Page Four Mission of Soldier Told by General Cook Commander of Timber Wolf Div. Stresses Importance of Unity Last week marked the closing the best combat unit in the Timber »f the first series of orientation Wolf Division. ¿ourses in the Timber Wolf Divi- Your squad, section, platoon and sion. A part of the talk delivered company must be, and is, the finest >y Major General Gilbert R. Cook and best in the Army. Likewise for ■ ver radio station KOAC in Cor­ your battalion and regiment. Your vallis follows: unit can be no better than you When 1 first spoke to you, last make it and no better than you Lir ary, you had begun your train- think it is. Good combat units don’t ng in "How to Fight.” If I re- just grow, they are made by the nei.iber right it was raining, and soldiers belonging to them. If you low. It seemed that the howl of put your heart, soul and body into Timber Wolf was becoming making a good unit you will have tinged with the “quack, quack” of one. If training is just something .he duck. But rain, mud, or snow, to play at, and get over with, your you trained. No obstacle prevented unit is just a boarding house and raining. Now you are no longer a poor one at that. Ten cents worth »i ginners. You have advanced and of efforts makes a ten cent unit. Know much about “How to kill” Who wants to serve in a five and and “How not to be killed.” You dime unit? The members of a good fighting Know your weapons. You are ex- ellent shots. You can march. You unit, think, talk and live for their re hard physically. You are begin- unit. They design team plays, ing to appreciate the value of learn signals and practice issuing eam-play of weapons, of indivi­ and obeying orders. They know the duals and of units. You are becom- capabilities of each individual and ng efficient fighting soldiers. I component unit—their strong and lii proud of you. The nation will weak points. They try to strength­ jc proud of you. You are, how- en both. ver, not yet fully trained. You A unit is good, because its in­ Ion’t- know all your leaders and dividuals are good. cam-mates and what other indivi- Third Job, and of equal import­ luals and units in and out of the ance. You must make the Timber 1 ¡vision can do to help you, your Wolf Division the finest fighting ;nit and the division. You don’t unit of combined arms in the Army. ct know tactical team plays. The Timber Wolf Division, in In other words you have not yet addition to fighting with its own nrpleted your training program. weapons, will often fight with oth­ >. fact you are just now well under er divisions, with tanks, with avia­ way. You are, however, in the tion, with tank destroyers, with • >st important phase of training. anti-aircraft units, with the Navy, T u are being taught to operate the Marine Corps and units of company and battalion teams, allied nations. Enemy Strong, Too ou are being taught to fight in It will be fighting against enemy i ge packs. The Timber Wolf !vision can be no stronger than units similarly organized and equipped. packs of wolves. To operate with such units and The nation, your communities, is made up its mind to win this against such enemy units means ar. Unconditional surrender of that the division must be good. To ie enemy. This means that he have a good fighting division means ust be defeated in battle. The job that you make it so. To make it so, the Timber Wolf Division, then, you must study, learn and teach to help defeat the enemy by de- each other, how efficiently to de­ ti eying his fighting strength, stroy all types of enemy. What you have been taught as ■ >ur jobs are derived from this individuals and are now being- nission. taught as units are the foundation The Job to Do upon which correct methods of The jobs of the American soldiers fighting any type of armed enemy n the Timber Wolf Division are is based. Learn what is being 5ew. taught you thoroughly and we will First Job, and foremost, you have, as we now have, the finest hi ust make yourself the best sol­ division in the Army. tier individually in your unit. The Timber Wolf Division’s creed Proud and confident of your abil­ is “Stalk and Kill” and its battle ity, your uniform and your com­ cry is “Rally the Pack.” pany, troop or battery. Fourth Job. and of the greatest A good soldier does nothing that importance. We must not play at will bring discredit on himself, his learning “How to Kill” and “How family, his company or his Army. not to be Killed.” War is a costly He is a good soldier in camp, in game, particularly to us soldiers. adjacent communities, in training Our cost is measured in killed and wounded. Time or effort wasted and in battle. A good soldier keeps himself fit during the training period must in­ at all times; he is neat in appear­ evitably be paid for on the battle­ ance; and salutes promptly and field by you and your comrades. with snap. You are responsible for the battle A good soldier is respected by welfare of yourself and of your other good soldiers. comrades. This is a heavy respon­ A soldier is no better than he sibility. It cannot be shifted. Train­ ~hinks he is; if he thinks he is a ing is an investment as well as an poor soldier he probably is, because insurance. The soldier who does :io one should know better than not take it seriously is a menace to himself. good soldiers and a detriment to A poor