Regimental mirror. (Fort Benning, Ga.) 1943-194?, March 23, 1944, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
PAGE TWO THREE COMPANY A INSTRUCTORS OF COMMUNICATIONS SECTION. THE INFANTRY SCHOOL. PHOTOGRAPHED WHILE GIV ING LECTURES ON RADIO SETS. (Left) T. SGT. HERBERT SOMER SON DEMONSTRATES TUNING BY MEANS OF A MODEL OF A FRE- At Work With The Academic Regiment (10): — Communications In Combat Taught By A Co. Non-Coms The Company A non-commissioned officers who staff ( osmoi imitations Section of The Infantry School are respon sible for training communications experts and officers for combat Infantry regiments. Their work is divided among three large groups of instructors and technicians—the Wire and Message Center. Radio, and Tactical Committees Their main । equipment is needed for almost job * to teach the Enlisted Coni muMieations, Officers Communi cations and Enlisted Radio Re pair Courses In addition the Section gives brief periods of instruction to officer candidates, basic and advanced officers clas ses Housed in a large group of buildings on the Main Post, the Section holds its classes in mod ern lecture halls and laborato ries, using the latest technical equipment and educational de vices. including hundreds of large cutaway models, charts and other visual aids In one build ing alone, it is estimated that half a million dollars worth of SGT. ROBERT POWERS (left) AND M. SGT. WAL lace Thornell in the wire shop of the Wire Committee, Com munications Section. (Official U. S. Army Photo—The In fantry School.) daily use The enlisted students, who are sent from line outfits on detach ed service, are picked for their high code aptitude or because of civilian communications ex perience. Since the Section is an “advanced service school," all enlisted students sent there are automatically made at least privates first class, and may lose their ratings if they fail to pass the course. Most of the commissioned stu dents have been chosen as com munications officers for their permanent outfits, and they also return to their regiments at the close of the three months' course REGIMENTAL MIRROR QUENCY METER. (Center) S. SGT. SHERWOOD RICHARDSON LEC TURING AT THE BLACKBOARD. (Right) S SGT. PAUL VANIMAN INSTRUCTING ON A MODEL OF THE "BIG” INFANTRY RADIO SET. 'Official U. S Armv Photos—The Infantry School.i A few OCC students, especially those with previous communica tions experience, come straight from OCS. The course which the enlisted students take varies greatly with the Officers Communications Course. Since the enlisted men are being trained as field opera tors or radio chiefs, their studies emphasize code speed, with 13 words per minute as the min imum requirement for gradua tion after 216 hours of practice. Officers, however, will be re sponsible in the field for the tactical angle of communications, and so they need attain a code speed of only eight words per minute after JO hours of prac tice, while spending most of their time in wire communication and tactics, of which the enlisted men need little. TEACH WIRE LAYING Approximately thirty men of A Company work in the Wire and Message Center Committee. Covering such physics theory as magnetism and electricity, they teach the proper laying and spli cing of wire, the functioning of telephones and telegraphs, the operation of switchboards, and the best way of climbing com munications poles. During the course of instruction the Aca demics and their students grad ually build up to combat dis tances, teaching the proper way to move forward without losing contact with the outposts and rear command posts. Nearly all of the instructors in wire (except the key men) are selectees, who have learn ed in the Army most of what they know about communica tions. Almost all of them, how ever, have been picked for their jobs because of their ex perience in c«lian Jife with power companiS, public utilities or allied industries. The ranking non-com of the committee is M. Sgt. Wallace Thornell, who is in charge of wire equipment and heads all the enlisted personnel. The chief enlisted instructor is M. Sgt. Luther Sharpe, who has as assis tant chiefs T. Sgt Stanley Dut- '4'* * SGT RYAN HALLORAN, RADIO SETS COMMIT tee, Communications Section, operating the newest (fre quency modulation) Infantry radio set. (Official U. S. Army Signal Corps Photo • ) terer and S. Sgt. Gray Ruther ford. DESIGN VISUAL AIDS All of the instructors coop erate in designing visual aids Finished charts are painted by the Reproduction Plant, but the working models used to illus trate lectures are made in the wire shop by Sgt. Robert P. Pow ers, who is called by his fellow workers "one of the finest me chanics on the post ” One of his Thursday, March 23. 1944 best devices is a large model tel egraph instrument showing by means of lights the circuits that are actually in use. Another small piece of standard equip merit, the generator, which act ually is only inches high, has been enlarged 80 times in one of Sgt. Powers’ models. The wire shop not only makes most of the visual aid material used for teaching,'but it main- (Continued on Page 3)