Yet Another Game

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  • Tactical Neural Implant
    Registered User
    • May 2002
    • 94

    #1

    Yet Another Game

    I'm bored so I scrounged up a few pictures for "who is that"

    #1 This Marine began his career as an enlistedman and retired as a Lt. General.
  • Tactical Neural Implant
    Registered User
    • May 2002
    • 94

    #2
    #2 This man was the most decorated American Combat Soldier of WWII

    Comment

    • Tactical Neural Implant
      Registered User
      • May 2002
      • 94

      #3
      #3 This soldier captured 132 prisoners almost single handed.

      Comment

      • Tactical Neural Implant
        Registered User
        • May 2002
        • 94

        #4
        #4 Last one (for now)
        Seal Team 6, Red Cell

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        • FutureMagOwner
          Registered User
          • Dec 2001
          • 3354

          #5
          #2 is johnny hopper maybe? im serious

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          • SprayingMango
            i cant wait to blog this
            • Feb 2002
            • 4557

            #6
            #1: Lieutenant General Louis B. "Chesty" Puller - General Puller is the most decorated Marine in Marine Corps history. He won 52 ribbons in all, including five Navy Crosses, the second highest award a Marine can win, and a Distinguished Service Cross, the Distinguished Service Cross is the US Army equivalent of the Navy Cross and therefore is ALSO the second highest decoration awarded by the United States..

            #2: AUDIE LEON MURPHY WAS BORN 6-20-24 IN HUNT COUNTY, TEXAS. HE WAS ONE OF TWELVE CHILDREN BORN TO HIS POOR SHARECROPPER PARENTS.

            #3:Sergeant Alvin York: Known as the greatest [American] hero of World War I, York avoided profiting from his war record before 1939. Born December 13, 1887 in a two-room dogtrot log cabin in Pall Mall, Tennessee, and raised in a rural backwater in the northern section of Fentress County, York was a semi-skilled laborer when drafted in 1917. Quite literally having never traveled more than fifty miles from his home, York's war experience served as an epiphany awakening him to a more complex world.

            #4: Rich Marcinko: read all his books.

            Make em harder next time you dip dunk, no load, pencil pushin cookie counter. (as Rich would say).
            Last edited by Mango; 06-11-2002, 04:36 PM.

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            • FutureMagOwner
              Registered User
              • Dec 2001
              • 3354

              #7
              lol im not good with these things next someone should do johnny hopper that would be a hard one to guess(seing how there are supposedly no pictures of him in existance)

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              • Tactical Neural Implant
                Registered User
                • May 2002
                • 94

                #8
                Oh too easy for you! Alright Mango, I'll find some more challenging people for you next time!

                Comment

                • SprayingMango
                  i cant wait to blog this
                  • Feb 2002
                  • 4557

                  #9


                  I love military history. those were great though, I learned a lot!! Thanks!!

                  Comment

                  • Timmee
                    eBay addict
                    • Apr 2002
                    • 1770

                    #10
                    I only knew #2. Did ya'll know that Audie Murphy stared in the Audie Murphy story (he played himself).
                    There are three kinds of people in the world: Those who can count, and those who can't.

                    With understanding comes understanding.

                    If the saying is true that we are what we eat, aren't we all just cannibals?

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