TLN.JPG (37996 bytes)


Vol. 5 No. 29          TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS          August 3, 1970


 

Index

Unit                   Page Unit                  Page Unit                   Page Unit                  Page
116th AHC Photo          1 2/27 Photo                      3 4/9                                     1 7/11 Arty Photo              8
2/12                                  1 2/77 Arty                        3 4/9                                     3 7/11 Arty                          8
2/12 Photo                      1 25th Inf Band Photo    4 4/9                                     8 7/11 Arty                          8
2/12                                  6 25th Inf Photo               6 65th Engr                         4 Donut Dolly Photos      4
2/14 Photos                    3 3rd Bde                           8 65th Engr Photos           4 GED Photo                       1
2/22                                  7 3rd Bde Photo               8 7/11 Arty                          3 Hoi Chanh                        1
2/22 Photos                    7      

  

Teen Hoi Chanh Conquers Fear
By PFC PATRICK F. MURPHY

   CU CHI -- A young boy compelled to fight for the Viet Cong, recently conquered the fear built up in him by VC scare tactics and rallied to freedom at Cu Chi’s Ann-Margaret Gate.
   The Hoi Chanh told his story to the division’s 3rd Brigade civic action NCOIC, Staff Sergeant Ronald Galluzzo.
          Forced
   “He told us the VC had forced him to join them during March of last year and that he hasn’t seen his family since,” said Galluzo, of Springfield, Ohio.  “At first, he was assigned to an infantry unit.  But he soon became frightened by the constant allied shelling.  He was then redeployed to a medical outfit.”  But the med unit turned out to be little better for the frightened teenager.
          Cook
   “He had to be up at four every morning to cook breakfast and the evening meal had to be prepared at eight o’clock, so observation planes couldn’t spot the cooking smoke.  Between the artillery and the many snakes brought out by recent rains, he was pretty miserable,” added Galluzzo.
   Although increasingly weary of this hazardous existence, the boy was nonetheless fearful of his treatment at Allied hands if he should surrender.
         Scared
   “He was taken to meetings once a month for indoctrination and intimidation and told repeatedly not to listen to US squawk ships or read Chieu Hoi leaflets,” Galluzzo continued.  “He was also warned that the allies would kill him as soon as he surrendered.”
   He finally overcame his apprehension, and at the first opportunity, deserted his post, and fled to Cu Chi Base Camp.
  

 

116th Assault Helicopters AIR JAM - This 116th Assault Helicopter Company Yellow Jacket pilot looks out on a sky full of traffic over Dan Tieng.  (Photo by SP4 Ed Toulouse)

  

 

Five Enemy Killed
Manchus Gun Down NVA

   TAY NINH - First Brigade elements recently killed five NVA soldiers in a late night ambush a mile west of Tay Ninh base camp.
   An element of Alfa company, 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry Manchus was set up in a night position along a trail when enemy movement was spotted.  The Manchus opened fire with small arms and machineguns.
   The estimated five enemy returned with small arms fire and Staff Sergeant Howard Dean, Butte, Mont., the platoon leader, called in the brigade’s Nighthawk gunship and artillery support.
   After about ten minutes contact was lost and the Manchus searched the area and located two enemy killed by their rifle fire and three others killed by the Nighthawk guns.
   “We came through without a scratch,” Dean said. “We were alert and ready for anything that came along.”
   Besides the enemy killed, the Manchus found three rocket propelled grenades with boosters, an assault rifle with ammunition, four Chicom grenades, several rifle grenades and a small amount of medical gear.
  

 

CONGRATS -- One of 45 GIs who finished his GED high school equivalency degree recently picks up his diploma at a Cu Chi ceremony. Receives GED High School Equivalency

  

 

Private ‘Pappy’
By SP4 ED TOULOUSE

   FSB WARRIOR - Two overseas tours -- one in Germany and the other in Guam -- with an honorable discharge in 1952 may have been enough army duty for the average GI but not for “Pappy.”  He came back.
   In January 1967, almost fifteen years after his July 18, 1952 discharge, thirty-seven year old Private Josh Murray (nicknamed Pappy) of Bald Knot, Ark., was back on a PT field, this time at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., shouting “Airborne ranger” along with his fellow basic trainees.
          No Rookie
   Pappy was no rookie.  His first dose of army PT was with the 10th Armor Division at Camp Chaffee, Ark., in 1948.  And later, in 1951, Murray was a PT instructor at the Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland.  But more than fifteen years had passed since then.
          First Sergeant Jimmie
   Johnson of Birmingham, Ala., presently with Echo Company, 2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry, was Pappy’s basic training drill instructor - this second time.
          Stuck it Out
   “Some of the younger men playfully called him the “old soldier” and kidded him about keeping up, but he stuck it out,” recalled Johnson.  “In fact his PT test score was over the company average,” he added.
   “The instructors treated me just like any other private that had just come into the army,” explained Murray.  “I didn’t ask for anything that I didn’t deserve.”
          Third Tour
   Pappy, presently a supply sergeant with Delta Company, 2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry, is in the fourth month of his third tour in Vietnam - he likes it here.
   “I’ve enjoyed the opportunity to go overseas,” said Pappy.  “I’ve never cared for stateside duty.”
  

