Seventh Infantry Division - Yearbook (South Korea)

 - Class of 1954

Page 188 of 276

 

Seventh Infantry Division - Yearbook (South Korea) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 188 of 276
Page 188 of 276



Seventh Infantry Division - Yearbook (South Korea) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 187
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Page 188 text:

K 77 , W, v S 1,5 . V, if 'Ci' 5 'ui w-:Aiwa eu? . H., ,-awk . Advancing behind the profeciion of an M-4 funk. tered back down the slope and the post was secured. The Reds, meanwhile, had launched a new attack against Pork Chop the night before at 2305. For two days until April 18 at 0055 both forces fought at close quarters under heavy artillery fire from both sides. At 0055 the 18th, an enemy company attacked Pork Chop and minutes later succeeded in reaching the edge of friendly trenches. The position was reinforced immedi- ately and the Reds were rammed back down the hill. By 0310 on 18 April the fight was over and Pork Chop was once again secured. During this intense attempt by the Reds to invade the main UN line, Outpost Arsenal was also battered by heavy artillery fire and enemy attack. It, too, withstood the onslaught and drove the Com- munists back. It was during this period that Hollywood came to Korea. Hal Wallis and Owen Crump of Paramount Pic- tures had wanted to film a real story about the Ko- Keeping fo the sides of the roadway in order to fake cover in a hurry. 1 - iff: S ' --if-U. ' F . , . 5 5737 4. Q f V55-555 L ,. fain- ., if 1.4 Tye -1 :J 5 .rz -3, .7 7 - . .2 -3 :QV V ' fi ig' .,.7,f 7357 V ,7...,. ., , -,.-g- f-- :I ,5HV. 2 4 V.1':-' 5 ...gf 'aff '.V -.12 55-7 A f5gV.-525-T' '?5'f'5',s.,if .VI 'V5-JT ' 7gf -ff ' F 1.57 V -'-- '- 51 55 ' -Q7 77w 1-.7 3 7 7+-.Q ,M-fy 1 7, . -H 5 Vw ' . ti 'N' Q , we .. ' ,- A . ,K J 77 .R g .. . qc glee? -. -5,'+V.,75V. 7 5,-J V ' A ., nf .Vi . f 5... .. - ,, 5 '75, .X if . '!-5. -' 55 15? 1- . . Q , .fish 7 -55 it 1i',f5 .7 .7 V uf ' -' gi ' AV , 5? - V 'ff 'v 5 . af, ,. 'Z ' tif' 'zffii -Q'-'1 5 QV 5' 5 v ga iii ' V1 .if WK 77 - K K7 7qK,KKx,iKKx KAI K QV7 8, N, Kiwi. 7.V .ZKLX7 7 KK? K. K 7, K QM TVYX in 17 A7 .7 , K7m., 7 KK K jg .V 7A .. ,. 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Page 187 text:

,, ff? if s in --sv is ' ' , ag- ., an f The Ethiopian Bn. is trained in the use of the bayonet. stalled, they reorganized and tried again, this time reaching the southwest slopes of the overbearing hill. Casualties had been heavy and the Chinese were looking down the throats of the counterattacking force. By 2200 UN forces had swarmed over about one-quarter of Old Baldy and the attack had once again bogged down. They remained there for the rest of the night. At 0430 they tried again, this time Company maneuvering around the right flank to assault the NCS? northeast finger of the objective. Once again the Reds blasted them with all types of fire. The UN forces were literally walking into a wall of gunfire. Cut down, the force once again dug in and held their new line. By 1315, the battalion commander reported he had a fight- ing strength left of only four officers and fifty-four men. He was ordered to reorganize his attack once more and to evacuate the dead and wounded from the gutted hillside. Company B was then ordered to pull back to Westview and hold that position while the lst Bat- talion withdrew. The Division Commander then ordered the 2nd Battalion of the 31st Infantry to prepare to launch an attack on the hill. For five days they practiced the assault on terrain similar to Old Baldy. Then, at a conference on the morning of 30 March, the Eighth Army Commander and Major General Arthur G. Tru- deau, who had assumed command of the 7th from Gen- eral Smith on 21 March, decided that the psychological and tactical advantages of Old Baldy were not essential to the defense of the sector. After a week of attack and counterattack, Old Baldy was abandoned. For the next three weeks the see-saw battle continued, with the Reds unsuccessfully attempting several major assaults on our positions along the MLR and OPLR. On 13 April, Outpost Dale was attacked by heavy enemy forces twice in the same day and both times Dale's de- fending force threw the Reds back. At 0202 the next morning, another enemy platoon probed Dale but with- drew under heavy fire by units on the hill. The heavy barrages which had preceded these attacks had torn up many of the communications trenches on the position and damaged or destroyed several defending ones. At 23 16 on 16 April, Dale was hit by two more enemy com- panies. By this time, however, Companies L and I of the 31st Infantry were attached to the lst Battalion. An intense fireiight followed as the enemy closed in. Through heavy VT fires, the Reds charged at the de- fense positions and bitter hand-to-hand combat fol- lowed. But Dale held. At 0450, the Communists scat-



Page 189 text:

fi jf! On the firing range. rean conflict ever since it had started. Crump had writ- ten the story, which appropriately enough concerned the action of a typical platoon during a quiet day on the front. This day in the film was the day the cease fire was called and the picture was a tragic, realistic and, at times, humorous account of life along the MLR on the last day of War. The plot was familiar to us. It concerned patrol actions and assaults on hilltops and those harrowing jobs often referred to as routine W -amass-v Radio shop. Surprisingly enough, Crump, Who directed the picture, brought no glamour boys from Hollywood to play the leads. Instead he picked men from the 7th Infantry Division and they played themselves in the picture. True, the names were changed, but each man in the cast was in reality, portraying himself in this War picture. Later, Bosley Crowther, the famous New York Times critic, said of the picture that though the soldiers who do the performing demonstrate no professional acting Outdoor class in the use of small arms.

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