Field Artillery Journal - Nov 1946
Field Artillery Journal - Nov 1946
Field Artillery Journal - Nov 1946
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The collected speeches of FDR 1932-1945. An excellent autobiographical sketch of Mr. Roosevelt's tenure as President of the United States, written in the words of his speeches. The accompanying biographical remarks are excellent.
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The true story of psychiatric illness in our Army writen by a layman in laymen's language. Gen. Cooke was assigned by the Chief of Staff to find out why men were being discharged for medical reasons faster than men were being inducted. ALL BUT ME AND THEE is the account of what he found. Valuable material for any man who expects to be a group leader.
NATIONAL SECURITY AND THE GENERAL STAFF By Maj. Gen. Otto L. Nelson, Jr. $5.00
A complete study of the War Department General Staff, its organization and function since it was organized in 1903. Written by Major General Otto L. Nelson, Jr., who assisted in the 1942 reorganization of the Staff. This is the only book-length study of the United States General Staff ever to be published. No military library will be complete without a copy. Order Now from
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VOL. 36
NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 1946
NO. 11
Covert Chapel at Fort Francis E. Warren. Frontispiece: Christmas greeting from the Commanding General. Army Ground Forces. EDITORIAL Year-end Reflections ........................................................................................................... 630 ARTICLES Out of Balance? by Maj. Gen. Anthony C. McAuliffe ........................................................ Moonlight Jeepery, by Leonard J. Gressman ................................................................... Field Calibration, by Capt. Charles M. Thatcher, Ord-Res. .............................................. Army Map Service, by Lt. Gen. R. A. Wheeler ................................................................... Civilian Schooling for Officers ........................................................................................... Redlegs Ride Tanks, by 1st Lt. Milton M. Meisels, FA-Res. ............................................. A Creed for Army Public Relations, by Maj. Gen. Floyd L. Parks.................................... The United Nations, by Thomas J. Hamilton..................................................................... Answer Machines, by William M. Hines, Jr. ...................................................................... Rolling Doughnuts, by Oram C. Clesma............................................................................ Displacement of Field Artillery, by Brig. Gen. W. A. Beiderlinden .................................. Tesk Force Frost ................................................................................................................. Reorganized AGF School System ...................................................................................... 1948 Olympic Games .......................................................................................................... Soviet Artillery Goes to Town, by Lt. Col. E. A. Raymond, FA Res. ................................ Perimeters in Paragraphs, by Col. Conrad H. Lanza, Rtd. ............................................... 614 616 617 621 624 625 628 632 635 638 640 643 644 645 646 652
HARD POUNDING
By Lt. Col. C. D. W. COURT, R.A.
HERE IS A DEFINITIVE BOOK ON TANK KILLING, THE TACTICS AND TECHNIQUE OF ANTITANK WARFARE.
$2.50
Published by U. S. FIELD ARTILLERY ASSN. 1218 Connecticut Avenue Washington 6, D. C.
ARTILLERY NOTES Combat Experience with Gun Tubes ................................................................................. 619 "Never Performed More Brilliantly" ................................................................................... 620 Fuze Wrench, by Lt. Col. John S. Benson, FA .................................................................. 642 OTHER FEATURES Of More Then Passing Interest ........................................................................................... For Heroism and Service .................................................................................................... In Honored Memory ............................................................................................................. Letters to the Editor ............................................................................................................ Writing You're Reading ....................................................................................................... Index of Titles and Authors, 1946 ...................................................................................... 637 647 649 660 669 671
BOOKS .......................................................................................................................................... 661 The Field Artillery Journal is not a medium for the dissemination of War Department doctrine or administrative directives. Contributors alone are responsible for opinions expressed and conclusions reached in published articles. Consistent with the objects of our Association, however. The Field Artillery Journal seeks to provide a meeting ground for the free expression of artillery ideas in the changing present. COLONEL DEVERE ARMSTRONG Editor MAJOR ROBERT F. COCKLIN Associate Editor LENNA PEDIGO Business Manager
Published monthly by The United States Field Artillery Association. Publication office: 3110 Elm Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Editorial and executive offices: 1218 Connecticut Avenue. Washington 6, D. C. Address all communications to the Washington office. Entered as second class matter August 20, 1929, at the post office at Baltimore, Md. Accepted for mailing at the special rate of postage provided in Sec. 1103. Act of October 3, 1917. Copyright, 1946, by The United States Field Artillery Association. Subscription rates: $3.00 a year; foreign, $3.50; single copies, 35 cents; additional single copies to subscribers. 25 cents. The Field Artillery Journal does not accept paid advertising. It does pay for original articles accepted, but unsolicited manuscripts must be accompanied by return postage if they are to be returned.
Out Of Balance?
By Major General Anthony C. McAuliffe, USA
Airborne artilleryman, veteran division commander, and active participant in Operation CrossroadsMajor General McAuliffe here reminisces briefy on the Bikini tests and then projects his mind boldly to the future character of armed confict. Whether or not they agree with General McAuliffe, artillerymen will find stimulation in his candid and searching views.
CROSSROADS was in O PERATION every respect a joint operation, the
that prior to the test one of the phenomenologists told me that he believed that the intense light which had characterized previous bursts would be missing in this one. He thought that the high humidity in the area would cause the formation of a cloud that would obscure the bright light from observers on surface ships. This was exactly what happened, as recorded in both the still and the moving pictures. The bomb burst with full power, but not precisely over the target. The cause of this error has not been determined and was really not important to the test itself. The second burst, the underwater one, made up in spectacular effects for what the first one lacked. A cylinder of water about 700 yards in diameter shot up in the air to an altitude of 5,500 feet, a Niagara Falls going up instead of coming down. You will recall that the battleship Arkansas disappeared immediately, the grand old carrier Saratoga sank in less than eight hours, and the Jap battleship Nagato after several days. The target ships and the waters of the lagoon were heavily contaminated by deadly radioactive materials. In the opinion of most qualified witnesses, the bomb measured up to all the claims that had been made for it by scientists and others. Those who comment "not much" or "just another bomb" are simply talking through their hats. In the light of the atomic bomb, it appears to me time for us to re-examine and re-evaluate the principles of warfare which have been accepted in the past. The German Clausewitz, on the ground, and our own Admiral Mahan, on the sea, exerted a profound influence by their writings on military organization, strategy, and tactics particularly in this country and in England, Germany, and France. Their theories have been proved in war. Among other things, Clausewitz taught that victory in war was to be obtained through breaking the enemy's will to resist by destroying his armed forces. Admiral Mahan, the great exponent of sea power, stressed the decisive effect of control over the sea lanes. In his time, control of the sea insured complete security for nations like the United States and Britain. Yet back in 1907, he wrote "Unless we succeed in exploiting the air, water remains and must always remain the great medium of transportation." During World War II air, land and sea forces were mutually supporting, and, in their strategic importance, on a fairly equal basis. I think most will agree that the Army didn't win the war; neither did the Navy nor the Air Forces. The combined teamwork of all three did the job. The war was total in its impact striking soldier and civilian alikebut manpower concentrated in mass armies, navies, and air forces decided the outcome. In the new atomic age, the primary avenue of attack against any nation will
first such major operation in peacetime in which all services participated. No service forced itself into the operation, and the most cordial relations existed throughout between Army, Navy, and scientific personnel. Conducted with efficiency, the tests have produced information which I am sure will prove invaluable in planning the future security of our country. There was considerable sensational and inaccurate reporting about the Bikini tests, both before and after they were made, concerning which newsmen themselves have been very critical. Prior to the first test, prognostications ran the full scale of the imagination, and newspapers discussed seriously whether or not the bursts would cause earthquakes and tidal waves. After the first test, one Honolulu paper carried banner headlines"Error in A-Bomb" the article stating that the bomb had burst one and one-half miles too high. On the other hand, the commentator in one of our national newsreels stated repeatedly that the bomb had burst too low. Actually the bomb burst at the correct height. One writer, aboard a ship eighteen miles from the burst, stated that he was "knocked to the deck by the force of the blast." At that distance there was practically no blast effect at all. As a spectacle, the first test, the air burst, was unquestionably disappointing to many. To me, it is interesting to recall
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be the air. To me that fact is inescapable despite my sentimental attachment to the ground forces in which I have served for 28 years. This view of war is very different from the conceptions of Clausewitz and Mahan and more in keeping with the views of the Italian, Douhet, and our own General Mitchell. Although the past war disproved their teachings that victory could be attained by air power alone, the advent of the atomic bomb gives promise of bearing out their theories that air attack alone can be decisive. Modern war is becoming more and more a conflict of new weapons and of new techniques for employing them. World War II, more than any other, produced important contributions by science such as the atomic bomb, radar, proximity fuzes, andon the German side the jet propelled missiles, V-1 and V-2. However, until the morning of August 6, 1945, the weapons of World War II merely had more power, more range, and more speed than their predecessors. Against every one of them, with the exception of the German V-2 (an extremely inaccurate weapon, used in desperation) there was some sort of defense, some sort of possibility of protection or interception. In the rubble of Iwo Jima, in the ruins of Berlin and Munichsmashed and battered by hundreds of bomber sorties the Germans and Japs continued fighting until they were routed out with hand grenades and Tommy guns. A major plank of our strategy during World War II was to destroy by bombing highly important industrial centers, synthetic oil plants, and isolated factories engaged in the production of munitions. Our weapons, the demolition and incendiary bombs, powerful as they were, were so restricted in penetration and area of damage that even repeated raids could not make areas uninhabitable or utterly unproductive. The Luftwaffe learned that in England; and although our own Air Forces bled German productive power white by years of relentless day and night bombing in all weathers, the German industrial machine and civilian structure remained a going concern that had to be seized by the Ground Forces. By their resistance to heavy bombings from the air, first the British, and later the
OUT OF BALANCE?
Germans, disproved the theories of Douhet and Mitchell that an enemy's morale can be broken with conventional bombs. There is somewhere, however, a limit of human endurance to bombing, and I suggest that it has been reached with the arrival of the atomic bomb. Where the atomic bomb strikes, there is immediate and total paralysis of all effort, civilian and military. Both flight from the area and retaliation by defenders appear virtually impossible. Those not killed in the first blast seem helpless to make any effort until outside aid arrives. Utilities cease to exist. Means for defense are obliterated. Those are statements of cold, terrible fact made more terrible because after the first experiment in New Mexico it has required only four atomic bombstwo in war, two in peaceto produce the proof. It is true that the effects of the bomb upon a modern city have not been determined. I think it is also true that Japan was thoroughly licked by the Army-Navy-Air team before the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But the evidence from those two Japanese cities and from Bikini gives every indication that atomic bomb attack upon modern cities and industrial plants will be extremely devastating. It follows that in any future war one single surprise attack with atomic bombs dropped in mass with reasonable accuracy may well be decisive. I sincerely believe that a comparatively few atomic bombs dropped on key points would have left Germany helpless for the prosecution of war. Such a method of waging war could not have been foreseen by Clausewitz and Mahan. It never occurred to Clausewitz that a weapon could be produced that might destroy the economic structure of a country and break its morale without destroying its armed forces, nor could Admiral Mahan foresee that we would in fact succeed in exploiting the air and in making it too a great medium of transportation. If one believes, as I do, that the primary avenue of attack will be the air then the modern military establishment we developed during two wars is out of balance. Changes must be made in it but they must be made in harmony by all the Services working together to perfect a
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new military establishment which can offer some hope of security against atomic aggression. No one at this moment can clearly outline what these changes should be. Statements that the atomic bomb has obsoleted sea power and foot soldiers or that the Air Forces should be relegated to the role of an aerial passenger and freight service because guided missiles will be the bomb-carriers of the future . . . such statements as these should be outlawed for the good of the nation. We require a military establishment adjusted to the Atomic Age, not maimed and crippled by atomic propaganda. There remains the possibility of outlawing the bomb. We know that our statesmen have presented a plan which seemed fair and reasonable to most of us but which has proven unacceptable to Russia. As a soldier and a realist I can only hope and pray that public opinion will always overrule those in this country who propose that we destroy existing bombs and cease their manufacture. Our security demands that we maintain our present advantage in the field of atomic bombs and in the development of new weapons, and that we stockpile atomic bombs and airplanes to carry them until we are satisfied beyond question that world peace is firmly established.
MOONLIGHT JEEPERY
By Leonard J. Grassman
DANCED along the M OONLIGHT length of his scabbard and his
stride was prideful as the officer led a lovable companion beneath the heavily laden boughs of the park's trees. Soft words rolled from his lips, but his brow knitted at the same time in puzzlement. He couldn't understand this woman, couldn't quite figure out just why his amorous techniques, time-proven by considerable experience, brought no response. Annoying, to say the least, but apparently something was lackingshe wanted something more in her man. What could it be? It all came to him suddenly as they strode before the bronze statue of an American officer of an earlier day . . . and she was saying, "This is a beautiful work," waving her glove toward the statue; "it was done by . . ." Although he didn't catch the foreign name, he was already scheming a tactical move to soften this elusive heart. Agreeing to the beauty of the work, he added, "It is almost a living portrayal of what an officer lives for!" She laughed, "If that is the case, then, Sir, one day will they cast your likeness in bronze?" He smiled sardonically, and then his face took on a tragic expression. "Perhaps they will and I can feel almost certain that the bronze charger beneath me will also have both forehooves in the air as the one in yon statue thereby conveying the same glorious message that I, too, kept the soldier's faith." Obviously interested, the girl stared at the statue, quizzically. "I don't understand. Is there some interpretation to be had from the stance of the horse?"
His face glowed smugly. Her curiosity captured, his pulse quickened as he sensed a new compatibility between them. And he spoke quickly too, for even in those days furloughs were all too short and the evening was moving on. "There is a magnificent tradition in the artist's placing of the hooves. When all four are on the ground, which is rare in statues commemorating a hero, the rider died a normal death. One hoof in the air signifies that he died of wounds sustained in action. But if two are raised, it means that the rider was killed on the field of battle." Spellbound, the girl stared at the statuefascinated not only by the story it told but also, it was clear, by a fresh awareness of the strong figure by her side. Why he, himself, might soon be dead! the terrifying thought raced madly through her mind and she leaned instinctively toward him, as if in his protection. As we leave them, the officer is reassuring his lady, manfully . . . and has slid his strong arm, also reassuringly, about her shapely waist. ***** Regrettably, research has failed to reveal to what extent the young officer was successful in his amorous objectives or whether a statute was ever cast in his honor. But when he impressed the young lady with his knowledge, he started a legend which has been passed down through the decades. The plausibility of the legend is strengthened by
the coincidence that it dces fit many specific cases, and the natural interest that it provokes caused the editors of the New Yorker to narrate it in their issue of May 6, 1944. Naturally enough, that article prompted many queries to the War Department's Bureau of Public Relations. A project was made of it and research began. Letters crossed and recrossed the nation, but no substantiating data could be found, the nearest being the Library of Congress' disclaimer: "We have heard that the guides at the Gettysburg battlegrounds attach significance to the pose of the horses' feet, but suspect that they have constructed a formula on the basis of certain statues and we feel sure that any significance so attributed is ex post facto." Incidentally, some two years after they published the story The New Yorker felt constrained to admit: "The writer of our brief paragraph was told the statue theory by an anonymous caretaker in a Washington park. It's all poppycock, of course." All of which is very disappointing and disillusioning indeed. The generals of World War II rode jeeps instead of horses and this writer had worked himself into a fine dither, along with the editors of The New Yorker, trying to figure out "how these bronze jeeps are to deport themselves in the long bronze noons and the long bronze nightshow many wheels are to be off the ground?"
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FIELD CALIBRATION
By Capt. Charles M. Thatcher, Ord-Res.
a worriedB REATHLESSLY, looking artillery commander rushes up to the commanding officer of a Ballistic and Technical Service Team, crying: "Something's wrong! I've got a gun over there that's supposed to fire 19,000 yards, and it's firing only 13,000." The team goes into action. Truckloads of complicated electronic equipment arrive on the scene, are unloaded and positioned around the gun. Several hundred rounds are fired. Computing machines grind out endless columns of figures and formulae. And finally, from the reams of computations, the team commander selects a single sheet and struts proudly over to the artillery commander. "Sir, you are right! Your gun is firing only 13,000 yards!" ***** Such is the frequent misconception of the role of an Ordnance Ballistic and Technical Service Team in the field calibration of artillery. Fortunately, the account is correct in only one respect: there are such teams in the field, and they do calibrate artillery piecesnot to get superfluous information, but to report muzzle velocities to an accuracy on one foot per second! FIELD CALIBRATION IS NEW Accomplished at proving grounds for many years, it is only within the past few years that any concerted effort has been made to develop an accurate and satisfactory method for measuring muzzle velocities in the field. Such determinations would obviously be of great value both to the artillery and to ordnance, giving greater accuracy of fire to the former and enabling a closer check on gun wear and tube endurance for the latter. They might also be used for the calibration of ammunition lots. Though hypothetical, the imaginary artillery commander's worries are representative of the need for such calibration in the field. When a gun's muzzle velocity is known, the artilleryman can make firing table corrections without difficulty; but as the bore wears the velocity changes, with the result that elevation settings to obtain desired ranges cannot be determined accurately. Particularly acute is the problem of the artillery battery commander whose guns have all worn somewhatand at different rates. Only by ranging in individually with each weapon can he be sure that his guns will be fully effective against a battery target. To an artillery unit faced with such a problem, the Ballistic and Technical Service Team is a Godsend. Determining muzzle velocities for each piece, the team's calibration enables the commander to make his corrections from firing table data, and then to bring all pieces to bear after ranging in with only one. Such absolute calibration, however, requires the use of a pre-calibrated reference ammunition lot as well as precise measurement of atmospheric conditions and other considerations affecting the firing. Consequently the team more generally makes a "relative" calibration among the guns of a battalion, thus enabling the battalion commander to group his guns by batteries so as to give each battery four guns which fire at approximately the same velocity. CALIBRATION METHODS VARY Basically, the calibration problem is simply one of devising a method for measuring the time it takes a projectile to cover a measured distance. One of the earliest methods was to put up two wire screens a known distance apart. As the projectile strikes the first screen, it makes (or breaks) an electrical circuit to start a timing device, which is stopped when the projectile reaches the second screen. A second method was to fire the projectile through a solenoid coil, the change in magnetic flux sending an impulse to start the timing device. When the need for calibration in the field became evident, however, serious disadvantages to both of these methods became apparent. The first required replacement of the screens after each round (although the method can be used economically for small arms work), and the second meant the construction of large, unwieldy towers for the solenoid coils. The answer was the T6 Chronograph (see cuts), which is now used by the field teams. The "screen" principle was retained, but the screens of wire were replaced by screens of light, produced by shielding a photo-electric cell except
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for a narrow slit. The unit is mounted in a metal tube beneath a lens which focuses incoming light on the slit, and as the projectile passes over the tube the light intensity is changed and an impulse is sent to the counter. EQUIPMENT PLACED BY BORESIGHTING It is not quite as simple as all that, of course. The orientation of the slit with respect to the trajectory is of great importance, and the final version of the "telephoto pickup" included a sighting telescope and leveling vials, all mounted on a standard .30 caliber machine gun mount to permit tilting and traverse. When the team goes into action, the mounts are firmly emplaced to reduce the danger of movement from ground shock, their position being along the line of fire (established by boresighting) and approximately 100 feet apart, the nearest one about 50 feet from the gun muzzle. The telescope, mounted at perpendicularity to the slit, is sighted
November-December
size of the projectile, its height over the pickup, and the sky brightness, or general light intensity, are all factors in determining the proper amplification setting. Indeed, fast-moving clouds sometimes change the sky brightness unexpectedly, and the setting must be changed to allow for the difference. SIMPLE TEST IS USED Once the equipment is in place and the cables connected, it can be tested by
Telephoto pickups in place at rear area gun positions. as the projectile passes overone relatively gradual as the nose enters the screen, the second abrupt as the tail leaves. Because of the sharpness of this second pulse, it is the one used as the triggering signal. Beside each pickup is placed an amplifier unit which strengthens the signal sufficiently for transmission back to the counters, located behind the firing position and connected to the pickups and amplifiers by five-conductor cables. The degree of amplification must be determined very carefully, as too little will result in no pulse at all, while too much will cause "nose-triggering." The
back on the gun muzzle, and thus insures that the light screen will be at a right angle to the trajectory. The leveling vials in turn are used to insure that the screen is vertical. Using a surveyor's level and steel tape which are part of their equipment, the team accurately determines the horizontal distance between the two pickups,
the "whip test" rapidly whipping a small switch over the pickup to simulate the change in light intensiy caused by the projectile. A well-trained team can emplace all the equipment and make the necessary advance measurements, computations and tests in less than a half an hour. The counters used to time the flight of the projectile over the now known distance are rather complicated electronic devices, but may be explained briefly. A crystal oscillator sends impulses into the circuit at a rate of 100,000 per second. When the triggering signal is received from the first pickup, an electronic "gate" is opened, permitting these impulses to enter the counter. The second signal closes the gate, and lighted bulbs indicate how many pulses were received by the counter in the interim, giving the time to the nearest one hundred thousandth
1946
of a second. Knowing both the distance and the time, a computer can calculate the velocity by simple division. It will be observed, however, that this is not the muzzle velocity, but a velocity at some distance from the muzzle. Further, it is a velocity subject to correction for atmospheric conditions, powder temperature, and projectile weight. To convert the measured velocity to the velocity at the muzzle, the computer makes use of a chart giving the velocity drop as a function of distance from the muzzle. The other corrections are made as indicated by the firing table, periodic readings being taken of air temperature,
FIELD CALIBRATION
air density, humidity and temperature for this purpose. powder
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average muzzle velocity plus the figures for statistical variation for his use in making corrections when laying his piece. Once this calibration is accomplished, it is felt that gun-wear tables will give a satisfactory basis for estimating the rate of change of muzzle velocity, and that ballistic team calibration is only necessary two or three times during the firing life of the weapon. Where a number of guns are to be calibrated at one location, it has been found simpler to leave the pickups in position and place the guns one after another in the same spade holes, thus making it unnecessary for the team to remeasure the distances. In this manner
VELOCITY KNOWN IMMEDIATELY The entire procedure of set-up, survey, recording of data and computation of corrected muzzle velocity can be effectively accomplished by one officer and six men, with the answer supplied within minutes after the last round is fired. Usually the velocities of five or six rounds are averaged to arrive at the velocity of the piece. The data is checked for statistical conformity, the standard deviation and probable error are computed and the battery commander is given the resultant
tube comes to a positive end when a specific number of rounds have been fired. Although the total number of equivalent service rounds fired is indicative of the approach of the end of the accurate life, there are so many other factors that influence the wear in a tube that it cannot be stated that all should be replaced at any definite figure. Each individual tube wears differently, and any published life expectancy figures are estimates only. An accurate record of the number of rounds fired from each tube is kept by this Office through the medium of the gun tube reports submitted by artillery units. These reports are most useful to the Army Ordnance Officer, and as soon as possible after the number of rounds fired by a particular tube has approached the estimated life expectancy figure, the Calibration Team is made available to the unit. By determining technically the loss in muzzle velocity and "wobble" in flight, the Army Ordnance Officer has a more accurate figure as to the remaining life expectancy of the tube in question. Gun tubes in First Army are fired until performance indicates that they have been worn appreciably. This condition will be indicated by extreme loss of range and stripping of rotating bands. Normally, these symptoms develop gradually.
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an entire 105mm howitzer battalion can be calibrated in less than a day's work. In addition to the personnel doing field calibration, the team also has four men grouped to form a base calibration team, and one officer and one man working on maintenance, bringing the total strength of a team up to two officers and eleven men. The base calibration group works primarily with weapons coming out of repair shops, determining absolute velocities, and also does some calibration of powder lots, as a reference lot of known characteristics must be used in all firing for absolute calibration. The equipment normally carried by the team consists of five telephoto pickups and their mounts, five amplifiers, three counters, surveying equipment, a complete unit of Aberdeen chronograph equipment (revolving drum type counter) for testing small arms, a set of pressure gages for chamber
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allimportant. But it is also true that the accuracy of a piece can be greatly increased if its muzzle velocity is known, and by its determination of this figure, the Ballistic and Technical Service Team makes a substantial contribution to the effectiveness of artillery fire. End.
pressure studies of weapons using semifixed or separate loading ammunition, and a set of spare parts and testing equipment for maintenance.