 

WELCOME SIGHT -- Members of Alfa Company, 2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry, anxiously await choppers to take them in to base camp.  (Photo by SP4 Ed Toulouse) Hitching a ride

  

 


Page 2                           TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS                           August 3, 1970


   

Decorated

  SILVER STAR
CPT John E. Lockner, Co C, 2d Bn, 12th Inf
1 LT Kenneth J. Liljestrand, Co C, 2d Bn, 12th Inf
SP4 Gerald J. Camelleri, F Co, 75th Inf
SP4 Ronald J. Hodges, Co E, 3d Bn, 22d Inf
    
DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSS
MAJ Richard W. Cato, HHC, 2d Bn, 12th Inf
CPT Robert W. Simmons, D Trp, 3d Sqdn, 4th Cav
WO1 Dennis L. Hubbard, HHC, 2d Bde
SFC Ronald O. Godman, D Trp, 3d Sqdn, 4th Cav
    
BRONZE STAR
COL Ennis C. Whitehead Jr, HHC, 2d Bde
LTC Birtrun S. Kidwell Jr, HHC, 2d Bn, 34th Armor
LTC Shepperd H. Phillips, HHC, 2d Bn, 12th Inf
LTC Charles S. Stodter, HHSB, 2d Bn, 77th Fid Arty
MAJ Elijah H. Gardner, HHC, 1st Bde
1 LT Stephen Candela, Co C, 3d Bn, 22d Inf
1 LT David L. Phillips, Co A, 2d Bn, 14th Inf
1 LT Randall C. Smith, Co B, 2d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT Claude W. Cooper, Co B, 2d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT Daniel L. Dailey, Co B, 2d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT Gordon R. Grieve, F Co„75th Inf
SGT Jerry R. Holland, D Trp, 3d Sqdn, 4th Cav
SGT William G. Kock, Co C, 2d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT Joseph F. Miller, Co C, 3d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT Kenneth C. Russett, Co C, 3d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT Malcom M. Sheffield, Co D, 2d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT Larry J. Simpson, Co C, 2d Bn, 22d Inf
SGT James A. Wilfe, Co A, 2d Bn, 14th Inf
SGT Martin L. Woodruff, D Trp, 3d Sqdn, 4th Cav
SP4 Damian Aider, Co B, 2d Bn, 22d Inf
SP4 James H. Baker, Co A, 2d Bn, 14th Inf
SP4 Gary R. Freeman, D Trp, 3d Sqdn, 4th Cav
SP4 Robert A. Holtzman, D Trp, 3d Sqdn, 4th Cav
SP4 Michael J. Magnotta Jr, Co B., 2d Bn, 27th Inf
SP4 Richard L. Pugh, Co C, 3d Bn, 22d Inf
SP4 Daniel L. Rawlings, Co D, 2d Bn, 27th Inf
SP4 Otimo P. Vasquez, Co C, 3d Bn, 22d Inf
PFC Kent O. Beavers, Co B, 2d Bn, 27th Inf
PFC Ben H. Bodine Jr, Co D, 2d Bn, 27th Inf

    

 

Prevent Problems
Keep Records Straight
By SP4 SCOTT WATSON

   Many servicemen, upon ETSing, make a bad mistake by either loosing or destroying their military records.  For the rest of a man’s life, he will be called upon to produce these records.  They also hold the key to benefits that may be claimed many years after the man leaves the service.
   It’s a good idea to start a personal record file.  The large envelope that discharge papers come in can be used for this purpose, or any file will do the job.  This personal file will save much searching and inconvenience as the years click away and will provide orderly safekeeping for service associated papers.
   About the most important item to include in the file, is DD form 214, Armed Forces of the United States report of discharge or transfer.  This is a brief account of military service and should be registered with the county recorder in the serviceman’s home town, for his own protection.  The original should be kept in a safe fireproof place, while photocopies should be placed in the file for quick reference.  Copies are required as evidence of eligibility for veterans benefits.
   Included in the file should be a serviceman’s shot record, (which should be kept up to date), government insurance policies, including premium payment records, and papers associated with active duty, such as orders to and releases from active duty, pay vouchers, warrants, commissions and diplomas.
  

