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- <text id=93HT1408>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1950: American Fighting-Man
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 1, 1951
- Man of the Year
- American Fighting-Man: Destiny's Draftee
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The man of 1950 was not a statesman; Dean Acheson and his
- fellow diplomats of the free world had, in 1950, notably failed
- to stop the march of Communism. Nor was 1950's man a general; the
- best commander of the year, MacArthur, had blundered and been
- beaten. Nor a scientist, for science--so sure at the century's
- beginning that it had all the answers--now waited for the
- politicians (or anyone else) to find a way of controlling the
- terrible power that science had released. Nor an industrialist,
- for 1950, although it produced more goods than any other year in
- the world's history, was not preoccupied with goods, but with
- life & death. Nor a scholar, for the world of 1950 was surfeited
- with undigested facts, and sought its salvation not in the
- conquest of new knowledge but in what it could relearn from old
- old, old lessons. 1950's man might turn out to be the aging
- conspirator, Joseph Stalin but as the year closed, that dreadful
- prospect was far from certain; if he was winning the game and not
- just an inning, Stalin's historians would record that 1950--and
- all other years from the death of Lenin--belonged to him. Or
- 1950's man might turn out to be an unknown saint, quietly living
- above the clash of armies and ideas. Him, too, the future would
- have to find.
- </p>
- <p> As the year ended, 1950's man seemed to be an American in
- the bitterly unwelcome role of the fighting-man. It was not a
- role the American had sought, either as an individual or as a
- nation. The U.S. fighting-man was not civilization's crusader,
- but destiny's draftee.
- </p>
- <p> The Peculiar Soldier. Most of the men in U.S. uniform around
- the world had enlisted voluntarily, but few had taken to
- themselves the old, proud label of "regular," few had thought
- they would fight, and fewer still had foreseen the incredibly
- dirty and desperate war that waited for them. They hated it, as
- soldiers in all lands and times have hated wars, but the American
- had some special reasons for hating it. He was the most comfort-
- loving creature who had ever walked the earth--and he much
- preferred riding to walking. As well as comfort, he loved and
- expected order; he yearned, like other men, for a predictable
- world, and the fantastic fog and gamble of war struck him as a
- terrifying affront.
- </p>
- <p> Yet he was rightly as well as inevitably cast for his role
- as fighting-man in the middle of the 20th Century. No matter how
- the issue was defined, whether he was said to be fighting for
- progress or freedom or faith or survival, the American's heritage
- and character were deeply bound up in the struggle. More
- specifically, it was inevitable that the American be in the
- forefront of this battle because it was the U.S. which had
- unleased gigantic forces of technology and organizational ideas.
- These had created the great 20th Century revolution. Communism
- was a reaction, an effort to turn the worldwide forces set free
- by U.S. progress back into the old channels of slavery.
- </p>
- <p> The American fighting-man could not win this struggle
- without millions of allies--and it was the unfinished (almost
- unstarted) business of his government to find and mobilize those
- allies through U.N. and by all other means. But the allies would
- never be found unless the American fighting-man first took his
- post and did his duty. On June 27, 1950, he was ordered to his
- post. Since then, the world has watched how he went about doing
- his duty.
- </p>
- <p> He has been called soft and tough, resourceful and
- unskilled, unbelievably brave and unbelievably timid, thoroughly
- disciplined and scornful of discipline. One way or another, all
- of these generalizations are valid. He is a peculiar soldier,
- product of a peculiar country. His two outstanding
- characteristics seem to be contradictory. He is more of an
- individualist than soldiers of other nations, and at the same
- time he is far more conscious of, and dependent on, teamwork. He
- fights as he lives, a part of a vast, complicated machine--but a
- thinking, deciding part, not an inert cog.
- </p>
- <p> "In Our Time..." A British officer who has seen much of
- the U.S. fighting-man in Korea last week gave this shrewd,
- balanced appraisal:
- </p>
- <p> "Your chaps have everything it takes to make great
- soldiers--intelligence, physique, doggedness and an amazing
- ability to endure adversity with grace. The thing they lack is
- proper discipline. They also would be better off with a little
- more training in the art of retreat. I know they like to say that
- the American soldier is taught only offensive tactics, but if
- Korea has proved nothing else it has proved the absolute
- necessity of knowing how to retreat in order. Your marines know
- how, but your Army men just don't. In our time, you know, we were
- able to make quite a thing of the rearguard action.