COMPLETE UNIT IS COMPACT
All this equipment can be stowed in a 2-ton 66 shop truck, a 1-ton 66 personnel carrier, and a 1-ton two-wheel cargo trailer. Electric power is provided by two 10-kw generators, one mounted in the shop truck and the other in the 1-
by experts in ballistics, electronics and statistical procedure. The members of the first teams actually built most of the equipment, and so became thoroughly familiar with its peculiarities and maintenance. Velocity calibration does not constitute a cure for all the artilleryman's troubles by any means, segregation of ammunition lots, proper storage and handling of ammunition, and proper maintenance of the piece still being
MAP IS A TEXT BOOK OF terrain information printed on a single sheet of paper. Using the language of signs, symbols, and colors, it tells the modern soldier where he is and where he is going. It also tells him where the enemy should be and the best and safest way to get to him. In modern war, it is the basis of all tactical planning and, as such, holds the margin between ultimate victory and defeat. The above concept of the modern military map keynotes the work of the Army Map Service, which functions in its modern, especially designed plant in Washington, under the Office of the Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army. Charged specifically with the mission of providing all military maps required by the War Department, from the large, brightly colored, pin-lined maps on the walls of the Chief of Staff's office to the small, wrinkle-proof sheets used by company and battery
commanders, the Army Map Service emerged from World War II as one of the world's most efficient military mapping organizations. It has been said with justice that AMS had the most intricate, careful, painstaking, and yet speediest, job in the war. In an incredibly short length of time, with inexperienced personnel, it had to produce the best maps in the largest quantities any Army in history ever had. That it did this job with a dispatch and efficiency that amazed military men everywhere is a tribute to the leadership, talents, and ingenuity of AMS's entire personnel. Some knowledge of both AMS's wartime job and global war's insatiable hunger for military maps can be gleaned in a comparison of the maps needed for all the maneuvers of World War I with the requirements of a single campaign in World War II. The first World War, fought in a more or less limited area, on 621
relatively well-known terrain, and employing the rather static strategy of trench warfare, required but 9 million sheets. In World War II, the North African invasion alone demanded 10 million sheets of 1,000 different types of maps. And even this precedentsetting demand, like the invasion itself, was but a prelude of demands to come. The invasion of Normandy required 70 million sheets of 3 thousand maps, while the Battle for France often consumed 30 tons of maps dailyor a total, in round numbers, of 210 million sheets. These maps, incidentally, were the first military maps to be made of coastal France since the campaigns of Napoleon. With its unceasing movements on a world-wide scale, World War II required a total of almost 500 million sheets of some 40 thousand different maps. Conservatively estimating each map in four colors only, this would
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mean 2 billion impressions or press runs. A man with a mind for such statistics has stated that the maps of World War II overbalance the weight of two prewar cruisers24,550 tons. If stacked, the pile of maps would rise 297 times the height of the Washington Monument or approximately 165,945 feethigher even than a post-war rocket has, as yet, ascended. With AMS acting as "home base," much of the actual compilation and press work was done in the field by topographical units, such as the 660th Base Topograpical Battalion, which operated first from England, then from the L'Illustration building in Paris; and the 648th Engineer Battalion, which arrived in Australia in March 1942. The 64th Engineer Topographical Battalion, established in Hawaii in June 1942, engaged in the preparation of hasty maps and the compilation of terrain intelligence material incidental to the amphibious operations of the Pacific atolls. In Portland, Oregon, the 29th Engineers (though primarily a training unit) made maps for the Kuriles operations and for our forces in the North Pacific. As the text books of the infantry, artillery, air corps, and other branches of the Army differ in content and scope, so do maps produced for the various branches, and for various purposes, differ in text. An aviator intent upon bombing an industrial area requires a map (or series of maps) that renders the earth recognizable from high altitudes at great speeds. He needs a guide to and from his target, with little attention to details such as road conditions, or a clump of trees where a machine-gun may wait in ambush, or even a swiftcurrented river that has but one bridge in a radius of fifty miles. So the pilot is provided with a small scale flight chart on which details are greatly generalized, and a larger scale target chart with the primary object emphasized. More than likely, a pilot's maps would be of the Rescue or Cloth Map type. These maps were designed especially to aid airmen forced down at sea or in unfamiliar territory and are printed on high grade rayon acetatea texture impervious to rough handling, crumpling, and exposure to weather and
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general, however, small scale (1:1,000,000 and smaller) maps are used by the commanders of large units for general planning. These maps carry a minimum of detail but give emphasis to road and railway networks, drainage patterns, political boundaries, and coastline configuration. Terrain is but broadly shown with a series of distinctly colored elevation levels. Because the movement, concentration, and supply of troops are more quickly and better plotted on medium scale (1:250,000) maps, they are used for strategical and tactical studies, as well as by tank corpsmen. The large amount of detail in cultural and terrain features makes this type of map an ideal road map, and in fact, an almost ideal all-purpose instrument. This detail includes a finer classification of roads, railroads, and population areas than is shown on the smaller scale maps, while relief is expressed with relatively accurate contouring, supplemented by hill shading. No military map, however, is suitable for combined field operations without a standard grid. Minus the network of horizontal and vertical lines which divide the map into exact squaresidentified by numbers unit commanders could not coordinate their activities. When artillery fire is requested at a specific point, the point is identified exactly by the numbered grid reference, and the answering barrage comes quickly after computation of distance and direction. For this reason all tactical maps carry a standard grid, with the distance between the regularly spaced lines representing an arbitrary number of yards or meters. From the above it may appear that the military map is an intricate and complete tool of war. It is. Even with equipment that ranges from the latest type of electric airbrush and air-eraser to especially designed buildings, from almost magical multiplex machines to color presses and a battery of cameras so large they use 40 48 negatives and small electric motors for focusing, it often requires AMS's staff of artists and technicians more than six hundred manhours to process a new military map. Each new map must be processed through the departments of Planning,
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Design, Research, Compilation, Drafting, Photography, and Printing. Yet, in light of cartographic history, one of the "miracles" of the war was the amazing speed in which AMS, its field units, and contractors, produced maps of areas over the entire world. Often starting from scratchespecially in the unmapped, or badly mapped, areas of the Pacificweeks were cut to hours, months were cut to days. Our initial offensive in the Pacific is an example. In July 1942, a Marine task force was assembling on the palm-shrouded island of New Caledonia, preparing to take the first offensive step on our famous "road back" campaign. The objective was in the Solomons Guadalcanal, to be exact. Every article and instrument of modern war was on hand, save one. No adequate map of the island to be attacked was to be had. A search of New Caledonia produced only sketch maps, drawn by missionaries and Australian planters, and of the type marked "Location not accurate within several miles." Desperate, the Marines radioed Army Headquarters at Port Moresby, New Guinea, asking that Guadalcanal be mapped, and in a hurry. Immediately, a B-17 equipped with new automatic cameras took off from Port Moresby's new air strip. It flew almost a thousand miles to Guadalcanal and, disregarding heavy ack-ack fire, began to cruise up and down the little brown and green, Japanese-infested oval, the camera clicking incessantly.
Then, with its urgent mission completed, it returned home. At Port Moresby, the film was transferred to another plane and flown to Australia. There a battalion of Topographical Engineers went to work. The hundreds of tiny pictures were matched and measured. The maps were compiled and printed. In less than a week, the first reliable maps ever made of Guadalcanal were in the hands of the Marines on New Caledoniathe Marines now knew where they were going and what they would find there. On August 7, 1942, they established their beachhead, and made history. The Army Map Service, as such, is a relatively recent organization. Only during the war and after a long series of rather complicated reorganizations of separate units did it evolve into its present status. In accordance with Army Regulations, the Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2, War Department General Staff, is charged with the development of plans and policies for military mapping. Responsibilities for the completion of outlined methods and procedures specified in subsequent directives infiltrate through the chain of command, first through the Military Intelligence Division, Office, Chief of Engineers, then to its principal cartographic echelon, the Army Map Service, which, through a number of departments, turns out the end productmodern military maps. The Service's commanding officer and his military staff are selected from
Engineers with proved aptitude and talent for topographic pursuits. Its civilian personnel consists of specialists in the fields of Cartography and Photolithography. Prior to World War II, AMS was known as the Engineer Reproduction Plant, which in turn had absorbed the Central Map Reproduction Plant and other agencies created in anticipation of a World War I mapping crisis. Due to the tactics of trench warfare, the crisis did not materialize, but soon after the war, the Engineer Reproduction Plant began mapping certain strategic areas within the United States. It also produced maps covering military posts and camps. Many of the maps which the Mississippi River Commission prepared as plans or records of flood control and river navigation were worked upon by the Engineer Reproduction Plant. Peace - time studies involving the methods and techniques of Cartography and Photolithography were undertaken. These studies led to such developments as the blue line board method of color separations, the selection of mapping type best suited to photolithography, the use of transparent adhesives for the application of place names and symbols on drafted copy. Intensive research into the graphic arts conceded that the best medium for map reproduction is Photolithography. The basic pattern which the Army Map Service eventually would follow in wartime was set in 1938, when the
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Engineer Reproduction Plant began compilation of a Strategic Map of the United States. This program also gave a hint of the expansion and of the problems which would accompany such an expansion, to come. Using WPA funds and personnel, most of whom were totally unfamiliar with mapmaking, the ERP published a map series of 87 creditable sheets. More important, however, was the lesson learned. The use of untrained personnel required radical changes in map-preparation methods. As an expert compiler or draftsman cannot be made overnight, the varied operations were divided into short, simple tasks which could be quickly mastered. This method was the beginning of the now famous "assembly-line" technique a technique which paid handsome dividends during the war. The project proved that untrained personnel could be used in any expanded mapping program after minimum instruction on some specific task. If any specific year can be singled out as the pivot year upon which the development of AMS wheeled into the organization which made its amazing wartime function possible, then that year is 1939. In 1939, the War Department transferred its map collection from G-2, War Department General Staff (a policy making agency) to the Chief of Engineers (a working organization). The responsibility for the maintenance of the map collection was delegated to the Engineer Reproduction Plant, whose commanding officer was designated as its director. Coincident with the very day on which war broke out in Europe, September 1, the War Department activated the 30th Engineers. From these initial actions the development of the mapping organization for World War II proceeded rapidly. The passage of selective service legislation in September 1940 made additional engineer topographic battalions possible. Many of these units were trained as mobile units under the direction of the Commanding General, Army Ground Forces, with the advice and aid of the Chief of Engineers. Additional base battalions, equipped with the new multiplex stereo mechanical equipment, were established
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IRES STILL BURN IN THE German town just captured by American armor, and a rather decrepit looking tank bearing the task force's artillery observer section groans to a halt next to a large and very comforting brick wall. The reconnaissance sergeant lifts his tank helmet wearily. "Lieutenant, do you suppose we'll ever get back to observing for a good old infantry outfit?" "I don't know, Sergeant; perhaps never. After this deal we may find we've made a reputation as tankers, and I'm not too sure I'm happy about it if we have." ***** Spoken from the heart, the officer's remark emphasizes that observing fire from a moving tank virtually requires two sets of ears which can operate independently of each other, four eyes with built-in stabilizers, and a neck with 6400 mils of traverse. From a bucking and jolting tank, the control of the fire becomes uncertain, the fire itself is less effective, and the observer loses sight of the "big picture." There are situations, however, where the FO has to stick his tank out there with the leading platoon and do his job, despite the difficulties. It is impossible to read a map. The target keeps jumping around in the binoculars, and often blurs out entirely. The noise of the motor, the chattering of the other tankers on the radio, the racket of the bowgunner's machine gun, and the roar of friendly artillery bursting up ahead would make bedlam itself seem like a health sanatorium. A further distraction is the
*The author had extended combat experience in Europe as a forward observer with armored artillery. JOURNAL readers will recall his article, "Night Ride Through Krautland," in the May, 1946, issue.Ed.
constant search that must be made for targets for the observer's tank. He has a 75-mm gun and two machine guns aboard and the task force commander expects them to shoot! For some reason, no matter how well the radio may be adjusted, communications invariably become difficult and uncertain while the tank is on the move. Messages become unintelligible . . . the tanker on the right shouts that something peculiar is sticking out of that haystack . . . the FDC wants a repeat on the last sensing . . . the tanks are near the objectives and the commander is screaming to lift that artillery. By this time the observer is really sweatingthen, by the grace of God, communication is re-established, fire lifts, and another objective is won. If it can be avoided, the artillery observer should not make the initial onslaught with the tanks. The more efficient technique is to select a position well behind the leading elements, preferably on high terrain, from which it is possible to observe both the movement of the tanks and the objectives. Thus situated, the efficient conduct of fire and continuous knowledge of the general situation are both far easier and better achieved. If the objective is far off, study the terrain and displace the tank from time to time, always being certain that the location of all units is known. For the artillery observer to achieve this freedom of movement requires that he earn and maintain the complete trust and confidence of the task force commander. Their relationship should be similar to that of a lawyer and his client. Such a relationship isn't issued automatically with the T/O. In fact, at the start of a 625
campaign, many tank officers are rather naive about artillery matters. Some believe that Mr. Redlegs is just along for the ride, and consider his tank as just one more tank for their outfit one more gun and two more machine guns and perhaps a good tank to put up at the head of the column because it can be lost without reducing the organic strength of the company. Fortunately, such an attitude doesn't last beyond the first successful mission. When the tankers see how artillery can soften up an objective and note the protection artillery fire affords attacking forces when laid down in front of them. the observer becomes the fair-haired boy. Thereafter, his counsel is regarded as gospel, and he is permitted to operate in a manner which insures the maximum control of artillery fire. But being the fair-haired boy isn't as simple as it may sound. When the tankers turn to artillery, they turn in a big way. They're apt to become so artillery-conscious that they don't like to turn over their motors unless a few rounds are falling out there to drown out the noise. They delay attacking any town until it is first softened up by a heavy artillery preparation. Yes, the FO has become their Houdini, who, presto, can make artillery fire appear in three places at once. "Hello, Fox Oboe. I want a smoke screen about 400 yards to the right of the road, and I want you to keep pounding the town up ahead until the tanks get there. Try to get that fire out there in about three minutes." Such sweeping demands flow easily from the lips of "artillery-minded" tankers. Of course, at such times the FO must deliver a fluent and convincing discourse
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on the limitations of artillery, enumerating the ammunition problem, the time it takes to properly adjust fire, and the difficulties of displacing a battery. He may even find it necessary to overdo it a bit now and then in order to dampen somewhat the tanker's ardor and enthusiasm for artillery and its capabilities. However, when a tank column is halted temporarily during a fast breakthrough, it is an eloquent tribute to artillery to know that the next call on the radio is more than apt to be "Come up here right away, will you?" Because of the mobile nature of armored action, the conduct of artillery fire is difficult, particularly since the location on the ground of battery position becomes increasingly uncertain with each turn in the road. If gains of ten to fifteen miles are made before a fire mission is sent down, all the observer can hope is that his guns are back there some place along the axis of advance, and he is usually more than satisfied if one battery is in position to answer his call for fire. His constant prayer is to be able to see the first round. And incidentally, one must be extremely careful in observing those initial rounds as the GT line will probably be quite different than what is expected. Disconcerting, too, is to have the artillery battalion in direct support of several tank units elect to follow the advance of another outfit, in which case it will often drift so far away that a call for fire will be unheard and unheeded. Since this can easily occur within the short space of fifteen minutes, it is wise to have radio facilities and frequencies available to the observer in the tank for contacting other field artillery battalions in the area which may be able to lend support. Forward observation methods are used exclusively for adjusting fire. A novel method of fire which often results from the pincer tactics employed by tank units is called "shooting 'em backwards"that is, when the target lies between the observer and the guns. Obviously, this makes a "short" an over and a "left" a right. Because of the large area covered, the tank FO must be equipped with a veritable library of maps, detailing every section where there is a remote
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An important consideration is selection of the proper type of tank. During the war the headquarters battery of armored field artillery battalions usually received second-hand Shermans which ordnance was probably glad to get off its hands. In fact, they often arrived bearing the notation, non-combat tank. Some of these tanks were not in the best of mechanical shape and the condition of weapons and appurtenances often left much to be desired. That sort of thing hardly stimulates the forward observer with enthusiasm to get out there and do his stuff! One FO section received a well battered Sherman with a hole in its turret, made by an 88 and hastily covered over, and the white camouflage paint (put on for the Battle of the Bulge) peeling off in quantities. It was a strange spotted apparition among those new Pershings and clean double-hatched 76's of the tank battalions. A good tank for forward observation purposes is the new light M-24 tank. It is extremely fast, maneuverable, and the wide tracks give increased flotation. The inside is luxurious by comparison with the Sherman. It is well padded in the right places and easier to work in. During cold weather the turret can be heated, a progressive feature considering the frigidaire qualities of the older tank. There is a handy light for safely reading maps at night with the hatch closed. The thick, bullet-proof glass which extends around the top of the hatch affords all-around vision even when the hatch is closedalthough during combat it is necessary to keep unbuttoned and stick your head out to do really good observing. The drivers and bow-gunner's hatches open sideways so that there is no danger that they will be pinned in if the tank is hit and the gunner neglects to bring his gun to the center position before bailing out. There is a double hatch which permits two men to jump out simultaneously, an important consideration when the tank must be abandoned. Whether an M-24 can be secured or not, the importance and the hazards of the forward observer's role impels that he be equipped with a tank as good as those of the tank battalions.
24-POUND BOOK Deluxe, sheepskin-bound, 24pound edition of Hitler's "Mein Kampf," recently presented to the Museum by the officers and men of the V Corps Artillery and the 3rd Tank Destroyer Group.
WHAT IS IT?
One of three weapons, neither the donor nor the staff of the Museum know when, where or why it was made. Clarifying information will be appreciated by the Staff of the Museum.
MONUMENT TO ARTILLERYMEN OF THE PAST and present, the A LIVING Field Artillery School Museum has enjoyed a healthy growth since its inception in 1934. The Museum is housed in one of the oldest structures at Fort Sill, a building that served first as a guard house and at one time as a prison for Geronimo, last chief of the Apaches. The history of artillery and artillerymen from the earliest brass cannon to the deadly weapons of the present day is recorded within the Museum's walls and along the bordering walks. Deeply appreciative as they are for past contributions, the staff of the Museum is aware that an institution of this nature must continue to expand if it is to measure up to its potentialities. Artillerymen should pass by no opportunity to help further this worthy projecta matter of pride for us all.
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HE BASIC APPROACH OF the public relations officer to his job should be the same as that of any officerindeed, of any man in the U. S. Army. The same high standards apply, whether the job is in artillery, in the air, in mechanized operations, or in public relations. The first quality that an officer must have for any duty is character. First, character; second, good, common, horse sense, coupled with a sense of responsibility; third, health and energy; fourth, an agreeable personality; and fifth, knowledge of the profession. If he has the first four, he can readily gain and effectively employ knowledge of the profession. The presence, or lack, of these qualities becomes especially evident in public relations. The positiveor negativeresults assume greater than normal proportions of success or failure. This is because we are dealing with media which reach far and wide throughout the nation. Thus, the effect of an intelligent, well-considered act may be multiplied a thousandfold. So can the effect of a thoughtless and faulty performance be multiplied. During the war, a good man overseas was usually twice as good; an inadequate man was always twice as inadequate. I have mentioned the general qualities that an officer must bring with him to this profession of public relations. On the other side of the picture, let us examine certain qualities held by the public our people which we must consider in all our activities. First, let us never forget the human readiness to believe the worst of anything, or anyone, in preference to the best. Falsehood and half-truth travel fast; a truthful explanation can almost never catch up with false accusation in the public mind. For the most part, only in the courts is a man considered innocent until he is proved guilty. The impact of a statement in the public press by some self-constituted
authority to the effect that the Army is hoarding lumber, or the Army is hoarding doctors, or the Army is hoarding food will always be stronger than any following explanations, unless the charges are anticipated by alert public relations activity. Second, the public relations officer should never overlook the common tendency to form opinions in terms of black-and-white, with few shades of gray in betweensweeping generalizations of approbation or
I consider Public Relations as important to the peacetime Army as personnel, intelligence, training, supply, plans and research. The personnel assigned to public relations duties should be as carefully selected and as well qualified as the personnel to whom these other paramount general staff functions are delegated. JACOB L. DEVERS General, USA
indictment arrived at on the basis of insufficient facts. People with this tendency mistakenly endow an entire group with the faults, but rarely the virtues, of an individual belonging to that group. To such people, a drunken serviceman on the street means that all servicemen are drunks; and an unjust officer means that all officers are unjust. One publicized case of undue privilege can indict the entire Army. This is one of the chief difficulties with which public relations officers must contend. It presents a situation aggravated by the post-war change in public feeling from over-glamorization down to a debunking psychology that inclines to believe only the worst. This, too, is something that the alert public relations officer must expectand anticipate. An intelligent and objective approach to the public, therefore, will consider these two foibles of public 628
opinion: (1) the superior power of criticism over praise, and (2) the tendency to generalize. Facing the problem realistically, we may frankly recognize that the mistakes of a comparative handful of individuals, coupled with half-truths or complete misstatement of facts, have given us the job of counteracting a number of broad misconceptions. These misconceptions, if they are allowed to prevail, will end by doing great harm to the Army as an instrument of national security, and, as a result, to national security itself. Therefore, our public relations program must intelligently meet misconception with truth, and thereby seek to reach certain long-range objectives, in order to strengthen the position of the Army in its function of serving the nation. This applies both to our personal and our professional lives. It also applies to the behavior of every uniformed soldier. In terms of public relations, we must promote the idea of military courtesy, to displace the misconception of military arrogance. We must advance the idea of equality, as delineated by the needs of military discipline, to displace the misconception of undue privilegethe so-called "officer caste" system. We must inspire confidence in Army justice, as opposed to the misconception of an unjust system of courts-martial. We must provide a basis for belief in Army ability and initiative, as against the misconception of the so-called "GI mentality." We must strengthen and maintain the idea of military dignity and capability, and seek to drive out the old, outmoded misconception of the Army as a refuge for misfits and incompetents. Above all, during a most difficult periodthe time of peacewe must increase respect and public consideration for the vital function of the nation's peacetime Army. I do not mean to suggest that there is no basis for the common misconceptions,
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such as those I have mentioned. Many individual mistakes have been made in the past, and will be made in the future; but we must not permit the whole Army institution to suffer in the public mind as a result of sweeping generalizations inspired by the mistakes of a few. What I do want to emphasize, therefore, is that we must recognize the existence of such generalizations, and do our job accordingly, to the best of our ability. Our job will be made no easier by continuance of little or big mistakes within the military establishment. We must contend with the frequent tendency in certain sections of the press to magnify such mistakes out of all proportion, and often, to misinterpret the calculated remarks of Army officials. Here are a couple of examples. The first example concerns misinterpretation, and illustrates the results of inaccuracy in reporting. Recently, in connection with the Lichfield trials, the Under Secretary of War was asked by a reporter at a press conference what the "hollering" by defense counsel was all about. Mr. Royall answered, in effect: that it was the duty of the defense to call attention to their side of the casea straight answer to the reporter's question. He did not at any time use the word "hollering." He emphasized that both the defense and the prosecution had duties to perform and that the War Department's desire was to obtain justice for all, under due process of law. The article which appeared, however, quoted the Under Secretary himself as having referred to the trial as "just a lot of hollering of lawyers." It was inaccurate, to say the least, and the result was unfortunate. It was picked up by reputable editors and radio commentators, and quoted as a fact. It was repeated for days; but we were able to refute it and get local retraction by the newspaper and radio commentators whose quotations from the erroneous article came to our notice. An example of needless difficulty placed in the path of the public relations officer can be any one of several mistakes committed by Army personnel. It may be as simple as lack of courtesy by Army hospital attendants in replying to inquiries of relatives and friends of patients. It may be the thoughtless action
If we are to expect fairness and impartiality in the press, we must be equally fair and impartial in our dealings with the press. Favoritismthat is, passing out hot news to some, while excluding othersis a short cut to failure in public relations. Equally important is establishing a reputation for initiative in dealings with press and publications. It is not enough to provide news in answer to requests for news. It is far better to call proper attention to news which may fittingly and usefully be given out. Here let me underline the importance of keeping an eye on the long range objectives and the larger issues. Every action dealing in the media of public relations should be calculated to advance the purpose of the Army as a whole toward the larger objectives. Here is the Creed of Army Public Relationsbrief, and to the point! "The United States Army is part of the United States, made up of people of the United States who live with people of the United States. The relations of Army people to the people with whom they live, are the relations between neighbors. The relations can be good, for reason; or bad, for cause. "The United States Army is also a public utility, serving the people of the United States in a vital way. As a public utility it has a character and a reputation that parallel the character and reputation of the individual people who make up the Army. "The reputation and character of neither the Army as a utility not the people who make up the Army, can be bad without reflecting on the other. The relations between Army personnel and their neighbor people are in the hands of each member of the Army. The relations between the Army as a utility and the people of the United States are a command concern of the Army. "It is the responsibility of each Army individual to build his own character and reputation in his community. It is the responsibility of Army command to build the Army's character and reputation in the Nation. The discharge of these responsibilities in the best possible manner constitutes Army public relations."
PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY THE UNITED STATES FIELD ARTILLERY ASSOCIATION WHICH WAS FOUNDED IN 1910 WITH THE FOLLOWING OBJECTS AS WORTHY NOW AS THEN The objects of the Association shall be the promotion of the efficiency of the Field Artillery by maintaining its best traditions; the publishing of a Journal for disseminating professional knowledge and furnishing information as to the field artillery's progress, development and best use in campaign; to cultivate, with the other arms, a common understanding of the powers and limitations of each; to foster a feeling of interdependence among the different arms and of hearty cooperation by all; and to promote understanding between the regular and militia forces by a closer bond; all of which objects are worthy and contribute to the good of our country.
be neither surprising nor discouraging. "How to do" is almost invariably more difficult than "doing." Yet the fact remains that our Nation, our Armyyes, and our Association toowere still sweating out major "how to do" problems as 1947 approached. OUR NATION At home, the relentless evolution of the political process was the most significant reality of 1946. Created, for better or worse, by the mid-term elections was a complete division of governmental responsibility this, at a time when the resiliency of our democratic way was being strained, perhaps as never before. How could a Democratic Administration do a big job with a Republican Congress; or vice versa, if one's political convictions might so prefer? Most urgent requirement of the world's richest and most powerful and most productive but still goods-andhome-hungry people at year's end: a political common denominator for resolving the merry-go-round riddle of democratic government vs. organized labor vs. corporate management. This riddle would be 1947's inheritance from 1946, with our domestic (and perhaps world) economic stability balanced on the solution. In world affairs, 1946 followed a pattern that was reasonably clear when it began. Editorially, this JOURNAL then recorded that "the United States is now completely involved in world affairs . . . this is one of the outstanding realities of the century." No less involved at year's end, the American people had been sobered by the complex "how to do" difficulties that go hand in hand with world leadership. Be it noted in passing that such a sobering was progress, in itself. Actually, the events of the year themselves were not too discouraging, in the overall. More important, with faith in the rightness of her world purposes and a maturing capacity emerging inexorably from a broadening experience, there was scant evidence that the United States would repeat her error of the 1920's and again shy back from the responsibilities of greatness. Our people sensed that to do so, in this atomic age, would be to invite something worse than chaos.
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EAR'S END IS THE APPROPRIATE TIME, BY custom, for casting a prideful eye backward over twelve months' accomplishments and looking forward confidently to the new year ahead. This isn't that sort of editorial, because 1946 wasn't that sort of year. It lacked the stupendous punches of 1945one of history's greatest doing yearswhen victory and the atom bomb thrilled and rocked and sobered the world. By contrast, 1946 was a how to do year for America and the rest of the world, a year that saw the political process properly reassert itself after years of war making, a year that worried through recurring crises both at home and abroad, a year that provided few conclusive answers to many major problems. The failure of 1946 to provide conclusive answers should
1946
YEAR-END REFLECTIONS
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However, despite some progress in man's continuing quest for a more ordered world, 1946 bequeathed to 1947 the same urgent requirement it had inherited from 1945: the political equivalent of the atomic bomb. OUR ARMY As expected, 1946 was a "morning after" year for the Army, a year that posed a vast array of readjustment problems incident to the "leveling off" of a great wartime Army. Public administration is a difficult and relatively undeveloped science, if such it can be called. Of all aspects of the administrative process, retrenchment is probably the most difficult. Psychologically, it is not easy for public officialsbe they soldiers or otherwiseto readjust and gear down their thinking and their organizations and their operating procedures to a new "normalcy," after years of unprecedentedly great expansion and activity. Our Army struggled with this problem in 1946. It was neither an easy year nor a particularly satisfying year. Regardless of cause, the year seemed characterized by a feverish administrative activity that appeared to be quite out of proportion, in this writer's view, to the actualities. The circumstance left many soldiers in a "hangover" mood of frustrated disquietude. Time would, of course, provide the remedial cure. The War Department was hampered throughout the entire year by the lack of any guiding legislative directive for the post-war period, which was not written by the 79th Congress. Necessarily, this left much policy planning on an unsteady "if and when" foundation. What of Universal Military Training? What sort of unification of the Services, if any, would be forthcoming? These great questions, among others, were not answerable in 1946. The year was not without important accomplishments on the positive side. Occupation commitments and other responsibilities beyond the seas were fulfilled in a generally creditable manner. Internally, the War Department reorganized itself and the area commands, set up a more logically integrated school system, made appreciable progress in revitalizing the civilian components of the Army, digested battle lessons at several great conferences and conducted important experiments and tests, integrated thousands of new Regular officers, andperhaps most significant of allevidenced a full awakening to the vital need henceforth for a more sympathetic "meeting of the minds" between our Army and our people. The framework for such an understanding was marked out in
1946, although the gears ground and grated raucously on numerous occasions. Most urgent need of the Army as 1947 came in sights a reasoned legislative pronouncement by the 80th Congress defining the post-war pattern of our Military Establishment. OUR ASSOCIATION The year 1946 was critical in the life of the United States Field Artillery Association and its JOURNAL. Underway by 1945, the damaging impact on our Association's welfare of the Army's demobilization was snowballing by the time 1946 arrived. Financially, the Association was sustaining a serious loss each month and membership was plunging downward. Confident that our Association does, in fact, "contribute to the good of our country" and aware that the accumulation of dollars has no part in our purposes, the Executive Council authorized continued spending in excess of income. It was hoped that a recovery might be achieved and that the JOURNAL could be maintained on a monthly publication basis. Meanwhile the staff introduced major changes in the face, format and tone of our JOURNAL, which changes were designed to stimulate reader interest. Aggressive promotional efforts to increase membership and to expand book sales were also initiated. For whatever the reasons, the trend of the Association's financial circumstances and membership improved steadily during the second half of the year. In sum, it is clear that our Association achieved an appreciable degree of recovery during 1946, despite the fact that we were still operating at a monthly loss at year's end. The year 1946 also yielded several major disappointments: the goal of a solid financial operating basis for a monthly JOURNAL was not achieved; the 79th Congress renewed the prohibition against the acceptance of paid advertising; the hoped-for merger of the Field and Coast Artillery Associations did not come about; an essential augmentation of the editorial staff could not be arranged; and the inflow of suitable manuscripts remained sluggish. These "how to do" problems would carry over to 1947. Weighing all factors, it appeared doubtful as 1946 ran out that our Association either could, or should try to, continue to publish a monthly JOURNAL in 1946. The staff takes this opportunity, however, again to pledge themselves, come what may, to bring to Association members in 1947 the best possible JOURNAL they are capable of producing within the limitations imposed.
Assembly. In the case of the Security Council the Assembly has no power to alter its decisions, but it has the right to discuss and criticize them and exert moral pressure by making recommendations about them. GENERAL ASSEMBLY The General Assembly is the parliament, and meets once every year. Special sessions may be called at the request of the Security Council or a majority of the United Nations. Each of the fifty-one member nations holds one vote in the Assembly. At the present session, the Assembly will have to determine its budget for the coming year and the contributions to be made to it by each nation. It also must approve the constitutions and budgets of various specialized agencies before they can actually be established. The Assembly has final authority over the reports of the Social and Economic Council. The agreements between the United Nations and the specialized agencies under the jurisdiction of the Economic and Social Council must also be approved by the Assembly, and where it has been authorized the Assembly provide contributions to the budgets of these agencies. Like the Economic and Social Council, the Trusteeship Council is under the authority of the Assembly. SECURITY COUNCIL The Security Council consists of the Big Fivethe United States, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, China and Franceall of which are permanent members, and six nonpermanent 632
members. These latter, elected by the Assembly in London last winter, are Australia, Brazil and Polandto serve two years; and the Netherlands, Egypt and Mexicoto serve one year. The Security Council's duty is to investigate all international disputes, to propose peaceful methods of settling such disputes, to call on United Nations members to invoke diplomatic and economic sanctions against the offending nation, in the event of a continued threat to world peace, and, as a final recourse, to take military action. Big Five power comes to the surface in the Security Council, where, in all matters that do not concern questions of procedure, a decision cannot be made without the affirmative vote of each of the Big Five. Thus, a veto by any one of these powers can prevent the Security Council from taking any action whatsoever. Even any attempt to amend the Charter is subject to the veto. The Charter provides that amendments to it shall come into force after they have been adopted by a two-thirds majority of the Governments of the member nations, including the Big Five. Two important agencies, the Atomic Energy Commission and the Military Staff Committee, are immediately responsible to the Security Council. Both are advisory bodies. Atomic Commission. By adopting the atomic-energy resolution agreed on by the Big Three in Moscow in December, 1945, the General Assembly set up the Atomic Energy Commission in London last January. Composed of representatives of the eleven members of
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the Security Council and Canada, the Commission is responsible to the Council and is authorized to investigate all matters relating to atomic energy and to make specific proposals for (1) exchanging basic scientific information for peaceful uses, (2) controlling atomic energy to the extent necessary to insure its peaceful use, (3) eliminating atomic weapons as instruments of war, and (4) effectively protecting complying states against violations and evasions by inspection and other means. Military Committee. On the assumption that the Security Council might one day be compelled to threaten or take military action against a nation endangering world peace, the United Nations Charter established the Military Staff Committee to advise the Council on all military questions, including the regulation of armaments and disarmament, and to assume direction of the armed forces placed at the Council's disposal. Regular members of this committee are the Chiefs of Staff of the Big Five. The committee began its deliberations in London last February, resumed
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The Council is empowered to call international meetings on all social and economic matters; in addition to creating agencies, it can ally itself with agencies already in existence. The Council may also make direct recommendations to the Assembly or to individual countires among the United Nations. It is the one body in the United Nations that is authorized to cooperate with nongovernmental organizations. The specialized agencies, working as autonomous bodies with the Social and Economic Council, are as follows: UNESCO. The United National Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, designed to foster international intellectual cooperation, was established at a conference held in London in November, 1945, in which forty-one nations took part. A detailed program was drawn up and permanent headquarters were recently set up in Paris. Among its aims are the promotion of international agreements for the free exchange of information and ideas throughout the world; assisting members,
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at their request, in developing educational activities; the institution of collaboration among nations to advance equality of educational opportunity, and the assuring of the conservation and production of the world's inheritance of books, works of art and the monuments of history and science. FAO. The established aims of the Food and Agriculture Organization, which was organized at Hot Springs, Virginia, in May, 1943, as a permanent agency, are to raise the levels of nutrition in the world, improve the efficiency of production and distribution and better the condition of rural populations. FAO must attempt to set up a longrange program for sharing the food of the world's productive nations with countries that suffer periodically from droughts, floods or economic dislocations. At its annual conference in Copenhagen in September of this year, delegates of thirty-three of the FAO's forty-two member nations discussed formation of a World Food Board to maintain a world food reserve. ILO. Created at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 and inherited from the League of Nations, the International Labor Organization has negotiated a draft agreement with the United Nations for integrating its work with that of the Economic and Social Council. This now awaits the Assembly's approval. Though government-sponsored, the national delegations to the ILO include representatives not only of government but of management and organized labor. Its purpose is to promote social justice in the world, and this is implemented by the drafting of international conventions. While not all the ILO agreements have been ratified by national governments and while still fewer have been scrupulously observed, the ILO is generally conceded to have had considerable influence in improving working conditions. PICAO. Representatives of fifty-four nations met in Chicago in November, 1944, at the invitation of the United States, formed the Provisional International Civil Aviation Organization, and drafted a program designed to unify the different and
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areas, which are to be inspected periodically by Council officials.
WORLD COURT
The International Court of Justice is devoted to the arbitration of all international disputes submitted to it and acts as adviser to the United Nations on legal matters. It is successor to the League of Nations' Permanent Court of International Justice, and was formally opened on April 18, 1946. Its fifteen judges, elected in concurrent voting by the General Assembly and the Security Council, were assigned by lot to three-, six- and nine-year terms. The Court has its seat at The Hague and is headed by Dr. Jose Gustavo Guerrero of El Salvador. The statute of the Court is given strength by a clause under which nations may voluntarily declare that they accept the tribunal's compulsory jurisdiction in specified cases, such as interpretation of treaties, questions of international law and breaches of international obligations. So far the United Kingdom, the United States and The Netherlands have accepted compulsory jurisdiction. SECRETARIAT The United Nations SecretaryGeneral is the executive head of the permanent officials who administer the work of the entire organization. He acts as Secretary-General of all the meetings of the General Assembly and the three Councils and makes an annual report to the Assembly. In January, upon the recommendation of the Security Council, the Assembly elected to the post Trygve Lie, who had the support of Russia. Under the Charter the Secretary-General holds extraordinary powers, but Mr. Lie has asserted them warily, and mainly in behalf of the Secretariat, resisting efforts to keep the Security Council from sitting far into the night. However, the Charter gives him the right to bring any question before the Security Council that in his opinion is a threat to peace. At present there are about 2,000 persons on the United Nations payroll; apart from the Secretary-General's own staff, these are divided into eight departments, under eight assistant secretaries general.
"ANSWER" MACHINES
By William M. Hines, Jr.
HEN THE ARMY wants answers in a hurrywhen it needs to know how many field artillerymen are in Europe or how many Negro truck drivers are available for overseas duty it puts the question to its Machine Records Units. Large orders on short notice are a commonplace for the MRUs, but of all the jobs it has been called on to perform the recent compilation of Honor Lists of Dead and Missing for World War II was probably the biggest test of recent times. The essence of the job went beyond the mere fact of size, although 310,000 punch-cards make a formidable stack. The specifications of the task called for an alphabetical arrangement by counties, inclusion in their proper place of all honorable and exclusion of all dishonorable deaths, and the translation of the casualty code into a reasonably few recognizable symbols. As it was, the cards were filed numerically by serial number, the late General Malin Craig's O-86 heading the list. Another obstacle was that GIs who had suffered execution or who had died while in desertion were in with the rest, and the number of cards was too great to permit visual inspection to remove these cards from the file. Alsoand a big "also"there were more than fifty casualty codings, descriptive of various types of deaths; obviously, such a number was far too great for use in a list to be studied by the press and public. Still another hurdle to be leaped was the fact that the card file from which the list was to be developed was used daily and could not be "frozen" for this one job.
Somewhere in the Pentagon a wit has posted a sign over his desk: "Why be difficult when it is so easy to be impossible?" This might well have described the job facing MRU. But in the Adjutant General's office another sign stares workers in the face: the hackneyed old "The impossible we do immediately; the miraculous takes a little longer." Everyone in the huge room on the first floor of the river side of the sprawling Pentagon agreed that there was nothing miraculous about the job it was only slightly impossible. So they went ahead with it immediately. In that room, in addition to people, there are machines. And the question is moot as to which have the more brains the machines or the people. Perhaps the answer is the people, for they get the machines to do their work for them. But these machines seem to do almost anything. They can punch holes in cards, correct miscoded cards, duplicate cards, count cards, translate holes in cards into letters and numerals, and most
wonderful of all, the listing-tabulatingcomputing-whathaveyou machines. All were used in compiling the casualty lists. May 27, 1941, the date of President Roosevelt's declaration of unlimited national emergency, was selected as the opening date and January 31, 1946, was taken as the closing date for the compilation. First step was a "sort" run at the rate of about 17,000 cards an hour, to reject all cards bearing a date earlier than May 27, 1941. The 310,000 cards in the file were taken to the "gang-punch" or duplicating machines. A stack of punched cards were placed in one hopper on top of the machine, a stack of blanks was placed in another hopper, and the current was turned on. With a whirr, the job of punching a duplicate set of cards was beguna myriad of tiny electricallycharged fingers raced over each original card, seeing and finding holes in the non-conductive paper, and translating the impulses shot through these holes into energy which would actuate dies to punch holes in exactly the same places on the blank card. Quite a proccess, at the rate of eighty a minute. So, in a few days, the original set had been duplicated and returned to its filing
Typical of the millions of Machine Records Cards of all conceivable types is this sample of a Casualty Card. With the aid of prepared codes, the ninety-three holes punched in the card yield the following information: George P. Redlegs, Army Serial Number O-3000000, was a captain in command of a truck-drawn 105 Howitzer Battery in the 1000th Field Artillery Battalion. He was wounded in Germany on January 20, 1945, and was evacuated to the United Kingdom, where he died of these wounds on February 18, 1945. This information was entered in the central files of the Adjutant General's Office in the second week of March, 1945. Captain Redlegs. a white man whose component was Army of the United States, was a resident of Manhattan Borough in New York City.
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cabinets for further work. From then on, the duplicate setfrozen as of January 31was used. The next step was to feed these cards into a machine which would "read" the punches and translate them into a line of printing at the top of the card. This was necessary in the interest of speed in
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It was the first card in the deck, and the first to be sorted. Let's see how the sorting was done: It was determined that alphabetical sequence would be accurate to the tenth position in a name. Counting spaces, and remembering that last name comes first, the tenth position would be "I" in CRAIG MALI. So when the current was turned on, General Craig's card went into the ninth pocketthe one reserved for the letter "I." Alphabetizing, in other words, was done backward. The next time the General's card went through, the ninth position was sensitized, and the "L" in CRAIG MAL caused it to drop into the twelfth hopper. And so the card was scanned: CRAIG MA, CRAIG M, CRAIG (space), CRAIG, CRAI, CRA, CR and finally C. Because there are twenty-six letters in the alphabet, two sorts are necessary for each of the ten alphabetical positions. What this boiled down to was examination of 6,200,000 cards in a total of twenty sorts. With five machines running simultaneously on a three-shift basis, the job was done in three days. The sort was accurate enough for all practical purposes: JONES HERBERT would certainly fall before JONES HERMAN, and it was even-up (but not too important) whether ROGERS HERBERT would come before or after ROGERS HERMAN; the pragmatic outlook on this point was that anyone looking for ROGERS HERMAN would be able to find him without any difficulty. After alphabetizing, the cards were sorted by state and county according to "Code 72," devised by Machine Records for this purpose. Code 72 broke the United States up by the old Service Commands and assigned numbers to states on a two-digit, alphabetical basis. Connecticut, being the first state alphabetically in the First Service Command, is number 11the first "1" for Service Command and the second "1" for the state's alphabetical position. After state sorting, each state group (alphabetically arranged within itself) was re-fed into the sorter for county breakdown. This follows a second section of Code 72 which consists of a three-digit figure as follows: the counties are arranged alphabetically and assigned
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numbers starting with 001. Since the originator of the code foresaw a possibility that new counties might be legislated into existence, this second section of Code 72 was designed as an "expansion" code only odd numbers were assigned originally: 001, 003, 005, etc., leaving a place in alphabetical order (as an even number, i.e., 002) for any "new" county. Through an oversight, historic old Charles City County Virginia, was left out of the original code and was inserted later as 33 (for Virginia)036. This is the only evennumbered county of some 3,000 in the United States. The county sort and state sort added only ninety machine-hours' work (about two shifts for five machines) to the job and required only single examination of each card on five different runs (or a total of 1,550,000 cards). So the job of transforming a serially-numbered deck into an alphabetical deck arranged by state and county (a job involving examination of 7,750,000 cards) was done in something less than four days. Is there a statistician in the house who could figure how long the job would have taken how many humans? With the sorting job complete, the task of printing was ready to begin. And this was done by the brainiest machine of them all. Each casualty card bears much more information than was desired in the honor list. Some was to be retained and some was to be rejected. Some was to be printed as it appeared on the card and some was to be interpreted into something entirely different; in other words, in addition to printing what it did say on the card, the machine in some instances had to print what it didn't say. Then too, the machine had to keep track of figures while it was doing the other job. For inclusion and exclusion of information the operators relied on the brains of the machinea board with 2,000 holes in one bakelite face and a like number of electrical connections on the other face. This board, incidentally, is not much bigger than the page on which this is printed. The "brain" was wired in a complicated fashion to produce the desired information, and a final check for accuracy was achieved
"ANSWER" MACHINES
by wiring the machine so that the state and county code would be printed at the extreme right of the page after each name. Thus, the proof-readers could immediately locate a misplaced entry. Another matter which relied on the selectivity of the machine was that of translating casualty code numbers more than fifty different kindsinto six broad classifications: KIA for killed in action; DOW for died of wounds; DOI for died of injuries; DNB for died, nonbattle; FOD for finding of death, and M for missing. If one of several codes designating different type of non-battle deaths came up on a card, the machine would instantly translate this to DNB and print DNB instead of the code number. It would also automatically reject all "line of duty no" entries. The machines which do this work are less than ten feet long, under four feet high and about three feet thick. They are popularly reputed to contain thirty-five miles of wire of all sizes. Somewhere in the innards of the machine, in addition to all this wire, the manufacturers have managed to jam 120 little adding machines. The wiring included a provision to strike an automatic total at the end of each county listing and to break this county total down into its component casualty types. An example of a county with 100 deaths would be: 00-000 57 8 1 27 6 1 100 The completed job was released by the War Department earlier this summer. A massive stack of fifty books, it ran to 1,700 pages of names. How accurate? Somewhere between 99.8 and 99.9 per cent. And what caused these errors perhaps five hundred of them? Human beings, naturally. Humans who punched cards wrong, humans who lost cards, humans who put cards back in the wrong place after taking them out to look at them, and humans who failed to catch errors in proof reading. Humans made the errors that the machines couldn't catch. And until they invent machines that really think, the way humans think, or until they start making humans of as stern and reliable material as machines, the output from MRUs will necessarily include a certain minimum of errors.
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By Oram C. Clesma
Republished by courtesy of the Army Transportation Journal NE OF THE MOST INCONgruous 1942. The American Red Cross was sights of the war was the operating permanent clubs in cities and appearance of a pretty girl behind the at large military installations but wheel of a huge, van-like truck making many small units of American troops its way over muddy, debris-strewn roads were stationed in villages in isolated near a battle-front. The truck was areas. familiar to every GI. It was a Red Cross To bring a Red Cross club to these Clubmobile and the petite young driver lonely men the Red Cross constructed was one of hundreds who rolled the first club on wheels and named it a 7,000,000 doughnuts a month to soldiers "Clubmobile." The first Clubmobiles all over the world. were converted British "Green Line" Clubmobiles of all types, sizes and buses. Originally requisitioned by the shapes were operated throughout the British government from commercial world wherever American troops were bus lines and then requisitioned from the stationed. At the peak of operation, June British by the Americans, these buses 30, 1945, 294 Clubmobiles were were excellent over the good roads and operated in overseas theaters. Europe short distances of England. They had 170; Great Britain, 31; contained a kitchen, an electric doughnut Mediterranean Theater, 22; C.B.I., 8; machine, a lounge, and two bunks. With Pacific Ocean area, 6; Southwest Pacific the approach of D-Day, Red Cross 6; Canada-Alaska, 5. officials sounded out the Army on the But by May 31, 1946, there were question of whether Clubmobiles would only 17 Clubmobiles in operation. The be permitted on the continent. The Army curtailment of Clubmobile operation agreed with the proviso that the vehicles marks the passing of a unique morale be designed so that they could be booster and the closing of a chapter of converted quickly into ambulances if World War II that packed glamour, needed. laughter, heroism, tears, and just plain Eighty GMC 2-ton 6 6 trucks fun into the bloody business that was were allotted the Red Cross by the total war. Army. The bodies for these were The Clubmobile program started in designed by Americans but they were the United Kingdom back in October of built by the British at London and 638
Wilmington. These vehicles, which became standard on the continent, contained a 220-volt doughnut machine, five 35-gallon water tanks, a sink, and storage space for cooking materials and for doughnuts. They were organized in units known as "Clubmobile Groups." Each group consisted of eight clubmobiles, one cinemobile (for showing movies), two supply trucks, two GMC generators which were pulled behind trucks, and one 110-gallon water trailer. Three girls were assigned to each truck and two soldiers and 30 girls were assigned to a group. The soldiers, limited service ex-combat men, drove the supply trucks and helped in maintenance work. Since the Army could not spare men to drive the Clubmobiles, the Red Cross took on the job of training its girls for the job. The Army loaned GI's as instructors, and the girls soon learned that "double-clutching" is not something done on a dance floor. After preliminary heats around the Wilmington race track where the motor pool was located, the girls took more intensive training at a British tank course complete with hills, craters, and mud wallows. Then for a final exam they drove their ungainly vehicles through London's Oxford St. As one Clubmobile girl put it, "The sight of an American girl driving an Army truck at breakneck
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speed along the wrong side of Oxford St. conditioned Londoners for the Vbombs." With the approach of D-Day, the Red Cross amassed in the UK 4,000,000 pounds of doughnut flour in barrels, 30,000,000 cigarettes in boxes, plus towels, toothbrushes, toothpaste, shaving cream, candy, gum, playing cards, and matches. The Clubmobiles were waterproofed in England, carried across the channel in Liberty ships, transferred to landing craft and then rolled up to the beaches under their own power. On shore they were de-waterproofed before being driven inland. The first Clubmobile, the DANIEL BOONE, drove off an LST onto the Normandy beachhead on July 15, 1944. Two special Clubmobiles serviced the beaches while combat GIs poured over them and into France. Also there was a "Duckmobile" to service ships on which troops were waiting to debark. This was one of many such improvisations. During the Allied drive across France army supply lines were not fast enough for the Clubmobiles so the Red Cross organized its own system which operated as a part of the famed "Red Ball Express." Two supply trucks with Red Cross girls as drivers highballed the rough route from Cherbourg to Paris, day and night, seven days a week.
