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Thread: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

  1. #1
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    Default 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090918/...ant_commandant

    FORT JACKSON, S.C. – Command Sgt. Maj. Teresa King can dress down a burly, battle-hardened sergeant in seconds with a sharp phrase and a withering look, then turn around and tell trainee soldiers to be sure they get seven hours of sleep.

    As the first woman to take charge of the Army's school for its order-barking drill sergeants, the 28-year military veteran and sharecropper's daughter said she's used to breaking down barriers in military roles normally reserved for men.

    "It's so easy because I love it," said King, a single, 48-year-old North Carolina native. "I have a family in the Army. It is my family."

    The stern discipline dispensed by her late father to his 12 children set her on a path of taking responsibility for herself and her siblings early on, King said during a recent interview on the Army's training base next to Columbia.

    She learned to "give a hard day's work for whatever I earned and take no short cuts," said King, who enjoys passing her values to young soldiers and watching them grow into senior officers and enlisted men and women.

    Lt. Col. Dave Wood, King's battalion commander, said she was chosen for her approach to "the business of taking civilians and making them into soldiers."

    Gone are the days of two decades ago, Wood said, when his drill sergeant made him clean wax off a floor with a razor blade or run around the barracks loaded down with a full duffel bag.

    "She's got this unique way of dealing with soldiers where she can be correcting them, but it's in a manner that they're wanting to please her and wanting to do the right thing," he said. "It's not degrading to them."

    King takes over command of the Drill Sergeant School on Tuesday at Fort Jackson, the Army's largest training installation. This year the school will churn out about 2,000 of the in-your-face instructors.

    The tough love approach comes through as King conducted her barracks inspections and daily "walkabout" to meet with senior enlisted men and women on a recent weekday.

    A touch of bright red lipstick and kohl-dark eyeliner doesn't soften her stern gaze when she spots a sheet corner not properly tucked or a young soldier with a uniform askew.

    "What's going on here?" she queries, soldiers jumping to attention as she enters a room as they relax between classes on becoming finance clerks or legal aides. "Get back to school and get back to doing something!"

    King's face softened once she determined one soldier in exercise gear wasn't goofing off, but just back from the dentist and a root canal. "Get some rest, soldier," she advised the woman with a swollen face and jaw.

    "You all make sure you get your seven, seven hours of sleep!" King said before heading out the door.

    King's inspection companion, 1st Sgt. Teddy Johnson, said with a relieved grin that a day without King's stern critiques "wouldn't be a normal day. ... She's always that way."

    Still, she has time for a few other pursuits. She's completed one master's degree in business management and is working on another in theology, saying she enjoys studying issues of leadership in the Bible.

    King's elevation marks another barrier broken in a still male-dominated service of 550,000 soldiers, of which only about 14 percent are female.

    There were few women training alongside men when she first entered the military in 1980, just out of high school. Several years later, she was chosen to train as a drill sergeant.

    King rose to become the first female first sergeant named to oversee the heart and soul of Army warfighters: the headquarters company of the 18th Airborne Corps at Fort Bragg, N.C., where she was responsible for 500 paratroopers, 22 sergeant majors, 22 colonels and three general officers. She's served in South Korea and Europe and held jobs at NATO and the Pentagon.

    While opportunities for women have increased over the past two decades, they are still excluded from assignments where soldiers engage in direct combat, such as infantry and tank units.

    Yet modern-day battlefields in Iraq and Afghanistan have shown that front lines no longer exist, and even accountants or medics in the rear can find themselves in the heat of battle and must defend themselves and their buddies.

    "I have one chance to do it, and if I don't get it right, that soldier could not survive on the battlefield," King said.

    She's pleased that her rise should help others, she says.

    "It means a door has been opened. ... Who knows how far we can go?" she asks. "I just want people to be able to fly."

  2. #2
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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    She looks like a Biznotch. She will fo just fine I believe.
    ALL THAT WE ASK IS THAT YOU BE PERFECT AND FAST


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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    There were few women training alongside men when she first entered the military in 1980, just out of high school.
    Good on her!!! She had the guts to be a trailblazer in 1980 that I didn't have. I admire her.