- </p>
- <p> "Also, it seems to me that you are a little too reluctant to
- take casualties for your own good. I've seen an entire American
- division held up all day because a regimental commander was
- unwilling to risk what at most would have been ten or 20
- casualties. I don't want to sound blood-thirsty, but 20
- casualties in a light action today may frequently save 100 or so
- tomorrow."
- </p>
- <p> Like all British observers of the U.S. Army, this observer
- was both envious and appalled at the bulk and variety of U.S.
- equipment and its "amenities." One Briton in Korea says that he
- saw tanks held up for hours by beer and refrigerator trucks.
- Another, who had been with U.S. troops landing in Southern
- France, said last week. "In France, I thought someone was just
- having his little joke when they brought the office wastebaskets
- ashore from the ship. But damned if they didn't do the same thing
- in Korea, too."
- </p>
- <p> Night Into Day. The American fighting-man who went forth to
- battle, brandishing his chocolate bars, his beer cans and his
- wastebaskets, was (contrary to the expectations of many) no lily.
- He had proved himself able to endure the tortures of climate and
- the thrusts of a brave and well-led enemy. His soldierly virtues
- were attested by the fact that he had been able to stay in Korea
- at all.
- </p>
- <p> His defects were many, serious--and understandable. Unless
- he was in an extremely well-trained outfit, he was prone to inner
- panic at the opening of a night attack. On several occasions, Red
- units had broken up American units by night charges accompanied
- by shouting and bugle calls. Old soldiers, aware that the Army
- needs sterner training before it goes to battle, said that the
- answer to this was more night training. A more typically American
- answer was in practice last week around the Hungnam beachhead:
- lavish use of star shells, which changed night to day. Another
- defect was that the U.S. Army was roadbound by its enormous
- supply train, a defect that grew out of the very strength of U.S.
- technology. The relative security of American life had dulled the
- U.S. fighting-man's caution, made him unwary about taking cover
- in the presence of the enemy. Said a sergeant instructing new
- arrivals in Korea: "If you see anyone on the skyline, don't
- shoot. He's probably one of our guys."
- </p>
- <p> These were explainable demerits. More surprising--and
- disgraceful--was the fact that the American fighting-man in
- Korea, despite his country's vaunted industrial superiority,
- found that his government had not given him weapons as numerous
- or as good as he needed and had a right to expect.
- </p>
- <p> The Men. More important than the weapons in 1950, as in
- 1066, were the men who used them. What were they like? Better
- trained, more experienced and older than the G.I.s of World War
- II, the U.S. Army in battle in Korea was the nearest approach to
- a professional army that the U.S. had ever sent into war. The men
- in it did not lend themselves to easy characterization. Nobody
- could find a typical U.S. soldier of 1950. There was no one type;
- there were as many types as there were men. Here are some of the
- men:
- </p>
- <p> PRIVATE KENNETH SHADRICK, 19, of Skin Fork, W.Va., the first
- U.S. infantryman reported killed in Korea, fired his bazooka at a
- Red tank on July 5, looked up to check his aim, and was cut down
- by machine-gun fire.
- </p>
- <p> MAY. GEN. WILLIAM F. DEAN, trapped with his 4th Infantry
- Division in Taejon, sent his men out of the besieged, burning
- city while he went after Red tanks with a bazooka; he is listed
- as missing in action.
- </p>
- <p> CORP. HIDEO HASIMOTO, a Japanese-American who had been
- interned in the U.S. during World War II, kept hurling hand
- grenades at the storming Reds; after he ran out of grenades, he
- threw rocks.
- </p>
- <p> 2ND LIEUT. JOHN CHARLES TRENT, of Memphis, captain of West
- Point's 1949 football team, was killed by a rifle bullet at
- Wonsan, while he was walking from foxhole to foxhole to see that
- his men--fighting for three days & nights--had not fallen asleep.
- </p>
- <p> PFC. DONALD PATTON, who in his frontline foxhole slept
- through the bloodiest night attack which the Reds hurled against
- the U.S.'s position on the famed "Bowling Alley" near Taegu, woke
- up the next morning, looked at the smoking, knocked-out Red tanks
- and cried in a frightened voice: "Holy Cow! What happened?"
- </p>
- <p> PFC. JOHN D. LASHARE, 17, of Moundsville, W.Va., went around
- reciting the 23rd Psalm ("Yea, though I walk through the valley
- of the shadow of death...").
