Fighting men of the 20th century, slept as fighting men have slept for centuries; rolled up in blankets and/or sleeping bags on the ground. Sometimes the ground was a "hole" or "bunker", or just a hilltop. But it was ground. For the 20th Century fighting men, tanks and armored vehicles were sometimes used to sleep on or inside. For armor crewmen in WW2, Korea, and Vietnam, Army folding cots (wood/aluminum and canvas) were sometimes available to sleep on. Cots could be strapped to the outsides of armored vehicles (tanks and Armored Personnel Carriers).
C & K rations.
Whenever they could, they were not constantly in contact with Chinese forces so there were brief breaks in between engagements. Usually in a fox hole.
2,448,095 soldiers died in total in the Korean war.
no they sleep at the travvel lodge in London
Although helicopters had been invented prior to the Korean War; helicopters were widely used for the first time during the Korean War.
C & K rations.
Whenever they could, they were not constantly in contact with Chinese forces so there were brief breaks in between engagements. Usually in a fox hole.
there was an estimated 7 million soldiers that died during the korean war, and 3 million civilians.
on a bed
2,448,095 soldiers died in total in the Korean war.
no they sleep at the travvel lodge in London
Although helicopters had been invented prior to the Korean War; helicopters were widely used for the first time during the Korean War.
Perhaps you are thinking of the Stars & Stripes ... the newspaper distributed to soldiers during the Korean War. Today, that paper is published in Europe for the troops.
Korean war
Over 7,000 Philippine servicemen were deployed to the Korean War (1950-1953); over a hundred lost their lives during the conflict. See: "Filipino Soldiers in the Korean War."
1)Many soldiers experienced frostbite during the subzero temperatures in winter it was in the 1950s 2)there were 58,000 soldiers in the Korean war 3)over 3 million people died
usally when and whereever they could