Mr. Delgado. Just five of us.

Mr. Liebeler. Just five?

Mr. Delgado. Right.

Mr. Liebeler. And which one were you?

Mr. Delgado. I was—I shot about 192. I came in about third.

Mr. Liebeler. My recollection of the rifle range from the time I was in the Army is that sometimes the scores that were reported——

Mr. Delgado. Were erroneous.

Mr. Liebeler. Were erroneous. Has that been your experience also?

Mr. Delgado. Oh, yes; if there is not close supervision. By this, that you have your buddy in back of you, he could be penciling in your score; if you get a 4, he will put a 5 in there. It doesn't work that way if you go to fire for record, like we did, because they have an NCO line and they got a pit NCO. Now they have a man at that target down there keeping score, and they also have a man back here keeping score, and when both those score cards are turned into the line officer, they both better correspond, and you have no way of communicating with the man down the pit.

Mr. Liebeler. Was that the way it was handled when you fired this time?