We didn't make it to Petoskey for Christmas. It was snowing and blowing, not as bad as it was on Friday and Saturday, but bad enough that they were still advising people not to travel if they didn't have to. My daughter and her boyfriend made it to my granddaughter's, but they are younger than us and it was only a ten-mile drive for them, while it would have been a 50- mile drive for us. They came to visit us the next day, after the storm had abated, and I had plowed our driveway enough that they could get in and out without difficulty. It could still use more work, but the big thaw is supposed to start tomorrow, so I gave the tractor a rest today. I might widen the track a bit tomorrow, or I might just wait for it to melt. Our temps never got as low as yours, mostly teens and twenties, with thirties and forties being predicted for the next week or so. Our official snow total was 20 inches on the level.
We had all kinds of people in the army, the good, the bad, and the ugly. Some of the sergeants were mean pricks, some were decent, and some were just stupid. Smitty the cook summed it up pretty well: "The difference between a lifer and a career soldier is a lifer is somebody who can't do anything on the outside, while a career soldier is somebody who can't even do anything on the inside."
We all started out as buck privates, no stripes, pay grade E-1. About the time we completed basic training, we were promoted to E-2, still no stripe. After that came private first class, one stripe E-3. When I was there, the rank of corporal had been replaced by specialist 4, no stripes but a bird insignia, I think it was an eagle. After that came sergeant E-5, three stripes, then sergeant E-6, three stripes and a rocker. Then sergeant E-7 with three stripes and two rockers. Then sergeant E-8, three stripes and three rockers. Then first sergeant, three stripes three rockers, and a diamond in the middle. There was also a sergeant major, but there was only one of those per battalion, and we never saw him. Depending on your job description, an alternate to sergeant was specialist 5, a bird with one rocker. That's what I ended up as a few months before I got out.
The officers were literally a whole different class. They led us in parades and simulated battles, but they mostly left the day-to-day operation to the sergeants. Most of the officers seemed decent enough, but a few of them were mean pricks who drove us almost to the point of mutiny. That's where I learned the fine art of malingering., which is like mutiny, but more subtle and harder to prove. As we used to say, "They can work us long, but they can't work us hard."