I t \ J{ , I l H ||| ^'oxtunuUtij wz ! t t > .1 Mission Completed Editor’s Note:—We don’t qpite know what, to make of this report from one of our waiters making an in spection of a United States Army post. Naturally, we expected it to be censored, but evidently the wrong kind of censors got hold of it. r ; Fort v June 1942 It was ten .oWslotek ‘in the moriiing before I fin ally, received permission and the pecessary pass to go through the pffet. And then it was only because I struck up a friendship with the commanding gen eral’s ( daughter. Jane, the daughter, and I headed for the rifle range not far off where there was some sporadic firing goUig on. She made a pretty picture as she swished her —t .while we walked along. At another place we came across the Army’s basic, light artillery unit, the 3800 lb 75 mm. field gun. Standing beside it was a World War I model 155 mm. howitzer, which can fire a ninety-five pound shell twelve thousand yards. I “Let’s see, I believe your father is an artillery of ficer, isn't he?” I asked Jane. I “Yes,” she said, “The old —»—- went to France As. wejapproached the firing: line I copld see that some of the-‘men were shooting a- new semi automatic rifle, called the jGarand, with which an expert rifleman can shoot as high as one hundred bullets pet minute* Others were practicing with the Colt .45 pistol which can fire seven shots in twelve seconds, and others were looking iat Jane’s in the last war, and would you believe it, he in Paris! “Ah. Gay Paree! Were you ever in Paris?” I asked. “Oh. yes, I was there once. We lived on Where did you live?” “I lived on which can fire—un-ohL An! officeij asked us'please to move on, as the men couldn’t concentrate on their firing. Not to thwarted, we m ove d pn until we came to a .37 mm. } anti-tknk gun. It caii put any light tank or armored car out of action with Its thirty to forty shots per minute.-- ! |'. ,” I said, noticing that her showed when the breeze blew. A little farther and we came to the 75 mm field howitzer which is a third lightet than the previously reported gun, more mobile and fires a thirteen pound shell. ^Oh. look,” said’. Jane* "doesn’t ithat look like a That’s all the big guns we saw that day, and I completed the tour under —-—- with Jane and to^you?” j j He is responsible for her fiction on the post. 1 ,THE BATTALION 1 ■ t .. »- ;