ROLLING DOUGHNUTS
Transportation of all sorts brought "coffee and" to GI's around the world. The Clubmobile became a "Jeepmobile" in New Guinea; a cub-courier-carrier in Sicily; and a "Fleetmobile" at secret naval bases in Great Britain. In the Mediterranean Theater Clubmobiles were improvised from whatever type of vehicle was availableusually Allied or captured trucks. In areas where motor transportation could not be used because of great distances and lack of roads, "Trainmobiles" were operated. A Trainmobile in eastern India operated a 20-day round trip along the BengalAssam railroad to take movies, books, games and canteen service to men in jungle outposts. After September, 1942, when American troops were sent into Persia to establish supply lines to Russia, a Trainmobile consisting of two cars and an engine operated up and down the barren Persian Gulf territory. The trip took three weeks in temperatures that frequently reached 160 degrees. Many Clubmobiles and their drivers frequently were within range of enemy air action. They were seldom within range of ground fire. But there were several exceptions to this, especially during the "Battle of the Bulge." The only clubmobile fatality occurred at that time when Red Cross Driver Kay Cullen
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was killed by shell fire at Verviers, Belgium. To offset the danger and tragedy of their work these slim, trim young drivers often were involved in pleasant and sometimes ludicrous situations. One young Red Cross girl whose previous driving experience had been limited mostly to piloting a snappy station wagon out to the country club was doing her best to start her cumbersome "six by six" when an Army Ordnance crew stopped and offered to help her. In answer to their first question of whether there was any gasoline in the tank, she replied she had put 35 gallons into the tank only a few miles back. After trying everything else with no success, they finally checked the gasoline tank. It was empty. She had laboriously put 35 gallons of gasoline into the tank designed to hold water for making doughnuts! To those who like to study figures, the Red Cross Clubmobiles offered some interesting ones. For example, in one month, December, 1944, throughout the world, clubmobiles distributed 7,154,000 doughnuts and 2,855,000 cups of coffee. And on no fewer than 8,437,863 occasions the girls answered the question, "Where's your home town, honey?"
HERE is nothing in front of the infantry (armor) but the enemy. The artillery mission is to assist this infantry in getting the objective and when on the objective to prevent its dislodgement by enemy action. This mission requires artillery to "keep up the fire." Among other critical essentials in keeping the fire up is the proper location of firing units (battalions). Artillery battalions are properly located when there exists an area of 1500 or more yards in front of the infantry that is covered by "time fire" of these battalions. To maintain the proper location of firing units requires the displacement of field artillery battalions. Displacement is not an operation but is a continuous process which is controlled by a general plan. The plan will vary with the amount of artillery available to a division commander, the condition of roads, the availability of position areas, the extent of visibility, and ammunition allocations. The division artillery commander plans the displacement for all artillery supporting the division; these plans are coordinated with the corps artillery commander and must include having the decided minimum of artillery supporting the infantry at all times. The mechanics of the plan are to establish displacement phase lines in each regimental zone; these phase lines are established to permit maximum use and time fire and normally conform to lines of observation or other terrain feature. Displacement is then controlled by (1) the arrival at these phase lines by the infantry, and (2) the priority of displacement assigned to artillery battalions advancing in the zone
*General Beiderlinden commanded the 44th Infantry Division Artillery in Europe during the late war.Ed.
of the infantry regiment (see diagram). The mobility possessed by the United States Army Field Artillery is such that a plan based upon the above two factors can generally be effected regardless of road or terrain conditions. The operation called displacement must be enlarged uponit is too often confused with the movement of firing echelons. It is a continuous operation during the entire time of combat. It is broken down for convenience into the following phases: 1. Map reconnaissance of possible position areas. 2. Liaison aircraft observers report concerning map reconnoitered areas. 3. Ground reconnaissance as soon as possible after a position is under friendly control. 4. Survey of position area. 5. Installation of wire communications. 6. Initial improvement of position area including de-mining or taping of mined areas. 7. The registering of a single piece coincident with the establishment of the forward echelon of the FDC. 8. The movement of the firing echelons into the new positions. 9. Firing echelons displace normally by infiltration, by battery or battalion, dependent on road conditions and the number of battalions in the zone of action of an infantry regiment. 10. Extra ammunition and kitchens follow into the new position at a convenient time. A registered piece permits accurate fire from the battalion as soon as firing echelons arrive in the new 640
positions. The displacement of all battalions having similar missions in the zone of action of an infantry regiment is on the order of the direct support battalion commander providing it conforms to a pre-arranged plan. The details of displacement listed above are those necessary when operating under the most difficult conditions and in which continuous fire support of considerable volume is required. Displacement in a pursuit varies slightly from the above principles. A minimum of two battalions are desirable in the zone of action of each infantry regiment, and when using the division artillery alone the medium battalion takes over a direct support mission. Two light battalions are grouped and the one medium and one light battalion are grouped; each group supports an infantry regiment. During a pursuit one battalion as a minimum should be in position to support leading elements. When the leading elements are motorized (quite often "Piggy Back" on an artillery battalion) the field artillery is prepared for a "Crash RSOP." Displacement in the defense is controlled directly by the division artillery commander coordinated with the division commander and corps artillery commander. In the defense at least two positions are completely prepared for each batalion, including "digging in" and the installation of all telephone lines. Other rearward positions are reconnoitered and surveyed in. Priorities for movement to rear positions must be coordinated carefully between division and corps artillery commanders, with due
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consideration for the effective ranges of weapons and time required to get superheavy weapons out of position. In addition each battery has "dug in" an alternate position in case it receives counter-battery. Pieces for each battery are registered in the alternative positions and displacement positions if time permits. The plan of displacement of corps artillery in the zone of action of a
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as a group supporting another division The corps artillery commander will usually prescribe the deflection coverage of corps artillery in the division zone. He may prescribe limits for certain elements of the division artillery. Displacement in a limited objective attack is a special operation and requires separate consideration. The definition of a "limited objective" is a variable. However, it is safe to say that it normally
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is an attack planned as a one-day operation in the attack of an organized position, and will not exceed a 6000yard advance. All displacement operations are completed as rapidly as possible after the attack starts except the movement of firing echelons. No firing echelons should displace in this type action until the infantry is dug in on the objective and the enemy's counterattacks have ceased. Artillery should, if possible, be initially located during the attack so as to permit the checking of all defensive barrages for the new defensive line. The volume of artillery fire will be greater in front of a given part of the new position than it is on any part of the original position because of the fanning out of fire possibilities. The depth of searching in the new enemy rear areas only will be lessened. Displacement across a mined area or a terrain barrier presents an opportunity and a challengean opportunity for the artillerist to demonstrate finesse in preparing a workable plan which overlooks none of the above factors, and a challenge to his leadership during the execution phase since small failures must be corrected immediately to prevent cumulation into a situation which would cause disaster to the support of the infantry. Artillery supports the infantry wherever or whatever it may be; division boundaries are only a lateral demarkation to limit the infantry responsibilities. The call of any forward observer "in trouble" must give him all the artillery that can help him regardless of boundaries. Artillery so operated constitutes a powerful corps reserve which on record has materially assisted in clearing many critical situations. In conclusion, it is emphasized that the displacing of artillery is a continuous process which is integrated into an overall plan, that the artillery within the zone of action of a division must be given the same consideration as the artillery of the division. Operating on the above outlined principle will give maximum artillery support with a minimum of confusion. Current training literature leaves much unsaid concerning the displacement of artillery.
November-December
Fuze Wrench
By Lt. Col. John S. Benson, FA
HE FUZE WRENCH PICtured will cut fuze setting time for any caliber and in the case of the 105 howitzer will speed up considerably the delivery of time fire. Its advantages over the present standard issue fuze wrench M-14 are ease of operation and stability. The round recess at the top of the new wrench permits the seating of the fuze nose, thereby absolutely preventing the wrench from slipping once the lug has engaged the slot on the time scale, such slipping being the chief fault of the present fuze wrench. It also permits the fuze to be set by turning from directly above, enabling a single cannoneer to perform this operation when gun squads are short. The wrench can be made easily and quickly in any shop, using commonly available materials. It is not certain to whom the credit belongs for the origination of this wrench. The 18th FA Bn fell heir to it when a gun squad from the 664th FA Bn (250mm How) joined the Battalion. However, the tool is now standard equipment in the Battalion, and the drawing and description are furnished for the convenience of any unit desiring more rapid fuze setting in the firing battery.
participating in a seven months' maneuver which has as its objectives the determination of the modifications necessary to present clothing, weapons, and heavy equipment for cold weather operations and the development of new equipment in cases where this is found necessary. The Force is commanded by Colonel Rudolph W. Broedlow, Inf., who commanded the 361th Infantry in the 91st Infantry Division in Italy during the war. In mid-November, the Force staged a demonstration of its activities which was attended by representatives of the nation's press. Clothing being put to rigid test includes a string vest worn under the undershirt for ventilation (Byrnje vest), Air Corps parkas, wind face masks (see cut), white over garments for camouflage, pile jackets, mukluks, shoe pacs, ski boots, arctic mittens, and wet weather parkas. A front line sleeping bag has been designed to permit the
soldier to get into action without having to fight his way out of the conventional type sleeping bag. This is to overcome the claustrophobia so common among soldiers in combat equipped with the standard sleeping bag. Another recent development is the Arctic sleeping bag, designed for very cold weather. It consists of two down and feather filled cases, an outside water repellent cover, and an inside liner. Also shown were artillery sleds which will be tested, as soon as there is snow, as to the suitability of using sleds for towed weapons. Some recent artillery developments exhibited were radar and meteorological equipment now being used and tested. Radar Set SCR-584, which tracks enemy mortar and artillery shells, was formerly used only in the location of airplanes. The metro section obtains important weather data by sending aloft a tiny radio sending set attached to a balloon and using a radio direction finder to pick up and interpolate the signals.
The new 57mm and 75mm recoilless weapons were fired and also a new MI rifle, which can be fired either full shot or full automatic. On display was a new type of shelter half, a modification of the pup tent, which may be closed at both ends and ventilated by opening one or both ends. Other infantry tentage shown was a new two-man reversible mountain tent which may be pitched white or O.D. according to the camouflage desired; a 16-man squad tent; a six-man pyramidal tent for use in high winds; and the Jamesway Shelter, which is used as a mess hall where sixty men may be served cafeteria style. Recent mess equipment innovations are the new stainless steel combination knife, fork, and spoon which eliminates noise and may be carried by the soldier at all times and the plastic meal tray which is being tested with a stainless one. Packboards and rucksacks, used to help carry loads on the back more comfortably, were exhibited along with a convertible sled-toboggan used for hauling up to 350 lbs. of supplies. Mountain climbing equipment included nylon and manila climbing ropes, snap links, pitons, crampons, and ice creepers. Task Force Frost has a medical platoon, the main purpose of which is to test the "human element" in cold weather operations and evaluate the efficiency of standardized medical equipment and supplies. They also evaluate the adequacy of Army rations on a caloric basis for this type of climate.
Metro section of an observation battalion prepares to send aloft a balloon carrying a delicate radiosonde set, signals from which are received by the instrument in rear and thereafter converted into weather data for use by artillerymen.
GI's, thesebelieve it or not! Shown are five different types of special winter clothing undergoing test. Particularly ferocious and "comfy" looking, respectively, are the masked figure in white and the ready-for-bed soldier on the right.
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Reorganized AGF School System 1 November 1946, the activities at Forts Knox, E FFECTIVE Sill, Benning and Riley were reorganized and consolidated
respectively into The Armored, Artillery, Infantry and Ground General School Centers. Whereas the troops and stations remain under the commanding generals of the army areas in which they are located, the several Schools and Boards concerned are directly under the Commanding General, Army Ground Forces.
CONSOLIDATION AND ELIMINATION The following Schools were eliminated, as such, by this reorganization: Effective 1 Nov. 1946: The Airborne Schoolto be replaced by an Airborne Department or Section in The Infantry School at The Infantry Center at Fort Benning, to conduct Airborne instruction. The Air Training Schoolto be replaced by an Air Training Department or Section in The Artillery School at The Artillery Center at Fort Sill, to handle the Army Ground Forces Pilots' Course and the Air Mechanics' Course. The Antiaircraft Artillery Schoolto be replaced by the Antiaircraft and Guided Missile Branch of the Artillery School at Fort Bliss, Texas. The Cavalry Schoolto be replaced by the Ground General School at Fort Riley, Kansas. The Coast Artillery School to be replaced by the Seacoast Branch of the Artillery School at Fort Scott, California. The Intelligence Schoolto be replaced by the Intelligence Department or Section in the Ground General School, to conduct those activities performed by the Intelligence School. Effective 1 June 1947: The Mountain and Winter Warfare School, with the responsibility for this type of training assumed thereafter by the Fifth and Sixth Armies. The reorganization included the transfer of numerous courses among the several schools of the integrated system, and the elimination of the following courses at the School indicated: a. PMS&Tall schools. b. National Guard Instructor all schools. c. Radio Operatorsall schools. d. Airborne Officers Signal CommunicationThe Airborne School. e. Officers Parachute Riggers The Airborne School. f. Enlisted Airborne CommunicationThe Airborne School. g. Basic Branch The AAA and S/CA Schools. h. Advanced Branch The AAA and S/CA Schools. i. Enlisted Track Vehicles The Armored School. j. AGF Clerks the Armored School. k. Officers Animal Management The Cavalry School. l. Officers Reconnaissance and Securitythe Intelligence School. m. Enlisted Reconnaissance and SecurityThe Intelligence School.
The Ground General School at the Ground General School Center, Fort Riley, Kansas, will conduct the following courses: Officers Courses: Basic (17),* Intelligence (18), Intermediate Horsemanship (37), Advanced Horsemanship (37). Enlisted Courses: Horseshoer-Packer (18), SaddlerPacker (18), Photo Interpreter (7), Order of Battle and Interrogator (7), CCS (24), CIC (To be announced), CID (To be announced), NCO (18), Communications Chiefs (18), Radio Repairman (18), Motor and Track Vehicles (25).
ARMORED CENTER
The Armored School at the Armored Center, Fort Knox, Kentucky, will conduct the following courses: Officers Courses: Basic (22), Associate Basic (13), Advanced (37), Associate Advanced (13), Communications (18), Motor and Track Vehicles (18), Refresher Courses for Senior Officer (As announced).
INFANTRY CENTER
The Infantry School at the Infantry Center, Fort Benning, Georgia, will conduct the following courses:
*Figures in parenthesis, in this and subsequent sections, show the length of the course in weeks.
McNair Hall, the administrative headquarters of the Artillery Center at Fort Sill, sited between a brace of Long Toms.
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1946
Officers Courses: Basic (Branch Material) (22), Associate Basic (13), Advanced (37), Associate Advanced (13), Motors (12), Communications (18), Basic Airborne (8), Advanced Airborne (6), Air Transportability (3), Pathfinder (8), Refresher Course for Senior Officers (As announced). Enlisted Courses: NCO (18), Motors (15), Basic Airborne (6), Radio Repairmen (18), Communications Chiefs (18), Parachute Rigger (8), Pathfinder (8). ARTILLERY CENTER The Artillery School at the Artillery Center, Fort Sill, Oklahoma, will conduct the following courses: Officers Courses: Basic (22), Associate Basic (13), Advanced (37), Associate Advanced (13), Communications (18), Sound and Flash (18), AGF Pilot Course (16), Refresher Courses for Senior Officers (As announced). Enlisted Courses: NCO (18), Radio Repairman (18), Communications Chiefs (18), Master Gunnery (37), Sound, Flash and Survey (18), Meteorology (18), Radar (18), Armorer and Artillery Mechanic (18), Air Mechanics (13). The Antiaircraft and Guided Missile Branch of the Artillery School, Fort Bliss, Texas, will conduct the following courses: Officers Courses: Associate Basic (13), Radar (37), Guided Missiles (37), Research and Analysis (37). Enlisted Courses: Radar Repair (37), Fire Control Electrician (37). The Seacoast Branch of the Artillery School, Fort Scott, California, will conduct the following courses: Officers Courses: Associate Basic (13), Seacoast Electronics (18), Submarine Mines (18), Advanced Gunnery (13). Enlisted Courses: Diesel Motors (18), Electrical (18), Gun Data Computer (18), Seacoast Radar (18), Submarine Mine Operator (18).
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S UBJECT personnel
as well as in other sports from the 1948 Olympic lists. Sports listed for the cancelled 1940 Olympics and which are expected to be among the 1948 games include track and field, swimming, boxing, wrestling, gymnastics, basketball, ice hockey, weight lifting, bobsled, rowing, skiing, fencing, cycling, soccer, football, rifle shooting, pistol shooting, yachting, figure skating, speed skating, canoeing and field hockey. The War Department will encourage participation of military personnel in preliminary Army training and in tryouts of the various United States Olympic games committees, leading to final selection as members of United States Olympic teams. Those who qualify in the final United States tryouts will be authorized to take part in the Olympic games. All must maintain their amateur standing in their own sports and in other sports as well. Selection of qualified participants to represent the Army in the tryouts will be based primarily on competition in sports to be selected from the Olympic list. Preliminary competition will be held within the Army areas, Air Forces commands, oversea theaters, departments and commands and in the Military District of Washington.
in the world on three arguments: (1) there is more of it, (2) materiel is excellent, and (3) tactical use of field artillery is more aggressive in the Soviet Army. Use of artillery in cities is typical of unconventional Soviet tactics. First the Soviets analyzed the difficulties of observing for artillery in cities. Fighting in a densely populated area is not like fighting in the field; it is almost impossible to select observation posts which command the enemy's defenses. Observers must occupy vantage points with a limited field of view, and shift them constantly as the infantry moves forward. It is almost impossible to run surveys to tie these vantage points together, as the Soviets normally do; bilateral observation is the basic observed-fire procedure of their Army. Work with the regimental "reconnaissance" (sound and flash) battery in cities is a nightmare of frustration. In cities, sound waves from a gun or bursting shell echo off the walls of buildings, are compressed in narrow streets, and are changed beyond all recognition. Sound posts sometimes find themselves in a "sound shadow," and even when they do hear, deciphering the sound track is extremely difficult. Sound outposts have a particularly hard time distinguishing between enemy artillery fire and that of their own guns. Front lines are rarely straight, and guns are firing from various directions. Direct-fire pieces may be emplaced ahead of the sound outpost, making it all the harder to distinguish friend from foe. Under field conditions, the "visual reconnaissance platoon" (flash ranging) is usually able to locate enemy strongpoints, heavy weapons, and artillery batteries by intersection. This requires a base line at least one quarter as long as the observer-target distance. Under city conditions this system will work only at night. The enemy will be firing both
fixed OP's. Mobile OP's consisted of two experienced observers with a periscope, who moved up and down the front, observing specific targets, and collecting all observation data they could from infantry observers. They were supplied with panoramic sketches of their zones. During a battle the mobile OP's were stationed behind or on the flank of an assault unit. The officer who sent out the observers assigned definite targets, so that their attention was not distracted. When they saw anything else worthwhile, they reported it directly to their own commander, who may have ordered them to point out a target of opportunity to roving guns sent forward during the battle to deliver direct fire. Overwatching OP's were established on the upper stories of tall buildings, in an effort to obtain general observation of streets occupied by the enemy. These OP's also checked the camouflage discipline of friendly troops. The Red Army contends that observation around the clock should always be stressed in city fighting, where the enemy is so well hidden that he only betrays himself by movement or the flash of his weapons. Enemy gun flashes and the bursts of an observer's own shells can be picked up most readily at night. In positions very close to the enemy, every effort was made to tie into the enemy telephone wire net to intercept German messages and commands. Large numbers of Soviet guns were brought forward for direct fire during the street fighting. Considerable stress was laid on training their crews to observe the enemy constantly. Battalion staffs maintained contact with roving guns and obtained frequent reports. These reports were studied with those of regular observers. The basic technique of Soviet observation, the bilateral method, was modified in city fighting. Instead of trying to plot intersections, pairs of OP's reported a target as being in or near a certain building. The specific window or breach from which an enemy weapon was firing was reported if possible. The building was then identified on a firing chart. This system facilitated the dessignation of targets for direct-fire missions.
