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Page Title: SHOW A LEG
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SUMMARY
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Military Requirements for Petty Officer First Class
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Chapter 2 LEADERSHIP  AND  ADMINISTRATIVE RESPONSIBILITIES

resulting from them, military superiority would be unachievable. To be survivable, today’s Navy must have  the  latest  and  most  modern  platforms  and systems  available  to  deliver  weapons  wherever needed. To meet any challenge, the Navy is constantly in   a   state   of   readiness   training.   Forces   must constantly  be  trained  during  peacetime  so  that they will be prepared for war. Training is a major factor in the ability of a ship to carry out assigned operations. Personnel must be able to operate and maintain equipment and function continuously as a team. The best weapons and systems are useless without  skilled  hands  and  well-trained  minds  to operate them. REFERENCES Basic Military Requirements, NAVEDTRA, 12043, Naval Education and Training Program Management Support Activity, Pensacola, Fla., 1992. SHOW A LEG Many    of    our    Navy’s    colorful    expressions originated  as  practical  means  of  communicating vital information. One such expression is “show a leg.” In  the  British  Navy  of  King  George  III  and earlier, many sailors’ wives accompanied them on long voyages. This practice caused a multitude  of problems,  but  some  ingenious  bosun  solved  one problem that tended to make reveille a hazardous event:  that  of  distinguishing  which  bunks  held males and which held females. To  avoid  dragging  the  wrong  “mates”  out   of the rack, the bosun asked all to “show a leg,” If the leg  shown  was  adorned  with  silk,  the  owner  was allowed to continue sleeping. If the leg was hairy and tattooed, the owner was forced to “turn-to.” In  today’s  Navy,  showing  a  leg  is  a  signal  to the reveille petty  officer  that  you  have  heard  the call and are awake. Show a leg. 1-22

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