- </p>
- <p> PFC. JOHN A. PALMA, of Brooklyn, was captured by the Chinese
- Reds and later released. Said he: "We prayed like hell all the
- time."
- </p>
- <p> T/SGT. WAYNE H. KERR, of Cleveland, was on safe desk duty,
- but got into an L-5 at night when other pilots had refused the
- mission; holding a flashlight in one hand to light up the
- instrument panel, he landed on a tiny, badly lighted mountain
- strip and flew out a wounded marine.
- </p>
- <p> CAPTAIN "WHISTLIN' JOE" ROGERS, 26, of the 36th Squadron,
- Eight Fighter-Bomber Group, had probably killed more North
- Koreans and Chinese than any other flyer. During World War II, to
- his disgust, he had been an instructor, saw no combat. He had
- made up for it in Korea. Air Force men liked to talk about Joe's
- exploits--his trick of barrel-rolling when he came in for a
- strafing run, the time he attached a whistle to one of his wings
- to scare the enemy, thus earned his nickname. The story they
- liked best was the one about Joe chatting at the bar with a B-26
- pilot who, not knowing Joe's record, was beefing because he had
- to fly combat two days in a row. "How many missions you got?"
- asked Joe. "Eight," said the other flyer. Joe didn't say
- anything. At that point a third man joined them and asked Joe how
- many missions he had. "Hundert an'fifty-three," said Joe. The B-
- 26 man quietly set down his glass and faded away.
- </p>
- <p> SERGEANT JOHN LLOYD ran a motor pool. Helping a war
- correspondent fix a flat tire, Lloyd talked very American talk,
- and very happy. "You need any gas? I am the stingiest man alive
- with gas. Anybody comes in here with more than half a tank don't
- get any, that's all. They get mad. But when we get orders to
- move, I have got some saved up, and then I'm not such a bad guy."
- The tire repaired, Sergeant Lloyd went over to a compressor which
- would not work, turned a screw, took hold of a valve, told a G.I.
- who was standing by to kick the thing; after three tries, the
- thing worked. "Of course," he said, in explanation of the
- procedure, "the bad problem is parts. We don't do bad. If we come
- across anything on the road, damaged, we strip it for parts. When
- we got time, we send a party out to scour the road for vehicles,
- gook or otherwise." A jeep marked H.Q. 35 drove up. "You see old
- 35 there," said Sergeant Lloyd. "That is our reserve. Whenever a
- jeep comes up here and needs a part bad, we take it off old 35."
- How did he replace the parts on old 35? "Ah, that is a
- professional secret. If I don't keep this stuff rolling around
- here, it's just my tail, that's all."
- </p>
- <p> 54 Days to Pusan. Very few Americans got to Korea because
- they wanted to fight. PRIVATE STANLEY POPKO, of Bayonne, N.J.,
- for instance, was in Korea because he had wanted an education.
- His father was a night watchman for Standard Oil of New Jersey;
- there was never any money to spare in the family. After Stan
- graduated from Bayonne Technical High School last year, he looked
- around for a job that would permit him to go on to night school,
- finally decided to let Uncle Sam take care of his further
- education. First he tried the Navy, but it had a waiting list.
- "So I thought," says Popko, "I'd go see what the Army had to
- offer. At the Army place there was a first lieutenant. He was a
- real good salesman. First he said I could pick my own branch and
- then I could go to school wherever I wanted to. Boy, did he sell
- me!"
- </p>
- <p> They taught Popko to fire an M-I rifle and a carbine. The
- closes he came to artillery and flamethrowers was an exhibition;
- he also saw a tank from a distance. After his basic training was
- over, he went to Quartermaster School at Camp Lee, Va., where
- they made him a salvage technician, i.e., "one of the guys who
- clean up the battlefields."
- </p>
- <p> On Sunday, June 25, Popko slept late, played a double-header
- softball game against a local bakery company. When he returned to
- barracks, someone turned on a radio. The North Koreans had
- attacked the South Koreans. "We figured that if the Koreans
- wanted to fight among themselves, let them fight. It was like
- that revolution in China. It was nothing to do with us."
- </p>
- <p> Fifty-four days later, Popko was in Pusan.
- </p>
- <p> A lieutenant was just about to assign Popko to duty in a
- warehouse when a sergeant rushed in, crying: "They got to have
- riflemen." Popko thought: "There is the only guy in the world I'd
- like to shoot." The sergeant won his argument with the lieutenant
- and got Popko.
