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Post by Rick I.C. Harris on Jun 12, 2014 10:17:04 GMT -5
You Two RP here Please.
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Post by Dmitry Popov on Jun 16, 2014 11:38:29 GMT -5
We open to a picture of the Kremlin with the Soviet National Anthem playing in the back ground.We then hear "The Soviet Union"s favorite Son" Dmitry Popov begin to speak.
Dmitry Popov: As you see in the picture The Kremlin still stands and it's still a symbol of how great the Soviet Union truly is. Ve are better than you pathetic Americans. Vhy do you still believe that you Americans are so much better than us and the ve are so below you.Dmitry pauses for a few seconds to catch his breath.Dmitry Popov:[/font] I vas sent here by the Kremlin to prove that the Soviet Union is now and vill always be better than the so called great U.S. of A There is now one here in the N L Double U that can match my vill, my skill, and my intelligence in an out of the ring. The simply fact is that I am better than all of you in every single way possible.Dmitry pauses again and reach for a huge Soviet flag and starts to way it. Dmitry Popov:[/font] This flag is the best flag in the vorld. Better than the flag of the United States of America. Your flag represents stupidity and weakness vhile the Soviet flag represents Power and intelligence. Ve are superior to you and soon you vill all understand that.Once again he pauses for a few seconds.Dmitry Popov:[/font] This veek on Roulette vhen I get in ring and face America's #1 hero SGT. Chris Justice in a one on one match. I am going to show him what true JUSTICE is vhen I beat him and prove vith out a shadow of a doubt that the Soviet Union is indeed better than the USA. I vill see you very soon.The comes to and end and we fade out.
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Post by SGT. Chris Justice on Jun 16, 2014 14:56:48 GMT -5
We open up to Airborne Training in Fort Benning, Georgia were we see all kinds of soldiers in different types of Airborne Training some are in Ground Week which means During Ground Week, soldiers will spend a lot of time learning, practicing, and perfecting their Parachute Landing Fall (PLF). This maneuver teaches a soldier to transfer the energy of your fall (landing) up the sides of the lower legs and knees, all the way up to side of the upper body. The key is landing with your feet and knees together. To practice the PLFs, soldiers will jump from platforms of various heights into sand or pebble pits, simulating the final stage of parachute landing. All the while, the Black Hat instructors observe and correct the soldier's body position and PLF technique. Over and over a soldier will practice the PLF – expect a soldier's body to become quite sore from the repetitive falling as well as the uniform to get beat up. This week culminates in practice landings from the Lateral Drift Assembly, in order to simulate landing while moving across the ground. The 34-foot tower is also used to simulate exiting an aircraft in flight. To continue to week 2, you must pass all jump training test as well as the physical fitness requirements. Some students that are unable to advance may require additional training or get "recycled" to another class due to lack of progress or injury.
Some are in Tower Week which means The second week of Jump School concentrates on the jump towers. Soldiers will continue using the 34-foot tower and will also use the swing-landing trainer, the suspended harness, and the 250-foot tower. Soldiers will become familiar with the mock door trainer to simulate mass exit training (how to exit an aircraft in flight). Parachute jumps from the 250-foot high tower culminate the second week of training and are the final transition from ground training to actual parachuting. Additionally, soldiers are taught the different phases of parachute flight from aircraft exit, through opening shock and chute deployment, then onto the deployment of the risers, steering the chute, and all the way to landing. One critical skill learned is how to identify a parachute malfunction and deal with it. This may involve emergency procedures including when and how to deploy the reserve parachute. Soldiers also learn about oscillation, landing falls, and how to recover from drag. The T-10C parachute is partially steerable using the parachute risers and soldiers are taught the different techniques to steer their chutes into the wind and aim for the Point of Impact at the center of the Drop Zone. The second week completes a soldier's individual skill training and begins building team effort skills. Once successfully completing the skills required and the physical fitness requirements, a soldier progresses to jump week.
And some have made it to Jump Week which means Finally, soldiers get to practice their new skills while jumping out of real aircraft in flight. The C-130 or C-17 aircraft pick up the paratrooper students in front of the hangar at Lawson Army Airfield. From there it is a very short flight to Fryar Field (commonly referred to as "Fryar Drop Zone"), where all of the training jumps are accomplished. Fryar Field is named after Private Elmer E. Fryar of the United States Army's 511th Parachute Infantry Regiment, who posthumously received the Medal of Honor for his actions in World War II.[2]
The Air Force aircraft fly at 1200 feet above the ground at an airspeed of about 150 MPH. After the flight crew completes the pre-drop and slow-down checklists, soldiers rise out of their seats and move at the jumpmaster's direction to one of two paratroop doors (on each side of the aircraft). At "green light" one stick of soldiers exits the plane – jumpers continue to move to the door until the red light is illuminated. At that point the aircraft will begin its racetrack maneuver circling back to the beginning of the drop zone and continue to do this until all jumpers have jumped.
A soldier must complete 5 jumps, including one night jump, to graduate Airborne School. During jump week, the schedule varies and soldiers will jump in a variety of configurations from no load (Hollywood style) all the way to a full combat load jump. Jump week can seem chaotic, with a large group of soldiers gathered in the ready-room waiting to be loaded onto the aircraft one chalk at a time. Immediately after landing on the Drop Zone (DZ), the soldiers collect their parachutes and other gear and meet back at the rally point on one side of the DZ, where they wait for a bus to take them back to Lawson Army Airfield to get ready for their next jump.
The jump schedule varies greatly based on class dynamics, weather, and aircraft. Graduation is normally conducted at 0900 on Friday of Jump Week at the south end of Eubanks Field on the Airborne Walk. However, if there is inclement weather, or other factors delay the scheduled jumps, graduation may be conducted on Fryar Drop Zone following the last jump. Guests and family members are welcome to observe all of the jumps at the DZ, attend the graduation ceremony, and participate in awarding the parachutist wings to the soldiers. On graduation day, families typically spend only a few minutes with their soldier, pinning on his or her new airborne wings. The soldier frequently departs Fort Benning that day or the following day, to attend another advanced military school or to report to another duty station.
We see a plane fly over head and a single soldier jumps out of it and after a few minutes lands in the Drop Zone perfectly. The camera zooms in on him and it's none other than NLW Superstar SGT. Chris Justice.
SGT. Chris Justice: Man that was fun!!! It's been a log time since I got to do that. I got a chance to do it today so I took it. Dmitry Popov I heard what you were saying about this great country and I was not very happy about it.
Chris is gathering all his gear together and getting it ready to catch the bus so that he can go up again for another jump.
SGT. Chris Justice: Popov there have been far better men than man that have done what I did defending this great country. So what gives you the right to badmouth any of them of the US of A. Some of those men died protecting this great land. Who have you stood up for and protected? My guess would be no one you damn Russia coward.
The camera pans out and we can see the bus coming down the road in the distance.
SGT. Chris Justice: Well my ride is almost here and it will be time to go up again for another jump. Dmitry this week on Roulette I am going to show you what a good ole American soldier can do in that ring. I am going to take you down for all my brothers and sisters that have lost their lives in battle and all my brothers and sisters that are still in the battle all over the world today. The US Military is the best in the world and you son are going up against one of the finest to ever be in the military.
The bus shows up takes Justice to the air field where he boards the plane and the camera fades as he takes off for another jump.
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