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Senior Member
Old Salt Navy6064
is Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: US
Posts: 22,947
Threads: 4588 UserID: 6 |
Humor in uniform
Enlisted
1. THE ENLISTED MEN in our airplane company had to pull double duty as guards. One night as my sergeant and I stood watch at the bachelor officers' quarters, a new pilot tried to take some contraband into his room. Sarge, standing his ground, refused the officer entry, and an argument ensued. "Do you know who I am, sergeant?" the pilot yelled. "Yes, sir, I do," replied my sergeant. "But do you know I'm the mechanic who's going to keep your plane up for the next 12 months?" The pilot made a hasty retreat. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Alvin Y. Sato ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2. IT WAS EARLY MORNING at Fort Ord, Calif., and the first sergeant was calling out names for the daily work parties listed on a piece of paper: "Ames" "Here!" "Jenson" "Here!" "Jones" "Here!" "Magersky" "Here!" "Seeback" "Here!" -- "Seeback!" "Here!" -- "SEEBACK!!!" "Here!" -- At that point, someone whispered into the first sergeant's ear. He looked again at what the last name really said, quickly turned over the list and continued calling the names printed on the other side. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Larry D. Wade ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3. WHEN OUR UNIT was deployed in the early stages of Operation Desert Shield, we were told to expect "field conditions" -- hot, dusty tents, cold, vacuum-packed meals and rock-hard cots. But because the flow of people and supplies into Saudi Arabia had backed up, we were lucky enough to spend two weeks in a barracks complete with color TV. We found a VCR in a closet, rigged up some cables and hooked it up, only to discover that everything played on it showed up in black and white. One night, we were watching the latest Arnold Schwarzenegger movie when a newcomer asked why the movie wasn't in color. "Field conditions," our sergeant said without looking up. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Capt. Steven A. Hoselton ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4. AS A NEWLY commissioned infantry lieutenant, I was eager to set an example for my platoon by cleaning my own M-16 rifle. While we were working on the weapons, one soldier complained about the unusual notched shape of the M-16's bolt and chamber, which makes it difficult to clean. "Lieutenant, they need to make something to clean this with," the soldier said. "They do," piped up a sergeant. "Really," I said with surprise, wondering why we had not ordered such a tool. "Yes, sir," replied the sergeant. "It's called a soldier." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Charles Anderson ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5. SOME YEARS AGO, my brother, David, decided to enlist in the U.S. Navy. He filled out the forms and took his physical. Next was a consultation with a Naval officer to determine the enlistee's mental state. "Why do you want to join the Navy?" the officer asked. "Because my father said it was a good idea," replied David. "Oh," said the officer, "and what does your father do?" "He's in the Army," was the reply. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Maj. Robert D. Hall, USAR ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6. THE NAVAL TRAINING CENTER in Orlando, Fla., encompasses two large lakes. A street near one lake sports a duck-crossing sign urging traffic to yield the right of way. In the middle of a rainstorm one spring, I watched 50 sailors marching in place, waiting for three ducks to finish cavorting in a puddle in the middle of that street. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Willamay Howard ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7. MY COMPANY, stationed at Fort Lee, Va., usually got up before reveille. Early one dark morning, the soldier responsible for playing the taped trumpet calls inadvertently put on the taps recording instead of reveille. Our sergeant major, who enjoyed pointing out other people's mistakes, turned sharply and faced the formation. "Why in hell would anyone play taps at 0615?" he bellowed. We all looked around nervously until a voice in the back called out, "That's to let you know what kind of day you're going to have, sergeant major!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Sgt. Jeff L. Sellers ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8. WHEN OUR SERGEANT ordered us to paint the barracks, we finished the job in a single day" "except for the front door. There was no more gray paint. "That's your problem," the sergeant told us when we approached him. Back in the supply shed I found white and dark-blue paint. By mixing them, I produced a color that satisfied the entire barracks. That night I went to bed a hero. In the middle of the night, however, the sergeant's voice boomed through the barracks, "Fall out in front in five minutes." When the last man arrived, the sergeant called us to attention and ordered an about-face. Instantly I went from hero to dud, for there in the black of night was our glowing barracks door. The blue paint I'd used was fluorescent. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by William J. Hughes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 9. A NEWLY COMMISSIONED ensign on board his first ship was having difficulty getting used to the ways of the sea. His confidence picked up, however, when he heard crew members refer to him as "Tackline." Although he didn't know what the term meant, he was pleased with the salty nickname. One day, he discovered a manual of sea terms that defined tackline as "a divider of light line between flags on a signal hoist." Puzzled as to how this could apply to him, he asked the chief signalman if he knew the modern meaning of the word. "Sir," the chief replied, "a tackline is six feet of nothing." -- J. S. Hayes in U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by J. S. Hayes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 10. WHILE MIDSHIPMEN at Annapolis, we took 80-foot patrol boats out on the Chesapeake for ship-handling drills. Each of us had turns as helmsman, lookout, officer-of-the-deck and engineering officer. I was standing watch as the engineering officer when a signal was given to execute a routine formation change. Another midshipman called out a variety of helm and engine orders. Realizing we weren't moving closer to our ordered position, he passed another command down the voice tube: "Ah, the heck with it! Just follow those other boats!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Lt. Cmdr. Ronald Malec ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 11. A SERGEANT due for a re-enlistment interview appeared before the commanding officer. "Well, sergeant," began the captain, "tomorrow is your last day in the Air Force. Have you thought about re-enlisting?" "Yes, sir," replied the sergeant. "Thought about it, laughed about it and forgot about it!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Roy C. Shelton ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 12. WHILE STATIONED at Clark Air Base, the Philippines, I was on standby in the evenings to resolve personnel problems. These included going to the police station and signing for enlisted people who had been picked up for some infraction. I resented this detail, because it was really the responsibility of the squadron commander or first sergeant. One evening, when the security police summoned me to the station to sign for someone, I asked with irritation, "Can't you find the first sergeant?" "Sarge," the officer replied, "it is the first sergeant!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by WILLIAM L. Shelton ![]() |
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Senior Member
Old Salt Navy6064
is Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: US
Posts: 22,947
Threads: 4588 UserID: 6 |
Re: Humor in uniform
Military Family & Marriage
1. AFTER an overnight flight to meet my father at his latest military assignment, my mother wearily arrived at Rhein-Main Air Base in Germany with my eight siblings and me -- all under age 11. Collecting our many suitcases, the ten of us entered the cramped customs area. A young customs official watched our entourage in disbelief. "Ma'am," he said, "do all these children and all this luggage belong to you?" "Yes, sir," my mother said with a sigh. "They're all mine." The customs agent began his interrogation: "Ma'am, do you have any weapons, contraband or illegal drugs in your possession?" "Sir," she calmly answered, "if I'd had any of those items, I would have used them by now." The official allowed us to pass without opening a single suitcase. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Mary E. Levy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2. SOON after my military discharge, my five-year-old son and his buddy asked to play with an old Army cot that was in the garage. As I was helping them carry the cot outside, I heard my son tell his friend, "He won this in the war, you know." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Dick Smith ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3. FOLLOWING a 12-month tour in Vietnam with the 362nd Signal Battalion, my husband Bill, a captain, went to Japan for R&R. He purchased an exquisite set of china while he was there and had it shipped to his mother. Bill then signed on to serve another tour. When he finally returned to the States, his mother prepared an elaborate homecoming meal. But, as he sat down, Bill noticed the mismatched dinner plates they had been using since he was a boy. "Mom," he asked, "didn't you receive the china I sent you from Japan?" "Yes, I did," she replied, "but I'm saving it for a special occasion." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Bonnie Morris ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4. I HAD BEEN in the Army for six months when I was awakened early one Sunday morning by the sound of a siren. Instinctively I jumped out of bed, ran for the exit and stood, half asleep, at attention outside the door. Then my mother switched on the hall light, and I found myself standing at attention, on a weekend pass, outside my own bedroom. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Bernard Ebsteen ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5. WHEN MY DAD and his brothers were little boys, their mother often baked cherry pies and always left several pits in each pie. The brother to find the first pit was rewarded by not having to do the dishes. It seemed that my father always found the first pit. Years later, during World War II, Uncle Lou, an Army pilot based in the Philippines, received a little box from my father. In it was a cherry pit and a note that said, "This seed has brought me luck for years." My uncle came home, safe and sound. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Bobbi Rushford Grimes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6. WHEN MY HUSBAND was stationed at Eglin Air Force Base in northern Florida, I worked as a bookkeeper at the officers club. Several military personnel worked with me, one of whom was going through a bitter divorce. One day he came raging through the office waving the latest of many letters from his wife's lawyer. "What's with this forthwith?" he yelled. The young private at the next desk replied, "Ain't that somewhere over near Dallas, Sarge?" