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Show i , h 1 ' , '.V t . " " , 4?v! ' r ' '. . ... - i S " - J" 1 V I ' y - ' f -weekly , v"..- - ficturevf Q War is an unpleasant business. busi-ness. And like all such conflicts, the Korean war is dirty, bloody and often boring. In the picture above American troops rest during a pause in the fighting in the only available place a ditch beside the road. If anyone still entertains the idea that war is glamorous, the picture at the right should dispel that illusion two Gl's sitting in the rain between be-tween firing missions against the enemy. There are many such periods of waiting and misery and boredom during the course of a war. f - v I I . ; , ; I - - -I fl f f ! r , in 4 ' i( f S I , . ' i I' y" "fv? v.. -I And there is death in war. The U. S. soldier (above) was killed with his hands tied after he was captured by North Koreans. Ko-reans. The impersonal in war is represented by the tank (right) advancing into battle. ii 4. A , J. , ( ' t si , s i ,-l u , , , I f f ' O Many men in World War II received a new and greater understanding of religion in the midst of battle. The same is true in the Korean conflict. The U. S. army takes its chaplains into the field so men who are dying, or may die, can receive religious aid and comfort. com-fort. In the above picture, Mass is being held near the battlefront with an improvised altar. v v 'v - -' ' s V " . ku - , - X, V v ' - Q Above, a wounded soldier is helped to a first-aid station by a buddy. This is the enemy (left) shown as he is brought in by American soldiers. A guerrilla, he had a bag of hand grenades in his possession. |