soldier is one who can­ his unit, his family and his country. not be trusted. He can’t he trusted Training Appreciated to even scare the enemy he shoots Many soldiers telling of their at, to keep his weapon and ammu­ first experience in battle in Tu­ nition clean, to be present for duty, nisia, New Guinea and Guadal­ to be on time, or even to fight well canal charge themselves with neg­ :n battle with his team-mates. He lect during the training period. jften causes good soldiers to be They say, “If we had only known killed uselessly. He should not be and appreciated the value of train­ tolerated in a company. ing.” This is particularly true of Second Job, and of greater im­ non-commissioned officers. They portance, you must make your unit found that they had lacked imagi- I Camp Adair Sentry Thursday, April 29, 1943. It is the direct responsibility of written by Enlisted Men. nation and initiative, that they had the officers and non-commissioned In the Service Club libraries are either avoided responsibility or had officers to make this knowledge hundreds of new books, many of been given none. In battle, respon­ available and to see that it does which are directly related to the sibility was thrust upon them, it reach the men. The officer must present war. These are well worth was either accept it, and do some­ assume the role of the teacher, an hour or two of your time. thing, or be destroyed. ready at all times to discuss cur ­ In training, a good soldier car­ Second Series ries on his person or in the truck rent news and explain the signifi­ Following this initial series of everything that he needs in battle. cance of each new phase of the war. Orientation Programs will be a But it does not stop there; such He gets in the habit of doing it. second series, presented by the responsibility falls not only on the He does not make exception. When Timber Wolf Special Service office. he does he knows he’s playing at officers, but on each and every This series will give you, each individual soldier in the Timber war. week, a half-hour dramatic pre­ Wolf Division. Every man must Good individuals and units prac­ sentation of the outstanding war tice constantly only those activities make it his business to follow the news of the preceding seven days. that are useful in combat. They progress of the war, to know what Let your radio help you keep your­ don’t kid themselves by saying, is going on and to interpret the self oriented. “Oh, we know how to set sights I news in terms of what it means to Before closing I desire to thank or level the bubble. Why keep him as a fighting soldier. and compliment Captains Barnes doing it over and over. We’ll do War Concerns All and Gridley, Lieutenants Bowen, it in combat.” They know if they No man can say, “What do I care start skipping this important step what happens in Africa or Russia? Buckley, Madigan and Black, Ser­ in training that they will skip it in That doesn’t concern me.” It does geants O’Neil, Vaka and Stegeman, and Private, now Corporal, Chap­ the excitement of battle. concern you. You are a part of The Orientation Program, ex­ the whole conflict; you are in­ man, for outstanding work in con­ plaining the background and prog­ volved in everything that happens nection with the preparation and ress of the war, is finished. But —because from the lessons which presentation of the Orientation that does not mean that keeping experience teaches others you must Talks during this series. A Timber Wolf likes to howl be­ up to date on the war is finished, learn how best to do the duty ahead cause he knows the value of the The war isn’t finished, it’s still of you. Who knows where the going qn. Timber Wolf Division is going to pack. Timber Wolf and Good Sol­ dier are the same. fight ? Know Your Enemy Learn now while you have the It is the constant duty of every opportunity. It will not he so easy J ust When We Planned to keep abreast of world soldier to learn when the time comes for To Run for Cover events, As I said in my first talk with you, keeping oriented means, us to go into battle. There are several methods by The army has just issued an simply, to “Know where we are, which you can inform yourself of order to stop Army men from run- why we are there, and where we the course the war is taking. Readning for public office. Last No- are going.” A foreknowledge of the enemy, the newspapers. Study the Daily vember dozens of soldiers were how he fights, is almost as im- Orientation Bulletins posted on elected to all kinds of jobs from portant to every member of the your bulletin boards. Find the time county sheriffs to congressmen, Timber Wolf Division as skill in to read the several magazines Now with another election already the use of his weapon. Without which concern themselves with in- being talked of the War Depart- that knowledge we go into battle terpretation of the week’s events, ment says soldiers can’t be in the Read YANK, the Army weekly Army and politics both. only partly prepared. SERVICE CLUBS NOS. 1 & 2 CAFETERIAS X, PATRONIZE YOUR SERVICE CLUB CAFETERIAS! WHOLESOME FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES Notice: The Restaurant at Service Club 1 will be closed Mondays and the Restaurant at Service Club 2 on Tuesdays. The fountain, however, will be open for business as usual, each day. Come in, soldier!