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Show Weeks Of Back Pain JUNIOR Teast it oy ga Min Gardser, Let’s Draw a Head or Tail By Ann Davidow c a vu J) “+ 2 2 4 4 CHEST Can You Answer This Offhand? eoeceeeevreeeses GUARANTEED TO POM AeL male] ole Now! Rid eorbeeoereeeereeeeee ee . . . ° ° . . . . . . . . cope cece ceees ®tx 2 ‘home of mice completely with d-CON*Mouse-Prufe,theamazing mouse-killer that's: CLEANEST. ++ no muss—no fuss— no messy traps . . . =~ How_many tines has a stand- . ard dinner fork—three, four,five, . . six, or seven? . (See Answer Boz) . See ewer eseece . . Answer Rex . ‘anog :zaasuy pusyyo * UID) MEN-B-OPHT . “Yosessey : SEL 8] OFM . This could be the head of an Indian man !) Or a Thanksgiving turkey “spreading his fan. . . ° . . ° . . . e * e . z ° . . . . ° . . . . : eoeceeee eee re ee sees eseeeeeeesee eee eseeeeeeseeeseene EASIEST... just pull tab—bait feeds mutomatically 5... household pets *when you use it like it says on the package, yet is guaranteed to keep your place mouse-free. GET d-CON MOUSE -PRUFE! I'll Rememberthe Brave Men of Dong Xoai (Continued from page 21) rocket launcher we had with us. Then I hunched up, sighted—or tried to. The sight was broken! There ‘was no time to waste, so I let loose a round,It arched far overhead. A sec- ond shot struckbelow the schoolhouse. As the YC machine gun began firing away, I fired « third shot. It pulverized the schoolhouse wall. Minutes passed; not a sound came from the schoolhouse. “Let's go back,” I yelled, and we sprinted across the compound. From the west wall, an automatic weapon took us under fire. Hit in my right arm and leg, I dropped to the ground and dragged myself behind a jeep. I saw Shields lying in the dirt, fully exposed. He had taken a burst in the stomach. I crawled out and tried carrying him to cover. He was too much for me, so 1dragged him to the comparative safety of the jeep. —My arm was swelling, butthe leg - wound wasn’t bad, so I ran, crouched, to the building. “Shields is out there in bad shape,” I told the men. They didn’t waste time but went right out, we can hold on much longer without a resupply of ammo.” “We've got a Caribou airborne,” came the reply. “He's got supplies and says he’s coming in for a drop.” was quick: “Where do we land?” About30 or 40 meters away was a small clearing. Maybe, I hoped, two helicopters could squeeze into it. With wouldn’t have a chance to make it through the intense VCfire. All we could do through the dreary morning was wait. Then, about 10 might be able to rush our wounded to the ships and clamber aboard before the infiltrators could get us. Somehow,thepilotswiggled three helicopters into that clearing. 1 had established loading priorities, starting with the seriously wounded and working back. As the choppers squeezed in and out, about 35 of us lifted off from Dong Xoai 14 hours after the first mortar rounds. When I later returned to Dong I told them—asbsolutely no. The plane a.m., the clouds began lifting. AIEs, F-100s, and B-57s laid it on the VC. At-times, portions of napalm containers bounded against the building, and we could feel scorching heat. This was close air support in its finest hour. Butstill the VC kept us under constant small-arms fire and periodic mortar barrages. The concrete building was crumbling around us, In a few hours, we'd be half buried-in-de- bris without ammo to put up even a last defense. T felt we could make ourfinal stand better in the 105 Howitzer gun pits nearby, so. we carried the seriously wounded to the communications working their way through VC fire to bring him back only to see him bunker and holed up in the 105 positions. This could be it, I thought to got on the radio: “We're low on myself—but about this time a rescue plan began to evolve. I radioed that die hours later). ; better visibility, the Air Force could keep the VCs’ heads down, andwe- Xoai, Special Forces men were busy rebuilding the camp and village defenses and assisting in resettling the—population, treating the” sick, — and planning civic-action programs. Things like that are part ofour job, too—a part largely overlooked. Many people read about the battle of Dong Xoai and the medals won there. But-not much was ever said about how Special Forces helped rebuild the village—and that our purposes in being there ammo. No medical supplies. A lot of wounded, too, and if some don’t get Care soon, we'll lose them. Don’t think 2 Family Weekly, November £0, 1966 after the battle is forgotten. + |