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The FReeper Foxhole - Fun with Army Men - February 19th, 2005
see educational sources

Posted on 02/18/2005 10:40:53 PM PST by snippy_about_it



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.



...................................................................................... ...........................................

U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues

Where Duty, Honor and Country
are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.

Our Mission:

The FReeper Foxhole is dedicated to Veterans of our Nation's military forces and to others who are affected in their relationships with Veterans.

In the FReeper Foxhole, Veterans or their family members should feel free to address their specific circumstances or whatever issues concern them in an atmosphere of peace, understanding, brotherhood and support.

The FReeper Foxhole hopes to share with it's readers an open forum where we can learn about and discuss military history, military news and other topics of concern or interest to our readers be they Veteran's, Current Duty or anyone interested in what we have to offer.

If the Foxhole makes someone appreciate, even a little, what others have sacrificed for us, then it has accomplished one of it's missions.

We hope the Foxhole in some small way helps us to remember and honor those who came before us.

To read previous Foxhole threads or
to add the Foxhole to your sidebar,
click on the books below.

Fun with Army Men




There are many ways to enjoy Army Men.


The simplest and most common involves a sandpile or dirt backyard, small garden trowel and wood twigs. You can dig bunkers, fortifications and trenchlines.



Using them with electric trains (only larger O and G scale trains!) is fun. Soldiers ride in hoppers and gondolas. Do not stuff them in boxcars because it is hard to get them out. Note that a train can crash a tank, but a tank cannot crash a locomotive. So don't be a dummy: never put tanks on train tracks.

Outdoors, soldiers can be bombed with 'enemy dirt bombs." Small, dry clumps of dirt will seem to explode upon impact.



The cheap spring-loaded firing cannons sold with Army Men don't pack much punch. Many cannot knock down a single Army Man from three feet. You can buy the heavy metal cannons by Britains if you want to shoot and be assured of a knockdown. The best is the cannon marketed as a 4.7 Inch Naval Gun. It is accurate to nine feet.

South Street Rules
These are an unwritten set of rules that were generally accepted in 1962. Updated info is included, but not noted as such. Amendments were added whenever there was a new real war.

Allies and Enemies:



By the rules, the following troops can be used for the following armies:

US soldiers: US Army, US Marines, Norwegian Army, Danish Army, South Koreans, ARVN, Canadians



Germans: German Army, Swedes. Some companies now sell green Germans as modern US troops in the new helmet.

British: British Troops can be used for Israelis if they are molded in Green, and Arabs if they are molded in tan. In some areas in the Northeast, British soldiers are considered enemy troops. It's an Irish thing. Even though the Canadians used to have British uniforms, it is considered prudent to use US troops for The Great White North's army.

Foreign Legion: in a pinch, Foreign Legionnaires can be used as Union troops.

Civil War: Union troops can substitute for foreign legion. Grey Confederates can substitute for Germans.

Cowboys can also be used for Alamo Texans.



Russians: Russians can substitute for Poles, North Koreans and Red Chinese

Japanese: it is allowable to use Japanese for Red Chinese, North Koreans or VC.

Mexicans: Alamo Mexicans can be used as War of 1812 guys. Blue go with the US, red with the British.

Napoleonics: What? Napoleon guys? NOT HERE! This is traditional American Army Men, and we didn't have no stinkin' Napoleon Guys!

Pirates: Pirates can be used as Revolutionary War and Civil War sailors, and as Alamo Texans.

Commandos: a small group of soldiers, if molded in a distinctly different shade of green than your regular Army Men, could be used as Commandos or Rangers.

Special Forces: it was allowable to paint ten soldiers' helmets red and designate them as Special Forces. They acted as Commandos.

A medic can heal a man who was shot by taking out the bullet. He cannot do this if the guy was bayonetted or bombed or fired up.

Vehicles and their Protocols



Both sides had to have a fair share of vehicles. Green vehicles were generally US, and grey were German. Later, some tan vehicles were also German or Japanese. If you had only green vehicles, some had to be given to the other side. A few companies molded them in blue or other colors. Blue could mean Navy or Air Force, but usually they became the Enemy. In a pinch, which was most of the time, they enemy had Green vehicles, too.