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Alice Bunch ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7. MY SON-IN-LAW, Carlos, stationed at March AFB in California, was deployed to Saudi Arabia for three months. Before leaving his wife and three young children, he sat down with four-year-old Andrew. "I'm going to be gone a long time," he said. "While I'm away, you're going to have to be the man in the family. You'll have to take care of your younger brother and sister. There are lots of things you can do around the house." The more he talked, the bigger Andrew's eyes got. Finally Andrew turned to his mother and said, "You'll have to help." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Shirley Solie ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8. DURING WORLD WAR II my parents had planned a romantic Valentine's Day wedding. Suddenly my father, then stationed at Camp Edwards in Massachusetts, received orders to prepare to ship out, and all leaves were canceled. Being a young man in love, he went AWOL. He and mother were married four days earlier than originally planned and he returned to base to an angry sergeant. After hearing the explanation, the sergeant understandingly replied, "Okay, okay!" Then, as an afterthought: "But don't let it happen again!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Sandra L. Caron ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 9. I AM a first sergeant in the Army stationed at Fort Carson, Colo. After our waterbed sprang a leak, my wife and I were grateful that my sergeant major offered us the use of his spare conventional bed. But we were unaccustomed to a regular mattress and slept restlessly the next few nights. On the following weekend, we attended a formal dinner with the sergeant major, his wife and other² couples. My wife and I grew sleepy, so we made our apologies and started to depart early. One of the women asked why. My wife responded that she was exhausted as a result of many sleepless nights in the sergeant major's bed, winked at the astonished man and walked out, leaving him to explain to his guests. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by SFC Richard S. Davis ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 10. MY HUSBAND, Bill, is a Navy man, and a year and a half ago, while making our wedding plans, we decided that he would ask the chaplain of his ship, the USS New Jersey, if he would marry us in the church on the Naval base. Bill phoned me at work. "Honey," he said, "how would you feel about getting married on the ship? The chaplain prefers to perform the ceremony in his parish, which is on the ship." "I'd love it," I replied excitedly. After hanging up, I phoned my mother. "Guess what?" I shouted. "Bill and I are going to be married on the USS New Jersey!" "That's wonderful," Mother replied with a sigh. "What a way to start a marriage on a battleship!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Belinda Townsend ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 11. I WAS A CAPTAIN in the Air Force, and my wife was a sergeant. One evening at the officers club, we sat down to dinner and noticed a new couple at our table. The woman wasted no time introducing herself as a captain's wife, emphasizing her husband's status. She explained at length how miserable their last base had been because they "had to live next door to those enlisted people!" "You think that was bad," I retorted. "I have to sleep with one." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by M. F. M. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 12. AS A RECRUIT nearing completion of basic training at Fort Knox, I was looking forward to my leave home. After 13 weeks of sleeping on the ground, eating Army food and being tormented by drill sergeants, all I could think of was clean sheets, Mom's cooking and some relaxation. Arriving in Boston the day after graduation, I was greeted by my joyous family. "Just wait until you hear about the camping trip we've planned!" exclaimed my mother. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Curt J. Carlson ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 13. WHILE WE STOOD at attention during a parade, the private next to me waved to someone in the audience. "Jones, never do that again!" our drill instructor sternly whispered. But a few minutes later, the soldier waved a second time. Back in the barracks after the parade, the DI barreled in and barked for Jones to come front and center. "Son, you knew I was going to see you," he screamed. "You knew it was wrong. Aren't you afraid of me?" "Yes, sir!" replied Jones. "But you don't know my mother!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Andrew G. Ramon ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 14. WHEN I WAS 11 years old, my father, an Army colonel, was stationed in Europe. After planning a last-minute trip to Greece, our family of five raced off to Rhein Main Air Base in Frankfurt. We arrived in the departure lobby, where entire families were waiting for the next available flight. To their annoyance, we were put at the top of the passenger list because of my father's rank. We were also first to board the military cargo plane. The weary people in line behind us groaned as my father marched toward the only five cushioned seats in the aircraft. Then he hesitated and moved on to the seats used for carrying troops. "Make yourselves comfy, kids," he boomed. "This is how we fly in the Army!" Suddenly smiles appeared on the rest of the passengers' faces, and my father was the toast of the flight. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Erin Y. Lynch ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 15. WHEN I came back to the States after a tour of duty with the Marines in Vietnam, I stayed with my parents for a 30-day leave. Mom's rules were simple: I could come and go as I pleased, but I must let her know when I returned home each night. After one long evening with friends, I crept into the house and didn't knock on Mom's door. Late the next morning when I came down to breakfast, she glared at me with icy silence. "Look, Mom," I said, "I'm sorry I didn't tell you I got home safely last night, but what did you do all the time I was in Vietnam?" "Well," she replied, "at least then I knew where you were!