- </p>
- <p> "I Was All Alone." Unhappy, scared and wishing he had never
- left Bayonne, Popko was loaded onto a truck with 60 other G.I.s,
- and started along dusty "Cavalry Boulevard" toward the Naktong
- River front. Says Popko: "After the first couple of days we got
- to be pretty good. We learned the tricks. We knew what to watch
- for and when to fire and how to take care of yourself. If you can
- live through the first couple of days, you got a chance."
- </p>
- <p> About three weeks after Popka had moved to the front, the
- big attack came--part of the enemy's hard-driving try to take
- Taegu. Popko's squad was holding the left side of Hill 303.
- (Scene of the infamous massacre of U.S. prisoners by North Korean
- troops.) The enemy came up in three manzai-screaming waves. "Once
- I was going to get out of the hole and throw my rifle away and go
- over the hill. You can't explain how it is. You just think you
- can't stand it any more. But the guy in the next hole to me
- started talking sense to me."
- </p>
- <p> By 3 a.m., all was quietly. Popko's platoon sergeant
- discovered that all the other men on Hill 303 had either been
- killed or pushed back. Popko and his buddies managed to get off
- the hill with the help of a South Korean who led them through
- enemy lines. At dawn, they were ordered to retake the hill. A
- couple of times that morning, Stan Popko ran up & down that hill,
- chasing the enemy or being chased by him. Then he went up for the
- last time. "It seemed like I was all alone. There were supposed
- to be guys on both sides of me, but I couldn't see them. I spent
- a lot of time in Korea looking back down a road and wondering
- when someone was going to come up it and help us. There never
- seemed to be anyone coming up.
- </p>
- <p> "I kept going up this hill carefully and then all of a
- sudden I see this light machine gun up real close. There were two
- gooks with it. I grabbed a grenade and threw it at 'em. The
- damned thing was a dud and didn't go off. The first thing I felt
- was my leg hurt real bad. Then the other leg hurt and both my
- arms were numb. I yelled, `I got hit!' but there was no one
- around. I looked up and saw both of these gooks coming for me. I
- couldn't find my rifle and I knew I couldn't throw my last
- grenade because I could hardly move my arms."
- </p>
- <p> "I Lay There Real Still." "I figure that they're going to
- get me. I didn't think about very much. I just said to myself the
- bastards won't get me alive and they aren't going to live either.
- I got the last grenade and held it. When they got real close to
- me, I was going to pull the pin and let it go between us."
- </p>
- <p> "I lay there real still and they come up slow as hell. I was
- just ready to pull the pin when a hell of an explosion came
- between me and them. It must have been our artillery. The next
- thing I knew I was at the bottom of a rise. I must have been
- rolled 100 feet or more. What happened to the gooks I don't know.
- They weren't around."
- </p>
- <p> Stan Popko, hurting bad, started crawling. He figured he
- crawled almost a mile before he looked up and saw a tank coming
- down the road.
- </p>
- <p> "The turret man was waving his big 50-cal. machine gun at
- me, and I figured he was going to let me have it. I yelled, `I'm
- a G.I.' He looked at me and then the other way. The tank went
- right by me.
- </p>
- <p> "I got up some way and started to run. I took two steps and
- fell down. I saw two G.I.s coming toward me and I passed out. I
- stopped worrying.
- </p>
- <p> "I came to the next morning about 6 o'clock and I felt for
- my right hand. I couldn't find it. I started yelling like hell
- and this South Korean kid who brought water around to our
- stretchers came in and asked me what the trouble was. He showed
- my hand to me. It was in a cast and I just was scared to look for
- it. I thought sure they'd cut it off."
- </p>
- <p> Later that day Popko was taken to the Pusan airfield and
- flown to a hospital near Tokyo. Two weeks later they sent him
- home to Bayonne, N.J. A lot of people asked him would he do it
- again--enlist if he knew what was ahead? Said Stan Popko: "I
- guess I would. I can't see myself spending my life as a
- counterman or hanging around streetcorners."
- </p>
- <p> The Sun Never Sets. A man's past, the things that shape his
- character, are reduced in wartime to a few sentences in a
- personnel file. But ENSIGN DAVID TATUM, like any fighting-man, is
- the kind of fighter he is in large measure because of the way he
- grew up and the things he learned. Tatum flies a Grumman jet
- fighter off the carrier Valley Forge. When he was a boy in Baton
- Rouge, La., his father gave him a BB-gun, with instructions to
- stand guard over the Tatums' little back garden, then beset by
- seed-snatching sparrows. David scared off the birds; frequently
- he hit one, but he didn't enjoy the sport. "I would look at these
- sparrows and think, `He didn't do me any harm. He was minding his
- own business.' I felt guilty."
