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CPT Jack Durish
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Edited 8 y ago
I attended Infantry OCS in the days of spit-shined floors and rigid discipline. The Company CO was getting annoyed that too much pogey bait was arriving from friends and family in the mail and declared that the practice had to stop. Gifts of food would only be permitted on a special event such as birthday. Well, when the next birthday arrived in our platoon, gift packages arrived for that person from every corner of the nation. Coincidentally there were the same number of packages as members of our platoon. We were called to our Tac Officer's office where we found the packages stacked against the wall. He instructed us to carry them to the platoon quarters and retire to the shower room in the latrine where we waited until summoned. When called we discovered that he had emptied every package and strewn the contents on the floor. We had 30 minutes to eat all we could then we had the clean up (and again spit shine the floors from scratch) Please remind me: Why are we calling this "humor"?
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LTC Stephen F.
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In Combat Engineer basic and advanced infantry training at Fort Leonard Wood beginning in November 1974 our drill sergeants introduced us to the cut-away as a group punishment technique SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL. We would be rousted out of our aluminum barracks with banging on the door and then we rushed to formation on the asphalt. The command to assume front leaning rest - either met lots of pushups or a cut away. Most of the time we did lots of pushups for whatever infraction somebody did. Cut-aways were usually because somebody went AWOL.
Cut-away was going from front leaning rest to parade rest. I kept my head up so I bounced off my chin - still have scars. Those who hit their face had bloody noses and/or scratched faces.
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SGT James Allen
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During basic training at Ft Knox Armor School we had a guy who loved to play practical jokes on all of us. We all decided one night to get him back. After he went to sleep, we decided to dental floss him to his bunk. He looked like a cocoon after we were done. You should have seen the drill sergeants reaction the next morning. We got dogged out at PT, but he was laughing as well as we were.
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