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Bill Bruckner ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 16. MY HUSBAND AND I, both active-duty Navy officers, were married by a notary public in Jacksonville, Fla., where I was stationed. Our wedding took place the day the Operation Desert Storm cease-fire was announced. We had gone to the courthouse on my lunch hour, so I was still in uniform. After the notary pronounced us husband and wife, he smiled and shook his head. "One war ends," he said, "and another begins." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Lt. Stephanie Gainer ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 17. AFTER our son Greg was accepted by the U.S. Naval Academy, we went to a meeting where parents of third-year midshipmen spoke about the difficult plebe year. When the new plebes left the room, the veteran parents told us to be prepared for a middle-of-the-night phone call from our son or daughter wanting to come home. Greg was at the Academy for a month when the phone rang late one evening. My husband answered it and handed the receiver to me, saying, "Greg would like to speak to you." I silently prayed I would find encouraging words. "Mom," Greg said. "What do you use to keep shower walls clean and shiny?" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Jane Stefanon ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 18. LATE ONE NIGHT, while serving as officer-of-the-deck at the Marine Barracks in Washington, D.C., I received a long-distance phone call from the family of a sergeant in my platoon. I quickly sent a corporal to summon the man from the noncommissioned officers quarters. Since it was well past the hour of lights out, it was impossible for the corporal to find anyone. So rather than stumble through the darkened squad-bay, he announced in a loud whisper, "Phone call for Sgt. Roberto Gonzalez Aballucia-Garcia!" From the far corner came the gruff voice of a sleepy Marine: "Which Sgt. Roberto Gonzalez Aballucia-Garcia?" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Woody Eney ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 19. I WAS THRILLED when it was announced that my sister, Sheila Widnall, an M.I.T. professor, was nominated by President Clinton to be the new Secretary of the Air Force. Our mother's reaction, however, was a bit different. "Why would Sheila take a job like that?" Mom asked. "She doesn't even type." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Sharon Maes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 20. I MET MY FUTURE HUSBAND, Richard, while we were assigned to McConnell Air Force Base in Kansas. At our rehearsal dinner, my soon-to-be father-in-law stood up to toast us: "Although Richard is an aircraft commander and outranks Janet, a captain, I'm not worried about her. Being a navigator, she'll always be able to tell him where to go!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Janet Lewis Hix ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 21. IN THE ARMY during Operation Desert Storm, I found myself in a world that had changed little since Biblical times. With so few creature comforts available, packages from home containing cookies and canned goods were received with great anticipation. When I got a box from my sister, I happily tore into it, only to discover just how far from home I really was. She had filled it with packages of microwave popcorn. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Robert T. Sims ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 22. WHILE I WAS SPENDING TIME with my grandmother in Atlanta, a friend who is a lieutenant colonel in the Army and her six-year-old daughter came to visit from Fort Benning. I asked the little girl what she did on post. "Oh," she said, "we play Civilian Life." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Katie Orvold ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 23. MY FIANCE had been sent to basic training in the Coast Guard at Cape May, N.J., soon after our engagement, so I visited him when he was given his first liberty. That evening we had a wonderful, quiet dinner, and then we took a romantic, moonlit walk toward the ocean. But at the sidewalk's end, he stopped. "Let's go down to the water," I suggested. "What?" he replied. "And have the sand ruin the shine on my shoes?" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Bonnie Wright ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 24. WE WERE EXPECTING our first child while my husband was a captain stationed at Fort Ord, Calif. The "big day" came, and I was in advanced labor when we arrived at Silas B. Hays Army Hospital. An hour later, our daughter was born. My husband went out to telephone relatives and overheard an enlisted man berate a nurse: "Isn't that just like the Army! My wife's been in labor for seven hours, then some captain's wife comes in and they let her have her baby first!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Fran Britton ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 25. AS A GREEN BERET, I was assigned to a tough, proud outfit stationed in South Korea. One mail call, I received a package from my wife, Rosemary, back in the States. Imagine the ribbing I got when I opened it and found a T-shirt with these words printed across the chest in big, black letters: "Rosemary's Baby." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Capt. Lars A. Ogren, USAR ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 26. AT FORT SAM HOUSTON, I knew a private whose mother baked such delicious cookies that whenever he received a package from home, he drew a crowd and was left with precious few of the goodies himself. He was eventually reassigned, and one day I bumped into him and asked if the members of his new unit were equally fond of his mother's cookies. "They've never tasted them," he replied. He went on to explain that the first thing he did after his transfer was to write to his ten-year-old sister, asking her to send him a batch of her awful oatmeal cookies. Then he went around enthusiastically offering them to his fellow soldiers, who gagged on the first bite. "Ever since then," he said cheerfully, "my packages from home haven't attracted much attention." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Richard Iannelli ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 27. SOON AFTER MY WIFE gave birth to our third child, in an Air Force hospital, I reminded her that our first child had been delivered in an Army hospital and our second in a Navy hospital. She didn't bat an eye as she told me, "To hell with the Marines." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Lt. Cmdr. George L. Steer (Ret.) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 28. WHILE I WAS a Marine drill instructor at Parris Island, S.C., my wife and three-year-old daughter joined me for lunch after recruit graduation. As we entered the base restaurant, my daughter charged ahead of us and collided witha woman. In my firmest drill-instructor voice, I asked my little girl, "What do you say when you run into someone?" The woman looked at me in fright and said, "Excuse me, sir!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Gunnery Sgt. Mark E. Harris ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 29. A FRIEND OF MINE joined the Navy and soon after had to attend a wedding. He asked an officer for a pass and was told he had to be back by 7 p.m. Sunday. "You don't understand, sir," my friend said. "I'm in the wedding." "No, you don't understand," the officer replied. "You're in the Navy." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Mindy Stone ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 30. AN ARMY FAMILY living at West Point, we invited a new cadet and his parents for dinner. The young man had just completed the Military Academy's intense, six-week boot-camp-style training course, and his mother was thrilled to see that her 17-year-old son had survived the ordeal. During dinner she asked him, "Do you think you've been changed by your experiences at West Point?" He looked straight at her and replied, "No, sir, I haven't changed at all." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Joanna Gonzales ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 31. MOST FRIDAY NIGHTS at the Naval Station in Bermuda, we would assemble at the officers club after work. One Friday, Rick, a newly married ensign, insisted he had to leave at 6 p.m. We all tried to talk him into staying, but he'd promised his bride he'd be home by six. I offered to call home for Rick. When his wife answered the phone, I said, "Rick has been kidnapped. Put five dollars in small, unmarked bills in a plain brown paper bag and throw it in the door of the officers club." Then I hung up. A short time later, a waiter brought a grocery bag to our table. In it were Rick's baseball glove, a tennis racket and a teddy bear. Attached to the bear was a note: "Rick can play kidnapped until 7 p.m. Then he must come home." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Harry E. Clark ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 32. WHILE SERVING in the U.S. Army in Germany, I exchanged letters with my family by cassette. On one tape, my grandfather began telling me stories of his days in Europe during World War I. He reminisced for about five minutes. Then, in the background, I heard my grandmother saying something to him. There was a short pause, and Grandpa resumed talking: "Well, got to go. Your grandma says this is long distance, you know." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Dan Walsh ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 33. I REALIZED just how fully a Navy friend of mine had been indoctrinated in antisubmarine warfare when I asked him whether he knew the sex of the baby his wife was expecting. "We believe it's a boy," he answered, "but that analysis is based solely on low-confidence acoustic intelligence." "He means," his wife clarified, "I had a sonogram." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Lt. Col. James T. Currie ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 34. DURING THE PERSIAN gulf war, our son Dan served with the Third Battalion, 27th Field Artillery. On the first anniversary of the war, we were watching a commemorative program on TV. "Dan," I asked, "can you recall what you were doing one year ago today?" "Sitting in the sand," he said. "Dan," I told him, "I was sitting in this room with your mother and four other women who were crying their eyes out." "Well," my son said, "I guess you had it a whole lot worse than I did." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Forrest Dunbar ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 35. DURING THE PERSIAN gulf war, our son Dan served with the Third Battalion, 27th Field Artillery. On the first anniversary of the war, we were watching a commemorative program on TV. "Dan," I asked, "can you recall what you were doing one year ago today?" "Sitting in the sand," he said. "Dan," I told him, "I was sitting in this room with your mother and four other women who were crying their eyes out." "Well," my son said, "I guess you had it a whole lot worse than I did." