POSTSCRIPT One day, when the battle of Orel was drawing to its triumphant end and the forward regiments that were advancing from the north were reporting that from the Krasnogorsk hills they were able to see the burning city, Headquarters of the Bryansk Front received a report to the effect that during the preceding nine days the men of the Guards Fighter Aircraft Wing that was operating in that area had shot down forty-seven enemy planes. Their own losses amounted to five machines and only three men, as two of the men brought down had bailed out and had reached their base on foot. Such a victory was unusual even in those days of the Soviet Army's swift advance. I got a seat in a liaison plane, that was flying to the airfield of that wing, with the intention of getting a story for an article for Pravda on the achieve- ments of these Guards airmen. The airfield of this wing was situated in a common pasture which had been roughly cleared of clumps and molehills. The planes were hidden like a brood of grouse chickens on the edge of a young birch wood. In short, it was a field air strip of the type that was common in the hectic days of the war. We landed late in the afternoon, when the wing was finishing a hard, busy day. The Germans were being exceptionally active in the air in the area of Orel, and on that day each fighter plane had made as many as six combat flights. At sundown, the last planes were returning from their seventh flight. The colonel, a short tightly- belted, brisk man with a tanned face, hair carefully part- ed, and wearing new, blue overalls, frankly confessed that he was unable to give me a connected story that day, that he had been at the airfield since six in the morning, that he had been up three times himself and was so tired that he could hardly stand. Nor were the other officers in the