Newspaper Page Text
(HURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1952,
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AR#¥E THE MEN of Able Company. Abeve, reporter
y ; Larsen (left)) talks to the company commander, Captain
\ liam B, Hartman, who knows “the crazy things green kids
| , vhen they first get up here.”
iriter Relates Story
"t Korean G. L Joos
%y DOUGLAS LARSEN |
viA Staff Correspondent
riGHTH ARMY FRONT, Korea
_NEA) — This is Able Comp
" s last day atop “Little Gibral
.. v another one of those bloody
;105 like Hearthbreak, important
. hold because it gives'you a good
1o down the enemy’s throat, and
v.e» versa if they h‘VPm to hold
i Sometime this evening the out
¢ ‘noves back intg reserve for a
i ttle Gibraltar looks like all
. Korean ridges you've seen in
¢« newspictures. Broken stumps‘\
.~ irees. No green foliage. Raw
;ounds of clay topped with neat
rows of logs—the bunkers, resid
cees of Able Company’s men for
t» past couple of months. Sand
parsed gun emplacements. And all
onnected by by narrow, deep neat
trenches.
Able Company’s commander,
(oot William P, Hartman of Sha
okin, Penn., a square-jawed
leon man of medium height
o ved his head into a bunker and
in a low, clipl?ed voice said,
“(ome out here, Heutenant.”
The grinning, grimed face of
1t Joseph E. D’lmperio, of Ocean
City, N. J., showed itself. Me step
ped out end gave an elaborate
<alute while holding a fork with
s dripping piece of ham in the
other hand. “Sir, you caught me
in the last stages of a very del
j icious bruneh.” |
‘*& » F |
Hartman smiled and said, “Your |
m n all ready to go, Joe?” |
1 mock French D'lmperio re
pliod, “Mon Captain, you should |
asi such & question.”
There was a long pause while
Joo finished his piece of ham.
Then Hartman said:
“I suppose you know that one
of vour men started a fire out on
patrol last night. Guess he got too
cold, hunh?® :
“My God, why dosen't some
body tell me what goes on in my
own platoon,” Joe said. He let out
2 shout for “Andy.” A sergeant
eared. Joe asked him about
the fire and he replied:
“Yes sir, He was about 25 yards
m me when he tried it. I
cidn’t know what he was up to.
I got over to him too late. The
mage was done. They sure
ew it in on us heavy after that.
I was scared as hell for awhile
but we finally got out all right.”
“I know who it was, den’t 12"
loe asked Andy. “Yes sir,” Andy
replied. Joe turned to Hartman
end asked, “You know who it
vas, don’t you?” Harman re
plied, “Yea.”
*® $ »
This last was because I was
s‘anding there 'taking‘ notes.
Hartman said to me: “Now you
¢in write a story about the crazy
tings green kids do when they
Irst get up here. We're had ‘em
(0 worse than that. These guys
tink they're going to get a rest
hen, we got back into reserve.
Actually, we're got a helluva lot
ol training to do. There are a lot
Ofnew men in the outfit. Re
tiacements. Believe it er not you
tan get out of training when
‘ou've been in the line a long
tme. Even the old ones.”
H;e continued:
“Something else you wouldn’t
l:clieve. When it's fairly quiet up
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T *E““
FVTUR!]EAMR of America have set aside February
16-28 a 5 Natfonal ;TA Week. The above picture illus
rates the importanee of this youth movement in the
future of anfeulturo.
here like it has been lately the
guys kind of like the life, except
for the patrols maybe. They loaf
and take it easy and the incom
ing fire isn’t too bad, except at
times. Back in reserve you've got
to get up early for breakfast and
drill. They think up all kinds of
things for you to do. That they
don’t care much for. Isn’t that
right Andy?”
Hesitantly, Andy replied: “Yes,
I guess so, sir.”
# * *®
Hartman then suggested that I
stay for lunch.
“We get darn good hot chow up
here, and there’s plenty of it,” he
said. “Of course there’s nothing
to drink up here. Somehow the
British and Canadians seem to get
all the booze and beer that's at
the front.”
D’'lmperio interjected, “That's
because they don’t have a WCTU
back home. They're {rying to
charge us S2O a bottle now.”
For the next ten minutes the
conversation turned on the
WCTU, how good the new com
bat boots were, what Japanese
sirls had that American girls
didn't how much candy the
Quartermaster was sending to the
front compared to last war and
whether or not there would be
an inspection before they pulled
out.
* The bull session was interrupt
ed by a great roar from a tank
which had been emplaced on the
ridge about 50 yards from where
we were talking. First one to
speak was Hartman. He address
ed me, “Larsen, something tells
me lunch isn’t going to be as good
as I thought it would be.”
e ¥ »
A few minutes later Lt. Frank
Bermingham, of Saranac Lake,
N. Y., ran up to the group shout
ing, Did you see stickingup up to
here. (He sliced his hand across
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HERO HAT — Paris cre
ation of white pique and black
satin with a veil held by a gold
en buoy is called “Captain Carl
sen” in honor of the hero of the
Flying Enterprise. ~
his middle.) They sure got good
sights on that thing.”
He saw me and paused. “I'm
really an artillery man and not
supposed to fire those tanks, but
I was just nosing round inside,
looking through the scope, and
really saw the guy standing up.
I get to hating those guys and
just had to fire. But I really got
him.”
“Was it in th& navel or the right
eye?” Joe asked sarcastically,
sl s S ottt orn id it
W R G g : SULTANA
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
“Aw, cut it out,” Bermingham
protested, “I hit him.”
About that time a motar shell
landed about 50 yards on the
other side of the tank. “That's
what you get for letting them
know where you are,” Hartman
said to Bermingham. A couple of
more shells came in, Everyone
started to move rather leisurely,
I thought, te bunkers. Hartman
turned to me:
“I'm sure that chow is going to
be lousy this noon., You'd prob
ably get ptomaine. It's much bet
;.etr"back with some artillery out
it.
I thanked him and loped off
down the side of the ridge.
SIGNING PRESIDENTS
Two signers of the Constitution
later became presidents of the
United States: George Washing
ton and James Madison, both Ofl
Virginia.
LOOKING AHEAD AT 100
SEATTLE — (AP) — For her
100th birthday observance, pert
Mrs. Lucy Owen waved aside
would-be helpers with the come
ment: “I don’t want to be treated
like an old lady.” Then, in the
next breath, she blew out close to
half the 100 candles on her cake.
She formerly operated a florist
lshop in Roseburg, Ore,, for many
years. She confided that she has
two wishes: to observe 10 more |
birthday anniversaries and to find
“a good man, I get awfully lonely
by mysell.,” She is thrice-wid
owed,
MOST ABUNDANT
Oxygen is by far the earth’s
most . abundant element, being
nearly equal in amount to all t*
others put together, according
the Eucyclopedia Britannica,
PAGE THIRTEEN
~ Mallard ducks sometimes settle
squabbles by dogfights in the air
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