For the more industrious ladies of negotiable affection, this was concurrent, not consecutive.whose devotion to their trade left many a soldier sailor and marine , satisfied!
For the more industrious ladies of negotiable affection, this was concurrent, not consecutive.whose devotion to their trade left many a soldier sailor and marine , satisfied!
Impressive, most Impressive.For the more industrious ladies of negotiable affection, this was concurrent, not consecutive.
In my army reserve days I spent a weekend of intense Infantry Minor Tactics. Monday lunchtime I was walking along a city street when some little so & so blew up and burst a paper bag behind me. I had to physically stop myself from diving behind the nearest tree.Shit, I still damn near dive for the deck every time I hear fireworks and I haven't been in the military in 13 years
Yeah, I did 3 tours in Iraq with Marine Recon...In my army reserve days I spent a weekend of intense Infantry Minor Tactics. Monday lunchtime I was walking along a city street when some little so & so blew up and burst a paper bag behind me. I had to physically stop myself from diving behind the nearest tree.
I just realized that "Friedman's Cruisers" would be a lot different, and not go so well for the Allies.
In my army reserve days I spent a weekend of intense Infantry Minor Tactics. Monday lunchtime I was walking along a city street when some little so & so blew up and burst a paper bag behind me. I had to physically stop myself from diving behind the nearest tree.
Yeah, I did 3 tours in Iraq with Marine Recon...
I have not had even 1/100th of 1% of the experiences of yourself and Ssgtc. Even with my extremely limited experience - training sticks.There's a reason they quite sounding the "noon siren" after GW1
While in Germany post GW1 my wife was driving on an Army post and the siren went off... Had someone almost give himself a concusion by trying to dive under her moving Geo Storm. (Ground clearance is less than 4 inches on a good day )
Aside:
We got so used to "Saddam's Wakeup Call" (Scud launch) at 3am so that you only came awake enough to put your hand on your mask carrier, then if you heard the double-thump of a Patriot launch you 'wokeup' and put on your mask. To this day I have no idea what the actual sequence of events was but according to my wife I was sleeping soundly, (midnight shift, so this was noon) when the base siren went off. I stirred and put my hand next to the bed, then there was a loud "whump-whump" and I sat up with my eyes still closed and lifted the cat to my face, grabbed his tail and jerked it back...
Must have been a good seal because she swears she could hardly hear me screaming as the kittly dug in and held on...
Randy
In my army reserve days I spent a weekend of intense Infantry Minor Tactics. Monday lunchtime I was walking along a city street when some little so & so blew up and burst a paper bag behind me. I had to physically stop myself from diving behind the nearest tree.
I have not had even 1/100th of 1% of the experiences of yourself and Ssgtc. Even with my extremely limited experience - training sticks.
Fort Devens, Massachusetts, September 20, 1943
The men of the 77th Infantry Division were hard at work. They were due to move to the Pacific theatre at the start of November.
The good old intelligence conundrum.Could the Allies front run their response or would the price of losing ULTRA be worth a day to prepare?
would take a worker away from a munitions plant for a day.
did not see her caretaker's eyes as she looked over the wound site; an infection was spreading
a new American wonderdrug had arrived at the hospital, but that was being saved for extreme cases. If the wounded sniper did not respond, more surgery would be needed
@Draconis
Sorry but you are wrong, Fleming didn’t invent penicillin, he didn’t even discover it, others had done that. What he did do was observe it’s anti bacterial properties, though he didn’t do a lot with this observation, and had given up on penicillin. It was a team at Oxford who did most of the work to prove its effectiveness and started its production and how to isolate it. Unfortunately they didn’t have the money or facilities to get it into serious production, and their leader didn’t believe in patenting, so failed to do so. While he couldn’t have patented penicillin, he could have patented the production method. It being war time the British went to America for assistance, and an American government scientist who wasn’t able to patent his work in America, realised that he could do so in Britain, and did, and he made millions.RR.