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To: archy
Reminds me of Sgt Bilko or, there was a movie with Jackie Gleason (Master Sergeant in supply) and Steve McQueen (Buck Sergeant). Jackie played the perfect wheeler-dealer.

Many of the club systems (Officer and NCO) in Vietnam were run as if they needed to come under the RICO statutes.

I guess the premier example involves the first Sergeant Major of the Army (Woolridge). I think that position was established in the late 60's. After he got the job the story of the Khaki Mafia broke. It was learned that while he had been the SGM of the 24th ID in Augsburg (MG Edwin A. Walker was the CG, BTW) he was part of a group of senior NCO's who skimmed from the top of the slot machines all over Germany. They got themselves assigned to Vietnam roughly together and ran the same organized crime operation over there. It included kickbacks from floor shows and just about everything you could imagine.

Walker, of course, was fired by JFK and supposedly had a shot taken at him by Oswald.

FReepmail shortly.
109 posted on 01/27/2004 12:13:56 PM PST by leadpenny
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To: leadpenny
I guess the premier example involves the first Sergeant Major of the Army (Woolridge). I think that position was established in the late 60's. After he got the job the story of the Khaki Mafia broke. It was learned that while he had been the SGM of the 24th ID in Augsburg (MG Edwin A. Walker was the CG, BTW) he was part of a group of senior NCO's who skimmed from the top of the slot machines all over Germany.

I'm pretty sure that Walker was gone from the 24th by the time Creighton Abrams' favourite *good ol' boy CSMAJ showed up to run the 24th's club system- I think it was Linton S, Boatwright running the 24th by then. Boatwright had survived at least two attempts on his life in Vietnam by his own men, officially *VC terorist attacks* and they got him out of the RVN for his own good- a third try was cancelled only because the helo pilot he had flying him that day was a Dustoff pilot and the guys involved weren't inclined to kill him just to get rid of a troublesome MGEN. And the Army wasn't real thrilled about the idea of having a Code Eight fragged.

That was also around the timeframe during which a Czech pilot in a MiG17 landed near Augsburg, in the 24ths alert move-out area, where he landed since he had the best maps and knowledge of that area, the target for his two nukes if the balloon went up. And shortly thereafter, the *Czech Spring* Russian invasion of Czechoslovokia occurred, with Spetznaz leading the way. The story went that the GRU had bought the 24ths alert plans from somebody in Div HQ. Heads rolled at 14th Armored Cav over that one, whose border recon teams say the MiG flyover- he made a return pass wagging his wings- but their HQ refused to kick it higher, so the guys on the 5KM zone started trying all 920 channels on their PRC25 until they got a helo outfit at Graf. And then it REALLY hit the fan- had that pilot been less charitably inclined, you could have written Munich and Bonn off the map in the 20 minutes it took to get his defection reported and interceptors up- the Luftwaffe was still flying F104 *widowmakers* at that time.

They got themselves assigned to Vietnam roughly together and ran the same organized crime operation over there. It included kickbacks from floor shows and just about everything you could imagine.

Including heroin being shipped home in the body cavities of KIAs.

Wooldridge, William O.

DOB 12 August 1922, Shawnee, Oklahoma



Assignments

1940 Enlisted at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, in Company F, 23d Infantry, 2d Infantry Division
1941-44 Detached service, British Forces- Iceland
1944-45 1st Infantry Division, Northwest and Central Europe
1945-46 Fort Sam Houston
1946-47 Schofield Barracks, Hawaii
1947-49 Headquarters, Eighth U.S. Army, Seoul, Korea
1949-54 1st Infantry Division, Germany
1954-55 First Sergeant, Company G, 3d Infantry, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C.
1955-58 First Sergeant, Sergeant Major, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kansas
1958-63 Sergeant Major, 2d Battle Group, 28th Infantry, 24th Infantry Division, Germany
1963-65 Sergeant Major, 24th Infantry Division, Germany
1965-66 Brigade, Division Sergeant Major, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley
1966-68 Sergeant Major of the Army
1968-69 Sergeant Major, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam
1969-72 Sergeant Major, Range Command, White Sands Missile Range, White Sands, New Mexico

Significant Accomplishments as SMA

As the first SMA, SMA Wooldridge worked to establish the position of the SMA. SMA Wooldridge had direct access to the Chief of Staff, established invaluable relationships with various staff agencies in the Pentagon, and traveled widely as the "eyes and ears" of the Chief of Staff, spending nearly half of his time as SMA visiting soldiers, including several trips to combat zones in Southeast Asia. To help pass on his experience to soldiers he wrote an article on combat, "So You're Headed for Combat: How to Get Ready and What to Expect," published in the January 1968 Army Digest (the predecessor of SOLDIERS). SMA Wooldridge also initiated the establishment the Major Commands Command Sergeants Major Conference in 1966, which since then has resulted in innumerable proposals that have improved the training, readiness, proficiency, and morale of soldiers.


116 posted on 01/27/2004 1:23:30 PM PST by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: leadpenny
"Soldier in the Rain" 1962, Jackie Gleason, Steve McQueen, and (drum roll, please) the lucious Ann-Margret. Wotta babe!
129 posted on 01/27/2004 6:03:25 PM PST by Snickersnee (Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket???)
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