Camp Adair sentry. (Camp Adair, Or.) 1942-1944, November 19, 1942, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page Four
Camp Adair Sentry
Thursday, November 19.1942
Russell Franklin top sgt. doesn’t laugh, does that
gan Hall, Pfc.------
Barry. Pfc. Herbert Edwin Bloedel, mean it ¡»n’t funny?
Pvt. Ronal Paul Brock, Pvt. Cor­
nelius Thonan Cronin, Pfc. Lute
Over-all promotions of 42 en-1 Henry De Frieze, Pfc. Alva Frank
listed personnel of Med. Sec. and Kinkade, Pfc. Ralph Huston Lee,
Hq. Co., SCU 1911, were this week Pfc Harry Ludwig, Pfc. James
Charles Mitchell, Pvt. Reynold A.
announced.
FfiRHltRS
S Sgt. Carrington C. Burch, Niemi, Pvt. Richard Frederick Von
.nr., insuuinctoc"^
Med. Sec., was promoted to T/Sgt. Wald, Pfc. Cletus Braun, Pfc. Abe
Sgt. Kenneth G. Scotland, Hq. Co., | Johnson, Jr.. Pfc. Frank Temple­
was promoted to S Sgt. Other pro­ ton, Pfc. Alan Sylvester Welter,
Pvt. J. W. Jones, Pfc. John R. Kar-
motions :
nap, Pvt. Walter W. Strickland,
Medical Section
District Mgr.
Phone 1142
To be T/3—Tz 4 Frank M. Brad- Pfc. John E. Heibel, Pfc. Joe Z.
215 Monroe St., Corvallis, Ore.
ler; to be Sgt. — Epls. Cornelius Tresch, Pfc. Lalo A. Gordova.
Chamberlain, Rudolph L. Gross,
KP TOMORROW — Because the
Patrick J. Want, Charles N. Leon­
Weiner,
Irving
C.
ard, Seymour
Lystad, G. W. Butler, William C.
The Army Wants tc Buy Your
Wenness; T 5 George Silverman,
T/5 James W. Moore.
To be T/4 — T/5s Howard I.
Reasonably Priced
Blanchard, Sheffield S. Campbell,
Authorized Purchasing Agent
also
John T. Stickdale, Jacob Finkel.
Raymond
N.
Van
Lagen,
Leo
Kra
­
Cameras-Supplies-Films
AM
vitz, Arthur A. Richmond III, Sam­
' ’ ■■ •
1
' 1
»
MFltf F QUIPWF*
uel Steinhoff, Howard J. Wolfe. To
M r
be Corporal—Privates first class
115 North 16th, Corvallis, Ore.
George H. DeMange, Fay G. Hiatt,
135 S. 2nd
Corvallis
George J. Guagenti, John L. Walsh,
> it?
If
--
h
* í
James K. G. Wong.
Headquarters Company
To be sergeant — Cpls. Even L.
Hendricks, George B. Stuart,
Thomas J. Grahame; T, 5s Vane M.
Humphrey Bldg.. 557 Monroe—Corvallis—Phone 424-J
5. Horizontal butt stroke. Soldier sentation of the enemy’s head, Hamilton, Harold R. C&Bauer.
To be T/4 — T 5s Charles R.
parries left, thin executes the which he is supposed to crush,
Henton, Raymond C. Johnson. To
stroke. Above him> here is a repre- (Lunt in picture.)
be Cpls.—Privates first class Will­
iam Rossky, David Gelbert, Cas-
mer Torrice, John E. Bach. To be
T/5s—Privates first class Wesley
L. Shepherd, Harry Backor, Jack
G. Wolff, Bernard Axelrad.
Paul R. Nichols, det. Corp of
SCU 1911, promoted to Cpl.
To be 1st Lieutenant—2nd
William Morris Zimmerman,
Lt. Frederick Grathwell Robertson.
To be Staff Sergeant—T 4 Eu­
gene Estep, Sgt. Robert A.
Knowles, Sgt. Charles S. Dickinson.
To be Tech 4th Gr.—Cpl. Fred­
erick W. Benney, T/5 Raymond T.
Warren, T/5 Dill Y. Bailey, T/5
Frank S. Kocen.
To be Corporal — Pfc. Charles
William Jameson, Pfc. John
Charles Forbes, Pvt. Edgar Virgil
Becker, Pfc. Wilmar C. Stolpe, Pfc.
Walter H. River, Pvt. Alfred J.
Dinger.
To be Tech 5th Gr. — Pvt. Paul
W. Bear, Pfc. Chester W. Mariner,
Pfc. Stanley F. Dolinar, Pvt. Bur-
Soldiers Here Tough Hombres
Adair Lauded Ideal
For a Training Site
Dummies Well Set
For Bayonet Practice
’.‘I
M.»
1. Preliminary bayonet instruc­
tion. Preparing to run the course.
Coming to an on-guard position
Although the men in these pic-
tur< s. all staff sergeants, are in­
structor . they accomodated the
photographer here in an effort to
show action, and the, fore purists
among bayonet authorities might
find errors.
Left to right: John Cooley, Ber­
nard Skrebes, Muriel Hicks, Gor­
don Lunt, Ray Rogers, Joe Baer.
