Marguerite Chapman, it says here, is now appearing in My Kingdom for a Cook. Candidly, the Roundup
staff doesn't give an anna if she can cook or not. Decorate a diving board nicely, does she not?
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Sgt. Frank Zikes operates his homemade hydraulic test stand, born out of the scrap pile through his ingenuity.
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Supplementing ASC troops, Chinese, Burmese and Indian workers are often trained to help in the various shops.
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T/Sgt. William Bishop, a welder in civilian life, continues to use his torch to give the Japs a "hot foot."
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Particular pains are taken with the landing gear, for the ASC doesn't want a beautiful mission marred by a faulty
landing. S/Sgt. Robert Dawes and Sgt. Joe Shimeta do the adjusting.
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"Greetings" to our little yellow cousins are stacked neatly into ammunition belts at an ASC base to be sent to
a forward unit.
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The camera blends the old and the new as two prop specialists bend to their task on a "big un."
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S/Sgt. Acil L. Petty packs a parachute, aided by Chih Jong Ho, his Chinese assistant.
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Brig. Gen. Edgar L. Glenn has his mitt in position to catch one of Maj. Gen. Claire L. Chennault's tosses, in the
opening game of the 14th Air Force Softball League. Lt. S. P. Tuzzeo swings viciously. Awaiting
his turn
to face the general is Sgt. Robert E. Convery, while Pvt. Karl Loeber keeps score and Lt. James Dunn observes.
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Here's a poignant reminder that this is St. Valentine's Day week.
I Love Marines, the Navy too. But dear G.I., I'm choosing you. - Susanna Foster.
Well, we can dream can't we?
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Here's pictorial proof of the combat efficiency of the American-trained Chinese troops now advancing against the
Japanese in the Hukawng and Dalu Valleys of northern Burma. Jap prisoners, blindfolded, are led to Intelligence for
interrogation. Note the U.S. combat helmets.
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What's all this talk about drafting American labor into war plants? Spot a few war workers like this around
at key points and who wouldn't be first in line to grab off the job at the bench next to her?
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