The Tunisian port of Sfax was captured by the British 8th Army. It would later be the staging point for the invasion of Sicily.
It was also used as a POW camp, holding German Prisoners of War through the rest of, and after, the war.
Foreshadowing that later event, perhaps, the Italian cruiser Trieste was sunk by B-24s in the port of La Maddealena, Sardinia.
Tom Harmon, well known collegic football star, a halfback, now a pilot in the U.S. Army Air Force, disappeared when a bomber he was flying cracked up in a storm over Surinam. The only survivor of the plant, he'd emerge several days later with the assistance of natives, who escorted him out of the jungle.
Harmon had been drafted by the Chicago Bears but had declined to take up professional football, which was not as lucrative or as followed as it now is. Instead, he intended to pursue a career in acting and radio, although he ended up joining the American Football League in 1941 for a $1,500 per game salary, a large sum at the time.
Harmon had resisted being drafted, something we don't think of as occurring much during World War Two, but which was in fact much more common than might be supposed. He received a 1-B classification in May 1941 as he was a student and then given a 60-day extension on the basis that he was the sole support for his parents. He asked for a permanent extension thereafter, but was denied and classified as 1-A, which he appealed. Losing the appeal, he was ordered to report by November 1941, and he thereafter enlisted as an Air Corps cadet.
Following the bomber disaster, he became a P-38 pilot and flew in combat missions over China, being shot down in 1943. He was returned to the US following evading the Japanese, having been shot down behind enemy lines, and was released from the service in January 1945. In 1944, he married actress Elyse Knox. Actor Mark Harmon was one of their three children.
He played for the Los Angeles Rams for a while after the war, and then returned to sports broadcasting.
From Sarah Sundin's blog:
Today in World War II History—April 10, 1943: US Department of Agriculture establishes Women’s Land Army: during WWII, 1.5 million women from non-farming backgrounds will serve on farms.
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