Sometimes he first w
a slow motion course,
the picture.)
(J im *
Burr
L
Recite 42 Promotions
Of Enlisted Personnel
W. Guy Parker
The bayonet thrust at a dummy
is part of the training of an Amer­
ican army which is out to show that
the Germans and Japanese really
are “dummies” for starting some­
thing that they can’t finish.
Cold steel flashes in the sun­
light, or pierces the fog. Whatever
the weather, the infantrymen are
out in it, attacking dummies which
hang over fields where cattle
grazed not long ago, or crops grew.
There’s nothing secret about this
training. It is the grimmest, stark­
est action that American soldiers
can have, yet motorists on High­
way 99W can see it going on as
they drive past the cantonment.
This camp area, veteran cam­
paigners say, is “ideally suited” for
training, because it has everything:
hills, prairie, forest, bare plain,
brooks, brush, ravines, farms and
houses, roads and dust or mud, as
the case may be. Nowadays, it’s
mud.
In addition, they say that Col.
Gordon H. McCoy, commanding
officer of the post, has done a
grand job in providing dummies
and having them arranged exactly
right for bayonet practice.
The pictuers here presented
show, in sequence, the procedure
on the qualification course.
Next comes the “assault course,
when in a sense the soldier i
taught to forget what he has just
learned: that is to say, the earlier
course is academic, rigid. Every­
thing has to be done just so. In
practice naturally that is imposs­
ible. A fellow must learn to meet
one dummy after another, as it
might be with th<- enemy in battle.
He must vary the attack according
to circumstances, and adjust him­
self to the adversary's behavior. In
short, he must be resourceful.
After that comes the “blitz
course," an advance on all past
fighting in its ruthlessness and in
the fierceness of the encounter. It
is bayonet skill plus tactics. It in­
f>. Parry left and vertical butt I anywhere from groin to chin. The
volves rifle fire, hand grenades, stroke. The idea is to parry the I supposed head here is hinged,
jumping hedges and assorted en­ opponent's rifle to the left and to (Cooley in picture.)
counters. Here the empty farm swing the butt so as to catch him
houses of the camp area are per­
fectly adapted to the purpose.
Bayonet practice is arduous
stuff. Before he does anything
else, the soldier is trained at hand­
ling the rifle and holding it out at
arm's length until his muscles
stand no more. By pictures,
training goes somewhat
lows:
TYPEWRITER
FINE
PORTRAITS
Wilson Studio
I
DR. CHAS. O. ANDERSON
Optometrist
IT'S A FACT
At we don’t have to resell your pol­
icy every year—as it is renewed by
mail—it is not necessary that our
rates include a yearly resale cost.
That’s why a Farmers continuing
form* automobile policy gives the
finest protection for less.
EARL HITE
Dist. Mgr., Phone 814
221 W. 1st, Albany, Or.
FARMIRS AUTOMOBILI
Is’s' lNSURANCI tschenis
*
front
steps
which
thrust
the background I
takes the
case he
9 PiMHrminK man with rifle Vi­
cious attack neceuary and hard,
fast movement.
distance ami comes closer. might dispose of three
He moves to the 1< ft and executes after another.
Hand to Hand Combat
School for Officers
idrawal of ths bay-
I the soldier passes to the
the dummy. He steps up
ing his left hand forward
>ck of the rifle, throws his
’ht liack and steps forward with
his right foot
position of gui
of high port, a
obstacle, whet
guani position
CJAFETERIA
SERVICE CLUB N. I
1st Street North & Club Avenue
Officers of the Timber Wolf di
vision may be tough, but they’ll
be tougher soon.
A school in hand-to-hand combat
began Tuesday morning at Field
House with a class of 28 officers
taking part and was scheduled to
continue between 10 a m. and noon
each day this week.
Directing the class is 2nd Lt.
Casper Ciaravino, assisted by 2nd
I.ts Edward J. Voso and Frank
Salata.
Lt. Ciaravino has had consider­
able experience in work of this kind
and prior to his service career
gained reputation as an amateur
wrestler.
Purpose of the classes, which
will be conducted in step-by-step
senes, is to teach the science of
unarmed defense against an armed,
or unarmed enemy.
GIRIS WILL HEU’
latin American dancing classes
v»« re started Tuesday night by l*vt.
Leonard Green, of Service Club 1,
in the game room at that club.
About a dosen enlisted men, those
really interested in learning the
HAVE YOU VISITED
We are still serving Steaks,
Lunches and Sandwiches
Complete fountain service
All at very reasonable prices
Drop in, enjoy excellent meals, well-prepared
★
★
★
Serving Hours Daily: 0700 to 2200
point of | behind stuck Three inches pene-
aim Soldi
n toes. stright- j tration is . nough. Tries for throat
ens legs and puts weight of body or chin Close combat method.
Rhumba, Congo, samba, and tango,
appeared for the first lesson dur­
mg which time basic steps were
taught. Next week, the same group
will return for their second lesson,
starting at T:30. Pvt. Green an- |
nounced to his class that there will
be girl partners next time.
to 2200
Fountain: 1000 to 2200
I