BATTLE HONORS
THE 44TH FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION is cited for outstanding performance of duty in action from 26 July to 2 August 1944. As the artillery component of the 22d Regimental Combat Team which was attached to Combat Command A, 2d Armored Division, the 44th Field Artillery Battalion aided materially in effecting the breakthrough in the German line west of St. Lo, France. The resulting St. Gillis-Marigny gap, which the 44th Field Artillery Battalion helped to establish by penetration and thereafter held open, permitted the break-out of Allied armor, which played a major part in the complete collapse of the German western positions. Without previous experience and only the briefest indoctrination, the 44th Field Artillery Battalion entered the St. Lo breakthrough operation on 26 July as armored artillery in a highly mobile warfare at St. Gillis, Canisy, Le Mesnil Herman, Villerbaudon, Mayen, Percy, and Tessy-SurVire. Throughout the operation, forward observers rode atop tanks and directed fire in close support of attacking infantry. Continuously displacing forward, the battalion was subjected to murderous enemy aircraft bombing and strafing. At Villebaudon, cannoneers were forced to attack enemy infantry in order to secure firing positions for their guns. Despite unusual difficulties encountered and the extreme fatigue produced by 24 hours a day mobile combat, the esprit of the battalion remained superior throughout. Consistently and invariably, the 44th Field Artillery Battalion performed its mission as an intricate part of the command, delivering close supporting fire speedily and accurately with devastating effect upon the enemy. The superb courage, combat efficiency, and tenacity of purpose manifested by each officer and man of the 44th Field Artillery Battalion reflect the highest credit on themselves and the armed forces of the Untied States. (General Orders 69, Headquarters First Army, 26 July 1946.) THE 306th FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION is cited for its magnificent
LEGION OF MERIT
Brig. Gen. THOMAS F. HICKEY Col. LAWRENCE B. BIXBY Col. PAUL C. BOYLAN Col. CLAUDE F. BURBACH Col. WILLIAM W. DIXON Col. JAMES C. HUGHES Col. RICHARD PARK, JR. Col. CHARLES L. STEPHENSON Lt. Col. DONALD C. BEERE Lt. Col. WILLIAM CALFEE Lt. Col. RODERICK L. CARMICHAEL Lt. Col. O. S. HULLEY Lt. Col. WINFIELD W. SCOTT Maj. STANLEY B. BONNER (posthumously) Maj. DOUGLAS GORMAN, JR. Capt. LANDIS GORES
SILVER STAR
Lt. Col. ALVA R. FITCH
courage, heroism, and skillful performance of duty in action against the enemy on the Island of Leyte, Philippine Islands, during the period 24 to 31 December 1944. The 306th Field Artillery Battalion was given the vital mission of supporting the 305th Infantry Regiment in its attack on the last enemy escape route to the seaport of Palompon. This operation consisted of a pincer movement of one force driving over the mountain and another from the sea. On the night of 24 December, the 306th Field Artillery Battalion began its march from the Palompon Road Junction along the only road to Matagob, a distance of 10 miles over a single, narrow causeway, under persistent enemy sniper fire. Immediately upon arrival at Matagob, the 306th Field Artillery Battalion came under observed enemy artillery fire and promptly opened counterbattery fire while shells were falling in battery positions. The enemy fire was silenced and enemy field pieces destroyed within a few minutes of the initiation of the artillery fire. The battalion's position was, of necessity, 2,000 yards in rear of the front lines and without defilade from the commanding terrain held by the enemy demolition parties, which were killed at close quarters by members of the battalion. On 25 December, the infantry advance in the mountains encountered strong enemy resistance and was beld up temporarily. The enemy was concealed skillfully in numerous mutually supporting strong points. Massed artillery fire was placed on the enemy. These concentrations were so dense and effective that they stripped the terrain of all vegetation, caught the enemy in his well-concealed and dug-in positions, and inflicted severe casualties. After these fire missions were completed, the infantry was then able to continue its advance. This vital artillery support was accomplished despite the fact that the 306th Field Artillery Battalion was hemmed in by enemy groups in the surrounding hills, without infantry protection, continually fired upon by enemy artillery and mortar units, and subjected to persistent night attacks made by the demolition parties of a fanatical foe. About 0300 on 26 December, an enemy force, with estimated strength of a platoon, attacked the service battery, but was driven back after a sharp and decisive fight, leaving three dead. Substantial evidence was discovered later that the enemy had suffered heavy casualties in this short action. Later, an artillery patrol engaged the enemy about 1,000 yards from the battalion's position. After receiving several casualties, the patrol was withdrawn and the enemy taken under direct artillery fire. More than 50 Japanese
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were killed in this action. Another artillery security patrol, composed of 20 men from a firing battery, encountered an enemy infiltration party of approximately 50. The patrol, with grim determination, charged the enemy, killing 33 and routing others. Only six members of the patrol were wounded. Lacking infantry protection, the 306th Field Artillery Battalion maintained its position for 144 hours in this infested area, displacing only when its immediate tactical mission had been completed. Though subjected to attack day and night, this organization contributed materially to crushing the enemy between two friendly forces, enabling the latter to effect a junction and wrest from the enemy his last port, thus terminating all organized resistance on the Island of Leyte, Philippine Islands. The extraordinary determination, tenacity, aggressiveness, and esprit de corps displayed by the 306th Field Artillery Battalion in its isolated mountain position and fight against a fanatical enemy reflect the highest credit on this organization and the United States Army. HEADQUARTERS and HEADQUARTERS BATTERY, 9th INFANTRY DIVISION ARTILLERY, is cited for conspicuous gallantry and heroism in battle on 21, 22, and 23 February 1943, in repelling an attack by vastly superior forces, which were attempting to break through the Allied lines in the vicinity of Thala, Tunisia. Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 9th Infantry Division Artillery, completed a 100hour forced march from Tlemcen, Algeria, covering a distance of 735 miles in bitter weather over tortuous and almost impassable mountain roads on the night of 21 February 1943. Without prior reconnaissance or adequate maps, harassed by enemy fire, and forced to maneuver through a congested narrow road, nevertheless, the battery occupied battle positions, set up communications, established observation posts, and was ready to deliver fire by daylight. Although enemy forces were entrenched only 2,500 yards distant and there were only three platoons of friendly infantry in front of the artillery, the unit maintained constant and steady fire with much deadly effect and enemy tank units were dispersed and driven back. The cool and determined manner in which Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 9th Infantry Division Artillery, entered into battle, after an almost incredible forced march, contributed in great measure to the defeat of the enemy's attempt to break through the Thala defile. The gallant entry into battle and the heroism with which the volume of fire was maintained, despite terrific enemy fire, are in keeping with the highest traditions of the American military service. The 126th FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION is cited for extraordinary heroism and outstanding performance of duty in action against the enemy on Luzon,
November-December
itself, the 32d Division. and military service as well. THE 466th PARACHUTE FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION is cited for extroardinary heroism, efficiency, and achievement in action against the enemy near Wesel, Germany, on 24 March 1945. Jumping by parachute, north of Wesel, the 466th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion encountered some of the bitterest fighting in the accomplishment of the objectives assigned to the 17th Airborne Division. Landing in a drop zone completely covered by accurate fire from enemy artillery emplacements, this parachute field artillery battalion, after gathering ammunition and howitzer bundles off the fire-swept field, went into action to fire their first round within 30 minutes after getting to the ground. Although 1 battery of this parachute field artillery battalion had lost all of its officers, the battalion's fire control was established within 1 hours and firing in direct support of a parachute infantry regiment. The 466th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion, in addition to accomplishing its assigned mission, succeeded in capturing or destroying 18 field pieces and approximately 18 enemy machine guns. The proficiency and aggressiveness of the 466th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion, in the face of great odds and a defensively prepared enemy, resulted in the provision of adequate artillery support, which assisted materially in the ultimate exploitation of the gains achieved. The 189th FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION is cited for outstanding performance of duty in action against the enemy on 13 September 1943 at Salerno, Italy. During the first bitter 4-day battle on 9-12 September 1943, for establishment of the Salerno beachhead, success of the venture had not as yet been assured. The most critical day of the entire operation came on 13 September 1943, when the enemy launched its heaviest counterattacks. Success was within the enemy's grasp when he annihilated infantry elements holding the vital Sele-Calore Rivers corridor. The 189th Field Artillery Battalion, in position near the junction of the two rivers, stood alone between the strong enemy force and the beaches. As the enemy moved to the attack, the 189th Field Artillery Battalion formed a defensive line manned by the antitank platoon, machine gunners, cooks, truck drivers, ammunition handlers, clerks, and spare cannoneers. The Germans reached the river line and attacked in force with rifles, machine guns, mortars, tank fire, and artillery, but the 189th Field Artillery Battalion held fast. From 1800 hours until dark (2200 hours), the enemy attacked continuously in an attempt to overrun the battalion's position, but by grim determination and indomitable fighting spirit, the battalion repulsed all enemy assaults. The howitzer crews delivered almost continuous fire, mostly by
1946
direct laying and at very close range. By 2230 hours, the enemy admitted defeat and withdrew. The individual courage, gallantry, and esprit de corps displayed by the officers and men of the 189th Field Artillery Battalion exemplify the highest traditions of the military service. Successful accomplishment of an infantry role by the battalion prevented a disastrous and complete breakthrough and made possible the ultimate success of the Salerno Campaign. THE 53d FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION is cited for outstanding performance of duty against the enemy at Luzon, Philippine Islands, on 3.7 February 1945. During this period, the 53d Field Artillery Battalion supported the 63d Infantry Regiment in a flanking movement to by-pass Munoz and attack San Jose. The battalion built a road to follow the advancing infantry across soggy swamps, rice paddies, and deep irrigation ditches in order to carry out the mission. This movement was under enemy observation and machine-gun, mortar and artillery fire. After reaching its position, the battalion was attacked for 3 days and 4 nights by enemy infantry raiding parties. On the morning of 7 February 1945, at 0330, the remnants of the Japanese 2d Armored Division broke through a road block to the rear of the battalion and reached the battalion position area. Although it was too dark to see but a short distance, the tanks were taken under fire by .50 caliber machine guns located in the battalion perimeter. The leading tank was set afire. The remaining tanks and armored personnel carriers deployed in the dark and accompanying personnel dismounted and attacked the 53d Field Artillery Battalion position. The battalion fought off this night attack with carbines, machine guns, and hand grenades and then took the initiative by sending bazooka teams in among the tanks and redisposed their 105-mm howitzers to positions more advantageous for direct fire. When dawn broke, a vicious tank-artillery duel commenced. Firing at point-blank ranges of from 50 to 300 yards, the 105-mm howitzers of the 53d Field Artillery Battalion fought the turret-mounted guns of the Japanese tanks. When the last enemy gun was silenced, it was found that the enemy had lost 6 medium tanks, 5 light tanks, 10 personnel carriers, 2 105-mm howitzers, and 249 men. The 53d Field Artillery Battalion lost one howitzer by direct hit, plus additional casualties among vehicles and personnel. This action by the battalion and adjacent troops eliminated the Japanese 2d Armored Division as an effective fighting force. The 53d Field Artillery Battalion distinguished itself in action by extraordinary heroism and exhibited such gallantry, determination, and esprit de corps as to make it outstanding in this engagement. The magnificent courage and devotion to duty of all members of the 53d Field Artillery Battalion are a credit and inspiration to the armed forces of the United States.
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IN HONORED MEMORY
ROADS on the Post of Fort Sill are FIFTY-ONE to be dedicated to the memory of artillerymen, the great majority of whom lost their lives during World War II. New sign posts bearing the names of these honored dead, replacing letter designations for streets which until now have been left unnamed, will be raised in the near future to keep alive the memories of those who have gone before and left their mark in the history book of Fort Sill.
Irwin Circle, for Major General George LeR. Irwin. Commandant of the Field Artillery School from July 1, 1923, to April 1, 1928; died Feb. 19, 1931, while en route to the United States from Europe. Treat Road, for Major General Charles G. Treat, who rendered invaluable assistance to the first Commandant of the School of Fire when it was being organized in 1911. General Treat died on Oct. 11, 1941, in Washington, D. C. Cruikshank Circle, for Brigadier General William M. Cruikshank, Commandant of the Field Artillery School from Feb. 8, 1930, to April 26, 1934; died Feb. 23, 1943, in Washington, D. C. Hand Road, for Brigadier General Daniel W. Hand, formerly Assistant Commandant of the Field Artillery School and Director of the Department of Gunnery; died Sept. 28, 1945, at Letterman General Hospital, Presidio of San Francisco, California. McBride Avenue, for Brigadier General Allen C. McBride, formerly an instructor in the Department of Tactics of the Army Ground Forces Air Training School; died May 9, 1944, while a
prisoner of war at Camp TainwanFormosa, Philippine Islands. Searby Circle, for Brigadier General Edmund W. Searby, formerly an instructor in the Department of Animal Transport of the Field Artillery School; killed in action in France, Sept. 14, 1944, while commanding the artillery of the 80th Infantry Division. Clarke Road, for Colonel William Clarke, formerly director of Department of Tactics of the Air Training School at Fort Sill; died Jan. 1, 1945, while commanding a field artillery group in the European Theater of Operations. Hirsch Road, for Colonel Ralph Hirsch; died April 13, 1942, in the Philippine Islands. Hoskins Road, for Colonel John O. Hoskins; died Jan. 22, 1942, while serving in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater. Hudnutt Avenue, for Colonel Dean Hudnutt, formerly an instructor in the Department of Tactics of the Army Ground Forces Air Training School, and also one-time editor of THE FIELD ARTILLERY JOURNAL; died Oct. 11, 1943, while serving at the Army Air Forces Technical School, Yale Univ.
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Matthews Road, for Colonel Church M. Matthews; killed in action Dec. 17, 1944, while serving as chief of staff of the 7th Armored Division in the European Theater of Operations. McNair Avenue, for Colonel Douglas C, McNair, son of Lt. Gen. Lesley J. McNair, and formerly an instructor in the Department of Gunnery of the Field Artillery School, killed in action on Guam. Roberts Avenue, for Colonel Thomas A. Roberts, Jr., formerly an instructor in the Department of Tactics of the Air Training School; killed in action in France, Aug. 4, 1944, while commanding the artillery of the 2nd Armored Division. Searight Road, for Colonel Hamilton F. Searight; died April 14, 1942, in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater of Operations. Atkinson Road, for Lt. Col. John J. Atkinson; died Feb. 24, 1945, while serving in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater. Babcock Road, for Lt. Col. David S. Babcock; died Dec. 15, 1944, while serving in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater. Blair Street, for Lt. Col. Arthur W. Blair; killed in action Dec. 25, 1944, in Germany. Bryan Street, for Lt. Col. John K. Bryan; died July 5, 1944, while serving in New Guinea. Cook Street, for Lt. Col. John G. Cook; died Jan. 27, 1945, while serving in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater of Operations. Coyle Road, for Lt. Col. Harold J. Coyle; died April 17, 1942, in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater. Cureton Avenue, for Lt. Col. Nathaniel C. Cureton, Jr.; killed in action June 20, 1945, in the ChinaBurma-India area. Ganahl Avenue, for Lt. Col. Joseph Ganahl; died Feb. 11, 1945, while serving in the Asiatic-Pacific area. Harper Road, for Lt. Col. Harry J. Harper; died Dec. 15, 1944, in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater of Operations.
November-December
Hatch Road, for Major Steve E. Hatch; killed in action in Dec. 1944, while flying a combat mission in the European Theater of Operations. Lauman Avenue, for Major Phillip G. Lauman; died Dec. 15, 1944, while being transported as a prisoner of war from the Philippine Islands to Japan. McKee Street, for Major John L. McKee, Jr.; died April 12, 1945, while serving in Germany. Packard Street, for Major Harry B. Packard; killed in action Dec. 14, 1944, while being transported from the Philippines to Japan. Scott Street, for Major Stanley C. Scott; died Aug. 3, 1944, while serving in France. Thomas Street, for Major William R. Thomas; died Feb. 13, 1945, while serving in the Southwest Pacific. Webster Street, for Major Thomas J. Webster; died Oct. 27, 1943, while serving in North Africa. Coune Road, for Capt. Felix H. Coune; killed in action on the Baurauan, Leyte, air strip on December 8, 1944, during a Japanese air raid. Murphy Street, for Capt. John J. Murphy, Jr.; died Sept. 7, 1944, off Mindanao, in the Philippine Islands. Skelly Road, for Capt. Thomas M. Skelly; killed in action in the spring of 1945, while flying a combat mission as Air Officer of the 252nd Field Artillery Group. Swartz Street, for Capt. Benjamin A. Swartz; died Dec. 3, 1944, while serving in the European Theater of Operations. Phillips Road, for 1st Lt. Hicks R. Phillips; killed in an airplane accident near Fort Sill, April 19, 1943, while giving dual instruction to a student pilot. Stalling Road, for 1st Lt. Robert P. Stalling, one of the early instructors of the Department of Air Training; killed on March 8, 1943, during a routine training flight.
selection starts with a physical examination. If qualified physically, the candidate for selection takes an intelligence test, which, if passed satisfactorily, is followed by a "self rating" test, a written examination in which the answers to the questions establish the man's caliber as possible officer material. If the candidate has qualified through these steps, he is submitted to an evaluation by another enlisted man, a noncommissioned officer who in the opinion of the immediate superior commissioned officer is best qualified to make such an evaluation based upon the frequency of daily contact and the supervisory relationship between such non-commissioned officer and the applicant. In the case of applications from non-commissioned officers of the higher grades the evaluation report will be secured from a qualified commissioned officer. After the evaluation rating by a fellow enlisted man has been compiled the applicant will be ordered to the nearest officer interview board, where he will be evaluated again for selection. Although elaborate for the number of candidates selected during peacetime, in the event of an emergency the officer training plan should not only greatly reduce the officer attrition rate but also provide the Army with an efficient, easily administered, and practiced system of selection of officer candidate material from civilian manpower pools.
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PERIMETERS
in
PARAGRAPHS
By Col. Conrad H. Lanza, FA, Ret.
UBSTANTIALLY, THE GENeral situation remains unchanged, with the existing differences between Russia and the Western Powers the focal center of interest. Harsh statements have appeared in the Russian press against the Western Powers, and the United States in particular. Frequent objections have been voiced by Russia's representatives both at the Paris Peace Conference and at the Security Council Meetings. Besides these manifestations, Russian diplomacy has been active against the interests of the Western Powers in various places throughout the world, some of which have been backed up by military force. Elsewhere, military force is threatened but has not been applied. All this is curious, in view of an internal condition within Russia which is certainly unfavorable to hazarding armed conflict on a major scale. In fact, the evidence indicates that Russia strongly wishes to avoid any such conflict. Nevertheless, her announced policy of last February (which has neither been withdrawn nor amended) is that a war with the capitalist countries is inevitable, and that Russia must prepare for it. Russia's diplomatic moves and her risking of minor wars should be interpreted as part of that preparation. To prepare Russia industrially, three
successive 5-Year Plans are considered as essential preliminaries. The first of these Plans was started this year and, if all goes as planned, the final year will be 1960. The general character of Russia's moves during this, the first year of preparation, is worthy of review. Beginning of 1946. Russia was occupying Manchuria with large military forces, in violation of a treaty which required evacuation by 2 December 1945. Similarly, Azerbaijan was occupied under treaty obligations to withdraw by 2 March 1946. These forces were not withdrawn by that date. In connection with the occupation of Azerbaijan, a claim was set forth on 20 December 1945 for the cession by Turkey of a substantial slice of territory adjacent to the Russian frontier near Batum. Claims were also made for the right to garrison the Istanbul Straits by establishment of Russian naval and air bases thereon. Large forces were assembled in the Batum area and in Bulgaria by the end of March. In view of these concentrations, some commentators predicted a Russian attack on Turkey during April. At the same time there was a strenuous Russian diplomatic and propaganda campaign against Spain. This induced France to break diplomatic relations with Spain and to close their common boundary. A Russian CP was established outside Vienna to prepare plans to rush troops to France, upon call, should they be needed on the Spanish frontier. Policy Changes. Although the exact date of the change in policy cannot be 652
established, late in March the foregoing projects in Manchuria, Azerbaijan, opposite Turkey and against Spain were abandoned. This was undoubtedly on orders from the Polit Bureau, the executive body that rules Russia. The reasons for this sudden change of policy can only be conjectured. There are some good guides. Both Western Powers had become very stern with Russia about the unlawful occupation of Azerbaijan. Less sternly, but nonetheless firmly, they insisted that Russia evacuate Manchuria. In response to this pressure, Azerbaijan was evacuated by 8 May and Manchuria by 30 April. No call having come from either the French Government or the French Communists for Russian troops to protect France against Spain, that project was also discontinued at about the same time. In lieu of the abandonedor possibly merely temporarily discontinuedprojects, new ones were initiated which appeared to involve less risk. These were against Greece and Trieste. Initiated in May, they are still being pursued. A reorientation of the policy against Turkey was undertaken. The loss of occupation of Azerbaijan reduced the eastern frontier with Turkey by over 50%, and correspondingly reduced the number of divisions which could be usefully employed at one time. The new GHQ established at Odessa under Marshal Zhukov, an able general whose command includes two army groups one each on the eastern and western frontiers of Turkey. Marshal Zhukov assumed command in July, and at once
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started to organize his forces. Having made considerable progress in this line, Russia made renewed demands on Turkey. The current Russian diplomatic offensive embraces three areas Trieste (the gateway to Italy), Greece, and Turkey. All three point towards the eastern Mediterranean. In Russian hands, any one of the three would afford excellent basesa military reality that would materially alter the strategical situation within the Mediterranean to the advantage of Russia and the disadvantage of the Western Powers. Considering Marshal Stalin's candid statements of 9 February last, it would be to the disinterest of the Western Powers to agree to such a Russian expansion. Battle Order. According to advices dating from August and September, Marshal Zhukov apparently has some 12 divisions divided, more or less equally between the eastern and western frontiers of Turkey. This is exclusive of Bulgar divisions, whose number has not been recently reported, but are estimated as 12 to 14 divisions. The GHQ Reserve is in Romania and is reported to total at
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least 15 divisions, plus about 12 Romanian divisions and an Air Force of 3,000 combat planes. Russia has transferred a number of ships obtained as reparations to the Black Sea. It would be possible to organize an amphibious expedition to cross the Black Sea (200 to 400 miles wide) to land on the north coast of Turkey. Opposite Greece are 3 recently organized Albanian divisions said to be partly officered by Russians. It is reported but not confirmed that 3 additional divisions are being raised. Besides the foregoing, Yugoslavia was reported early in September to have had 4 infantry and 1 armored divisions on the Greek frontier, with 4 Russian divisions in support. In all, this amounts to at least 12 divisions facing Greece. Opposite Trieste there are reported to be a weak Yugoslav Army of 6 divisions, with 1 or 2 Russian divisions in support. There is also a Russian Air Force present. The GHQ Reserve in Romania is centrally located and could be moved rapidly to any one of three possible
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fronts Trieste, Greece, or western Turkey. The general distribution of the Russian forces points toward Turkey, with land attacks possible both from the east and from the west by troops already in position. As already stated, amphibious expeditions against Turkey via the Black Sea are also possible. The Russian force on the east front of Turkey is available for Azerbaijan should it be there needed. Azerbaijan has 2 divisions, which are Russian equipped, but their combat value is uncertain. Opposite Manchukuo the Russian strength in northern Korea is reported as 9 divisions, with 4 or 5 additional divisions near the Manchurian border. This is exclusive of the Russian controlled Mongolian divisions, estimated as 3 in number, and some 25 Russian divisions east of Lake Baikal which seem to be the Far East GHQ Reserve. Clearly, Russian troop dispositions are such as to facilitate taking prompt advantage, if desired, of favorable opportunities for expansion or the seizure of areas suitable for military bases.
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It is evident that the Communist regime is not as efficient as that of the democratic nations. At the beginning, Communism seized all industrial establishments, farms and services without compensating the former owners. The immediate result was the cessation of payments for dividends and interest on borrowed capital. This permitted higher wages and sometimes lower prices initially, but as the seized plants wore out it became necessary for the Government to replace them. The Russian Government had to find the capital and it has now become the greatest capitalist in the world, owning all capital within its territory. The relative inefficiency of the Communists is not surprising. It is generally agreed that government directed industries and services are usually less efficient than privately owned ones. What belongs to everybody belongs to nobody. Government supervision requires an excessive overhead. Such figures as are available indicate that the Russian overhead in industrial establishments and mines is 3 to 5 times as great as in the United States. Russia is up against the proposition of having to replace an enormous amount of worn out plants as well as the plants destroyed during the war. For this reason, she desires all the plants and machinery she can obtain from occupied countries, and if possible without payment. If true, the alleged looting of other countries may well be an organized and premeditated effort to keep the inefficient Communist economy rolling. DISSATISFACTION This is reported as general throughout Russia. Although under control, such dissatisfaction is a constant worry to a dictatorial form of government. An extensive counterpropaganda campaign is under way, charging that the Western Powers and particularly the United Statesthreaten Russia. It is rare that a good word appears in the Russian press as to what America has done or is doing. Credit is never given to American troops for their part in World War II. Russia assumes credit for having won the war with only minor help from Allies. The "iron curtain" functions to keep news out of Russia which might lead
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with the people. The Russian people are informed from returning soldiers who have been in contact with Western civilization that the Western Powers are not a set of savages, and that their soldiers are well dressed and well fed, are efficient and satisfied, and show no signs of wishing to desert to Russia. The UNRRA is having a strong effect in the areas where it operates. Most of the food distributed is packaged by Americans, and it is increasingly clear to the Russians who receive it that if the United States can send immense quantities of food to Russia she cannot herself be seriously short of food. UNRRA also distributes American motor vehicles and other articles. The simplest Russian peasant can see that a nation that can afford to do all this cannot possibly be such an undesirable country as their home propaganda charges. STALIN PRONOUNCEMENTS On 24 September, Marshal Stalin made written replies to questions submitted by the correspondent of the London Sunday Times. In judging Marshal Stalin's pronouncement (and he doesn't make them often) it is well to keep in mind that Russian policy changes with extreme suddenness, whenever such a course is deemed advantageous by the Polit Bureau. Stalin charged that:
"The noise is being raised about a new war mainly by military-political scouts and their few supporters from the ranks of civilian officials. They need this noise if only, a. to frighten with the specter of war some naive politicians ... and thereby aid their government to extract more concessions; b. to make difficult for some time the reduction of military budgets; c. to check demobilization of troops, and thereby prevent quick growth of unemployment."
This reply is obscure. The "noise about a new war" does not come from military-political scouts and a few civilian officials. Who are they? And who are "the naive politicians" who are to be frightened? Does this refer to American or Russian politicians? It is not correct to charge that an effort is being made to prevent reduction of military
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budgets or to check demobilization to avoid unemployment. Demobilization has been unusually rapid and complete in the United States. There isn't any unemployment problem, and has not been. In this writer's view, the real reason behind talk for a new war is Marshal Stalin's own statement last February that such a war is inevitable and that his country would be prepared. To this may be added the constant objections of Russian diplomatic agents to American proposals and the antiAmerican Russian propaganda. Marshal Stalin's reply to the question of a new war evades the issue. He attributes fear of such a war to non-existent things and is silent on the important ones. Marshal Stalin expressed the belief that the quickest possible withdrawal of all American forces in China is vitally necessary for the future peace. He did not amplify that statement. Other opinions were that the American sole possession of the atomic bomb would not last long, its use would be prohibited, and that in any case atomic bombs would not decide the outcome of a war. He expressed a general willingness to collaborate with the Western Powers.
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ARMY AND NAVY By a recent General Order the designation of Red Army and Red Navy, which has been the official title, is changed to Soviet Army and Soviet Navy. The Red flag and name were originally intended to apply to Communists throughout the world, all of whom were invited to fight under that banner. The new title stresses the Soviet Union of Russia rather than the Communists of the world. As previously explained in this column, the Polit Bureau reoriented its efforts some time ago to spreading the Soviet flag to other countries rather than to stirring up revolutionary movements elsewhere, which was the Communist theory 20 years ago. In other words, current Russian claims are motivated in the interest of the Soviet Union and not in the interest of World Communism. On the other hand, whereas the spread of Communism is now subordinated to national purposes, it is still useful, since it furnishes 5th Column opportunities in other lands. But it is no longer the main issueand Russia's Army and Navy are no longer representative of anything but their own country.
FAR EASTERN NOTE
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From reports made by Japanese who have escaped from Sakhalin and the Kurile Islands, it appears that the Russian displacement policy has been applied to those areas. It is estimated that 200,000 Russians have arrived to Sovietize Sakhalin, and 75,000 Japanese have been expelled and have lost their homes and property. Those not expelled have been drafted into work battalions. Large air fields have been constructed and large air forces are present. These are combat forces, as the observers reported that bombing drills were daily events. There are two, and possibly three, combat equipped infantry divisions on the island. Reports from the Kuriles are unusually limited. They agree that there is extraordinary activity supposed to be of a military nature. No concrete evidence which is reliable has come to note other than that, as in Sakhalin, a large number of Russians have moved in. However, there hasn't been any displacement of Japanese from the Kuriles to Japan. It is assumed that all Japs are required for enforced labor in whatever the Russian construction may be.