Jeeps: a machine gun could knock out a jeep, but jeeps could drive many places. The power of Jeeps increased after the series Rat Patrol made its debut, and then a Jeep with a machine gun could knock out a half track or open self-propelled gun. You could mount a machine gun, mortar or bazooka on a Jeep. You could tow a cannon with a jeep, but not mount a cannon on it.



Trucks: trucks only carry men and tow cannons.



Half Tracks: they can go anywhere and run over Jeeps and Trucks. Half Tracks can even mount a cannon. The second best vehicle on the battlefield.



Tanks: Tanks can go anywhere, knock down any building, run over any other vehicle except another tank or a train. To blow up a tank, you need another tank, a big cannon or a bazooka.

Self-propelled guns: they are like tanks, but they have an open top and can be blown up if a guy throws in a grenade or drops a mortar on them.

Helicopters: these are rare. They could carry soldiers and drop bombs (remember - we hadn't seen Hueys gunships or Cobras yet!). They could be knocked out with machine guns or cannons.

Airplanes: airplanes could carry paratroops, strafe and drop bombs. They could be knocked out by machine guns and cannons.

Rockets and Missiles: they had the same firepower as cannons, but could be shot up and come straight down into a bunker.

Armored cars: like tanks, but could not ride all over and were vulnerable to having their tires shot out. Armored cars could only go where trucks could go.

Firepower
Weapons have distinct powers and liabilities. Know them, and make sure you have enough when you go to battle!

A rifle could shoot one guy at a time.

A submachine gun could shoot up a bunch of guys or a jeep.



A machine gun could shoot up troops, jeeps, trucks, half tracks and aircrafts. If fired from above, like on a hill, it could also blow up a self-propelled gun.

A mortar could drop bombs and blow up anything but tanks and aircraft.

A small cannon could bomb anything except tanks.



A big cannon could blast anything. Of course, its crew was vulnerable to everything out there.

A bazooka could blow up any vehicle. However, it did not blow up a bunch of troops.

A flamethrower could burn out a tank.

A missile was like a big cannon.

Hand grenades are like a mortar, but they are thrown at close range.

Airplane bombs could blast anything except tanks.



Civil War, Revolutionary War and Pirate cannons could not harm tanks, half tracks, armored cars or self-propelled guns.

Civil War mortars acted like regular mortars.

Nukes destroy both sides, so nobody can use them.

Civil War



Cowboys, Pirates, Davy Crockett guys and Alamo Texans could be used to supplement either side. If a figure was molded in blue or grey, however, he had to go to the appropriate side.

Cannons could blow up anything on the Civil War battlefield. If you used Civil War cannons to supplement a modern war, however, they were not able to penetrate armored cars, self-propelled guns, tanks or half tracks.



Alamo Mexicans could be used to supplement Civil War armies. Blue always went to the Union, Grey to the Confederates, and red to whichever side needed more men.

Spacemen



Pistol-size ray guns can take out other spacemen, very small rockets and jeep-size vehicles.

Rifle-sized ray guns can take out big vehicles - anything except half tracks and tanks.

If you use tanks with spacemen (they didn't make many space combat vehicles) their cannons automatically become super ray guns.

You can use missiles, but regular guns and cannons do not work in space.

Knights, Vikings and Romans
Knights in plate armor are like walking tanks. It takes a lance on horseback, an axe, a mace or a direct hit with a catapult to down one with one shot. Sword and spear guys have to gang up on them and stick them through openings in the armor.

Knights in armor cannot swim or ford waterways.

If confronted by a gun, it takes 3 shots to knock down a fully-armored knight. A burst from a machine gun works, too. Fully-armored knights are vulnerable to all heavy weapons, including grenades. Flamethrowers wreak havoc on them.

Vikings are so cool that they can beat a knight as if he were an unarmored man.

Romans only have half armor. They can be used to supplement knights' armies.

