Posted on Apr 4, 2015
CW4 Larry Curtis
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Asa patch
When I went through the induction process in April 1974, there was a representative from the ASA at the induction center who attempted to pull me away from the contract I had initiated with my recruiter and have me join-up with the ASA in some capacity. At that point in my life I had no interest in the technical aspects of communications so my scores were barely within the acceptable range from the aptitude tests I had taken. He was really leaning on me to go into a commo MOS until I asked him if my aptitude score for the career field I had actually enlisted for was good enough, he looked and said, "yes it is." I said, "Good, you had me worried that I wouldn't be able to do what I was attempting to enlist for and I was about to just go home and forget about it." HAHAHA. I guess the ASA was short-handed in their commo MOS's at that time and so they were trying to persuade people to sign up for them. In 1977, the ASA was merged with the US Army's Military Intelligence component to create the United States Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM). And ironically, my final duty station in Germany was at an INSCOM installation, Gablingen Kaserne on the North side of Augsburg. But I was not there to work for INSCOM...I was assigned there as the Detachment Commander of my company's flight detachment which was there to support VII Corps Artillery. We supported the Brigade Commander with an OH-58, and I was the designated pilot for the Commander, VII Corps Artillery with a UH-1 Huey. I flew for two of them during my tenure...MG Louis J. Del Rosso, and BG Creighton W. Abrams Jr, whose father was the Army Chief of Staff when I joined in 1974. I loved flying for both of them, but actually deployed to Dessert Storm with BG Abrams. What a time we had in that job...wheww! Loved it very much, and enjoyed the heck out of Augsburg and living in Southern Bavaria. I'd do it all again without requiring even the gentlest of nudges if I could.
Edited >1 y ago
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SGT Jim Arnold
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a bit before my time
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Edited 8 y ago
I remember them well - hilltops, ice, and snow - morse code and rocket telemetry intercepts. Warmest Regards, Sandy :)
SSG Keith Jahnke
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FS Hakata Japan May 1970 - Jan 1972 as 05H
7thRRFS Udorn Thailand Nov 1973 - May 1975 as 98B
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SP5 Grover Crail
SP5 Grover Crail
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Keith, you came right after me. There are a lot of us from the 83RRSOU who came up to the 7th when they shut the 83rd down. A lot of the early guys like me who have developed emphysema. Uncle Sam has acknowledged the use of Agent Orange at the perimeter. But they want you to be a MP for the VA to accept you were "touched". hell you step out the back door of ops to smoke and you were at the fence, you leave the gate you here at the fence, the Damn elephant cage was sprayed frequently with agent orange no matter how the wind was blowing. No mowers were allowed in there once we were upintercepting.I know I am fighting a losing battle but I did the NSA's dirty work in their little secret Laos and Cambodia crap and my payback is a big zero. Sometimes I wondered why we even had army officers, the NSA ran the show when I was there. When I finished breaking a code and getting it ready it ALWAYS went to one of the tech reps on duty.
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COL Jill Morgenthaler
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I was in it at Camp Humphrey and Uijonbu in 1977
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SPC Robert Berg
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Yes, i was in the ASA from Dec 1973 to Oct 1975 in Udorn Thailand and then Pyongtaek South Korea.
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SPC Cryptographic Technician
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ASA Davis Camp - Saigon - 1968
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COL Jill Morgenthaler
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I served with ASA in South Korea as it became INSCOM - 1977 and then commanded similiar units under the INSCOM/66 Military Intelligence Group in Detachment B, Pirmasens, West Germany and Detachment O, West Berlin.
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