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Penknife Surgery. Pfc. Tully Cox of Altoona, Ala. was only 17 years old when the Reds shot him in both legs, then captured him, one day late in 1950. He was one of 20 men guarding a 40-truck convoy carrying some 800 U.S. wounded toward Hamhung. "The Chinese climbed up on the trucks," he said, "and sprayed burp guns into the wounded. Then they bayoneted them. The wounded were screaming. They couldn't do anything." Pfc. Cox assumed that most of them died. There were no medics at the first P.W. camp he went to. so two buddies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BATTLE OF KOREA: The Boys Come Home | 5/11/1953 | See Source »

...height of the retreat from the Chosin Reservoir last winter, Meirowsky arrived at Hamhung with a duffel bag full of instruments. He elbowed some space in a field hospital, persuaded a peacetime obstetrician to team up with him, and got to work. By the time the evacuation was over, he had proved his point that brain operations could be performed under com bat conditions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Neurosurgery Up Forward | 9/10/1951 | See Source »

...Sergeant John A. Pittman, 22, Company C, 23rd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Division, a farmer's son from backwoods Talulla, Miss. On November 26, near Hamhung, Sergeant Pittman volunteered to lead his squad in a counterattack against an enemy-held hill. The Chinese poured down mortar fire, burp guns began their deadly whinny. Pittman went down with a mortar-fragment wound, got up, pushed doggedly forward. A grenade landed in the midst of his squad.* Hero Pittman threw himself upon the missile, smothered the blast with his body. He left a hospital to get his decoration. ¶1st Lieut. Carl...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: Three Heroes | 5/28/1951 | See Source »

Less than 50 hours after the takeoff, Commander Sproul stood in the evacuation hospital at Hamhung watching a pint of the precious fluid flow into the veins of a wounded G.I. from Wisconsin. Each pint of Red Cross blood is marked with the city of its origin. Commander Sproul saw the boy grin when he noticed that his pint was marked "Madison...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Rush | 1/1/1951 | See Source »

...Colonel's Troubles. We drove up the main road from Hungnam to Hamhung, a distance of about eight miles. U.N. forces had officially evacuated the city that morning, amid some of the most spectacular demolitions of the retreat, but more were still to come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War: Like a Fire Drill | 12/25/1950 | See Source »

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