 

GIs Get To Switch Their Jobs

   Any enlisted man who arrives in Vietnam and is assigned to a line outfit with an MOS of 11 Bravo, has the opportunity to change his MOS if he is skilled in another.  This option is open to anyone who has been in the Army for eight months or more.
   By re-enlisting for three years, which begins on the day of re-enlistment, the enlisted man may terminate his present obligation.  Instead of spending two or three years as a rifleman, he can begin working as an MP, a supply clerk, a typist or what ever he is qualified for.
   Re-enlistment guarantees any qualified enlisted man the opportunity to change his present MOS, and he will be immediately reassigned to a new Vietnam job.
   Re-enlistment authorizes the EM to at least a 30 day special leave, a $643 cash bonus and an immediate R&R to China Beach.
   If the EM has been in the service for eight months and re-enlists, his total time in the army will be three years and eight months.  Re-enlisting does not change the EM’s DEROS date.
   Re-enlistment offices located across the street from Waikiki East in Cu Chi and near brigade headquarters in Tay Ninh, will test any interested enlisted man to determine what jobs he is qualified for.
  

 

Symbol For What?

   The circular peace symbol shows up all over Vietnam, demonstrating the GIs sincere desire for peace.  Yet few understand its history.
   The peace symbol, with its intersecting lines, was designed back in February, 1958 by a group of Englishmen, for use in a campaign supporting nuclear disarmament.
   The Englishmen decided to use the circular symbol because the phrase “unilateral nuclear disarmament” was too cumbersome for parade banners, and they wanted something that the people would remember.
   The result was a composite basic form of a semaphore signal for the letters “N” and “D”, taken from the words nuclear disarmament.  The black lines symbolized a distraught human, the circle -- the world, and the white back ground - eternity.
   The symbol eventually became universally recognized as a symbol for peace.

  

 

VOTE

   Even though the fall elections may seem a long time away, action should be taken now to prepare for them.
   The Department of Defense has declared September 25 as Armed Forces Voters Day.  Voting officers in division units will be making available form 76, request for ballot, to all interested personnel.  An initial distribution has been made to unit personnel offices who will also receive and make available “Voting Information 1970,” a pamphlet consisting of vital information for all voters.
   Since many states differ in their rules concerning voting procedures, it will be necessary for individuals to inquire home to find out what they must do in order to vote in their states.
   Any further inquiries should be directed to unit voting officers.
  

 

vStork.jpg (2787 bytes)Tropic Lightning Tots
The Commanding General Welcomes
The Following Tropic Lightning Tots
To The 25th Infantry Division – As
Reported By The American Red Cross.
Born To:

June 20
LT Paul J. Callen, 25th MP Co, girl
SP4 Robert J. Phalin, B Btry, 5th Bn, 2nd Arty, boy

June 21
SP4 John C. Dinger, Dau Tieng PX, girl

June 22
LT Francis Frediani, HHC, 1st Bde, girl

June 23
SGT Daniel P. Daneph, 5th Weather Sq, boy
June 23
SP4 Robert Seydlitz, HHC, 1st Bde, girl

June 25
SP4 Harry E. Carpenter, 25th Admin Co, girl

July 8
PFC Harry J. Filoh, HHC 4th Bn, 9th Inf, boy

July 10
LT Edwin Najion, Co D 2nd Bn, 12th Inf, boy
SP4 Craig A. Johnson, HHD 2nd Bn, 77 Arty, girl

  

 

The TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS is an authorized publication of the 25th Infantry Division. It is published weekly for all division units in the Republic of Vietnam by the Information Office, 25th Infantry Division, APO San Francisco 96225. Army News Features, Army Photo Features, Armed Forces Press Service and Armed Forces News Bureau material are used. Views and opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Department of the Army. Printed in Tokyo, Japan, by Pacific Stars and Stripes.

