Entering Lashio shortly after its capture, Lt. Gen. Dan I. Sultan, Theater Commander (third from left), and Lt. Gen.
Sun Li-jen, Commander of the New Chinese First Army (fourth from left), emerge safely from under Jap artillery fire
after an enemy shellburst cratered tracks 35 yards from the inspecting party.
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After a final plunge down the Burma Road, Chinese troops enter bomb and artillery-shattered Lashio, former strategic
supply terminal of the overland route to China.
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Dolores Moran of the movies has another title. She's been selected by the crew of the aircraft tender
USS St. George as their "tender girl."
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MILEPOSTS
WASHINGTON - Sixty-five per cent of the more than 15,000 soldiers used in the construction of the Stilwell Road to China were Negro troops of the U.S. Army Services of Supply, the War Department announced this week. A detachment of Negro Engineers, the 843rd Engineer General Service Regiment, using British and American equipment, first began work on the Road at Ledo. Twenty-five months later, T/5 Richard Barnett drove the leading vehicle of the first convoy to China over the completed highway. The announcement praised the Negro troops for doing a job that had been termed "impossible." Graves of the dead along the Road testify as to how impossible the task really was, the announcement said. The Road is 1,004 miles along, most of it through enemy territory, and there is a grave for every mile. |
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Treed Operator Gets Grounded
1333RD BU, ASSAM - S/Sgt. Jacob Rabatin, Jr., has been "grounded." When Rabatin came to this base back in March, 1943, he was appointed the field's first "control tower operator." It was a nice setup. His would be strictly a daytime job. His control tower afforded plenty of fresh air and sunshine. On the other hand, it wasn't such a nice job. For one thing, the tower was located in the lofty branches of a tall tree. Four times a day, at least, he had to climb a ladder up the tree's trunk. During the monsoon, his office had altogether too much running water. The field was doing lots of business, too. ATC cargo planes and a B-24 outfit made an average of 100 landings per day. An then, of course, there were the Japs. Bu that was all long ago. Today, at his new desk in a modern glass-enclosed tower in the operations building, Rabatin is a happier man. He's working a regular six-hour shift. The danger of enemy bombing has been eliminated. There's no more tree climbing. And, best of all, he's up for rotation. |
The New York World-Telegram decided that weather reports needed a little color so they dragged them out of their
sacred place near the masthead and put them in a boxed head, written around a feature angle. But Maj. John A. Haas, Jr.,
staff officer of the 10th Air Force, went a step further. He decided to go on the line that one picture was worth a
thousand words and used cheescake to liven up his lectures on the perambulations of Jup Pluvius. At left is shown a
violent cumulo nimbus formation, which reaches the height of its turbulence around the edges, with the gal below
supposed to represent the same idea. Center, dangerous stratus clouds, which shroud mountain tops and are often called
:rock-lined clouds." And at right the turbulent cumulo clouds, which toss airplanes around like tops. We think the boys
get the idea. In fact, knowing the 10th, we are sure they do.
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Of all places in the world, this pinup of gorgeous Marjorie Riordan, Hollywood starlet, was discovered on a barracks
wall by a Roundup staffer, whose wolfish eyes were attracted by her limpid eyes and other things. He escaped
with it amid a hail of bullets to bring same to all you lucky readers.
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Maj. Charles J. "Deacon" Miller, of Dexter, Mo., veteran pilot of the XX Bomber Command Super-Fortress "Deacon's
Disciples," holds the plane's mascot teddy bear, Col. Elmer E. Elmer, at a B-29 base in India.
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Brig. Gen. J. M. Thompson, Theater G-4, was reunited with his son, Lt. William A. Thompson, when the latter flew
his B-24 in from the States. The General hadn't seen his son in three years, just after Bill had been accepted as
an Air Cadet. The younger Thompson will serve with the 14th Air Force in China.
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The furtherest south in Burma of American radio teams, these men are with the 36th Division of Maj. Gen. Francis
W. Festing's command. Left to right are T/4 Robert R. Krieg, Saginaw, Mich.; Pvt. Joseph Eichhorn, Brooklyn, N.Y.;
T/5 Phillip Kurpeawskk, Grenwich, Conn., (seated); Pvt. Norman W. Irion, Westfield, N.J., and T/5 William Fowler
of Stamford, Conn.
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These men had much to do with conversion of B-25's to Malaria Control Spray units. Lt. Dodge E. Leary, Cambria,
Wis., test-flew the airplanes. Robert T. Wise, Cleveland, O., John J. Uebele, Pittsburgh, Pa., and Daniel Chako,
Girard, O., American civilians at Bangalore Air Depot of Air Service Command, participated in the tank and spray
installations.
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