Army & Navy - The First 24 Hours

From Paris, new TIME Correspondent Joe Weston, sometime soldier, cabled this account of his re-entry into civilian life:

At 4:21 p.m. yesterday, in a crummy, crowded room at Etampes, France, Pfc. Joe Weston, A.U.S., listened to a bored speech by a bored 2nd lieutenant, finally got a brown manila envelope full of papers and heard himself called Mister Weston for the first time in 40 months.

For unbearably long days & nights, when the mental strait jacket of Army discipline and regimentation seemed strangling, I had dreamed of "the moment." Now, at 4:22, I was a free man. But it didn't turn out like the dream.

I took a drink offered by one of my fellow dischargees, because I felt that soldiers who get discharged were supposed to get drunk. But the lousy cognac tasted just as lousy to me as a civilian as it did when I was a soldier. I had it all planned to say something nasty to the lieutenant who had kept us waiting around unnecessarily while he went to the PX for his rations. But I didn't.

On the Town. The first night in Paris was a nightmare. I found myself in a complete mental vacuum. What did civilians talk about? What did they do? How did they act? As a matter of fact, were civilians people at all?

For months, 90% of my conversation had consisted of strictly army talk; the beefs, the gripes, the profanity, the "wait-till-I-get-out" resolutions, the constant damning of the military and all its works, the endless recitals of battles and who won them. Now I had no beefs, no gripes, no bitches and no regimentation—and I was a lost soul. I tried to strike up a conversation with a civilian correspondent at the Hotel Scribe, and after five minutes of talking politics, I was right back where I started —"Now when we were on the Ruhr. . . ." It was extremely discouraging.

I walked along the Champs. I prayed desperately for some MP to stop me for not wearing my hat. Nobody even bothered. Next thing I knew, I had unthinkingly saluted a snappy 20-year-old lieutenant. I threw my hand down disgustedly, said to myself: "What in hell is the matter with you?"

A captain young enough to be my son and drunk enough to be in my shoes asked me for a light. I gave it to him. He asked me directions. I gave them—and said "sir," just as I had been taught.

A major collared me and yowled: "Button your jacket, soldier! Don't you know enough to salute?" Here was what I had been waiting for. What did I do? I buttoned my jacket. I saluted. I said "yessir," and told him I was a civilian. He said, "Humph!"

The Free Man. I went back to the hotel and into the bar. I tried the conversational line again with a party of PRO officers and civilian guests. All I could get out was: "Well, I am a free man now. I just got my discharge." They were supremely uninterested but proffered offhand congratulations and then began talking about other things.

I found myself unaccountably shy. I was afraid to offer opinions; afraid to join in the conversation. I felt like someone who is just learning to talk and is embarrassed to show a lack of progress.

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MANOJ, a police officer stationed in Mumbai, on why he and other police don't criticize their leaders for failing to meet promises to improve dire working conditions after last fall's deadly attacks on the Taj hotel

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