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Nancy Panko ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 36. OUR SON AND DAUGHTER-IN-LAW, both officers in the Army, visited us for a family reunion. Soon a bat and gloves were brought out, and everyone was enjoying a game of baseball all except my daughter-in-law. After many poor attempts at throwing, she was about to give up. Then our son yelled to her, "Captain, ma'am! Just think of the ball as a grenade." She pulled the imaginary pin, threw a perfect strike and a star was born. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Martha A. Mathis ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 37. WHILE MY HUSBAND was stationed at George Air Force Base near Victorville, Calif., my sister and her family came for a visit. One afternoon we took them on a tour of the base. Since my civilian sister had never been on a military installation before, she was impressed with our self-contained "city" -- grocery store, department store, gas station and even a golf course. Near the end of our drive, we were on a road parallel to the air-base runway. "Wow!" she said when she spotted the control tower. "You even have your own airport!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Shirley Jacob ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 38. MY PARENTS became engaged and were married while my father was in the Coast Guard. Mother thought it would be romantic to have the Coast Guard's Latin motto, which she assumed meant "Always Faithful," inscribed in his wedding band. She didn't have time to have it done, though, and later was glad. Semper Fidelis is the Marines' motto. The Coast Guard's is Semper Paratus, which would have had an entirely different connotation for a newly married couple: "Always Ready." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by L. N. Lemond ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 39. RETURNING HOME from Operation Desert Storm, our small Navy detachment was delayed overnight at Brunswick, Maine. The morning of our departure, my buddy and I decided to walk to the terminal instead of riding with the others. On the way, we stopped at the base flower shop to buy fresh roses for our wives. But when we got to the terminal, we were reprimanded by our gunner and senior chief because, as they said, how would it look if only two sailors had roses? So the rest of the detachment hustled over to the flower shop. And when we arrived at our destination, off the plane came 18 sailors -- all bearing roses for their wives. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by YN1 Ronnie E. Manning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 40. MY MOTHER has neatly organized her correspondence for years, keeping track of everything from my father's love letters to wedding invitations and birth announcements. But when I came home from boot camp, I was surprised to see all the letters I had written her divided into two even stacks tied with twine. Explaining, she said, "The first stack is letters where you complain about the food. In the second stack, you complain about everything else." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Erin Cochran ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 41. MY HUSBAND and I both grew up in military families and are now raising three Army "brats" of our own. At each of our 14 assignments, we've taken the kids to historical sites and other landmarks. When we told them that our summer vacation plans would include visiting San Francisco, Disneyland and Marine World, our daughter Molly looked annoyed. "Not Marine World!" she exclaimed. "I'm sick of gun museums!" --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Lynn S. Baker ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 42. I WAS PREPARING FOR DEPLOYMENT to Haiti as a member of the 82nd Airborne Division. My wife and I had tried to explain to our six-and three-year-old sons, Joshua and Benjamin, why I was going and all the potential risks involved. Still, nothing could prepare me for the tears welling up in my eyes as I was about to leave. Stopping for a last good-bye, I only managed to stammer, "See ya later, Josh. Be a good boy." "See ya, Dad," replied Joshua. "Hope you win." After that, I left with a smile on my face! --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Capt. Mark A. Smith ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 43. A CONSTRUCTION CREW that went aboard my husband's ship, the USS Prairie, erected a temporary work shack. Tacked to it was this sign: "Little House on the Prairie." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Dolores M. Johnson ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 44. IN THE MARINE CORPS, those with the Fleet Marine Force often go on long deployments. When my husband, Jim, came home from such an assignment after a six-month absence, he found a welcome-home yellow ribbon stretching across the yard to the front door -- and ending in a bow tied to the lawn mower. --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Denise Larson ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 45. MY HUSBAND Brent, our four-month-old baby and I were shopping when Brent remembered he had to take care of some paper work at his Army Reserve unit. We stopped there near the baby's feeding time, and as we waited for Brent, our little one became increasingly fussy. I sat and rocked him, vainly trying to quiet his cries. Several officers peeked in to check on the commotion. "I know just how he feels," one lieutenant consoled. "I cried my first day in the Army too." --Contributed to "Humor In Uniform" by Theresa Mellor ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ![]() |
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Navy
Field_Sailor
is AKA: Rich
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Fort Meade, MD
Posts: 3,380
Threads: 159 UserID: 95 |
Re: Humor in uniform
Quote:
That was too funny. I can feel his pain too. lol ![]() -Rich |
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