As he awaited his time to return home from occupied Germany, dad told me he played gin rummy with his buddies (not for money, as that would be gambling) until he was sick of it. Of course, most of the men drank, and daddy would sometimes go with them to a pub in town and drink Coca-Cola. I wish I could recall the name of the town.
One day he joined his friends for a trip to town, and as they walked across the precisely laid brick square, he suddenly stopped. He stood gazing at the bricks puzzled. His best friend - another non-drinker - asked him why he'd halted.
"Because this brickwork makes no sense."
The whole group of ten, or so, also stopped to urge the two hanging back to come on and go to the pub, but dad replied, "Look at this. See how precisely the man laid these bricks? So why did it suddenly turn left here? It just doesn't make any sense."
"What doesn't make sense here is that we are standing looking at bricks when we could be sipping cold beer!" declared one of the drinkers, but another, looking around, said, "He did it over here, too."
Daddy talked them into following the paths of the design, until they were all splayed as far apart as possible, standing in place trying to figure out the pattern.
Then it hit him, "Fellows, do you know what this is?"
"No, and I don't care," said one, "I'm thirsty."
But another asked, "So what is it?"
"Guys we're standing on a giant swastika!"
Well, the German POWs all across their nation had been put to work destroying every vestige of the hated symbol, first thing, dad told me. Thousands of Americans had crossed the square for months, but no one else had stopped to wonder why the workman laid the bricks so oddly.
The next day, the POWs were relaying brick in the town square.
Shortly after that, his Colonel sent for him; he was a little apprehensive, wondering why, hoping it wasn't bad news about one of his three brothers who were also in either Europe or the Pacific.
"Relax, son," said the Colonel, who was in charge of a huge supply depot that served many different American forces in that half of the country. "Now, you've served your country well, soldier, but you still have several months before your return home. Now you can spend that time marching POWs twice a day, with lots of free time to do whatever you want. You've earned that right. Understand?"
"Yes, sir?"
"Or... you could spend your time being useful."
"Colonel, I am so sick of playing rummy that I would love something to do."
"Good man. I asked for you because, well son, you knocked the top off every test we've ever given you. Your IQ is in the 160 neighborhood, and what I need is someone smart enough to help me revamp our procedures for the depot. We're losing equipment - probably to the black market - and I have dozens of complaints daily from those who say they can't get supplies. Want to try your hand at it?"
"Yes, sir! I sure do."
"The first thing I'll have you do then, Sargeant, is to man the switchboard for a week. That will let you see what we're doing now, and where we need to make changes - you'll learn it all in that position. Then you put together a plan and present it to me. Got it?"
"Yes, sir, but I'm a Corporal, not a Sargeant."
"Not anymore. And you'll still be operating beyond that rank, if I adopt your changes."
So after he'd worked the switchboard for a week, and spent three days on a new plan, he let the Colonel know he was ready, and was immediately ordered to report. This time the Colonel had a Lieutenant who helped run the depot present, as well.
Dad laid out his plan, complete with new forms he'd designed. He presented the plan, and the Colonel said, "Now, explain this Expediter position you created again."
"Every CO from every group we supply is to assign an Expediter, whoever he wants to send, who will come and live here, and who will sign for each shipment his group picks up. Since it is a driver and truck from his own group, if something comes up missing, then the Expediter and the driver have to answer for it."
"Also, I made some slight changes to our internal paperwork that will allow us to better track the supplies on hand. Including backorder forms for items we have yet to receive."
Dad said the Colonel spent thirty minutes examining the forms and asking him questions, then turned to the Lieutenant, "Lieutenant, you are officially in charge, but you won't have to do anything but help get started. The Sargeant will be running the depot. You see to it that we adopt every form, every change, everything outlined here. This man has thought of everything, and I want it done exactly as presented. Begin now. Dismissed!"
Three weeks later another Colonel - from one of the groups they supplied - came storming into the warehouse, angry and cursing at the top of his lungs. They were short of almost everything.
He demanded his supplies. Dad started pulling forms from file cabinets and showed the Colonel how almost all his supplies had been signed for by his Expediter, and driven away by one of his own. He showed him that a few items had been back-ordered, and explained how they would still go out when the depot received them - it wasn't forgotten.
The Colonel looked at the forms, "What is this about an Expediter, now?"
Dad explained it to him, who was supposed to have chosen a man from his unit that he felt right for the job. Later, he heard the Colonel had used the opportunity to get rid of a trouble-maker. The Colonel, no longer angry at the depot asked a question.
"I've been in Army supply depots all over the world, and I've never seen a single one this organized. Who came up with this?"
"I did, under supervision of my Colonel," dad said he didn't want to antagonize any officers, so he made sure his Colonel got credit, too.
"Sargeant, how would you like to come work for me. I believe you could help me get our site more organized."
"Oh, thank you, sir, but I'm happy right here," he knew the Colonel and his men were living in tents in mud, whereas he had his own room in a nice hotel.
"I think we could make you happy with us, son."
"Well, here I live in a nice hotel, we have hot running water, There's a steam room, and horseback riding, pubs within walking distance, opera and orchestra... I really like it here."
"You know I could order you, don't you?"
Daddy thought, not likely, his own Colonel wouldn't want to send him away, but his reply was, "Sir, in three months I'll be heading home."
"Well, that's the only thing that saved you, Sargeant."
"Yes, sir!" and thus the Colonel saved face.
He installed a new Expediter, and took the old one back, possibly to face charges.