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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1942)
I tvrh i ....mu.... i ,... i. m ,i . . i. ... .in. 1 l .. , , , v i, ij -J f . J- j- v . f - - V - ',. ' r!: - ':,:- : r "T ' V V 'A, " -:. v - - ' i. - V ' (;j - v " ;-:--?..; ! ' .-s-.. ; " x , i : ' - i -- - . f ; . m m,m,K . . . ; - A - ""ML C ...SI s . , ,m,d - t 'm I ' in mm i-if i "Tiif . mi nit ' r . rf rf fcmir il i m ,- ii , . ' . i - ' - , - r Soldiers tak good car of thIr tiSac SmoUag up Soldiars kxk good -j I ' --I- th sight. I Marksman Doesn't Flinch on Trigger, Says: General; j Advises Knotting Rifle CAMP ADAIR Rifles are cracking on i the range. The cadre, consisting mostly of officers and non-coms, started prac tice in October with Brig. Gen. Claudius M. Easley, of the 96th infantry division, in charge. ..... ,1 ; . t Marksmen will know what that means. It means that the job of training is in the bands of an ' -f CoL 11. M. Monroe, chief of staff. 9th dirisloa Jesten- MUler yhoto. 1 ! : :t '.. . . J , Col Michael tenMIUer photo. officer whose own lecord sup ports his declaration that this new division will earn the name of Deadeye Division.: Ftr M rears the imnl competed la rifle shoothir aad he did pretty welL la be was oa the Texas National Gaard team. Later be was on the recmlar army team. He was oa fear wiaaiac trimt. beims captain of two of them. Then In 1924 be scored 343 oat of a possible 35 la the Philip pines. He has been in national matches at Camp Perry, and was in charge of rifle and pistol teams, winning in pistol compe tition in 1938 and in rifle com petition in 1938 and 1939. In Gen. Easley the troops to be trained will find an officer who expects the best of them, because expert marksmanship is second nature to him and he as sumes that shooting well is mostly a matter of learning. "How about vision?' a be spectacled interviewer asked the general. "Must you have perfect vision, to shoot well?" "Can you see to jab a knife into the butter, at the table? Okeh, brother, you' can see well wwiigh to shoot.1 That was Gen. Xasley's ply. He conceded that steady nerve helps, but Insisted that the way to learn: learn bow. "The big error! with most men who fail to shoot well,' be plained. is in trigger release. Most men flinch. You must to shoot i' . " ; . . , -. i. I ' . ' - . , Wt a j j ?V-K-:-f ;ri r. .!- ( Tiring pcana oa Adair raog. - . h ' S "s.r I '"""V - .-4' NV!,i; was to :ti;fty. : . j . -4:11' '" H''-' -wiy"' ' : "" ,'; 2 v, , 5 .-" V"? !-..' f1 ' I i''"' -J' .- "..''..'''4; TT'"" j . i r..r. '' I i ' I I, n.i . nr -.. - J have your reflexes right. You don't need such But must see J course. -The ttme to shoot is before range at aU. A be taaght to accurate vision. uniformly, j of leara how-to going to the soldier shoald a H- Gea. Easley (kaeeliag) tastraetlag Sgt. John B. Shepard (left) and Sgt. Jesse B. Vaoxhaa-( Action photos this page by Camp Ad&ir pabUc relations staff.) ; fie weO aad to handle tt with skm before be' ever sends! a ballet, oat of it. i ' "When this training is over the 96th will be the Deadeye di vision. We're) learning the right way to shoot: for blood" on the battlefield. Thej men must be equal to any emergency. Every one must be imbued with the idea that be is to bit what he is aiming at and what he is aim ing at is not the side of a hilL A machine gun! can spatter la hill. The rifle soldier's job lis Civilian Chief Engineer 1st Man Commissioned A. Collins. early -chief of operations at; Camp Adair for the army engineers, soon became Maj. Collins. He received his formal notification from the war department in June and ' was commissioned at the camp with CoL R. E. M. Des Islets, area engineer, doing the nonors. 'Maj. Collins . was the first officer to be commissioned at Camp Adair. M j i to pick out a particular spot and bit that." i - - ; : !t Japs Don't Like This Whistling Polka, Thanks i "" "'V i : 1 ' " ' . .1 I SOMEWHERE IN AUSTRAL- lA-HHurtling beer bottles, empty or partly Clled With water is helping to disconcert the Japanese in . the northern Solomons, the crew of a allied Catalina bomber reported after a 2500-mile bombing mission. They called toe bottles "mo rale destroyers" because, ! they emit a weird whistle as they cut through the air. The tone can be altered by adding . a little , water. : .r ;" IP) ATOM 1 for the SALEM A0RPOC3T p il y m and 03 . 1 -: "'i : i- ft 1 h YOURS FOR (URBAN Ai VICTORY RLUrwuBDKI Industrial Piping Air CkindiUohing 1215 S.W. 5thstreet . Portland, Oregon 5 S ri : ::r yv-- , - ... , - .... .. " V -