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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    I don't know. The 7 hours of sleep thing.. making sure they are treated nicely...

    Gone are the days of two decades ago, Wood said, when his drill sergeant made him clean wax off a floor with a razor blade or run around the barracks loaded down with a full duffel bag.
    Just seems like Basic Training is becoming a fucking stress card fiesta. First day I got off the bus I got my face slammed into the dirt for not moving fast enough, and another guy got choke slammed for mouthing off. It may seem wrong to some, but it taught my ass to hussle.

    I'm not saying basic has to be abusive, but I've seen the affects of 'nice' basic training out here in the sandbox where certain soldiers complain about going outside because it's too hot, and I even saw one occasion where a soldier refused to take his headphones off even though ordered to by a SSG.

    The military is not the usual union blue collar job.. You have to listen to your leadership and be ready to snap to it, because I know from personal experience it'll save your ass.

    Todays basic training seems to be all cookies and milk. Just my .02.

    11B2P
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  5. #5
    NoWhereMan

    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    whoa, I don't know what Army you're in, but my leadership always made sure I got my seven hours of sleep living in a combat outpost and doing patrols and raids...

    Weak ass shit. When people like her get done, NCOs on the line get their shot at making these "former initial entry trainees" into Soldiers.

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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    But that's what Army basic training needed was a woman's touch! Next we'll bring in some queers, put them in the quartermaster corps, and they can collaborate on how to make the barracks less austere and more homey...perhaps even balance out that onion head chi with a little red here and there.

    Oh yes, some chintz curtains, frilly lace doilies, nice soft slippers under ever king size water-bunk. The Army is gonna do just fine.

    It'll break my heart, but I may raise my son up to join the Marines instead of the Airborne. There won't be nothing left of the Army when he's old enough to serve.
    If Mr. Einstein doesn't like the natural laws of the universe, let him go back to where he came from. ~ Robert Benchley

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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    Men i can tell you things about Basic that will make you sick. Our hands are tied behind are backs. Its the kinder softer approach, its complete bullshit.
    [IMG]file:///C:/DOCUME%7E1/Owner/LOCALS%7E1/Temp/moz-screenshot-27.jpg[/IMG][IMG]file:///C:/DOCUME%7E1/Owner/LOCALS%7E1/Temp/moz-screenshot-26.jpg[/IMG]"The more you sweat in peace, the less you bleed in war." ?

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    WTF? Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    You should be scared to death when you're in Basic. Seven hours of sleep!!! I don't get seven hours of sleep now fifteen years in the Army!! Basic is the foundation of the only Infantry skills some of us ever get and to "ease up" there is signing a death warrant for some of the folks going through there now. The way some guys get down range and end up on QRF or ECP duty, regardless of their MOS, with just a little OJT and sorry Basic is gonna be a body bag filler for sure. Can't run everything like a business............

  9. #9
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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    Fuck you for posting this!
    You can't train for a kick in the balls!

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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    Sure as Hell is not the Army Basic I took in Ft Polk in 68'. Right next to Tigerland and the VC village. You didn't pay attention and had a little nap in class; you awoke to the sound of an M14 crashing down on your helmet liner pushing your head down into your chest. And you never did it again...



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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    I've tried to write a comment about this post about 8 times and I just cant do it ... I'm with Kilted Heathen on this one!

  12. #12
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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    Dam you read my mind. Just doesn't make sense to a 11b.

    B Co 1/509th ABCT 1973-1976

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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

  14. #14
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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    Quote Originally Posted by LadyDoc View Post
    Good on her!!! She had the guts to be a trailblazer in 1980 that I didn't have. I admire her.
    Flutterkicks go!
    You can't train for a kick in the balls!

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    Default Re: 1st woman takes charge of Army's drill sergeants

    Army Strong!



    "Where is the prince who can afford so to cover his country with troops for its defense, so that ten thousand men descending from the clouds might not,in many places, do an infinite deal of mischief before a force could be brought together to repel them?" -Benjamin Franklin, 1784


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