers an other ventures. What do you think of a gl,y saying “Iceland is wondevfu • The weather isn’t half bad, an( it is nice to be able to go hd° a town onfce in awhile. There is plenty to do there.” Well, I, too, started backing away aP prehensively but after catching me, Cpl. Harold Kilpatric, ° an Air Corps unit here, proceed ed to explain that compared to Alaska, Iceland does look wont erful. He still remembers his stay in the Yukon territories in 1942- While there he shot wolves (bn no Japs) and nearly froze to death with temperatures at 7 degrees below zero, just to give you an idea .... ner in town will at last have your desires satisfied for the Red Cross girls at Club 14 plan to have a “Dutch Treat” dinner in town one night a week at the “Blue Room” (the Hull Restaur- ant.) Look up Elsie Celli at the Center for further particulars ... Reykjavik was quiet Monday, the Icelanders celebrating “The Bank holiday” .... Akranes across the European Refugees Arrive In U. S. Close to one thousand refugees from 19 occupied nations arrived in New Jersey this week from Italy. They are being sent to an emergency refugee shelter at Fort Ontario, N.Y., where they B remain until the war is over.

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The White Falcon

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