- </p>
- <p> He learned the Ten Commandments in Sunday School, but they
- meant nothing to him. "My mother taught me that it was right to
- go to church, but that you didn't have to go to church to have
- religion. She taught me to hate a hypocrite--a Sunday
- Christian." His parents also taught him to respect older people--a
- lesson driven home more than once with a switch. "I didn't
- mind that. It didn't hurt--it only stung a little. I would
- rather be beaten than fussed at."
- </p>
- <p> In school, he won second place in an essay contest on "Why I
- Am Glad I Am an American." He had gotten most of his ideas on
- this subject from a comic book whose hero was Uncle Sam. The book
- said that Uncle Sam was happy because he was free to go around
- and "lip off" about anything he pleased, because "he didn't have
- to mind his Ps and Qs."
- </p>
- <p> In sixth-grade geography, David Tatum learned that there was
- a world beyond America. He had heard a little about the Roman
- Empire, which conquered the world and, in time, fell. He learned
- about the British Empire, which also ruled a large part of the
- world--in fact, said Teacher, the sun never set on it. Tatum could
- not understand that, so the teacher got a globe and patiently
- explained the celestial facts. In a larger sense, Tatum never
- understood; he still wonders with a mixture of curiosity and awe
- how the British managed to keep control of so much land, so many
- people.
- </p>
- <p> Sparrows & People. His seventh-grade teacher taught him some
- current affairs--something about the isms. Naziism to him was the
- swastika, and evil because it was against the underdog. Fascism
- to him was a fat man on a balcony. Communism? Today he says
- without hesitation and with deep seriousness: "I will not live
- under Communism."
- </p>
- <p> In 1946, just after he turned 18 and liable for the draft,
- he volunteered for the Navy. Soon after he joined, he sat in the
- movies holding hands with his girl. They were showing newsreels
- of the Bikini A-bomb test. For the first time he was frightened
- of war. Without knowing it, he squeezed Mary's hand so hard that
- she cried out. "I was sorry for those ships going down," he says.
- "I told myself, `Tatum, you ought to be in a foxhole, not on a
- ship. This is where a man can get hurt.'" But he really liked
- ships. "A ship is home," he says.
- </p>
- <p> The Navy sent him to college (Rice Institute in Houston),
- then to pre-flight school at Pensacola, Fla. In December 1948, he
- qualified for carrier duty. On July 31, 1950, he joined the
- Valley Forge at Okinawa. On Aug. 6, he flew his first combat
- mission. The next day, on another mission, was the first time the
- 22-year-old, raised under the rule of law & order and under the
- Ten Commandments, killed a man. In his journal, Tatum wrote later
- in neat block letters: "Monday, August 7. Armed Recon Southwest
- Korea. Up to Taejon and Seoul. Shot up 2 junks, one supplies.
- Burned other troops. Burned in water." Somehow, he did not feel
- about the dead Koreans as he had about his father's sparrows.
- "Probably because I didn't have to pick up the Koreans and look
- at them."
- </p>
- <p> But jet fighters over Korea flew very low; sometimes a pilot
- had to look at the people he shot. On one mission, Tatum was
- firing into some troops moving along the road. With them walked
- an elderly woman. She was hit, and literally exploded: she had
- obviously been carrying ammunition in her pack. "That I don't
- like. If you have never seen arms and legs flying through the air..."
- says Tatum, his sentence dangling like a severed limb.
- </p>
- <p> None of the other fellows in his squadron liked this
- business of shooting civilians. But, "I figured if we had to kill
- ten civilians to kill one soldier who might later shoot at us, we
- were justified."
- </p>
- <p> Butterflies & Men in White. Tatum flew an average of one
- mission every two days, about an hour and 40 minutes to each
- mission. The entries in his journal are phrased like a boy's
- diary notes on how many butterflies he caught or what odd shells
- he found on the beach, but there is a deadly difference:
- </p>
- <p> "August 12. Armed Recon. Hit Kimpo airfield, burned 4 Yak
- fighters, damaged one more. Burned truck south of Taejon. Heavy
- flak.
- </p>
- <p> "August 13. Armed Recon north of 38th. Burned trucks, one
- bus, one motor launch...Encountered 20-mm. & 40-mm, ack-ack.
