The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 24.03.1945, Síða 3

The White Falcon - 24.03.1945, Síða 3
3 ONE LESS "NEBELWERFER" This five-barreled German “Nebelwerfer” gun was cap- tured by 5th Infantry Division troops when they overran enemy positions in Luxembourg. The Germans failed in their efforts to destroy it with dynamite. CAA TAKES NO ENTHUSIASTIC VIEW OF POSTWAR JOBS IN AVIATION Horde Of Swindlers Lay Plans To Take Vets To Cleaners (This is the first of a ser- ies of 2 articles on post-war employment possibilities in the aviation industry, based on a survey by the Civil Aer- onautics Administration.) By Camp Newspaper Service There will be jobs for vet- erans in post-war aviation after the shooting ceases> but “the industry cannot poss- ibly maintain employment approaching the present level.” That is the opinion of res- ponsible officials of the Civ- il Aeronautics Administrat- ion who have surveyed the field. We have a $20,000,000,000 annual aviation manufactur- ing industry today. Some sources say we will be lucky to have 2% of that operating in peacetime. That would mean a $400,000,000 indus- try employing 50,000 per- sons. J. A. Krug, chairman of the War Production Board, estimates only 5%' to 10% of today’s industry will survive. There are, however, some important variables, which may knock these estimates into a cocked hat. One is the helicopter, which the CAA says “is developing fast.” Another is the always possible development of an entirely new kind of plane so useful that it will be manufactured in quantity and sold at popular prices. Neither of these is “in sight today for the near fu- ture,” CAA men say. As for the commercial air- lines, CAA officials say “it is evident, and airline offici- als emphasize this, that the airlines will not be big em- ployers of labor after the war.” Men from the Army Air Transport Command or the Naval Air Transport Service are generally conceded to have the best chance for any of the comparatively few op- enings, flying and non-fly- ing, which may develop in airline operation. On the ground, the outlook is a little brighter. Congress is now considering the Nat- ional Airport Plan, drawn up by the CAA, which would double the number of air- ports (from 3 to 6 thousand) —90% of the increase being the smaller fields for private flyers. CAA estimates these new fields will producec 63,000 operational jobs and 125,000 jobs in all. PLASTIC BULLETS LEND REALISM TO FLIGHT TRAINING A new practice bullet which disintegrates harm- lessly into powder when it hits its target, and a special armored target plane that registers like a cash register ringing up sales, have just been announced by the Army Air Forces as the newest training aids for AAF gunn- ers. Known as the “frangible bullet,” the new invention makes it possible for gunn- ers and .fighter plane pilots to get the “priceless exper- ience” of shooting live am- munition at real fighters in hot aerial sham battles be- fore they go into actual com- bat. The bullet itself — an AAF Training Command invent- ion — is a 30 cal. machine gun slug made of lead powd- er and plastic material which is hard enough to withstand being fired through a machine gun, yet soft enough to splatter harm- lessly into a fine powder when it hits the special ar- mor plate of the target plane. lasxsoaoaoocGOQSioaaBtsttaaa; A new schedule was announced this week for the Art Club at Red Cross Club 14. The group will now meet on Wed. and Sat. nights, 1900 to 2200 hours, under the supervis- ion of Tec 5 Phil Schuss. Both beginners and ad- vanced students are invit- ed to attend the classes, in which a few openings now exist. Eager beavers among the postwar planners' are a horde of swindlers, primed for their biggest killing, the Better Business Bureau said recently. Their intended vic- tims are 12 million home- coming servicemen. The swindlers know that (1) servicemen own a good share of the nation’s 130 billion dollars in accumulat- ed savings, (2) some 12 mill- ion servicemen and women will possess up to $1,000 ap- iece in War Bonds, pay de- posits, mustering-out pay and travel allowances and (3) seven percent of all men in uniform have indicated their intention to apply for GI business loans. Not all sharpies are wait- ing for the war to end, eith- er. A real estate racketeer! in Philadelphia recently sent letters to Negro soldiers in the Pacific, seeking to interest them in a proposed all-colored subdivision in suburban New Jersey. The land, investigation found, wras almost as bad as the jungles in which these men had been fighting. Along with servicemen, the folks at home are being duped. An unknown “pu- blisher” recently made pro- posals to the citizens of Missouri to include any man in uniform in their family in a book on war heroes from the state. All the family htrd to do was agree to buy the book for $24.75 in advance. Investigation offered little assurance that the book ev- er will be published. Another fellow was caught soliciting funds for a monument to the Unknown Soldier of World War II. The Better Business Bur- eau warns ex-fighting men against the following types of swindlers: (1) the “front money operator,” who can get you a loan for a fee — and usually his help ends when the fee is paid; (2) so- called fur farmers who offer biological “proof” of stagg- ering profits on a small in- vestment; (3) the fake bus- iness broker who “finds” the right business for you — for a fee, of course; (4) the “Partner Wanted” advertis- er who, likely as not, is after money — not a working I partner; and (5) promoters of cooperative nut or citrus farms, always situated in another part of the country and nearly always fictitious. The bureau says that the “swindler will always try to rush his victim into hasty action and, of course^ seeks to prevent him making an investigation.” ^ ----------- \ Survey Reveals Only Five Percent Of GIs Want Govt. Employment Following War About five percent of Arm)’ male personnel have definite plans to obtain Fed- eral employment after dis- charge, a survey of postwar plans of troops by the Army Service Forces indicates. The Postal Service led all other occupations specified. PHILIPPINE CAPITAL WRECKED BY JAPANESE MADMEN A city in flames is Manila, capital of the Philippine Islands. As American troops approached the city, fires de- stroyed a large part of the downtown section, and during the night TNT charges, planted by the Japs, exploded. Many ouildings were wrecked and fire added to the devastation.

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The White Falcon

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