Regimental mirror. (Fort Benning, Ga.) 1943-194?, March 30, 1944, Image 1
Fa l/o 7 A TO. ~T7*. A ■7 1/ A/ ^ EG IM ENT A < M IRRO iCW j I 1 J, OF GA. LIBRARIES tW WI WITHDRAWW^^ VOL. 2 PVT. PHILIP A. CORRADO, HvHt back from Africa and Sicils with the Purple Heart, and Pi< ’ " ‘ ‘ - William K Salim tro returned p from 3 3 months' dut> in Panama. - -JR pla v Hillards in the main daj room T T id tiie Academic Regiment to ■?J’aß whic h this are mm. assigned. ()! 1| W V fmml I’ S Army Photo TIS BH| A Combat Is Series Os Close Shaves, Says Sicily Veteran “Combat is just one close shave after another,” remark ed Pvt. Philip A. Corrado—wearer of the Purple Heart for wounds sustained in Sicily—as he shot a game of billiards with some of his new friends in I) Company, Academic Regi ment, which he joined this week under the policy of rota- tion of troops. “You get used to close shaves after awhile Shrapnel hitting your helmet is just one of those things,” said the veteran of the African and Italian campaigns. “Once the right heel of my shoe was torn off by machine gun bullets. Another time I discov ered that some bullets had trav eled right through my pack." "Certainly sewed me up,” grumbled pool player Pfc. Wil liam R. Salinetro, back from Panama and sore as blazes that he landed in the States instead of in Europe. “KNOCKED OUT” “And that old saying that you never hear the shell that gets you,” laughed Corrado, “is cer tainly true.” The 22-year old ex grocery clerk from Hazelton, Pa., who has been in uniform since he was 18, believes that he was “knocked out” by a mortar shell that probably landed about five yards to the right of the fox hole which he had dug “some where beyond the Sicilian town of Gangi.” “But I can’t be sure,” Corra do added, chalking his cue, “I never did really know what hit me.” At the insistence of Salinetro, who was a photolitho plate worker in Pittsburgh before the FORT BENNING, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, MAR. 30, 1944 war, Corrado told some of the highlights of his experiences with one of the first Infantry regiments to go into action in the European-African theater of war. Landing with the first wave at Oran as an automatic rifle man, Corrado says his company walked all night and met the enemy in the morning. The French had artillery against only light mortars on the American side, but when they attacked they made the mistake of using cavalry. SHOT DOWN CAVALRY “We shot all the men off the horses, and that stopped the at tack,” Corrado recalls. After the French surrendered, his regiment moved up to meet the Germans, traveling now by air, later by truck, then on foot. After tak ing the Faid Pass, Corrado says, the Americans turned it over to the French and went on to take Gafsa and finally to fight for 22 days at El Guettar. “I was now assigned as scout,” Corrado recalls, “carrying an Ml and sidearms. The first night we walked till morning to get around the Italians who were defending the pass leading to El Guettar. The artillery shook them up quite a bit, and by morning we were capturing them in large numbers.” Since Corrado is of Italian- American descent and speaks Italian fairly well he was able to question many of the pris oners. “Most of them didn’t want to fight,” he discovered. “One 18- year old Italian said that when he was home on furlough he found out that his next assign ment was Africa. His mother told him to surrender at the first chance. He did.” The Blackshirt officers seem ed to be the only strongly pro- Fascist Italian soldiers, accord ing to Corrado. “It was the of ficers who asked to see our automatic artillery!” This belief that modern war machinery had gone so far was partly bred in them, Corrado be lieves, by their pessimism over their own equipment, most of which dated back at least six years. While their clothing was fair, he says their food was ter rible and their morale very low. “The high spot of the African campaign for us came when we knocked out Rommel’s famous Tenth Panzer DivteionAjKhey at tacked us at five o’aock one night. Our artillery, anti-tank companies and tank destroyers broke them up, and our Infantry routed them. But it was tough fighting from there on—we fought our way hill by hill to Mateur. Once the Nazis coun terattacked nine times, and each time only a few foot soldiers (Continued on page 5) Most NCO Class Men Expected To Leave With Ratings The first group of non-commissioned officers attend ing the Academic Regiment’s NCO school in Harmony Church are now entering their fourth and last week of spe cial training, and will be available for reassignment to line outfits as soon as they are graduated from the course on April 7th A second class, also numbering approximately 100 non-coms, will start the course on the same day as part of The Infantry School’s policy of giv ing to Academic Regiment cor porals and sergeants an oppor tunity to preserve their ratings when they join combat units un der the policy of rotation of troops. MEN LOOK SHABIP “The men look very sharp,” reported Lt. Philip Powers, com manding officer of F Company, in reviewing the progress of the non-com training this week. Many of the men, 'who range from Technician Fifth Grade to Technical Sergeant, had not done any line duty for several years, since their assignments called for specialist work varying in nature from instruction of offic er candidates to clerking, print ing and art work. ‘Their prog ress has exceeded <ur fondest expectations,” Lt. Powers de clared, “and we now Relieve that most of the non-cons will go out with their ratings and will S. SGT. LaGROSSE. (Of ficial U. S. Army Ph^to —The Infantry School.) be qualified to hold them ” As part of their weapons train ing more than 80 of the non coms qualified on the Ml rifle last week, with two men mak ing expert and 18 firing sharp shooter The course, under the super vision of Maj B. L Learman. Infantry School assistant direc tor of training, has paralleled the regular course for officer candidates except that it has ex cluded those phases of study not needed by the non-commission ed officer. The class has wit- (Continued on page 5) Vet To Retire One Mile From Regiment Camp After 24 years in the Army, S. Sgt. Nicholas R LaGrosse will retire tomorrow, but like most old soldiers, he won’t get far away from the service. He plans to make his home at Destin, Fla , just one mile away from the Rest Camp of the Academic Reg iment, in which he has served since 1941, when it was the In fantry School Detachment. A coal-miner as a boy in Haz leton, Pa., he fooled the recruit ing sergeant into signing him up in 1920 at the untender age of 14, and he has been in uniform at Fort Benning ever since. Dur ing his first enlistment he was an instructor on the automatic rifle, and with weapons as his hobby all through his service he has earned a whole chestful of medals for qualification in arms. In 1925 and 1926 he was a men. her of the powerful Benning football squad which at that time was famous with players like Kjelstrom and Tinsley stacking up with the best in the South. For fifteen years a member of the service company of the 29th Infantry, LaGrosse says “I help ed build up Fort Benning—l rec ognize every tree and lawn on the post.” In 1941, when he was on special duty in the bowling alley, he was ordered to join the Weapons Section, and put in charge of the ammunition shed, rising to the rank of staff ser geant before he took ill and was hospitalized last August He ex pects to start off civilian life as a fisherman, and will apply later for a job on one of the govern ment's crash boats sailing in Florida waters. He is married to the former Miss Ernestine So well and is the father of two in fant girls. No 28.