MG Edward Bautz, Jr . . . . . .  Commanding General
MAJ Warren J. Field . . . . . .  Information Officer
1LT John Caspari . . . . . . . . .  Officer-in-Charge
SP4 Bert Herrman . . . . . . . . .  Editor
SP4 Scott Watson . . . . . . . .  Assistant Editor
SP4 Joseph V. Kocian . . . . . Production Supervisor


BATTALION CORRESPONDENTS

SGT Mike Keyster
SP4 Tom Benn
SP4 Frank Salerno
PFC Nick Haren
SP4 Henry Zukowski
PFC Robb Lato
SP4 Greg Duncan
SP4 Rich Erickson
SP4 Ed Toulouse
SGT Mike Conroy
SP4 Dan Davis
4/23
7/11
2/22
2/22
2/22
2/27
2/27
2/14
2/12
3/4 Cav
1/27
SGT William Zarrett
SGT Daniel House
SP4 George Graham
SP5 Tom Watson
SP4 William McGown
PFC James Stoup
SGT Derr Steadman
SP5 Doug Sainsbury
SP4 James Duran
SGT Jack Strickland
SGT Mark Rockney
4/9
4/9
269th
725th
Divarty
65th Eng
Discom
2/77
3/13
1/27
2/12

   

 


Page 3                           TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS                           August 3, 1970


  

Rewards and Frustrations
    Tales of a Cannoneer
By SP5 DOUG SAINSBURY

   FSB REDLEG - “When we are out in the boonies at a patrol base firing support for the infantry, our morale is sky high and things are great,” he said.  “But when we are at a fire support base firing mostly illumination and radar pick-ups, we spend a lot of time on the appearance of the area.  We don’t like this too much.”
   “Life in the field as a cannoneer can be frustrating or very rewarding, depending on where you are and what your situation is,” Corporal Jim Robison from Overton, Nev., said.  Robison is an acting howitzer section chief with Alfa Battery, 2nd Battalion, 77th Artillery.
   He began his tour in a howitzer section as an ammo handler.  “When I first came into the battery, we were at Patrol Base Kotrc near the Cambodian border.  They had received a ground attack shortly before I arrived, and I was a little nervous,” he said.  “I had expected Kotrc to be buried in jungle, and I guess I was disappointed when the chopper landed and there was nothing but open field and a few hedgerows.”
   “I liked it at Kotrc because only three of our guns were there and we lived with the infantry and fired a lot of contact missions for them,” Robison said.
   “No one bothered us and we worked hard at doing our job,” he continued.  “Our morale was high and we really felt like we were involved in tactical operations.”
          United
   During Tet this year, all six howitzer sections of Alfa Battery were united at FSB Jackson.
   “It was the first chance for the men in the battery to get to know each other after being split for so long,” Robison said.  “At first the morale was great, but then tensions began to run high because we weren’t firing as many contact missions and we had to spend a lot of time on beautification.”
          Number 1
   It was at FSB Jackson that the young Redleg advanced to the position of Number One Man (the one who loads the rounds into the howitzer).
   “Number One Man is the most dangerous job on a gun because you have to stand between the trails and watch out for the recoil of the barrel and breachblock assembly,” Robison said.
   Alfa Battery remained at Jackson for several months and then began to be airmobiled in for short-term stints at various patrol bases and hard spots in the Division’s area of operations.
          Section Chief
   At Patrol Base Harry, southwest of Cu Chi, Robison became acting howitzer section chief - a job he has been doing ever since.
   “Chief of section is a job I really enjoy because it involves a lot of responsibility and you learn a few things about psychology in supervising personnel,” he said.  “When we were making moves every few days and the rations and mail resupply had a tough time keeping up with us, I learned that if a man has mail, a chance to take a shower and a good meal, you can get an awful lot of work out of him.
          105’s
   The 2/77th is a 105 howitzer battalion, using what are considered “light” howitzers.
   “I think the 105 (howitzer) plays the most important role in artillery because we fire more than the heavier guns and we are able to put rounds on the enemy even when our own infantry is close to the impact area.” Robison said.
  

 

Mobile Alfa:
   Have Gun Will Travel
By SP4 TOM BENN

   TAY NINH - A high degree of mobility made Alfa Battery, 7th Battalion, 11th Field Artillery, a timely source of fire power during Cambodia operations.
   Alfa stayed in Cambodia longer than any of Seven-Eleven’s other line batteries - almost 45 days.  What’s more, the unit never stayed in one spot for more than three or four days.
   In the month and a half Alfa was in Cambodia it moved 15 times.  According to Captain Rance Farrell, Alfa Battery commander, the battery could move to a new location and set up in almost the same amount of time it took to drive to the new hard spot.
   The moves were tiring.
   “For the first few moves we treated the moving as just part of the job,” a Redleg said.  “But, as time passed, more men were becoming fatigued because of the almost constant tearing down and rebuilding.”
   “When the news came that the move to a point northwest of Memot would probably be the last in Cambodia, spirits picked up.  The men handled the move with skill gained during the previous moves, but also with some relief because it meant we’d soon be ‘back home’ in Vietnam,” he said.
  

