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Old 12-07-2006, 08:20 AM
Bernadette Bernadette is offline
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Default Serious use for Silly String

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STRATFORD, N.J. - In an age of multimillion-dollar high-tech weapons systems, sometimes it's the simplest ideas that can save lives. Which is why a New Jersey mother is organizing a drive to send cans of Silly String to Iraq.

American troops use the stuff to detect trip wires around bombs, as Marcelle Shriver learned from her son, a soldier in Iraq.

Before entering a building, troops squirt the plastic goo, which can shoot strands about 10 to 12 feet, across the room. If it falls to the ground, no trip wires. If it hangs in the air, they know they have a problem. The wires are otherwise nearly invisible.

Now, 1,000 cans of the neon-colored plastic goop are packed into Shriver's one-car garage in this town outside Philadelphia, ready to be shipped to the Middle East thanks to two churches and a pilot who heard about the drive.

"If I turn on the TV and see a soldier with a can of this on his vest, that would make this all worth it," said Shriver, 57, an office manager.

The maker of the Silly String brand, Just for Kicks Inc. of Watertown, N.Y., has contacted the Shrivers about donating some. Other manufacturers make the stuff, too, and call their products "party string" or "crazy string."

"Everyone in the entire corporation is very pleased that we can be involved in something like this," said Rob Oram, Just for Kicks product marketing manager. He called the troops' use of Silly String innovative.

The military is reluctant to talk about the use of Silly String, saying that discussing specific tactics will tip off insurgents.

But Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, a U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad, said Army soldiers and Marines are not forbidden to come up with new ways to do their jobs, especially in Iraq's ever-evolving battlefield. And he said commanders are given money to buy nonstandard supplies as needed.

In other cases of battlefield improvisation in Iraq, U.S. soldiers have bolted scrap metal to Humvees in what has come to be known as "Hillybilly Armor." Medics use tampons to plug bullet holes in the wounded until they can be patched up.

Also, soldiers put condoms and rubber bands around their rifle muzzles to keep out sand. And troops have welded old bulletproof windshields to the tops of Humvees to give gunners extra protection. They have dubbed it "Pope's glass" ? a reference to the barriers that protect the pontiff.

In an October call to his mother, Army Spc. Todd Shriver explained how his unit in the insurgent hotbed of Ramadi learned from Marines to use Silly String on patrol to detect boobytraps.

After sending some cans to her 28-year-old son, Shriver enlisted the help of two priests and posted notices in her church and its newsletter. From there, the effort took off, with money and Silly String flowing in. Parishioners have been dropping cans into donation baskets.

"There's so much that they can't do, and they're frustrated, but this is something they can do," said the Rev. Joseph Capella of St. Luke's Church in Stratford.

The Shrivers said they would not mind seeing the string as standard-issue equipment, but they don't blame the military for not supplying it.

"I don't think that they can think of everything," said Ronald Shriver, 59, a retired salesman. "They're taught to improvise, and this is something that they've thought of."

Marcelle Shriver said that since the string comes in an aerosol can, it is considered a hazardous material, meaning the Postal Service will not ship it by air. But a private pilot who heard about her campaign has agreed to fly the cans to Kuwait ? most likely in January ? where they will then be taken to Iraq.

Shriver said she will continue her campaign as long as her son is overseas and she has Silly String to send.

"I know that he's going come through this. I hope they all do," she said.









Silly String sprayed by Marcelle Shriver drapes over an electrical cord in the garage of her Stratford, N.J., home Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2006. American troops use the stuff to detect trip wires around bombs, as Shriver learned from her son, a soldier in Iraq. After sending some cans to her son, Shriver posted notices in her church and its newsletter. From there, the effort took off, with money and cans of Silly String flowing in.
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Old 12-07-2006, 08:35 AM
39mto39g 39mto39g is offline
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This is such a great Idea. I would also look into deploying the stuff from a distance because soon as the people that put the trip wire there see the use, they will change the tactic.
Got to love our GI's

Ron
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Old 12-07-2006, 11:09 AM
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SparrowHawk62 SparrowHawk62 is offline
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Improvise, adapt and over come!
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A veteran - whether active duty, retired, national guard or reserve - is someone who, at one point in his life, wrote a blank check made payable to "The United States of America", for an amount of "up to and including my life." That is honor, and there are way too many people in this country who no longer understand it. -- Author Unknown
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Old 12-07-2006, 11:46 AM
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If they capture some insurgent scumbag they could use it to scare the hell out him during interragation by telling him that its made of pork fat and let him have it. It won't hurt him but it'll make him shit his pants!
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Old 12-07-2006, 12:14 PM
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Hell, use pork fat

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Old 12-10-2006, 05:04 AM
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QM3steve QM3steve is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by SparrowHawk62 Improvise, adapt and over come!
CLint Eastwood in Heartbreak Ridge.
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Old 12-11-2006, 08:37 PM
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colmurph colmurph is offline
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Wish we'd had that stuff in VIETNAM. Could have saved about 20 or more lives in my Batallion.
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