When Radar is telling Klinger about losing his stripes he has one arm on the bar and the other hanging over the edge of the bar.
But in the next scene he has his left arm pulling his right arm sleeve.
But in the next scene he has his left arm pulling his right arm sleeve.
Col. Potter informs Radar that he could face fifteen years' imprisonment for the "theft" of Col. Chaffey's gun. However, according to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, larceny of non-military property carries a maximum punishment of five years' imprisonment (as well as dishonorable discharge and a fine; the punishment can be substantially less depending on the value of the stolen property).
When Margaret and Frank are talking about the gun, her fingernails can be seen as almost an inch long. No nurse, especially a head nurse, would have such long fingernails.
At the point in which Radar enter into Major Houlihan tent to wake her (opening scene), the phonograph is playing and Major Houlihan is sound asleep. The needle arm on the phonograph is basically at the beginning of the record which would be incorrect with Major Houlihan sound asleep, unless there was a third person (the director or stagehand) in the tent to start the phonograph for the camera. With Major Houlihan sound asleep, the needle should be at the end (center) of the record, with NO MUSIC playing, as in M*A*S*H 7x17 - Inga (26 minutes 53 seconds) when Hawkeye and Inga are walking out of the tent. The only sound we should hear coming from the phonograph is a scratching sound from the record.
In the O.R., as Col. Potter is telling Hawkeye and B.J. about the mishap his Uncle Claude had with a gun, Potter says that "the bullet severed his foot" before killing the cat and then continued, "They buried Tabby in one shoebox and Uncle Claude's toe in another" -- making it clear that Harry Morgan goofed and should have said that the bullet severed Uncle Claude's toe, not his foot.
Colonel Potter reads in Stars and Stripes that Eisenhower plays a lot of golf, and that West Point cadets were expelled for cheating. The West Point incident was in August of 1951, and Eisenhower didn't serve as President until 1953.
After Col. Potter tucks Radar in for the night and leaves, Maj. Burns sneaks in through the door at 19:58. Another person can be seen crouching behind Burns in the doorway. Burns is shown entering alone, so the other person must be crew.
Margaret mentions the bone grips on the revolver read 1884, implying the revolver is from that era. The revolver is actually a Colt New Service, introduced in 1898, 14 years later.