 

Cold bath! UH-UHH-UHHH-UGH -- An NCO from 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry, Wolfhounds takes a frigid dip in a van of ice and beer cans.  (Photo by SGT Jack Strickland)

  

 

Manchu Honors

   TAY NINH - In two separate award ceremonies recently, five members of the 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry, Manchus were presented Silver Stars for valorous actions while serving with their units during operations in Cambodia.
   Three persons from Company were decorated: Captain Bruce S. Brooks of Winter Park, Fla., Specialist 4 James A. Fox of Harbor City, Calif., and Private First Class Alexander P. Ott of Seaside, Calif.
   Also decorated were Specialist 4 John F. Hans Jr. Of Charlie Company from Nassau, N.Y. and Specialist 4 John P. Schaad of Delta Company from Stockport, Ohio.  Hans and Schaad were also presented with plaques as newly elected members to the Combat Honor Roll.
   The presentations were made by Brigadier General M.J.L. Greene, the assistant division commander.
   In Cambodia, the Manchus operated north of the Dog’s Face with other 1st Brigade units.  The units uncovered the bulk of enemy supplies found by the 25th Division.
  

 

SP4 Bill Webb
BUDDY -- Specialist 4 Bill Webb attends to the needs of a youngster during a Golden Dragon MEDCAP.  (Photo by SP4 Rich Erickson)
Medical Project
          Makes Friends
                    In Ex-VC Town


   DAU TIENG - The former Viet Cong dominated hamlets near here have shown an increasing response to MEDCAP efforts by Golden Dragons, according to members of the Medical Civic Actions Program.  The daily routine of bringing medical aid and clothing has been the keystone to gaining the people’s trust, explained Master Sergeant John Wright, the Civic Actions NCO for 2nd Battalion, 14th Infantry.
   “In certain hamlets only the kids would come out to get the candy we always had for them.”  However the adults soon realized we were bringing aid on a regular basis and as their trust increased, we began to treat more of them.”
   “Along with on-the-spot treatment,” he continued, “we also pass out information on dental and general hygiene.”
   “The way to insure a large turnout,” explained Specialist 5 Stan Hamby of Evansville, Ind., “is to arrive at a time when their normal working and eating habits won’t be interrupted.  This is not always easy to do until one becomes familiar with the customs of these people.”
CANDY - MEDCAP members pass out personal hygiene information, but the big attraction is the candy.  (Photo by SP4 Rich Erickson)

  

 


Page 4-5                           TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS                           August 3, 1970


   

Engineers Dunk In Reopened Pool
By PFC JAMES D. STOUP


   CU CHI -- Snip went the ribbon and splash went Charlie Company, 65th Engineers.  Waikiki East Swimming pool reopened recently and a celebration was in order.
   The band played and cameras snapped, as five fully-dressed donut dollies, several officers and reluctant engineers, the battalion correspondent and the editor of the Tropic Lightning News got thrown in the water by the zealous 65th.
   The pool was closed in May because of impending collapse.  The 65th Engineer Battalion was called in.  Bravo Company analyzed he situation and cleared the land area while Echo Company constructed a “Bridge Over Troubled Waters.”  A total of five dry spans were constructed over the pool, dismantled and shifted around to act as a platform for the crane which drove piles 38 feet into the ground to strengthen the sides of the pool.
   Then Charlie Company entered the scene to dig out the new pool area, replace the rubber membrane bottom, and complete the cement work and landscaping.
   Charlie Company had just returned from six months in the field in support of the 2nd Brigade, when they were assigned the Waikiki East project.  They worked on round-the-clock shifts to rush completion and to have the honor of being first company in the pool.
  

 

Col. T.J. Hanifen open pool
RIBBON CUTTING -- Colonel T. J. Hanifen, division chief of staff, cuts the ribbon to open the pool.  (Photo by SP4 Joe Loper)

  

Crane
WILD THING -- You move me. A giant crane pounds 38 foot piles into the sides of Waikiki East pool.  (Photo by PFC James D. Stoup)

  

Judi and Diane LOTS OF LAUGHS -- Donut Dollies Judi and Diane find the pool opening very amusing.  (Photo by SP4 Bert Herrman)
LOST CAUSE -- Reluctant engineer discovers he’s going swimming.  (Photo by SP4 Bert Herrman) Bath time
Diane ENTER LAUGHING -- Diane finds herself in the water.
OH WELL -- Judi follows after.  (Photo by PFC James D. Stoup) Judi swimming
Judi DRIP-DRY -- Judi emerges from the soggy depths.  (Photo by PFC James D. Stoup)
FWOP! -- 65th Engineer Battalion correspondent enters the water ungracefully.  (Photo by SP4 Bert Herrman) Dive, dive