Terrain

Houses can stop bullets, but a hand grenade can blow a door open.



Tanks can knock down any house.



Stone walls stop everything

Wood only stops bullets

A wood fort can stop bullets and old fashioned cannons, but can be penetrated by grenades, light modern cannons and all larger weapons. Tanks and half tracks can drive through wood forts.

The easiest way to beat walls is to fire over them with mortars and grenades.



Some stone forts can be breached by tanks. Big cannons can put holes in stone forts, since a stone fort is not the same as a stone wall.

A soldier with a flamethrower or machine gun can fire through vision slits on pillboxes, if he is close enough.

Tanks plow through almost anything!



Tents do not stop bullets.




FReeper Foxhole Armed Services Links




TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: freeperfoxhole; history; militarytoys; samsdayoff; veterans
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To: PhilDragoo

BTTT!!!!!!


81 posted on 02/20/2005 5:30:38 AM PST by E.G.C.
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To: SAMWolf; snippy_about_it; All

February 20, 2005

Did You Thank God Today?

Read:
Psalm 100

Enter into His gates with thanksgiving . . . . Be thankful to Him, and bless His name. -Psalm 100:4

Bible In One Year: Numbers 11-14

cover On my way to work one day I saw a bumper sticker that read: "Did you thank a green plant today?" Plants are essential to the balance of nature. They release oxygen into the air. They're also a source of food, fuel, medicine, and building materials.

Was the bumper sticker suggesting that because we are so dependent on plants we should actually thank them? If that's what the driver believes, he certainly has a lot to learn about who should receive our gratitude.

Nature bears marvelous testimony to the wisdom of the Creator. The interdependence of one life-form on another makes us realize that we're part of a complex system characterized by beauty and balance. But to direct our praise to nature reminds us of Paul's indictment of those who "worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator" (Romans 1:25). God alone is worthy of our gratitude! He set our world in motion, and He sustains it by His power.

Yes, it's wonderful to be alive, and deep feelings of appreciation often well up within us. But we must always center our devotion on the One who not only provides the air we breathe but also gives us eternal life through faith in Christ.

I'd like to see that bumper sticker changed to: "Did you thank God today?" -Dennis De Haan

Wind and water, light and sod
Speak with faithful lips for God;
May we give to Him our praise
For the goodness He displays. -Anon.

When you think of all that's good, give your thanks to God.

FOR FURTHER STUDY
Celebrating The Wonder Of Creation

82 posted on 02/20/2005 5:34:21 AM PST by The Mayor (http://www.RusThompson.com)
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To: The Mayor
"Did you thank a green plant today?"

Tree Huggers!! GRRRRRRR!

83 posted on 02/20/2005 5:36:38 AM PST by SAMWolf (My cow died so I don't need your bull anymore.)
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To: SAMWolf

I know, we have to battle with them everywhere..


84 posted on 02/20/2005 5:46:01 AM PST by The Mayor (http://www.RusThompson.com)
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To: SAMWolf; snippy_about_it; Professional Engineer; PhilDragoo; Iris7; All

Ladies amd Gentleman, you too can relive your past on the internet if you just know where to shop. Ever hear of the Johnson Smith Co. Sure you have, we all looked at the stuff in the back of comic books and wanted to order the X-Ray glasses or any number of other silly things that were in those wonderfull adds right.

Well you to can go back in time at http://www.johnsonsmith.com

Want some of those frogmen, try here...
http://www.johnsonsmith.com/website/store/product_detail.asp?UID=2005022010243833&item_no=21619&keyword=diving+sub&cat_keyword=&search_page_no=1

or maybe you would like the mini diving sub, after all what good are frogman without a sub, eh...
http://www.johnsonsmith.com/website/store/product_detail.asp?UID=2005022010243833&item_no=21619&keyword=diving+sub&cat_keyword=&search_page_no=1

They ahve tons of weird and wonderfull uselass things to remind you of those days gone by, yaeh right.

What can I say, but enjoy

Regards

alfa6 ;>}


85 posted on 02/20/2005 7:37:34 AM PST by alfa6
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