The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 13.10.1945, Qupperneq 2

The White Falcon - 13.10.1945, Qupperneq 2
2 THE WHITE FALCON is published weekly by and for the American Forces in Iceland, with funds furnished by the Post Exchange, under supervision of Special Service Section, Iceland Base Command. Some material is supplied by Camp Newspaper Service, New York City, republication of which is prohibited without CNS approval. THE WHITE FALCON has been passed by the censor and may be mailed home for one-and-one-half cents. IBC Special Service Officer .Lt. Robert E. Simon Editor ....................Cpl. Charles S. Otto Jr. Associate Editor ..........Pfc. Bernard Epstein Circulation Manager .......Cpl. Bob Fournier Sig C. Photographer........SgL Robert F. Phillips Contributing Cartponist .. .Tec 5 Pete Ranilovich. New Records Set In Long Distance Flights By B-29s The Technological advan- cement made in the aviation field during the war, has been so great that distance can no longer he recognized as a handicap to world trav- el and trade. B-29s which were so effective as bomb- ers during the war, are mak- ing it a matter of a day or less of travel to reach Euro- pe and Asia. Two new speed records for long distance flights have been made by the B-29s. The one record credits a Super- fortress with covering the 2,300 miles distance from Labrador to Paris in 9 hours and 21 minutes. The other record is for the 5,490 miles from Iwo Jima to Spokane, Washington. The trip took 23 hours 33 minutes and broke all existing records for non-stop distance and over- water flights. In setting this record, 238.8 miles per hour was averaged. Take It Easy. Sarge - You'll Live Longer Sgt. Lester Schmeel madg a valiant effort to greet his wife, when he arrived home from overseas, in the man- ner he had always been dreaming of, hut several of the construction features of his home thwarted his plans. Reaching home and sight- ing his wife waiting with outstretched arms on the front porch, lie made a dash for her. Unfortunately he lost his balance and fell through the front porch lat- tice work into a concrete driveway. , Bruised but undismayed the Sgt. picked himself up and made another effort to reach his wife only to get conked on the head by a brick jarred loose from the chimney. In the meantime, his wife cheerily responded from the front porch, “Welcome home, dear.” — Demobilization (Continued from Page 1.) On October 1, the New York newspaper PM, publ- ished an article by staff writ- er Tom O’Connor charging that either the Army doesn’t know what it is doing with the demobilizition program; that it doesn’t know how fast men are getting out now or how fast they may be expect- ed to get out in the future, or that the Army is feeding Congress and the public a lot of pap to soothe its anger and is making promises and juggling figures so that ev- erything looks good on paper. O’Connor’s article follow- ed a statement by Pres. Tru- man on Sept. 20 in which the President said the Army was discharging 15,200 men a day and that plans were being made to increase it to 25,000 daily by January 1946. On the very next day Gen. Mar- shall told Congress that 17,000 men were being dis- charged daily. And one week later, Secretary of War Pat- terson, in his first press con- ference after succeeding Stimson, said that 26,000 men were being discharged daily. GTS IN JAPAN ARE NOT AT ALL PLAYFUL The GI’s in Japan appar- ently do not care to play with the Japs. According to Frank Kluckholm, of the New York Times, the GI’s are obeying the fraterniza- tion ban which is in direct contrast to what happened in the occupation of Ger- many. Searching for an, explana- tion, Mr. Kluckholm attribut- ed the condition partly to racial and language harriers and also to Jap propaganda which said that all Americ- ans are rapists. New Movies Play Hutment Circuit , “DUFFY’S TAVERN” I (Paramount: Ed Gardner, Victor Moore, Marjorie Reynolds). Here’s a hilarious two hours of fun with Archie of the famed cafe “where the elite meet to eat” that tops the parade of films for the month! Besides the famed radio characters; (and we do mean characters) a host of Paramount