  

And the band played on...
FIRST PLUNGE -- Charlie Company, 65th Engineer Battalion splashes in as the band plays on.  (Photo by SP4 Joe Loper)

  

 


Page 6                           TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS                           August 3, 1970


  

Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Roy Peters
FIELD MASS -- Chaplain (Lieutenant Colonel) Roy Peters conducts services for a line unit at Katum.  (Photo by SP5 Stephen F. Kroft)
Chaplain’s Choice

   CU CHI - “Most of us prefer to be with combat troops out in the field,” explains Chaplain (Lieutenant Colonel) Roy Peters, division chaplain.  “You find that in the base camp situation there isn’t the urgency or the pressure that there is in the field.”
   “When you are face to face with the realities of life, your religion means a lot more to you.  You’ve got the time to think about it, as well as the circumstances that make you think about it,” says Chaplain Peters.
   “In the field, I feel that the troops appreciate the chaplain coming to them and they show it.  They are a little more real and a little more honest with you.”
   Chaplain Peters, from Sacramento, Calif., recently replaced Chaplain (Lieutenant Colonel) Gene M. Little of Jericho Springs, Mo., as division chaplain.  Father Peters has been a priest for 22 years and a chaplain for eight.
   Chaplain Peters, like other combat chaplains appreciates the rapport with the men that he finds in the field.  Many men who were not churchgoers back in the world are found going here in Vietnam simply because, as one trooper put it, “They say it in English.”

  

 

THE AMBUSH
By SP4 ED TOULOUSE

   DAU TIENG - “I swatted again - missed, then went back to searching out the darkness.  I had been awake sitting in the wet paddy for almost fifty-three minutes - seemed like hours.  The only breaks in the silence had been answering the ‘sit reps,’ (situation reports) called from base on the radio and the occasional snoring from somebody down at the end of the position.”
   So go the reflections of a 2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry soldier on the previous night’s ambush patrol.
   “A flare went up in the distance.  I glanced at my watch and studied the dial. - It’s time!”
   “I touched the guy next to me.  He woke with a nervous start.”
   “What’s the matter?”  “Shh... !  Your guard.”  “Oh yeah.  Okay.”
   The time is 1:01 am.
   Typical American operations in Vietnam center around the nocturnal attempts to surprise Charlie - the ambush.
   If a grunt ever forgets anything about this tour, it probably won’t be how to set up a claymore or stay awake on guard duty.  Fond memories they’re not.
   “When I think of a ‘bush,’ all that comes to mind is rain and mosquitoes,” said Specialist 4 Paul Engrav, of Rochester, Minn., now a clerk with Delta Company, 2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry.
   The minutes of guard duty often seem endless according to the soldiers.
   “When I’m on guard duty, guessing at the time is like a weird game,” said Specialist 4 Steve Crider, of Marion, Ky.  “I try not to keep looking at my watch,” he added.  “It really makes time drag.”
   While the eyes are constantly scanning the night, the ever-tense mind occasionally seeks an escape.  Reality can be softened by pleasant thoughts.  Perhaps it is something in the letter from a girl or wife; maybe it’s an upcoming R&R.
   Nevertheless, the grunt never forgets where he is.
   Ask these guys who go on a “bush” - Charlie’s out there.
  

 

Ilikai East by Night


WED    Floor Show (6 or 8 p.m.)
THU     Plug-A-Pack (8 p.m.)
FRI       Cookout (8 p.m.)
SAT      Tourneys (2 p.m.)
             Movie & Popcorn (7:30 p.m.)
SUN     Coffee Call (10 a.m.)
             Tourneys (2 p.m.)
             Bingo (8 p.m.)
MON    Make Your Own Sandwiches &
             Small Games (8 p.m.)
TUE      Contract Bridge (7:30 p.m.)
             Movie (7:30 p.m.)
  

  

 

Ask Sgt. Certain

 
DEAR SGT CERTAIN:  Our CO has been telling us that we’re headed for a place called, Swan Lake.  My buddies and I have always imagined Swan Lake as a crystal pool with graceful birds surrounded by weeping willows.  Could this be in Vietnam?
                                                                             PFC Grimm

DEAR PFC:  The original commanding officer conceived the compound at Xuan Loc (Swan Lake) as a circle of cottages around a large lake.  But it didn’t rain for three days and Swan Lake shrank to a mosquito infested puddle.  The chief of the town sent to Calcutta for a rare and beautiful pure-white Indian swan.  However the night before the formal dedication a GI who had read the Charlie Ration Cookbook snatched and cooked the fowl and gave the CO the bird.

