At this point in your life, I guarantee you haven't had any jobs collectively worth 3 pages of writing. I'll quote my dad's philosophy on resumes: "If, in two well-written sentences per job, the value of your previous experience hasn't become evident to your potential employer, then you should probably leave that job off your resume." Not that as CIO of Nationwide Financial for 5 years he had any experience with resumes or anything. You're applying for a job so you can work for a company, don't let their first impression be that you're making them work by reading 3 pages of "things I learned in College". In fact, beyond your major and honors you received, nothing else really matters much from college (unless you're going for a high-level job, GPA doesn't factor in much either).
Back on topic. Tindall the best thing I can advise you to do is stay away from the statements that tell the reader nothing: "Other duties as a professional soldier include: completing a wide variety of missions". When I read that, all it says to me is "he was a soldier, and he did things as a soldier..." but that really doesn't say anything as to why your experience in the reserves is important or why it makes you qualified for the job. Empty statements like that will just hurt you.