stars, including Crosby, Lamour, Goddard, Hutton, Bracken, Benchley, Ladd, Lake, Lynn, and Dai- ley, make this a fun-fest that you won’t want to miss! f PORTS. ME FR Harry Schmkjlin offered his shoes for sale. “I won’t need them anymore,” he ex- plained, “I’m going back to Arkansas.” Reunions Are So Touching Screen Comedienne Finds Joan Davis, radio comedi- enne, went down to San Ped- ro with her cousin Mamie to meet the latter’s husband, returning from overseas and discharged. “It was really a touching sight,” sighed Joan. “They stood there — his hand clutching Mamie’s shoulder, and Mamie’s hand clutching his mustering-out pay!” “BUD ABBOTT AND LOU COSTELLO IN HOLLY- WOOD” (Universal: Abbot and Costello). Another helping of corn from the two radio stars. “UNCLE HARRY” (Universal: George Sand- ers, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Ella Raines). One of the finest mysteries in months! Excellent act- ing, different story, and of course, Ella Raines! “LADY ON A TRAIN” (Universal: Deanna Dur- bin, Ralph Bellamy, David Bruce). Deanna continues to grow up in this latest — a mystery. Romance, laughter, music, and murder. “OF HUMAN BONDAGE” (Warners: Eleanor Park- er, Paul Henried). A remake of Bette Davis’ tremendous success of a de- cade ago, with young, cute, and talented Eleanor Park- er taking over the Davis roll. Henried replaces the role created in the original by Leslie Howard. Excellent drama. “HOUSE ON 92d STREET” (20Ih Century Fox: Wil- liam Eythe, Lloyd Nolan, Signe Hasso) A good old-fashioned spy ' adventure that is quite a hit back home. Supposed tp be made up of actual cases of the FBI. Sounds good. “TOO YOUNG TO KNOW” (Warners: Joan Leslie, Robert Hutton, Dolores Mo- ran) Young lovers, the war, the eternal triangle. It’s been done too .much and in just | about the same way each ; time. NEW YORK CITY — Tommy Dorsey plans to break up his present band and form a new aggregation com- posed of his former musicians who have been discharg- ed from the service. HOLLYWOOD — If you got the idea that Shirley Temple married a poor man when she took Army Sgt. John Agar for a husband, you’re wrong. He happens to have a $3,000,000 trust fund. Their wedding cost a tidy $20,000. One expensive item was 5,000 roses, tied to the hushes in the garden. WASHINGTON — Give a Congressman a highball be- fore dinner and fewer letters from , perturbed voters hack home and his blood pressure will drop, says Capt. George W. Calver, Capitol physician recently recom- mended by Pres. Truman for promotion to Rear Admir- al. Calver, physician to Congressmen since 1928, says the drink is to relax the lawmaker’s nerves and the slim mail hag will decrease their worries. DETROIT, MICH. — Master Sergeant John Krantz, 52, a veteran of 30 years in the Army (four years in the Pacific) calmly tore up a $1,000 hill in a bar. The MPs picked up the pieces and the sergeant, in that ord- er, and asked a few questions. They found six more hills in Krantz’ wallet, each with a one and three zeroes, hut it was his money, so the arm-band guardians let him have his fun. RALEIGH, N. CAROLINA — During discussions of the volunteer enlistment bill, Rep. Barden (D-N. C.) pro- posed furloughing soldiers for 30 or 40 days rather than the recommended 90 days, because “many of them would get lonesome for the Army and go back.” . KANSAS CITY, MO. — Col. James Roosevelt, USMCR, was bumped off a westbound airliner here by a civilian with a higher priority. The civilian, Who evidently hadn’t forgotten the incident when three servicemen were humped off a plane in favor of a dog belonging to a member of the Roosevelt family, wisecracked, “But the dog went through.” Col. Roosevelt grinned but made no comment. WhatA jfh A “DANGEROUS PARTN- ERS” (MGM: James Craig, Signe Hasso, Edmund Gwenn) Another mystery, murder, romance combination that will pass an evening. I There’s a lot in a name of Marie McDonald who is called “The Body” for obvious and sundry reasons. She’s the star of United Artist’s latest bed room farce, “Getting Gertie’s Garter,” a revival of the play which appeared on Broadway after World War I.

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