DEAR SGT CERTAIN:  My mother has just written to ask me what has happened to all the rice we found in Cambodia.  Well?
                                                                             F. Ishent

DEAR F.:  The division came up with three solutions to the problem: (1) leave it in warehouses where it will naturally ferment; rice wine (saki) will be served each evening at the mess halls.  (2) make breakfast cereal by shooting it from guns.  (3) print future editions of the Tropic Lightning News on rice paper, which can be eaten out in the field to augment C’s.

DEAR SGT CERTAIN:  The other night I had the choice between reading your column or an Agatha Christie Mystery novel.  The butler did it.
                                                                             Miss Tri

DEAR MISS:  I’m pleased to be in such good company.  By the way, SGT Certain’s new novel will be rolling off the presses soon.  In case you’re interested it’s entitled “How I Won the War” or “Certain Victory.”
  

 


Page 7                           TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS                           August 3, 1970


   

Triple Deuce Moves Out
By SP4 FRANK H. SALERNO

   THIEN NGON -- In a 24-hour time span recently, an entire 25th Division mechanized battalion moved to and set up a new area of operations in Katum.
   The 2nd Battalion (Mech), 22nd Infantry, using all its available armored personnel carriers to provide security for the loaded-down wheeled transport vehicles, traveled 50 miles first to Tay Ninh and then north to Katum.
   An ARVN unit remained behind to maintain the Triple Deuce’s former AO at Thien Ngon which, according to Battalion Commander Lieutenant Colonel Nathan Vail, has been pretty well cleared of NVA.
   Despite the intense heat and rough road, the convoy met few problems and after six hours on the road, arrived at Katum.
   Tired and grimy, the men still had a night laager position to set up.
   

 

2/22 Mech REPLACMENTS -- Armored personnel carriers of the 2nd Battalion (Mech), 22nd Infantry, pause outside of Thien Ngon as elements of the 4th Battalion, 49th ARVN Regiment, move into the area which was one of the large staging areas for 25th Division’s assaults into Cambodia.
SETTING UP -- Members of Triple Deuce start to set up their night laager position at Katum by first unloading their armored personnel carrier.
Sandbagging SAND BAGGING -- Members of the mortar platoon of Triple Deuce fill sand bags as they build a back blast wall for their 81mm mortar track.
TRACK PROTECTION -- Members of Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion (Mech), 22nd Infantry, set up an RPG screen in front of their carrier as added protection from possible incoming rounds. Setting up RPG screen

  

Convoy outside Tay Ninh
WHEELED VEHICLES -- Trucks in the convoy of the 2nd Battalion (Mech), 22nd Infantry, move the battalion’s supplies through a village just outside of Tay Ninh towards their destination of Katum.

  

 


Page 8                           TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS                           August 3, 1970


  

Return to Tay Ninh BATTERY RETURNS -- Jubilant artillerymen from Bravo Battery, 7th Battalion., 11th Artillery, drive through the main gate of Tay Ninh. Bravo, the first artillery battery from the 25th Division to cross into Cambodia, returned to base camp after three months in the field.

   

 

7/11 Returns To Tay Ninh
By SP4 TOM BENN

   TAY NINH - A grueling, dusty four-hour convoy from Katum gave Bravo Battery, 7th Battalion, 11th Artillery its first glimpse of base camp after almost three months in the field.
   “Battling Bravo”, the first Division Arty unit to cross into Cambodia in May, returned to Tay Ninh for a brief standdown and a chance to get vehicles, guns and equipment ready for their next assignment.
          Excitement
   According to Sergeant Chuck Beck, a Bravo section chief, “the men in the battery are excited.  They’re looking forward to the things like the PX and the steam bath,” he said.  “But after a while they’ll get tired of it.”
   Bravo Battery left its permanent position at Fire Support Base Buell, halfway between Tay Ninh Base Camp and Nui Ba Den, in April when they moved to the Renegade and Straight Edge Woods to support engineers in Rome Plow operations there.
          First Over
   When the Cambodian operation began, Bravo got the call and became the first Division Arty unit to touch Cambodia when it crossed a bridge at FSB Minnie.  The Redlegs from the On Time battalion were constantly on the move while in Cambodia in June.
  

 

Dear Daddy,
   I wish you could be here.  We bought you some cards but we left them their.  I really miss you. 