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with rank increased two grades above that held in the German army. Russia needs all kinds of qualified industrial and military men to complete its announced program of having the best and strongest military force in the world. Russia is making a strong bid for German support. In its zone, there is no unemployment. This contrasts unfavorably with the zones of the Western Powers where there is extensive unemployment. Russia pays good wages and does not discriminate against Germans, some of whom receive high salaries. Russia has no refugee problem. These went to the American zone by millions. Undoubtedly Russia would like to see Germany united into a single country, dominated by herself. This is blocked by the Western Powers. In view of this situation present indications are that Germany will be treated for some time to come as a partitioned country, with little probability of a real central government. GREECE Insofar as the Western Powers are concerned, Greece presents a situation that is similar to China. In both cases, one of the Western Powers has substantial military forces present in the country supporting a recognized central government. Both countries have an opposition party in arms, and in each case this is the Communist Party. In both countries, the hostile Communists maintain liaison with Russia. In China, the central government recognized and supported by the United States never has an election and can only claim to represent a majority of the people. But Greece had an election this past September, which was observed by American and British observers who reported the election as having been fairly conducted. Of the total votes cast about 70% were in favor of restoration of the monarchy. In compliance with the vote the monarchy was duly reinstated by the return of King George on 27 September. Just as in China, the hostile Communists control a substantial section of northern Greece this being the area closest to Russia and from where liaison can easily be maintained. Also as in
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There will, however, be a concerted effort to cause the British to withdraw. Should this happen, it appears logical that the Communists would seek to overthrow the monarchy and establish a Soviet Government. Russia has withdrawn previous demands made at International Conferences for a base in the Dodecanese Islands, and has agreed to the cession of these islands to Greece. The explanation is that Russia feels it would be easier to establish a Communist Government, which would then voluntarily concede the desired base in Greece, than to fight for a base within the Mediterranean area. The Greek situation is an element of danger and needs to be watched. It is closely connected with the Istanbul and Trieste problems. The United States has made it known that it supports the British in Greece, just as the British support us in China. TRIESTE AND YUGOSLAVIA
HE CITY OF TRIESTE AND vicinity, known as Venezia Giulia and claimed by both Italy and Yugoslavia, is occupied by the XIII British Corps, which includes the U. S. 88th Infantry Division and the British 1st Armored Division. Whereas the shore area, which includes Trieste, is occupied by Italians, the interior mountainous country is inhabited mostly by Slavs. Yugoslavia demands all the territory (coast and mountains) on the ground that it is indivisible. Venezia Giulia has never belonged to Yugoslavia, and never belonged to Italy prior to the conclusion of World War I. For four hundred years prior to that war it was held by Austria Hungary and was the major commercial port for that empire. Contrary to numerous statements, Trieste has not been a vital port for Italy. There are other ports more convenient to production centers. Neither has Trieste been an important port for Yugoslavia for the same reasons. During the Italian occupation the port received goods for maritime shipment from south Germany, Austria and Hungary. However, it was not self supporting, and its insufficient local revenues were balanced by the Italian Treasury.
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The proposition has been made to make Venezia Giulia an independent state, probably under the jurisdiction of the United Nations. If this is done the United Nations will have to finance it, for there is no more trade from south Germany in sight. Moreover, with Hungary within the Russian economic circle, and Austria partly so, it is improbable that either of those countries will be able to furnish much trade for Trieste, unless Trieste falls to Russia or a Russian puppet state. This is what would happen if Venezia Giulia is given to Yugoslavia. It would be valuable to Russia by giving her a Mediterranean port very suitable for that part of west Europe occupied by Russia. The port of Pola (included within Venezia Giulia) would then again become a major naval base. Yugoslavia. This country has engaged in a series of "incidents" directed against the United States. Two transport planes were shot down, and several border altercations have occurred. Yugoslavia has officially charged the United States with willful and frequent violation of the air zone over its frontier areas. In one letter it charged 172 such incidents. In reply, our State Department pointed out that thorough investigation of the movements
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of every American plane in Europe for the period charged showed that only 10 had been anywhere near Yugoslavia, and that there was no evidence other than the Yugoslav charges that these 10 planes had in fact crossed the frontier. Marshal Tito, the dictator of Yugoslavia, has charged that "certain imperialistic great Powers" wished "to set the people of their own countries against those peoples who want justice and peace." He added that they (presumably Russia and Yugoslavia) did want peace, but not peace at any price, and would not cede to the aforementioned imperialistic great Powers. Whereas a warlike interpretation might be put on this speech and related incidents, a more probable explanation is that the intent was to impress the home front by showing firmness and an ability to talk back to the Western Powers. Best evidence, perhaps, is the strong internal opposition to Tito, which he is seeking to overcome. The Yugoslav Fourth Army, with about 6 divisions, is opposite the XIII British Corps. This army is being reequipped with Russian materiel, with the old materiel reported to be going to Greek Communists.
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Croatia. This is the northern province of Yugoslavia and contains approximately one-third of the total population. The southern two-thirds is Serb. Croatia was never united with the Serbs prior to the completion of World War I, having previously long been united to Hungary. Croats and Hungarians have the same religion Roman Catholic. They got along well together, and the Croats had full representation in governing bodies. The Serbs belong to the Orthodox Church, now placed under Russian rule. The Croats never got along well with the Serbs, and always tried to secure local autonomy. Croats claimed that the Serb majority discriminated against them. They did. When war came, many Croats willingly joined the Germans. There were 2 Croat Divisions serving with the German armies in Russia. Now Croatia is again unwillingly joined to the Serbs, who appear to be in the process of liquidating Croat opposition throughout that country. It is well to remember the precedent of Danzignamely, that the forceful unification of nationalistic groups against the will of the people is one of the breeders of war.
USSIA HAS TWO CLAIMS against Turkey. The first and most important is a demand submitted last August for the right to establish joint Russian and Turkish bases along the Istanbul Straits. The second, which has not been pushed recently, was for the cession to Russia of a considerable area at the northeast corner of Turkey where it adjoins the Russian border. The area involved amounts to about 50,000 square miles. Russia's claim to control of the Istanbul Straits is based on the principle that the Straits must be open at all times for passage of warships of the Black Sea Powers, and always closed to warships of non-Black Sea Powers. The bases are desired to ensure execution of that principle. If this is acknowledged
and granted, Russian ships can issue into the Mediterranean at will, but warships of Mediterranean and other Powers cannot enter the Black Sea. Istanbul would become a powerful advanced Russian air and naval base, thereby greatly increasing the military security of Russia. Obviously, however, this would decrease the military security of Mediterranean Powers. It is a problem of first class strategical importance. Approval of Russia's claim would also establish a precedent. If the entrance of the Black Sea is to be confided to Russia, the principal nation bordering that sea, by analogy the entrances to the Mediterranean should be confided to the care of the principal Mediterranean nations and the warships of outside nations excluded from that sea. This would mean surrender by the British of
their bases at Gibraltar, Malta, Cyprus and Egypt, and withdrawal of the American fleet from the Mediterranean Sea. On 22 August Turkey declined to accept Russian participation in the defense of the Istanbul Straits, which she stated lay entirely within her territory; and furthermore Turkey contended that she was fully capable of defending them under the provisions of the existing Montreux Convention which at present regulates traffic through the Straits. The United States and Great Britain by appropriate notes concurred in Turkey's stand and expressed their belief that Turkey could defend the Straits. Russia replied to Turkey late in September, reiterating her demand for joint bases on the Straits, and warning that
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a refusal to grant them would be considered an unfriendly act. Turkey has defenses on the Straits. She was able to defend them during World War I. During World War II nobody attacked them. She wants no foreign troops in her territory. She has always feared Russia, and for a century and a half has had repeated wars with that country which has consistently attempted to secure control of the Istanbul Straits, as well as also over her northeastern frontier. Turkey has scant hope of winning a war with Russia, unless she is supported by the Western Powers, since she has neither adequate armored troops nor an efficient Air Force. Russia has both. The Russian Navy in the Black sea is poor, but the Turkish Navy is poorer. The distance between the Turkish east and west frontiers, opposite both of which large Russian forces are present, is some 900 miles. Lines of communication between the two fronts are limited and incapable of transporting troops from one front to another with the same rapidity which Russia could do by using water transportation. The serious Istanbul problem had not been settled as this account closes. PALESTINE AND THE ARAB STATES There has been no change in the situation in Palestine. Jews attempting to enter that land are being intercepted by the British authorities and transported to camps in Cyprus. Sabotage by armed Jews within Palestine continues, but on a reduced scale. The Grand Mufti, Haj Amin el Husseini, has established his CP in Egypt. He is functioning as the real ruler of Arab Palestine, and is generally recognized as the Arab leader. At the beginning of October he replied to a questionnaire submitted by Mr. H. J. J. Sargint, of the New York Times, in which
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Russians to reach the Levant area, would stop the oil supply from Iraq, and probably from Saudi Arabia, would interrupt the Suez Canal, and might cause Moslem insurrections in French North Africa, Libya, and possibly elsewhere. Russia's appreciation of these possibilities may be shown by the large increase in staffs of Russian consulates throughout the Arab states and throughout French North Africa. In one of its sudden changes of policy last June, the Polit Bureau issued orders to these consulates to see to it that the local Communist parties displace without delay all Jews in key positions and replace them with Arabs. According to British reports, Communist cells in French North Africa have considerable quantities of arms, including a number of batteries, hidden in the desert. Of course the Jews are not a military factor as a combat organization, but the Arabs are. This indicates that Russia is preparing to support the Arabs if the Western Powers miss their chance. Should this occur it would lead to a partial encirclement of Turkey, and the disablement of France for military operations elsewhere if disorders should arise in North Africa. Turkey might then jump into Russian arms held out to welcome them as a new Soviet state. For the above reasons and despite the limited military strength of the Arab states, their location and connections with other Moslem countries are such that the Arabs cannot safely be disregarded. The British understand this. To quiet the Arabs it might be possible to organize a new Arab state out of Libya. The Arabs hate the Italians and do not want them back. If left to the Western Powers this might be arranged. However, the Arabs have made an issue on Palestine and are holding firm for the right to govern their own countries in their own way.
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by the Communists prior to that period. The Kuomintang has succeeded in reoccupying the railroads and now holds most, but not all, of the key positions. The one remaining exception is the north and south railroad through Shansi, which has not been reoccupied except for the south segment. This Kuomintang campaign has followed the pattern of the Japanese plan of occupation. From 1939 to 1945 Japan held all China in a vise by occupying the main cities, railroad junctions, and main coast and river ports. Although the Japanese made no attempt to hold the interior, the Chinese had to receive food and other necessary supplies through the key Jap-held cities and the lines of communication in order to live. This resulted in minimum losses (about 5,000 per annum) to Japan. The Kuomintang has not been able to duplicate the Japanese success despite the use of four times as many troops. Key positions have been occupied, but lines of communication have not been maintained. They are just as much closed as at any time since the Japanese were withdrawn. For example, a Communist force estimated as 150,000 men is in the general area where Shantung, Anwhei and Kiangsu come together. From that area they raid the railroads in all directions and none are operating. The Communists have avoided major battles. When pressed, they withdraw from key positions and then close in behind Kuomintang forces and cut the railroads. The result has two major consequences. From a military point of view the Communists have avoided severe losses and have maintained their armies in the field, pending raising of new troops, reported to include substantial air units. From an economic point of view China is being strangled by the impossibility of moving food and other supplies (including vast quantities of UNRRA goods) from one point to another. Famine has resulted in some provinces, mine products cannot be distributed, and manufactured goods cannot be delivered. It is probable that economic distress in China has never been as bad as it is right now.
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The Kuomintang is maintained by the United States through loans, "sale" of war goods (to be paid for at a distant date), military and naval advice, and instruction of military forces. American Marines guard the coal mines north of Tientsin. This coal is shipped to the Yangtze valley, although that area has its own coal mines. However, no U. S. Marines are watching over them, and the Kuomintang cannot distribute that coal. The Military Situation. The Kuomintang has occupied "key" positions in Jehol and elsewhere. It has sent two armiesthe 6th and 52nd from Mukden toward Antung, with the mission of interrupting this liaison line between Russian held northern Korea and the Communists in Manchuria. The Communists are uniformly avoiding major engagements, but are raiding over wide areas. JapanU. S. Ally? Communist General Chou En-lai expressed the opinion, in an interview with the Associated Press representative in midSeptember, that the United States apparently assumed that war with Russia was inevitable, adding that the United States would rely on Japanese troops rather than Kuomintang troops to wage war in Manchuria and north China. A few days later, a British estimate of the situation widely circulated in London reported that General MacArthur's policy was making a friend of Japanthat the iron hand which issued orders had been succeeded by an unseen hand which writes advice. The estimate concluded that it would be but a question of time before Japan would appear as an ally of the United States. Regardless of the truth or falsity of the foregoing statements, their circulation materially affects the current military situation. The Chinese Communists have noted them, and it must be assumed that Russia certainly has. The Chinese Communists do not like this. Their natural reaction is increased hostility to the United States and a drift toward Russian support. Whether or not this will be forthcoming and, if so, to what extent, is unknown. NETHERLANDS INDIES
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Java and Sumatra, less several large coast cities, are held by native troops under a native government which is functioning. Native forces on Java are estimated as about 10 divisions, including a small air force. A large quantity of Japanese arms are in their hands. This includes artillery and a few armored vehicles. The local population is hostile to a restoration of Dutch rule. It is showing much sympathy for Japan, and apparently regrets the departure of the Japanese troops; at the showing of films, for example, pictures of Japanese troops are loudly applauded. There is considerable dislike of the United States as a temporary oppressor of Japan, and for not insisting on the provisions of the Atlantic Charter that all peoples should govern themselves. Late in August, Lord Killearn, British Special Commissioner, arrived at Batavia as an intermediary to arrange for peace between the Dutch and the Javanese. He was not able to bring the two parties together until 7 October. They refused to declare an armistice. The Dutch claim that if the negotiations fail they will have insufficient troops to go on with the war after the British withdrawal, which is now under way and is scheduled to be completed by 30 November. The Dutch are bringing one infantry and one armored division from Holland. For their part, the Javanese refuse to stop fighting unless the military situation is frozen and no more troops are brought in. They also want 13,000 Japanese troops, now present at Batavia, sent home. The Dutch claim these are slave labor troops and essential for non-combat duty. In the meantime the Javanese hold 15,000 or more European prisoners. Fighting has been limited to patrol activities. The British hold Batavia, Semarang, Soerabaja, Buitenzorg and Bandoeng. The latter two places are supplied by armed convoys. In Sumatra, latest information indicates that the Japanese are still partly in control, with the British occupying Palembang, Medan and Padang.
Worm's Eye View Dear Editor: I have followed with interest the JOURNAL's editorial campaign for a "more suitably integrated artillery guidance," and wish to add my bit. Every infantry rifle company in battle has its own artillery forward observer. He is the "company artillery officer," and advises the commander on artillery matters. Every infantry battalion has an artillery liaison officerthe "battalion artillery officer," if you will. Every infantry regiment has a supporting artillery battalion, whose commander functions as "regimental artillery officer." And the tougher the going, the more the regimental commander looks to him for help. Every division, corps and army has an artillery officer. Is there a division, corps or army commander who would go willingly into battle without a capable artillery officer? Army groups and theaters had artillery officers. I understand that ETOUSA tried initially to get along without one, but found that one was necessary. Mine is only the worm's eye view, but it does seem strange to me that Headquarters, Army Ground Forces, which must be the best combat headquarters in the world, does not follow this battle-tested rule. COL. R. F. HALLOCK, FA Fort Sill, Okla. 99th Inf Div Ass'n. Dear Editor: Steps have been taken to initiate the 99th Infantry Division Association, but considerable difficulty has been encountered in obtaining names and addresses of former members. I have been designated Secretary of the
Association and will appreciate it if former members of the 99th Infantry Division will communicate with me at the following address: ROTC Unit, University of Utah, Salt Lake City 1, Utah. COL. FREDERICK H. BLACK, FA Flame-killer Dear Editor: In regard to Major Solf's letter in your October issue concerning German use of a "Salz vorlage" to reduce muzzle flash, he quotes from a novel published by Viking in 1936, which contained a clue to the use of the powder. The following quotation is from page 61 of a book with the deceptive title How Germany Makes War, George H. Doran Co., copyright 1914: "Nor is another new invention likely to affect tactics. It is the so-called "flame-killer," a material manufactured in the form of powder, which, added to the charge, does away with the flash at the muzzle without impairing accuracy of fire." The author, Friedrich von Bernhardi, general of cavalry (retired), also wrote Germany and the Next War. Hat man so "was schon erlebt"! J. ELSTON Houghton, La. Not - too - literal, but appropriate, translation of the German coloquialism: "Can you top this?"Ed. Never-ending Interest Dear Editor: As a former Marine artillery battalion operations officer, it is a neverending source of interest to me to note that a great many of the "short-cuts" in fire direction and conduct of fire discovered by Army artillery during the 660
war and recorded in THE FIELD ARTILLERY JOURNAL occurred to us in the Pacific at about the same time. I believe that one of the outstanding contributions that the JOURNAL is making towards a more efficient field artillery is the forceful, if implied, examples of the efficiency to be derived from centralized control. Many die-hard officers of my acquaintance never came to admit that "the battery has had its day" and that, during the war and for the foreseeable future, the battalion must be the basic technical as well as tactical unit. WILLIAM N. LARSON, JR. Lenox, Mass. Request for Information Dear Editor: I am seeking information concerning the circumstances of the reported death of Captain William Louis Dixon, Jr. O325656, Inf., U.S.A. Captain Dixon left this country on the S.S. President Coolidge in the fall of 1941 and reported to Fort McKinley, P. I., November 26, 1941. He was officially reported as killed at Corregidor, April 6, 1942. Later he was reported as missing, and still later as a prisoner of war interned in Tokio. If one of the JOURNAL's readers was either a member of Captain Dixon's unit during the above mentioned periods or has any information concerning his reported death, it will be appreciated if he will communicate with: C. C. Bennett, Box 794, Trenton, N. J. CAPT. CLIFFORD R. MOORE, FA Res. United States District Court Trenton, N. J.
PLEASE!
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Welles on Foreign Affairs WHERE ARE WE HEADING? By Sumner Welles. 397 pp. Harper & Bros. $3.00. By Col. Conrad H. Lanza. Rtd. Having set aside isolationism, the American people are everywhere talking foreign relations and are demanding clarifying information on this very complicated subject. Where Are We Heading? is intended to satisfy this popular demand. Mr. Welles covers foreign relations from the Atlantic Charter of August, 1941, to July, 1946. That was a period full of national, international and human events. During about half of those years Mr. Welles was excellently placed to know what was going on, as either Assistant Secretary or Acting Secretary of our State Department. This book is a partial history. Some incidents are described in great detail; others are omitted. There is considerable criticism, mostly derogatory, of both American and British statesmen who succeeded Roosevelt and Churchill. Roosevelt is the hero, and only one mistake is admitted to have been made by him during his long tenure in the White House. That was the policy of neutrality toward Spain during her civil war. Mr. Welles attended the Atlantic Conference and had a major role in drawing up its famous Charter. He relates that the predominant idea was that after World War II, the United States and the British Empire would provide the essential world leadership, since they would be the only Powers having the military forces needed to do
so. There was to be an organization, subsequently designated as the United Nations, wherein small states would submit grievances and offer suggestions. But decisions were to rest with the two English speaking nations. Later China was admitted to the council of Big Powersjust why is not explained, as China in no way fills the definition of a major Power. Still later Russia was added. Reason for not doing this in the first instance was that, at the time of the Atlantic Charter, Roosevelt and Churchill had been advised by their military staffs that Russia would be eliminated as a Power as a result of the attack upon her by Germany. There is no explanation as to how it was expected to win World War II under an assumption that Russia would disappear as a Power. Nor is a word said as to what was decided at the Atlantic Conference with regard to Japan. Other sources and subsequent events make it clear that Japan was discussed and momentous decisions regarding her were taken. Why the secrecy about this? Mr. Welles claimsand very correctly in this writer's viewthat the confusion which has arisen since World War II ended is due to failure to decide in advance what was to be done with Germany, Korea and other occupied and defeated states. Had that been done, the proper military authorities would have proceeded at once to establish law and order based upon some plan agreed to by the Big Powers. But there wasn't any Plan. The Powers had conflicting interests then, as they do now. While the war lasted these differences were necessarily laid aside in order to 661
concentrate on winning the war, and this reviewer feels that this was right and proper even though it was necessary, or advisable, to postpone solutions to certain burning problems. The author gives a history of postwar events coupled with criticisms, usually adverse, of American policies. There is a discussion of the trouble between Russia and the United States, which is stated to very likely lead to World War III unless the United Nations organization can stop all war. Mr. Welles believes that a better solution is for the United States and Russia to harmonize their policieshe does not state how. Many will not agree with Mr. Welles' ideas of present day international problems. Still his views are clearly expressed, are interestingly set forth, and are entitled to serious consideration. Foxhole Psychiatry ALL BUT ME AND THEE. By Brigadier General Elliot D. Cooke. 215 pages. Infantry Journal Press. $2.75. By Colonel Lamar Tooze, SAR* In this volume, General Cooke offers some interesting evidence and pointed observations upon the highly technical, often abstract, and always elusive subject of psychiatry. It is an easy-reading account, in layman's language, of an investigation made in 1943 by the author, assisted by Colonel Ralph Bing, both doughboys turned inspectors general. The inquiry was initiated when the War Department became acutely aware of the high incidence of psychoneurosis in the Army. Thousands of men had been released from the service upon medical discharges because of this
*Colonel Tooze served throughout the European campaign as executive officer to the Inspector General, Headquarters First Army. In this capacity he had occasion to interview approximately 500 officers who were afflicted with psychiatric diseases, most of them front line doughboys and artillerymen suffering from psychoneurosis, anxiety state, acute. Colonel Tooze's investigations led him to the conviction that no one is immune from this disease, although the breaking point varies from time to time. As one lieutenant from the 18th Infantry, who had served long and creditably in North Africa, Sicily, Normandy and through France and Belgium to the Siegfried Line, expressed it: "It was just a case of too many, too close, too long."Ed.
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nervous disorder although most of them had never been closer to combat than the cantonments of the United States. Some had been discharged as psychoneurotics who were, in fact, just the ordinary garden variety of eightballs. It was an easy way for commanders to rid themselves of the inept. The trail of the investigation led General Cooke and Colonel Bing to military installations in the United States and England and to the front lines in North Africa. They interviewed numerous medical officers, patients and commanders. The result is a report with a personal touch. General Cooke's style is agreeably earthy in a specialized field that abounds with discriminating and, to a layman, completely devastating terminology. Dialogue, for the most part, is his device and it makes for both simplicity and sustained interest. If he had presented the subject in a technical way, he would have been accused of presumptuousness and his book would have been read only by professional psychiatrists with upraised eyebrows. As written, it makes no pretenses and it can and should be read by every military man who has a real interest in his calling, particularly by troop commanders. As illustrated by actual cases reported by the author and as suggested by the title, psychoneurosis during the war frequently claimed as victims men who apparently had been normal in emotional stability and in many instances had performed courageously in battle. Numerous factors such as separation from home and family, domestic difficulties, harrowing experiences and prolonged tours under fire, were responsible for converting many a good soldier into a tremulous, weeping and thoroughly washed-up psychoneurotic. Ignorance of the causes of such breakdowns and failure to recognize the symptoms and take appropriate action before the affected individual is beyond redemption represent shortcomings in leadership. Therefore, one of the recommendations made by the author in his report to General Marshall was that the curriculum of every service school should include a practical course in psychology and the basic principles of psychiatry.