- Hit on plane by 20-mm. Landed aboard, wire broke, hit fence.
- </p>
- <p> "August 26. Armed Recon...Destroyed 3 trucks, 2 loaded
- with supplies.
- </p>
- <p> "September 16. Strafed & killed many troops on road from
- Taejon to Seoul, strafed & sank junk full of troops on Han River
- northeast of Inchon. Caught troops coming out cave in hill to
- board junk. Many casualties..."
- </p>
- <p> On Sept. 19, Tatum was shot down--by two bullets from North
- Korean rifles. He did not even notice that the plane had been hit
- until the pressure gauge on the instrument panel began to fall of
- to zero, and he realized that one of the slugs had hit fuel
- lines. He managed to turn around and ditch the plane about a mile
- offshore in the sea. He remembers scrambling into the life raft
- and watching the plane sink slowly. "I gave it sort of a half
- salute." His main worry was what his plane captain would think
- when Ensign Tatum was reported missing. A British cruiser picked
- him up.
- </p>
- <p> That evening Tatum was unable to sleep. He thought about his
- life-insurance policy and how, if he had got killed, the Navy
- would have had to read all the letters from his girl which he had
- saved. "A hell of a job for somebody." But then he pulled his
- blanket over his shoulder and went to sleep. His crash landing is
- the only war experience Tatum dreams about. The men in white he
- shot on the road, or the old woman's detached arms and legs,
- never disturb his sleep.
- </p>
- <p> Ensign Tatum describes patriotism this way: "I don't
- necessarily believe in the big shots as individuals. But there
- are a lot of people like me and you. I believe in them. I believe
- in the American girl I see walking in the street. I have never
- even met her, but I believe in her."
- </p>
- <p> "If These People Aren't Stopped." If there is any one story
- of a U.S. fighting-man that can sum up the best in all the
- stories, it is that of Marine SERGEANT ROBERT WARD, a full-
- blooded Cherokee Indian who grew up in Los Angeles. He got to be
- a wonderful marksman with a bow & arrow. When he got hungry he
- would go out into the country and kill himself a rabbit. Ward's
- two older brothers were killed in action in World War II. Robert
- served in the Navy, later joined the marines. After he went into
- action in Korea last summer, his mother wrote to the President
- and to the Marine Corps, begging that sergeant Ward, her only
- surviving son, be transferred from the combat zone. The marines'
- General Clifton Gates agreed to apply the "only surviving son"
- rule. (On their own or their parents' request, sole surviving
- sons serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces may be
- assigned duty outside the combat zone, if another son or daughter
- in the family has been killed as a result of the "hazards" of
- service since 1940.) Leather-faced Sergeant Ward intercepted the
- transfer orders, went on fighting.
- </p>
- <p> Eventually, despite his protests, Ward was transferred to a
- desk job in Japan. Last week his mother received a letter from
- Sergeant Ward. He wrote:
- </p>
- <p> "I'm no hero, but...if these people aren't stopped here
- on their own ground, we will have to share the thing which so
- many have died to prevent their loved ones from sharing--the
- sight of death in our own backyards; of women and children being
- victims of these people. I went on the warpath for the right to
- do my bit to keep our people free and proud and now I'm shackled
- to a useless job.
- </p>
- <p> "I ask you, my mother, to free me so I can once again be
- free to help my boys. They placed their faith in me and...whenever
- I led I brought them all back and now someone else leads
- them and I know they need me. Maybe in a sense I need them--my
- dirty, stinking and loyal platoon.
- </p>
- <p> "Once I cried before you when I thought I'd lost someone
- whom I loved very dearly, and once again I did cry when I was
- told I must leave my men. So, I ask of you the one thing your
- heart does not want to do--release me to fight.
- </p>
- <p> "I pace my room feeling useless, being no good to anyone.
- I'm no barracks-parade-ground marine--I'm a Cherokee Indian and
- I'm happiest being miserable with my men up in those mountains.
- </p>
- <p> "I know you'll understand and that your blessings will go
- with me into whatever the future holds in store for us..."
- </p>
- <p> Sergeant Ward was sent back to Korea and his dirty, stinking
- and loyal platoon. His mother said: "When men in our tribe say
- something, they mean it."
- </p>
- <p> Not all of the U.S. fighting-men are as brave as Sergeant
- Ward. Very few of them can say what they mean as fervidly as he.
- But most of them know what they are fighting against--"The
- sight of death in our own backyards; of women and children being
- victims of these people."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-