The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 24.03.1945, Blaðsíða 1

The White Falcon - 24.03.1945, Blaðsíða 1
OUR FORCES — ALWAYS ALERT Vol. VIII. ICELAND, Saturday, March 2'i, 1945. No. 1. Ail-Girl ENSATroupe Delights Tripoli GIs “ENTHUSED" OVER PLAYING BEFORE YANKS BECAUSE “THEY’RE SUCH GOOD SPORTS ABOUT COMING UP ON STAGE” Making a decided depart- ure from (lie usual ENSA and USO cast grouping, “Phyl’s Five” turned out to be a quintet of charming and talented voting women (Sig. Corps Photo). One of the comical high- lights of the “Phyl’s Five” ENSA show this week came when Sgt. Al Cerunda got down all fours to act as a sofa used as part of the set- ting for the joyful reunion of a “recently-returned hus- band” (Sgt. Steve Rudloff) and his “faithful and loving- wife” (Valerie Brown). Hobbyist Sig. Corps Photo). Tire iable scarf which Ter ;>■ -V PI. Svhafrik is displaying in above photo Is nude with ordinary wrapping string. Schafrilc dyes the string various co- lors and weaves designs on the hand-made loom or frame. An Engineer, he says that it takes about 40 hours to make a scarf. Cpl. Schafrik finds that they make ideal gifts for various holidays and anni- versaries. who had the audience al the Tripoli Theater figuratively in the palm of their hands last Tuesday night. With ENSA for three ye- ars, the group has appeared throughout the UK and the Faroe Islands and hopes eventually to tour the con- tinent and the Middle and Far East. Their audiences have ranged from 4,000 pe- ople down to three men in an isolated NisSen hut on the Channel coast. Phyilss Moulding, (he pi- anist-manager of the troupe, reports that they’ve traveled (Continued on Page 2) PX Sets Up Photo Service Further extending its service to the GIs in Iceland, the Base Post Exchange Section* through its chief. Major Harold M. Shaw, anounced this week the creation of the Post Exchange Photo Laboratory. The Laboratory will open for business on or about the first of April ,and will print photos for the men here. In order to accomplish this long-needed service, person- nel are now being trained by Base Photo Lab. technician's in the proper use of the new printers, enlarger and dry- 1 ing machine. Maj. Shaw reports that the ! pictures will be developed at cost hut as yet it is not known just how much each print will he. Complete de- tails on this aspect will he announced at a later dale. As at present, GIs and of- ficers will submit their rolls "Hudism World's Greatest Manifestation NEW BOMBING DEVICE AIDS SUPERFORTS IN- KNOCKING BLAZES OUT OF JAP CAPITAL One of the most closely- guarded secrets of the B-29 raids on Japan -an automat- ic device that continuously computes the plane’s exact position in terms of latitude and longitude, at the same time indicating the true com- pass bearing and mileage covered from the point of takeoff — has just been rev- ealed by the Army arid Navy. Known as (he Air Position Indicator, the new device is! credited with making it pos- sible for the big B-29s to hit Tokyo and other targets right on the nose. No bigger than a quart milk bottle, the “API” is mounted on the instrument panel and makes automatic calculations that would take a navigator hours of work with charts, star-sighting sec- lants, and other equipment. It allows the navigator to pin-point the location of his plane in mid-flight by tak- ing indicator readings and cheeking his driftmeter. The driftmeter supplies all the information needed to cor- rect for error due to wind drift. Now installed in other he- avy bombers as well as in Superforts, the device is al- sobeing used by carrier-bas- ed Navy planes and has played an important role ih the air war over Germany as well as Japan. Next Week’s Falcon Appears On Wednesday Because of an Icelandic holiday affecting the per- sonnel of our print shop, The. White’Falcon will he published on Wednesday of next week instead of Saturday. ROCKET GUNS PROVE “EFFECTIVE” IN WEST Rocket projectors which fire 32 death-dealing missil- es at the same time are now being used as Allied artillery on the Western Front, acc- ording to an announcement from officials of the British War Office. The projectors, employed by British and Canadian troops, are arranged in groups of 12 guns with 32 barrels each. A barrage from the 12 projectors, or 384 barrels, equals the firepow- er of more than 280 ordin- ary 5.5-inch guns using 100- pound shells. They are said to provide “very effective’ firepower. A world of pinups in the flesh is the postwar plan of Alois Knapp of Chicago. People, he says, should take off their clothes. Knapp, who is head of the American Sunbathing Ass- ociation and proprietor of a successful nudist camp in Indiana, declared, “Nudism is the world’s greatest mani- festation of democracy. Take the clothes off people and you have removed one of- the greatest differences between nationalities.” of films to the Base Photo Lab. for developing of nega- tives and to the Base Censor, for censorship. The indivi- dual may then submit his negatives to the Post Ex- change Photo Laboratory if he desires to have them printed. | /-fcrvrwrt./vr«rt.rvr<>rti/-vr*r*r- ./>„• .;*,r*rh#wi.FVr\.r IBC Headquarters an- nounced this week that furlough time in the U.S. under the T.D. plan has been extended from 30 davs to 45 days. AAF Takes Huge Toll Of German, Jap Planes During the first three years of war, the AAF de- stroyed or damaged more than 5*9,000 German and Japanese planes. In that periodl 7,830 American plan- es were lost. just The Discharge Will Be Okay With Most Proposed legislation was introduced in the Senate this week to give each member of the arm- ed forces a year’s base pay on his discharge. Sen. Joseph Guffey (Dem.-Pa.) told reporters it was not a bonus bill but rather its objective was to provide veterans with funds for the transition from civil- ian to military life after the war ends. He estimat- ed the cost at; four billion dollars annually in the demobilization period. I ONE OF WAR'S GREATEST PHOTOS ~ ~vv German POWs In U.S. Will So on Number Over 4 00,000 . An extra 1-00,000 German war prisoners will he taken to the Slates; "to ease the do-, mestic labor’shortage as well as ' relieve ' the 'burden of ■ guarding - the prisoners ab- Toad* an ANS release report- ed this week. • .The War Dept, says the POWs will he: used'only'for essential workrfor which no- civilian labor is available. Their arrival will bring the total German prisoners in the U.S. to more than 400,000. This photo, one of the most graphic taken in the war, shows U.S. Marines of the 5th Division hoisting the flag atop Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima.

x

The White Falcon

Beinir tenglar

Ef þú vilt tengja á þennan titil, vinsamlegast notaðu þessa tengla:

Tengja á þennan titil: The White Falcon
https://timarit.is/publication/382

Tengja á þetta tölublað:

Tengja á þessa síðu:

Tengja á þessa grein:

Vinsamlegast ekki tengja beint á myndir eða PDF skjöl á Tímarit.is þar sem slíkar slóðir geta breyst án fyrirvara. Notið slóðirnar hér fyrir ofan til að tengja á vefinn.