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This is my 4th article on my experience in Vietnam. I have heard from
some of you and I thank you for the email. I have added my home email
address on the bottom of this article.Mike Massey and I flew from Qui Nhon
to Long Binh to attend splicing school and earn the MOS 36E. On the flight
to Tan Son Nhut AFB the C130 lost one engine so the plane landed at Cam Ranh
Bay. We slept outside of the air terminal all night and made it to Long Binh
the following day. This was a bit of excitement for 2 guys that had been in
country for about 2 or 3 days.
The splicing school was good for what it was. The Army was behind Ma Bell
in current splicing techniques but the instructors did well with what they
had. I remember two instructors, Hurt and Raney. Sergeant Partain ran the
school. I knew him for Fort Gordon. In 1977 I ran into him at Fort Gordon.
He had retired from the Army and was a civilian splicer on that post.
The school lasted three weeks and nothing too eventful happened. I still
remember the color code. I did go into Saigon with the duty driver for an
afternoon. I had a good time just looking around. I think the driver's name
was Bennet from Detroit.
The Army would remain short of cable splicers for the entire war. The
Army had decided to install modern telephone switching offices but left in
place an out of date outside plant doctrine. The Soldiers who would pay for
this failure were by and large the cable splicers. More on this in future
articles.
With splicing school over Mike Massey and I flew back to Company D, 40th
Signal Battalion, in Qui Nhon. |