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biographical work that may be written about Mr. Roosevelt in the future and will be of real value to the historian and student of American labor relations. The reading public will find it an informative account of a spectacular President and his Administration. R. F. C. Mostly Indistinguishable OUR SHARE OF NIGHT: A Personal Narrative of the War Years. By Drew Middleton. 380 pp. The Viking Press. $3.75. By Allen Otten Perhaps good reporters shouldn't write books. Drew Middleton is a good reporter, one of the best. Much of his coverage of the early phases of the European war, of the North African campaign, and of the later European fighting was among the finest printed in American newspapers. But his book is for the most part flat, dull, run-of-themill. Our Share of Night is at its best when Mr. Middleton sticks closest to his original news dispatches to AP and the New York Times. His accounts of the convoy run to Iceland, the battles for Longstop Hill and Hill 609, the taking of Medjez-el-Bab, the fighting around Aachen, the Dieppe raidthese remain stirring, blood-tingling reading. When he strays from his first-hand stuff, when he relies on memory or notes to fill out what he wrote to meet his nightly deadline, when he pulls in anecdotes of other correspondents, politics, observations on censorship, then his book becomes just another correspondent's bid for extra cash, indistinguishable from any one of a hundred others. Just for the record, Mr. Middleton's deeper thoughts include: respect for the honesty and completeness with which the English fought the war, a high opinion of Eisenhower and Bradley, unhappiness that few Americans knew or know what the war was all about, approval of our initial decision to compromise with Darlan but distaste for our later support of French fascism in North Africa, a belief that we must provide Germans with economic security before we can expect them to be good democrats, and a generally pretty
1946
dim view of the future. Mr. Middleton is at present the Times' correspondent in the Soviet Union. It is to be hoped that his book on his experiences there will make more unusual and rewarding reading. Report from Inside Russia BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN. By George Moorad. 307 pp. Fireside Press, Inc. $3.00. By Col. John E. Coleman, FA-Res. Up to a year or so ago there was quite a Russian fetish in this country. The Soviets could do no wrong; all their critics must be Fascists at heart; New Russia held the (only) hope for the world. In accordance with the fashions of the time, W. L. White was mightily belabored for trying to tell straight facts straight, in his Report on the Russians. He was not one-sided at all, but merely tried to show honestly that no nation, not even the Soviet Union, is solely an unsullied white. Since that time there has been, I trust, an increasingly sober appraisal of the ultimate aims and ambitions of all nations. None is all white or all black varying shades of gray permeate the social, economic, and political aspects of all peoples. The chief difference is that some are lighter in spots, others darker. Many prophecies and predictions, once hooted as the words of communistbaiters, have been seen fulfilled. Russia has penetrated Finland, Bulgaria, Rumania. She has taken part of Iran and Turkey. Her puppets control Yugoslavia. And everywhere hers is a government of power and terror; of the NKVD (now the MVD) instead of the Gestapo; of suppression of free speech and individual liberties just as thorough as are found in her homeland or were ever conceived by Hitler and Mussolini and their cohorts. She has excluded Red Cross and UNRRA workers on the grounds of military "security." And the same things are found in the East, in Korea and Manchuria, as are encountered in the West. This is indeed a time for sober appraisal. Facts and figures, trends and tendencies, methods and tactics must be correlated and evaluated. These things
BOOK REVIEWS
are to be found in Behind the Iron Curtain. That is not to say that this is a book of dry figures or pointings-ofmorals. It isn't. But in Mr. Moorad's accounts of what he saw and did in Russia and her satellite countries are the materials from which the reader can form conclusions of his own. These will not all be unfavorable to the Russians, either. Mr. Moorad is a careful reporter as well as an able observer; he carefully distinguishes hearsay from the things he knows for himself, and whenever possible gives the basis for both. As an able diplomat whom he quotes says, ". . . relations with Russia are not bad. There simply are no relations. . . . Tell Americans that you cannot bank good will with the Soviets. Each deal is complete in itself; there is no credit carry-over. . . . If Americans . . . can mix generosity with good stiff resistance on vital issues all along the line, then we can gradually arrive at tolerable relations. Without drastic changes in the Soviet outlook, relations cannot be harmonious but they can be tolerable. I believe all our people deserve to know this. If they know the truth and are prepared to maintain their rights before the Soviets advance too far, then I think there is no need for anxiety. People may as well get the truth. God knows they've had everything else." Strong words, perhapsbut mighty sound advice. Global War Diary THE BRERETON DIARIES. By Lewis H. Brereton. 450 pages; index. William Morrow and Company. $4.00. By John R. Cuneo The career of Lieutenant General Brereton during World War II began in the Philippines. In October 1941 he was sent to command our Far East Air Forces. After the Japanese won aerial supremacy in the Philippines, he was ordered on 24 December to Australia and Java. Here he tried to organize effective air assistance for the various forces seeking to halt the southward march of the Japanese. When these efforts became obviously futile, he left for India, where he was to command the U. S. Tenth Air Force. Before his plans for the employment of this unit
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CURRENT and CHOICE
MILITARY . . .
The Brereton Diaries By Lt. Gen. Louis E. Brereton $4.00 Top Secret By Ralph Ingorsoll $3.00 The Strength We Need By George Fielding Eliot $3.00 Frontline Intelligence By Lt. Col. S. Chandler and Col. R. W. Robb $2.50 The Future of American Secret Intelligence By George S. Pettee $2.00 My Three Years With Eisenhower By Capt. Harry C. Butcher, USNR $5.00 Last Chapter By Ernie Pyle $2.50
FICTION . . .
The Miracle of The Bells By Russell Janney The Salem Frigate By John Jennings Mr. Adam By Pat Frank Holdfast Gaines By Odell and Willard Shepard The Hucksters By Fredric Wakeman Mister Roberts By Thomas Heggen The Fall of Valor By Charles Jackson This Side of Innocence By Taylor Caldwell $3.00 $3.00 $2.50 $3.00 $2.50 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
NON-FICTION . . .
The Roosevelt I Knew By Frances Perkins Where Are We Heading? By Sumner Welles Nothing to Fear Edited by B. D. Zevin Arsonal of Democracy By Donald M. Nelson As He Saw It By Elliot Roosevelt Thunder Out of China White and Jacoby Boy From Nebraska By Ralph Martin Dawn Over Zero By Wm. Laurence Peace of Mind By Joshua Leibman All But Me and Thee By Brig. Gen. Elliot D. Cooke $3.75 $3.00 $3.75 $4.00 $3.00 $3.00 $2.50 $3.00 $2.50 $2.75
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the result of censorship. If so, much of the diary's potential value has been destroyed. Occasionally the diaries contain entries which may cause a reader's eyebrows to raise a trifle. For instance, the entry of 9 November 1941 quotes what a Japanese envoy told his son in Tokyo on 6 November 1941. The surprise of the Pearl Harbor attack seems to rule out the acceptance of this as an example of the efficiency of our prewar intelligence service in Japan. What the remark seems to prove is that bits (at least) have been added to the original entries. It is impossible to tell to what extent the printed version represents the original diaries. The preface states that Lieutenant Colonel George Kirksey, a former newspaperman, aided the author in "gathering, documenting, and editing the material for this book." The fact that this man is mentioned in the advertisements of the book (although not on the title page) seems to indicate that he had a great deal to do with the book. But where Lieutenant General Brereton leaves off and Lieutenant Colonel Kirksey begins cannot be ascertained from the book. At times it seems as though the entries are presented as historical judgments rather than simply on-thespot records. Occasional footnotes add to this impression. If so, many of the entries are misleading. For example, the Ploesti raid of 1 August 1943 is presented as putting a "serious dent in Germany's oil supply." While this probably seemed to be the fact at the time, it is now known that the raid had only a temporary effect and a short time later Rumanian oil deliveries to Germany actually increased. Regardless of intention, it certainly is known that many people will accept all the entries as the absolute truth. Conscientious editing would have increased the value of the book by noting the modification of the diaries' entries caused by postwar disclosures. The publication of the book was accompanied by a great deal of publicity about a proposed air raid from the Philippines on Formosa at the beginning of the war. The alleged denial of permission was given widespread attention in the daily press. The background
LEWIS H. BRERETON
lieutenant general, U.S.A.
THE
BRERETON DIARIES
The war in the air in the Pacific, Middle East and Europe . . . OCTOBER 1941-MAY 1945 The global, on the-spot record of our war in the airfrom Pearl Harbor to the fall of Berlin. By one of the greatest authorities on air power since Billy Mitchellthe man who headed the First Allied Airborne Army, and the only general to fight in every major battle area.
$4.00
U. S. FIELD ARTILLERY ASSOCIATION 1218 Connecticut Avenue, N. W. Washington 6, D. C.
1946
cannot be given in a book review but no particular knowledge is needed for the critical reader to note that the dairy entries on the topic leave much to be desired. These are some of the faults of the volume which dampen enthusiasm for it. Moreover, it does not seem to give much of an impression of the forceful character of its author. Yet it bears his personal indorsement and no matter how weakened it may be by censorship, occasional inaccuracies, inadequate writing and poor editing, it is required reading for anyone interested in the aerial aspects of World War II. Inside RooseveltElliott, That Is AS HE SAW IT. By Elliott Roosevelt. 259 pp. Index. Duell, Sloan and Pearce. $3.00. The recent uproar in the press concerning this book is somewhat baffling. The fact that his father played such a prominent part in no way qualifies Elliott Roosevelt as an expert on world affairs. The quotes from his father that are listed in this book could scarcely be termed complete enough to give a clear picture of FDR's thoughts on world problems or personalities. So, why all the fuss? As He Saw It is another of the many "inside" stories that have recently glutted the market. Its real interest lies in the great personality whose intimate life the reader invades. Naturally, Elliott was in a position to pass on interesting tid-bits that would otherwise be unavailable to the outside observer. However, to attach international importance to this gossipy work is to belittle the intelligence of the reading public. Not only that, it is an injustice to the memory of Franklin Roosevelt to accept the interpretations of the author as the late President's own version. The dangers of partial quotes as a misinterpretation of fact have long been recognized. Certainly, the scope of discussion in As He Saw It is on matters of such importance that these dangers cannot be overlooked. The book is not without its redeeming features. The big conferences, the famous people, and events mentioned have played a tremendous part in the current history of the world and every intelligent human
BOOK REVIEWS
being is interested in reading about them. Having been present on most of these historic occasions, Elliott Roosevelt is certainly qualified to note his observations and reactions. As such, the book is interesting. It presents an intimate view of a great man from an unexploited angle. Much of the material could have been deleted without damage to the book. Seeing Mr. Churchill clad only in a cigar is not only uninteresting to read about but less interesting to reflect upon. But because of the Roosevelt name and attendant publicity the book will undoubtedly be widely read. It will be a disappointment to many. It is regrettable that Franklin Roosevelt apparently did not keep current memoirs. It is much more regrettable, in this writer's view, to have his son Elliott attempt to write them for him. R. F. C. Gallico Omnibus CONFESSIONS OF A STORYWRITER. By Paul Gallico. 576 pp. Alfred A. Knopf. $3.75. Anyone who has ever had a yen to write (and that includes practically all of us) will enjoy Paul Gallico's Confessions of a Story-Writer. In it Mr. Gallico presents twenty-four of his favorite short stories, together with a revealing addenda of candid biographical material that lay bare the writer's mind. There is no need to mention here the caliber of Mr. Gallico's writing. Through the pages of practically every major magazine he has gained considerable renown. In this collection all of his most famous stories are gathered. "The Snow Goose," "Hiram Holliday," "Joe Smith, American," "The Roman Kid," and others are all there. Many of them have been read before but fortunately writing by Gallico does not lose its appeal with a single reading. The real appeal of this book to the would-be author lies in the material which prefaces each of the various stories. Through this medium, Mr. Gallico explains the circumstances and situations that brought about the writing of the particular story. He flavors this with an added portion of biographical material concerning his actions at the time of writing.
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The final chapter of the book is a "vermiform appendix" which is a potpourri of good advice, random notes and an evidence of Mr. Gallico's own reluctance to see the book end. R.F.C. 24th Div. Story CHILDREN OF YESTERDAY. By Jan Valtin. 429 pp. Reader's Press. $3.00. By Major James V. Shea Children of Yesterday, the story of the heroic exploits of the 24th Infantry (Victory) Division, recounts Pacific warfare as seen from the front sight of the infantryman's rifle. The view as presented by Jan Valtin while not including in any respect all the operations of a division, clearly details the every hour activity of the combat ground soldier. The book encompasses the many areas in which the 24th wrote historyHollandia, Biak, Leyte, Mindoro, Luzon, and Mindanao. The combat soldiers platoon, squad or section in action is the view the reader receives of the Pacific's major campaigns. The history has been personalized to the extent that page after page recounts the exploits of hundreds of individuals who performed selflessly, often giving their lives, so their buddies might live and triumph. Jan Valtin, nom de plume of Richard Krebs, famed author of Out of the Night, has written of the 24th from the record and from personal observation. It is good history and high adventure, giving us the record full of passages about men and deeds that seem like fiction only because it is the rifleman's view. The story of the Conquest of Manila, the Battle of the Ormac Valley in Leyte, the Storming of Corregidor are recorded and also the blood bath of Breakneck Ridge, the Kilay Ridge, the "mopping up" of countless areas where Japs were only stopped by cornering them, one by one, and killing them. Children of Yesterday glorifies neither war nor soldiering. It is an infantryman's account of events and battles interwoven with human sacrifices that went on hour by hour, day by day, until either the medics ordered him back or he was out-guessed by the enemy.
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Ghosts from the Past LOST MEN OF AMERICAN HISTORY. By Stewart H. Holbrook. The Macmillan Company. Illustrated, index. 370 pages. $3.50. By Richard Cordon McCloskey If you have an ounce of curiosity you will be interested in knowing how Captain John Smith cured his loggers of swearing, who wrote the first book on contraception, how Liberia was founded, how Lee, Arnold and Church tried to sell the Revolution down the river, who put ice selling and tomato raising on a commercial basis and how they did it, which Confederate officer led a raid into Vermont during the Civil War (that'll stop most Civil War experts), and the truth about dozens of other incidents in American history. If all this appeals to you, dip into Holbrook's book. It is prime beef, trimmed of all fat, and rich with nourishment. It will probably knock holes into your ideas of American history, but the holes will let in a lot of truthful light. Holbrook writes well, and he spins a fine yarn. And, incidentally, the yarn is all wool and a yard wide. Nice Gift Book HAIL TO THE JEEP. By A. Wade Wells. 120 pp. Harper Bros. $2.00. "This book is the story of the Jeep that gallant four-wheeled vehicle that meant so much to us in war and promises to mean so much to us in peace." Those are the words with which Mr. Wells opens the preface to Hail to the Jeepand those words convey the warm enthusiasm that he and millions of others feel for this vehicle that literally exudes personality. Unusually attractive in format, Hail to the Jeep consists of some forty double-columned pages of printed material tracing in detail the background and development (including its name) of the Jeep, its combat record, and potential peacetime utility. This is followed by 70 odd pages of splendid picturesfor, as the author observes, the Jeep is as "photogenic in its own way as a Powers model" . . . and "the story of Jeep in action is actually a vivid pictorial history of modern warfare." A nice gift book, this, for anyone who wore the uniform in World War II. D. A.
November-December
George Moorad
takes you
No newspaper reader can evaluate the daily dispatches from cities BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN, without understanding the problems that confront correspondents who battle to keep you informed. You will read the news with a new appreciation after you have gone with George Moorad BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN.
Just published
1946
warfare. His short book is by no means as large or complete as General Waitt's on chemical warfare, but until something better comes along it is the basic general book on the subject. It should become a standard reference in any intelligent officer's library. Lost Soul THE FALL OF VALOR. By Charles Jackson. 310 pages. Rinehart and Co. $2.75. By Allen L Otten In The Fall of Valor the author of The Lost Weekend turns his attention to another social problem. His method is the same: a detached, clinical analysis; leisurely development; full-blooded characters rather than empty types; sympathetic treatment of an illness rather than an abnormality. Only the theme is different. Don Birnam's alcoholism has been replaced by John Grandin's homosexualism. John Grandin is a middle-aged Columbia professor whose marriage is on the rocks. He and his wife, Ethel, hope to revitalize the love they still have for each other by a second honeymoon on Nantucket. On the boat to the island, they meet Cliff Hauman and his wife Cliff is a young marine captain on sick leave after Guadalcanal. As the Grandins' marriage inexplicably breaks wider and wider open, John's hitherto latent weakness channelizes into physical love of Cliff. It is not until the book is almost two-thirds over that John (and the reader) knows he is homosexually inclined. The last third chronicles the consequences of the fall of valor in John Grandin's soul aspropelled by the unhappy state of his marital relationshe gives in to his weakness. Some of the writing in The Fall of Valor is slipshod; one or two people float in and out of the story without much excuse for existence; often the main characters act implausibly, as though they were living out an author's plot, rather than their own lives. But however easy it is to find criticisms, praises come even more easily. For Charles Jackson has done it again, and written another book which is both a compelling and absorbing novel and an honest and intelligent dramatization of a not too-uncommon problem rarely dealt with in popular works.
BOOK REVIEWS
Lilliput Tale MISTRESS MASHAM'S REPOSE. By T. H. White. 255 pp. G. P. Putnam's Sons. $2.75. By Dan J. Herr This fantasy is supposedly in the tradition of Alice in Wonderland and Stuart Little children's books really intended for adults. But that sort of thing must be well done and T. H. White isn't quite up to it. Mistress Masham's Repose turns out to be just a better than average children's book, of little interest to adults, or to sophisticated children for that matter. Mr. White has borrowed his fantasy from Jonathan Swift, dusted it off, and brought it up to date. He tells of a tiny colony of Lilliputians, descendants of a group brought back to England by the unscrupulous sea captain who rescued Gulliver. Luckily the captain liked his liquor and one night when he was enjoying a particularly uproarious drunk they escaped. For years they were safe on a little island in a large country estate safe, that is, until 10-year-old Maria, the orphaned heiress of the estate stumbles into their retreat. After fairly obvious misunderstandings on both sides they become true friends and the Lilliputians help Maria save her fortune from the plotting of her scheming guardian. There is probably a moral buried in this book somewhere, but it was either too subtle or I was too indifferent, for I can't tell you what it is. If you must have your fantasy dished up on a child's plate, I recommend Stuart Little by E. B. White. There is a book to treasure. As for Mistress Masham's Repose, leave that to our cavalry brethren. There is a Lilliputian rat-cavalry charge in it that they will find irresistible. First and Last Novel THE DEVIL IS A LONELY MAN. By Morrison Wood. 477 pp. Crowell. $3.00. By Capt Benjamin Arkin, FA-Res. Morrison Wood has written an arresting novel. It endeavors to cover a period of eighty years from the ruined post Civil War Alabama to the present time. Like the little girl with the little curl, when it is good it is very good and when it is bad it is horrid.
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Anthony Wayne, its central character, is as evil as they come. His chief interests are power and women and he doesn't mind using any devious method to attain his ends. When the author writes about things he knows such as high school days in Los Angeles his characters are living. When he lets his imagination wander far afield they don't always come off. The style of the author is a lurid one. He lays it on real thick and suggests Thomas Wolfe in his wordiness. Morrison Wood was as preoccupied with sex and evil as an adolescent. The physiological aspects of sex are explicitly gone into. This novel will undoubtedly become a best seller because of the erotic contents but there is considerable valuable writing in it. There will be no chance for the author to prove himself as this is both his first and last novel. The author died in a Jap prison camp while the manuscript was returned to the states with some of his belongings. Nehru on India THE DISCOVERY OF INDIA. By Jawaharlal Nehru. 595 pages. Index. The John Day Company. $5.00. By Richard Cordon McCloskey A man has plenty of time to reflect in jail, and Nehru has done a lot of reflecting. Now leader of India, he has been jailed numerous times by the British. This book (written in jail) is his story of India. It is an intensely personal story, colored throughout by his philosophy and his ideas of what he wants for India. It is by no means a formal history, and professional historians will probably find plenty to carp at. He divides his book approximately in half. The first half deals with pre-British India (to the middle of the 18th century), and the second with British India. Of British India he is extremely critical, and lays blame for practically all of India's woes on British imperialism. His arguments are weak in some spots, but by and large he draws convincing proof. Nehru's book, read with a somewhat more formal history of India as a reference, is an extremely valuable source on Indian affairs and possibly, considering Nehru's position, an excellent guide to India's future.
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New Yorker Short Stories THE IRON CHAIN. By Edward Newhouse. 228 pp. Harcourt, Brace and Co. $2.50. By Capt Benjamin Arkin, FA-Res. This book is a rewarding collection of short stories, most of them having previously appeared in the New Yorker. They were written in the period of 1941 to 1946 and all concern themselves with the impact of those times on various people. Unlike most stories with a war background this collection still stands up. The author's understanding of character is seen in the wide range of subjects and background, Newhouse being equally at home with musicians in New York, offensive C.O.'s in Okinawa and farmers in Maine. The stories are representative of the best of the New Yorker school of writing. They appeal as much to the head as to the heart. Most of the drama is implied rather than stated. The author has a good ear for dialogue and an appreciation of humorous situations. His writing packs a wallop because it has earnestness and a direct approach. The author while not preaching puts a lot of social implications in his writing. The title is from General Grant's writing, "Tethered as we are by the iron chain of circumstance . . ." The people in these stories are caught in a web not of their own making and the solutions to their problems are the basis of the action that takes place. While all of the 21 pieces are good, "Irving" and "I Hope You Will Understand" are outstanding. Jap View of War THE LOST WAR. By Masuo Kato. 264 pp. Alfred A. Knopf. $2.75. By Col John E. Coleman, FA-Res. It helps to get the other man's point of view. And it is especially interesting to get a good look at what went on in the enemy's country during a great war. That is what The Lost War gives you. Mr. Kato was Domei News Agency's correspondent in Washington before Pearl Harbor, interned here, then repatriated. He was high enough in the hierarchy of his firm to be one of the very few permitted to hear foreign broadcasts. Consequently he was enough "in the know" to have the facts.
November-December
with a sly humor pointing up his realistic advice, all illustrated in his inimitable style. Halfway through the book, your fingers will itch to begin cartooning and you will be tempted (even as we) by visions of an enlarged bank account, thanks only to your own efforts and Mr. Machamer's advice. But lest you become too confident, Gurney Williams, cartoon editor of Collier's since 1936, endeavors to suppress your wild hopes in I Meet Such People. He reminds you that in the past two years, in five leading magazines, 70% of all cartoons were drawn by less than 45 cartoonists. Furthermore, steals from old cartoons, switches of used gags, and a general inability to point up the punch line to the drawing in an effective manner lead to the greatest number of rejections for would-be comic artists. His interesting comments concerning the business of a cartoon editor are enhanced by a selection of some 200 cartoons, illustrative of what is best in comic art. These two books provide much of interest to the general reader and the aspiring cartoonist and all will enjoy the wealth of cartoons contained therein. Oxford Movement IDEAS HAVE LEGS. By Peter Howard. 184 pp. Coward - McCann. $2.50. By Capt. Benjamin Arkin, FA-Res. This book is an exposition of the aims of the Oxford Movement. The author describes his interesting background as a captain of England's international football team, bobsled champion and as a father of three children. His thesis is that moral revival is necessary for the world's salvation that we must change man first and material conditions will be changed thereby. The writer goes into his reasons for his conversion to the tenets of Frank Buchman, the founder of the movement. He is against materialism and for sound virtues. He feels that the moral rearmament plan of the Oxford Movement is the solution to most of the world's ills. Having worked for Lord Beaverbrook as a political columnist, Howard discusses him and such varied characters as Lenin and Hitler. Written in a simple style, it puts the case of the Oxford Movement in a most favorable light.
1946
BOOK REVIEWS
style, Mr. White presents his studied arguments for a world government in a manner that is both eloquent and convincing.
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quiet man, who shunned publicity while directing the world's greatest fighting army in a global war. *****
Kenneth Roberts' fans will welcome the news that his latest novel, Lydia Bailey, will go on sale January 2. For his background, Mr. Roberts has chosen two minor wars in which this country played inglorious parts L'Ouverture's and Dessalines' struggle to establish Negro supremacy in the West Indies against the attack of the forces of Napoleon and the effort to reestablish Hamet in Tripoli and oust the pretender Joseph Karamanli. Though the adventures of the young American lawyer, Albion Hamlin, may stray from historical fact, this interweaving of fact and fiction has characterized much of Roberts' writing and has proved very effective. As with all Roberts' books, Lydia Bailey will enjoy a wide audience and to start it off on the right foot it will be distributed in December by one of the big book clubs.
***** Something new has been added: at long last, an historical novel without a boudoir scene! Holdfast Gaines by Odell and Willard Shepard is a picturesque novel about an Indian fighting for his race against many of the more famous early Americans. A swiftly-paced, dramatic novel with plenty of excitement for young and old. *****
Being ignorant of the underlying realities, the internal politics of China defy understanding by most of us. Theodore White and Annalee Jacoby spent the war years in China as members of the Time and Life Bureau in Chungking, and have combined their efforts to write Thunder Out of China, a book that answers many questions on the Chinese situation. The Chinese civil war and war against Japan receive attention, as well as the late General Stilwell. A book club selection for November, Thunder Out of China will interest many.
*****
The publisher has announced that the new book Secret Missions written by Rear Adm. Ellis M. Zacharias, USN, will be published on schedule after muchpublicized clearance difficulties with the Navy Department. A veteran of 38 years' service with the Navy, Adm. Zacharias received considerable notice for his testimony in the Pearl Harbor investigations. During the war, he commanded the heavy cruiser Salt Lake City and the battleship New Mexico but the bulk of his service has been in the Naval Intelligence. Secret Missions is the record of his 23 years of work against the Japanese Secret Service.
***** A book by John P. Marquand is never a risk to any publisher. His consistent string of successes remains unbroken with the publishing of his latestB. F.'s Daughter, a book club selection for November. *****
Racial discrimination in our country is disgusting to right-thinking Americans. It will be even more so when they read Boy from Nebraska. This is the story of a young Nebraska farm boy who fought long and valorously for his country, only to find on his return that because of his Japanese-American ancestry he received treatment that should make white men cringe with shame. An excellent book worthy of a wide audience.
***** For still another slant on the late President Roosevelt's private life, read Vice Admiral Ross McIntire's White House Physician. Nothing new and nothing startling, but one more link in the lengthening chain of Roosevelt lore. *****
Jan Westcott has chosen the Scotland of 1590 as the setting for her new historical novel The Border Lord. The Border Lord is Frances Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell and uncrowned King of Scotland, and as dashing a hero as ever mounted a stallion. Starting off with an escape from unjust imprisonment, the Earl sets off on a series of battles, duels, love affairs and drinking bouts that will exhaust the strongest reader. After 594 pages of this, we find the impetuous Bothwell, fresh from clearing his name, riding top speed to join his wife and son. If Bothwell had lived in our day he most certainly would have graduated from the ranks of the Eagle Scouts to a hero of Errol Flynn proportions.