I guess by now you have gotten my first letter.  I have written you about three times.
   The night you left, after I stopped crying I wrote this song.  It goes like this:

1. I love my daddy across the sea.
Who’s fighting bravely just for me.
There is no daddy as sweet as he.
This daddy belongs to lucky, lucky me.

If you had a daddy as sweet as he
You’d be as lucky, as lucky me.
As lucky, as lucky me.

2. I searched the world all the way through,
But still I can’t find a daddy like you.
If you had a daddy as sweet as mine
You’d be singing glory devine

I made this song up all by myself.  I will sing it to you when we get the tape recorders.

Love,Cindy


Thanks to Miss Cindy Anders, 12, of Bentonville, Ark., and her daddy CW 2 Bobby J. Anders

  

 

Manchu Got The Spirit
By SGT DANIEL A. HOUSE

   TAY NINH - The men of the second platoon, Company B, 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry, Manchus recently encountered a friendly ghost on one of their nightly ambushes.
   As the platoon moved into its nighttime positions and set up for the evening’s activities, Private First Class John P. Stephan of St. Louis placed his equipment down next to his position and made himself comfortable.  A little later he noticed his rucksack was moving in a rather mysterious manner.
   “I didn’t know what it was and I wasn’t even going to reach down there to find out,” Stephan said.  “I just backed away a couple of feet and watched.  I’d push the rucksack down and it would pop back up and sway around like it was haunted.”
   Meanwhile, Stephan’s comrades around him were trying to figure out his peculiar behavior, including the acting platoon leader, Staff Sergeant Ronald Books of North Platte, Neb., who was trying to use the radio.  “I kept trying to hold the handset up to my mouth to use it but somebody kept pulling it away.”
   Finally, it was discovered that the cord had become hooked on Stephan’s rucksack frame.  Said Stephan after it was all over, “I may have felt silly, but you best believe I was relieved.”
  

 

Arty’s Act Better At Word ‘Contact’
By SP4 TOM BENN

   TAY NINH - “Artillerymen are 100 percent better when they hear the word ‘contact!  It’s like someone gave them a shot of hormones,” 1st Sergeant Corinthian Jones, Headquarters Battery, 7th Battalion, 11th Artillery, said.
   The 19-year artillery veteran should know.  He’s now on his second tour with the “On Time” battalion.
   It’s a good outfit,” he said. “I’ve been with 15 battalions and this one is the best.”
   “But, there seems to be a lack of urgency today.  The morale is not as high as it used to be probably because of the lack of contact,” Jones said.
   “Before there were more rockets and fire support bases were subject to ground attacks.  Arty used to constantly get contact fire missions.”
   Jones also said the Redlegs don’t get the credit they deserve.  “That’s because in other wars the artillery was always way behind the front lines while the infantry was 20 miles up front.  But now arty defends its own perimeters,” he said.
   This is the last time around for Jones.  He retires in November.  He has one goal:
   “My ambition in a combat area is to go home with the peace of mind that I’ve had the least number of men killed or wounded because of carelessness.”
  

 

Hawk For Sale
By SP4 RICH DOMBROWICKI

   CU CHI - Hey G.I., you wanna hawk?
   A 3rd Brigade LOH (Light Observation Helicopter) pilot, nearing his DEROS, is offering his pet hawk to anyone who would like one.
   Warrant Officer Craig Tate of Headquarters Company owns the “baby” bird which is only a few months old but already weighs five pounds and has a three and one half foot wing span.
          Discovery
   “I found him at an ARVN compound near here,” Tate, of Riverside, Calif., said.  “He had fallen out of his nest and was just fluttering around.”
   A wing was broken in the fall, but the division veterinarian patched him up and now he is on the mend, although still unable to fly.
          Contest
   Named “Shadow” in a company contest, the bird likes to dine on small rodents and lizards that it catches with its razor-sharp claws.
   “We used to feed him steaks, but he lost his taste for that,” Tate remarked.
   Asked why he made a hawk his pet instead of a dog or monkey, Tate replied, “I like to be different.”
   Anyone who’d like a “different” kind of pet may call the 3rd Brigade Snoopy Pad.
  

A BIRD IN HAND -- Warrant Officer Craig Tate, a light Observation Helicopter pilot from the 3rd Bde, shows off his pet hawk, Shadow, who he is offering to anyone who would like it. WO Craig Tate and Shadow

  

 


Thanks to:
Roger Welt, 4th Bn., 23rd Inf., and a Tropic Lightning News correspondent, for sharing this issue,
Kirk Ramsey, 2nd Bn., 14th Inf. for creating this page.

This page last modified 07-28-2006

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