***** Some day a comprehensive and truly adequate biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt will be written. When that is done, the biographer will find The Roosevelt I Knew an invaluable source of material. Longtime Secretary of Labor, Miss Frances Perkins has done an excellent job in this book which is both objective in outlook and restrained in tone, without sacrifice to the many-sided character of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the kaleidoscopic personalities that helped him build his New Deal. *****
The publication of The Wild Flag by E. B. White was nicely timed to coincide with the UNO meetings now being held. Facile in
***** Without benefit of fanfare, General George C. Marshall established himself as one of the great military leaders of our history. And his wife, Katherine Tupper Marshall, has written an interesting story of their lifeaptly titled Together. It is doubtful if any other soldier could have commanded the professional respect and unanimous confidence of the country that was Marshall's during his term as Chief of Staff. Together provides an interesting insight into the life of this essentially
"It's out of stock right now, but we have something just as dirty." Permission The Neww Yorker; Copyright The F R Publishing Corp.
670
THE GOLDEN ENCYCLOPEDIA. By Dorothy A. Bennett; illustrations by Cornelius DeWitt. Simon and Schuster. (7 up) $2.50. Our younger scholars of limited vocabulary and uncertain spelling are finally rewarded with an understandable and interesting encyclopedia. Easily handled, it's for pleasure too, being generously sprinkled with vivid illustrations1,500 in full color and 500 in black and white. Like all Golden Books, it offers tops in quality and is amazingly low priced. THE HEAVENLY TENANTS. By William Maxwell; pictures by Illonka Karasz. Harper. (8 up) $2.00. Star-dust fantasy puts its best foot forward to lead the book parade for originality, charm and humor. When the Marvells leave their farm on vacation the hired hand doesn't appear but neighbors notice strange tenants busily doing the chores. That a puzzling blank in the Zodiac might have some connection occurs to no one but dreamy Mr. Marvell. Appropriate pink and blue colors set off a beautiful book. THE FLYING HOUSE. Story and pictures by Ruth and Latrobe Carroll. Macmillan. (812) $2.00. Air and animal-minded children will demand more of these "it can't happen but isn't it fun" adventures. A helicopter house crammed with animals, family, and lively Mr. Bing, who doesn't let selling soap interfere with pleasure, provides up-to-date entertainment. FREDDY, THE PIED PIPER. By Walter R. Brooks; illustrations by Kurt Wiese. Knopf. (8-12) $2.00. A new Freddy book (this with a good circus theme) becomes a lending library with all the gang on the waiting list. Succumbing to pressure and swallowing a distaste for toohuman animals, I've read three of the dozen about Mr. Bean's farm creatures. Eating humble pie, I echo the kids and fall in line. ONCE THERE WAS A LITTLE BOY. By Dorothy Kunhardt; drawings by Helen Sewell. Viking. (7-10) $2.50. Young readers will be attracted to this story of Jesus when He was five. His daily life happily spent in His Mother's kitchen, the carpenter's shop and among the shepherds will build up a sympathetic background for future reading. (See cut.)
November-December
Helen Dean Fish. Caldecott Medal, 1938. (Primary through 12) $2.25. In the foreword, Helen Fish explains "I have always thought it delightful that throughout the Book . . . animals so frequently play a part in the most dramatic and beautiful happenings. . . ." Divided into the Old and New Testament and following the King James version of the Bible, this unique presentation of familiar stories, psalms, and gospels stirs the imagination. Here is Eve's serpent, Elijah's ravens, Daniel's lions, the Palm Sunday colt, Peter's cock and a good twenty more appealing pictures with appropriate texts in easily read print. PRAYER FOR A CHILD. By Rachel Field; illustrated by Elizabeth Orton Jones. Macmillan. Caldecott Medal 1945. (up to 6) $1.50. Written for one little girl, the cozy serenity of her thoughts dwelling on familiar things around her echoes the thoughts of children everywhere. The simplicity of the lines finds its counterpart in drawings on which small fry bestow their highest form of praisecomplete absorption. ONE GOD. By Florence Mary Fitch; photographs chosen by Beatrice Creighton. Lothrop, Lee and Shepard. $2.00. Unusual in its interpretation through photographs and simple text of the differences between the Catholic, the Jewish and the Protestant ways of worship, this book presents a moving and unbiased explanation of each. A perfect answer to round out any child's religious background. CHRISTMAS STOCKING. By Dorothy W. Baruch; illustrations by Bloch. W. R. Scott, Inc. (2-5) 50c. Santy will fill many a stocking with this colorful book. For extra fun, he'll include presents mentioned in the rhythmical phrases. Truly a million dollar idea at the budget level. THE CHRISTMAS ANNA ANGEL. By Ruth Sawyer; illustrations by Kate Seredy. Viking. (7-11) $2.00. Who was in the Hungarian farm house baking Christmas cakes? Was Anna's mother in the kitchenor was it the Anna Angel? Kate Seredy complements a "sugar and spice" story with lovely full color pictures (see cut).
JESUS' STORY. Illustrated by Maud end Miska Petersham. Macmillan (all ages) $1.50. This great Bible story will stimulate the awakening of a literary as well as religious intellect; the youngest child absorbs the cadence of beautiful language long before the message is clear. Recognizing that the stirring words of the New Testament need no improvement, the Petersham's merely added glowing pictures to emphasize their carefully arranged text of the King James version. It will meet with unqualified approval. (See center cut.) THE HORSE THAT TAKES THE MILK AROUND. By Helen Sterling; full color pictures by Marjorie Hartwell. Watts. (36) $1.50. Prize plum for Jack and Jill's Christmas, and chock-full of fine pictures and verses, is the excellent story of a milkman's horse on his early morning rounds. YOUR MANNERS ARE SHOWING. By Betty Betz. Grosset & Dunlap. (13 up) $2.00. Fresh, giddy and gay as the 'teen-age itself, here's the solution to that "difficult" gift. Jively illustrated and covering the etiquette field completely and smoothly, this book is "strictly on the beam." ANIMALS OF THE BIBLE. Picture book by Dorothy P. Lathrop, text selected by
INDEX OF TITLES
A CREED FOR ARMY PUBLIC RELATIONS By Maj. Gen. Floyd L. Parks ............................................................................................... 628 AGF GUIDED MISSILE BATTALION By Lt. Col. J. W. Rawls, CAC ............................................................................................. 334 AGF LIGHT AVIATION By The Staff AGFATS ........................................................................................................ 583 AIR OP CAUSES TROUBLE ................................................................................................... 271 AIR OP IS HERE TO STAY By Maj. D. L. Bristol, FA .................................................................................................... 586 AIR OP OPERATIONS IN THIRD ARMY ............................................................................. 588 AIR OP WAS VERY YOUNG By General Henry H. Arnold............................................................................................... 198 ANNAPOLIS. USA By Lt. Comdr. Henry Y. Shaefer, USNR ............................................................................ 355 ANSWER MACHINES By William M. Hines, Jr. ..................................................................................................... 635 ARMY GROUND FORCES BOARDS By Brig. Gen. Guy O. Kurtz ................................................................................................ 210 ARMY GROUND FORCES REPORT ..................................................................................... 394 ARMY MAP SERVICE By Lt. Gen. R. A. Wheeler .................................................................................................. 621 ARTILLERY AND FIGHTER BOMBERS By Maj. Richard J. Bestor, FA............................................................................................... 50 ARTILLERY CONFERENCES AT FAS ................................................................................. 273 ARTILLERY IN AN ENCIRCLEMENT By Lt. Col. Edward S. Berry, FA........................................................................................... 88 ARTILLERY IN STREET FIGHTING By Maj. G. Menshikov ........................................................................................................ 471 ARTILLERY IN THE ARDENNES By Lt. Col. Joseph R. Reeves .............................................................................................. 138 ARTILLERY OFFENSIVE By Capt. W. R. Young, M.C., R.A. ....................................................................................... 26 ARTILLERY ON OFFSHORE ISLANDS By Capt. Bernard C. Borning, FA ......................................................................................... 90 ARTILLERY OF THE FUTURE By Maj. Hal D. Steward, Inf. ............................................................................................... 332 ARTILLERY ROCKETS By Col. T. R. Hedekin, FA .................................................................................................. 564 ATOMIC MILITARY THEORY By Hoffman Nickerson ........................................................................................................ 204 BLACK BUFFALO By Maj. E. A. Raymond, FA ................................................................................................. 14 BOOK REVIEWS......................................... 56, 120, 185, 248, 311, 376, 440, 488, 552, 600, 663 BOOZERS BEWARE................................................................................................................ 393 CELLULAR TABLES OF ORGANIZATION By Maj. Misha Kadic, GSC ................................................................................................... 83 CIVILIAN SCHOOLING FOR OFFICERS ............................................................................. 624 COMBAT EXPERIENCE WITH GUN TUBES ...................................................................... 619 COURSES OF INSTRUCTION AT THE FA SCHOOL.......................................................... 348 DEFENSIVE FIRES By Lt. Col. Robert M. Ewing. FA ......................................................................................... 75 DENNIS' COURT-MARTIAL By Col. R. E. Anderson, FA ................................................................................................ 272 DUE FOR FOREIGN SERVICE............................................................................................... 350 DISPLACEMENT OF FIELD ARTILLERY By Brig. Gen. W. A. Beiderlinden....................................................................................... 640 EDITORIALS By Col. Devere P. Armstrong, FA A Left Over Army...................................................................................................... 514 Believing Isn't Enough ............................................................................................... 578 Call Them What You Will ......................................................................................... 468 Career Building .......................................................................................................... 420 Editor's Creed............................................................................................................. 260 Fire for Effect............................................................................................................. 196 Liberty on the Auction Block..................................................................................... 388 Top SecretExplosive Book..................................................................................... 284 Turn-of-the-Year Reflections......................................................................................... 4 Year-End Reflections ................................................................................................. 630 EMPLOYMENT OF RADARBy XV CORPS ARTILLERY By Brig. Gen. Edward S. Ott. FA ........................................................................................ 462 ETHICS OF SURRENDER By Capt. Willis C. Rowe, Inf............................................................................................... 460 FAS EVENTS .............................................................................................................................. 53 FIELD ARTILLERY NOTICES ............................................................................................... 334 FIELD CALIBRATION By Capt. Charles M. Thatcher, Ord-Res.............................................................................. 617 FIFTH WHEEL By Col. Douglass P. Ouandt. GSC ...................................................................................... 390 FIRE CONTROL ON OMAHA BEACH.................................................................................. 530 FIRST ARMY AIR OPERATIONS .......................................................................................... 586 FOR HEROISM AND SERVICE......................................... 55, 162, 227, 288, 473, 540, 577, 647 FORWA-A-ARD MUSH! By Lt. Col. Stanley W. Dziuban, GSC ................................................................................ 516 FUZE WRENCH By Lt. Col. John S. Benson, FA........................................................................................... 642 GEM TESTING FOR VETERANS .......................................................................................... 335 GUIDED MISSILES ARE COMING By Lt. Col. William R. Kintner, GSC.................................................................................. 534 GLORIOUS ARTILLERY TRADITION By Robert P. Patterson......................................................................................................... 401 HEAVY SELF-PROPELLED GUNS IN TANK BATTLES By Lt. Col. G. Khainatski ...................................................................................................... 24 HEROES ALL ........................................................................................................................... 522 HOW ABOUT SOME REAL PEACETIME TRAINING? By Capt. Lloyd E. Jones, Jr., FA ............................................................................................. 2 INFANTRY DIVISION IN EUROPE By Maj. Gen. H. W. Blakeley, USA.................................................................................... 262 IN HONORED MEMORY ........................................................................................................ 649 IN VAIN DO THEY SEEK A DEFENSE AGAINST LIGHTNING By Lt. Col. Albert J. Weinnig, CAC.................................................................................... 537 IS EVERYBODY HAPPY .......................................................................................................... 76 JAP ARTILLERY IN NORTHERN LUZON ............................................................................. 17 JAP POW'S VIEW OF OUR ARTILLERY
By Cpl. Raymond Carison.................................................................................................... 211 KEY TO A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF MAPS By William C. Gill.................................................................................................................. 92 LANDMARKS OF MILITARY POLICY ................................................................................. 344 LET'S PROTECT OUR CANNONEERS' EARS By Maj. H. S. Howard, FA ................................................................................................... 160 LET'S PULL TOGETHER By Lt. Col. R. M. Brewer, FA .............................................................................................. 455 LET'S USE FORWARD OBSERVATION By Lt. Ulrich G. Gibbons, FA .............................................................................................. 269 LOOPHOLE By Lt. Col. D. J. McDaniel, FA............................................................................................ 208 MANY ARTILLERYMEN WORK IN WASHINGTON.......................................................... 307 MEET OUR NEW OFFICERS AND COUNCIL MEMBERS ................................................... 96 MINUTES OF THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION .................................... 118 MOBILE. ARMORED AND REVOLVING By J. M. Riboud.................................................................................................................... 326 MOONLIGHT JEEPERY By Leonard J. Grassman....................................................................................................... 616 MORE ON THE MASSACRE AT MALMEDY By Kenneth Parker................................................................................................................ 283 MUST WE ALWAYS LEARN THE HARD WAY By Maj. Gen. John A. Crane, USA ...................................................................................... 329 NATURE ABHORS A VACUUM By Walter H. B. Smith.......................................................................................................... 500 NEGRO ARTILLERY IN WORLD WAR II............................................................................. 228 "NEVER PERFORMED MORE BRILLIANTLY"................................................................... 613 NIGHT RIDE THROUGH KRAUTLAND By Lt. M. M. Meisels, FA .................................................................................................... 276 NON-DIVISIONAL ARTILLERY IN BURMA By Maj. Robert C. Taber, FA ............................................................................................... 152 NOTES OF INTEREST TO ARTILLERYMEN ....................................................................... 157 OBSERVATIONS OF A BATTERY COMMANDER By Capt. John J. Norris, FA.................................................................................................. 403 OF MORE THAN PASSING INTEREST ..................................222, 275, 331, 406, 527, 587, 637 ONE IDEA PLUS $10,000 By T/4 Charles E. Adams ..................................................................................................... 201 OUT OF BALANCE By Maj. Gen. Anthony C. McAuliffe................................................................................... 614 PANAMA'S WATERMELON WAR By Ralph Z. Kirkpatrick ....................................................................................................... 286 PERIMETERS IN PARAGRAPHS By Col. Conrad H. Lanza, Rtd................ 39, 109, 163, 231, 297, 365, 430, 475, 511, 490, 652 POOL OFFICER'S LAMENTA POEM ................................................................................. 287 POST-WAR PLANS FOR THE ORC........................................................................................ 218 POST-WAR ROTC POLICY..................................................................................................... 424 POST-WAR SCHOOL SYSTEM FOR ARMY OFFICERS..................................................... 347 PROBABLE ERROR CHART................................................................................................... 471 RADAR By Maj. Sidney Coombs, FA.................................................................................................... 6 REDLEGS RIDE TANKS By 1st Lt. Milton M. Meisels, FA-Res. ................................................................................ 625 REORGANIZED AGF SCHOOL SYSTEM ............................................................................. 644 REORGANIZATION OF THE WAR DEPARTMENT AND ARMY ..................................... 339 REPORT ON THE FIELD ARTILLERY CONFERENCE By Maj. Gen. Louis E. Hibbs. USA ..................................................................................... 407 REPORT ON THE UNITED NATIONS By Edward Stettinius, Jr. ...................................................................................................... 279 ROCKET FIRE DIRECTION By Capt. James L. Goodnow, FA........................................................................................... 11 ROLLING DOUGHNUTS By Oram C. Clesma.............................................................................................................. 638 SERVICE WITH THE CHINESE ARMY By Col. Hubert M. Cole FA ................................................................................................. 104 SEVEN UP By Maj. A. M. Anderson, FA-Res........................................................................................ 576 SOLDIER ART IS EXCELLENT................................................................................................ 74 SOLDIERS LIKE TO SING By Lt. Col. Fairfax Downey, FA-Res................................................................................... 351 SOVIET ARTILLERY GOES TO TOWN By Lt. Col. E. A. Raymond, FA-Res. ................................................................................... 646 SOVIET ARTILLERY GROUPS By Maj. Gen. F. Samsonar ..................................................................................................... 30 SPEARHEAD ARTILLERY By Col. Frederic J. Brown. FA............................................................................................. 502 STATION LIST, ARMY GROUND FORCES.......................................................................... 246 STOP FIGHTING JAPS By Capt. Leo B. Shinn, USMC ............................................................................................ 528 STORY OF A MEDAL .............................................................................................................. 512 STRATEGY OF THE WAR ...................................................................................................... 562 TANK DESTROYERS AGAINST JAPAN By Lt. Col. Allerton Cushman................................................................................................ 70 TARGET GETTING By Col. Robert F. Hallock, FA............................................................................................. 458 TASK FORCE FROST............................................................................................................... 643 THE CAGAYAN VALLEY OPERATION By Maj. Archibald M. Rogers ................................................................................................ 99 THE GUNNER NET By Lt. Gen. O. M. Lund. C.B., D.S.O .................................................................................. 575 THE LAST WORLD WAR By Col. Christiancy Pickett, FA ........................................................................................... 452 THE MASSACRE AT MALMEDY By 1st Lt. Virgil P. Lury, Jr., FA............................................................................................ 80 THIS MIGHTY INSTRUMENT OF VICTORY By Winston Churchill........................................................................................................... 324 THE PRINCIPLE OF UNIVERSAL MILITARY TRAINING By Col. W. A. Graham, Rtd. .........................................................................................143, 284 THE STORY OF THE GUN By Lt. A. W. Wilson, RA ..........................................................................34, 83, 147, 223, 289 THE UNITED NATIONS By Thomas J. Hamilton ........................................................................................................ 632 THESE CHILDISH THINGS By Francis Chase, Jr. ............................................................................................................ 414
671
672
November-December
TRENDS IN FIELD ARTILLERY ORGANIZATIONS AND EQUIPMENT By Maj. Irvin F. Belser, Jr., FA ............................................................................................. 49 TRAVELING LOCK FOR 105-MM MOTOR CARRIAGE M-7 ............................................ 108 TRIBUTE TO ARTILLLERY................................................................................................... 525 UNCOMMON CITIZEN-SOLDIERS......................................................................................... 32 UNIVERSAL MILITARY TRAINING .................................................................................... 579 VOICE OF EXPERIENCE........................................................................................................ 219 VII CORPS ARTILLERY BATTLE EXPERIENCES .............................................. 293, 360, 425 WARTIME DEVELOPMENTS IN WD ORGANIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT By Maj. Gen. O. L. Nelson, Jr. ............................................................................................ 336 WELCOME TO FIELD ARTILLERY....................................................................... 346, 402, 521 WEST POINT LOOKS AHEAD By Maj. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, USA .............................................................................. 134 WHAT ABOUT THAT INSURANCE?.................................................................................... 229 WHAT'S YOUR ARTILLERY I.Q.? ......................................................................... 335, 413, 524 WHO DO YOU KNOW AT SILL?........................................................................................... 373 WRITING YOU'RE READING By Maj. Robert F. Cocklin............................................................................ 493, 559, 607, 671 1948 OLYMPIC GAMES.......................................................................................................... 645 30,000,000 COPIES ................................................................................................................... 526
Keep Your Standard Size Field Artillery Journals for Constant Reference Both Now and Later
INDEX OF AUTHORS
Adams, T/4 Charles E. ............................................................................................................... 201 Anderson, Maj. A. M., FA-Res.................................................................................................. 576 Anderson, Col. R. E., FA ........................................................................................................... 272 Armstrong, Col. Devere P., FA............................ 68, 132, 196, 260, 284, 420, 468, 514, 578, 630 Arnold, Gen. Henry H., USA..................................................................................................... 198 Beiderlinden, Brig. Gen. W. A., USA........................................................................................ 640 Belser, Maj. Irvine F., Jr., FA ...................................................................................................... 49 Benson, Lt. Col. John S., FA ..................................................................................................... 642 Berry, Lt. Col. Edward S., FA ..................................................................................................... 88 Bestor, Maj. Richard J., FA ......................................................................................................... 50 Blakeley, Maj. Gen. H. W., USA............................................................................................... 262 Borning, Capt. Bernard C., FA .................................................................................................... 90 Brewer, Lt. Col. R. M., FA ........................................................................................................ 455 Bristol, Maj. D. L., FA ............................................................................................................... 586 Brown, Col. Frederic J., FA ....................................................................................................... 502 Carlson, Cpl. Raymond .............................................................................................................. 211 Chase, Francis, Jr. ...................................................................................................................... 414 Churchill, Winston ..................................................................................................................... 324 Clesma, Oram C. ........................................................................................................................ 638 Cocklin, Maj. Robert F., FA ............................................................................... 493, 559, 607, 671 Cole, Col. Hubert M., FA........................................................................................................... 104 Coombs, Maj. Sidney, FA.............................................................................................................. 6 Crane, Maj. Gen. John A., USA................................................................................................. 329 Cushman, Lt. Col. Allerton .......................................................................................................... 70 Downey, Lt. Col. Fairfax, FA-Res............................................................................................. 351 Dziuban, Lt. Col. Stanley W. ..................................................................................................... 516 Ewing, Lt. Col. Robert M., FA .................................................................................................... 75 Gibbons, Lt. Ulrich G., FA ........................................................................................................ 269 Gill, William C............................................................................................................................. 92 Goodnow, Capt. James L., FA ..................................................................................................... 11 Graham, Col. W. A., Rtd..................................................................................................... 143, 284 Grassman, Leonard J.................................................................................................................. 616 Hallock, Col. Robert F., FA ....................................................................................................... 458 Hamilton, Thomas J. .................................................................................................................. 632 Hedekin, Col. T. B., FA ............................................................................................................. 564 Hibbs, Maj. Gen. Louis E., USA................................................................................................ 407 Hines, William, Jr. ..................................................................................................................... 635 Howard, Maj. H. S., FA ............................................................................................................. 160 Jones, Capt. Lloyd E., Jr., FA ........................................................................................................ 2 Kadic, Maj. Misha........................................................................................................................ 83 Khainatski, Lt. Col. G. ................................................................................................................. 24 Kintner, Lt. Col. William R. ...................................................................................................... 534 Kirkpatrick, Ralph Z. ................................................................................................................. 286 Kurtz, Brig. Gen. Guy O., USA ................................................................................................. 210 Lanza, Col. Comad R., Rtd. ......................... 39, 109, 163, 231, 297, 365, 430, 475, 511, 590, 652 Lund, Lt. Gen. O. M., C.B., D.S.O. ........................................................................................... 575 Lury 1st Lt. Virgil P., Jr., FA ....................................................................................................... 80 McAuliffe, Maj. Gen. Anthony C., USA ................................................................................... 614 McDaniel, Lt. Col. D. J., FA...................................................................................................... 208 Meisels, Lt. M. M., FA ....................................................................................................... 276, 625 Menshikov, Maj. G. ................................................................................................................... 471 Nelson, Maj. Gen. O. L., Jr., USA ............................................................................................. 336 Nickerson, Hoffman................................................................................................................... 204 Norris, Capt. John J., FA............................................................................................................ 403 Ott. Brig. Gen. Edward S., USA ................................................................................................ 462 Parker, Kenneth.......................................................................................................................... 283 Parks, Maj. Gen. Floyd L., USA ................................................................................................ 628 Patterson, Robert P..................................................................................................................... 401 Pickett, Col. Christiancy, FA ..................................................................................................... 452 Quandt, Col. Douglass P. ........................................................................................................... 390 Rawls, Lt. Col. J. W., CAC........................................................................................................ 334 Raymond, Maj. E. A., FA ....................................................................................................... 4, 646 Reeves, Lt. Col. Joseph R. ......................................................................................................... 138 Riboud, J. M............................................................................................................................... 326 Rogers, Maj. Archibald M. .......................................................................................................... 99 Rowe, Capt. Willis C., Inf.......................................................................................................... 460 Samsonar, Maj. Gen. F................................................................................................................. 30 Shaefer, Lt. Comdr. Henry Y., USNR ....................................................................................... 355 Shinn, Capt. Leo B., USMC....................................................................................................... 528 Smith, Walter H. B..................................................................................................................... 500 Staff AGFATS ........................................................................................................................... 583 Stettinius, Edward, Jr. ................................................................................................................ 279 Steward, Maj. Hal D., Inf........................................................................................................... 332 Taber, Maj. Robert C., FA ......................................................................................................... 152 Taylor, Maj. Gen. Maxwell D., USA......................................................................................... 134 Thatcher, Capt. Charles M., Ord-Res......................................................................................... 617 Weinnig, Lt. Col. Albert J., CAC............................................................................................... 537 Wheeler, Lt. Gen. R. A., USA ................................................................................................... 621 Wilson, Lt. A. W., RA .................................................................................... 34, 84, 147, 223, 289 Young, Capt. W. R., M.C., RA .................................................................................................... 26
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