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Who are the FISTS members on RRAP?
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May 29th 04, 06:07 AM
Len Over 21
Posts: n/a
In article ,
(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:
Then we can move along to your investigation as to wheter or not my
"service claims" are valid or not. You've certainly been provided more than
enough information to get THAT right by now. That's available on the
Internet, too.
The United States government put up a web page referencing
nursie's "military career?!?" [I think not...can't find one]
The Veterans Administration has a web page referencing the
"hero of hostile actions?!?" [I think not...can't find one]
Has ANY government agency put up a web page all about
nursie, the "hero of hostile actions?!?" [I think not...not there]
"Provided more than enough information?" Hardly. We don't
know squat about the date and location of those "hostile
actions."
Lots of bluff and bluster, shouting, hollering, and nursie name-
calling. Tsk, tsk, tsk...
And while you're at it, please tell us once again how many pieces of
traffic YOU were directly responsible for handling in 1953 while assigned as
a rear area radio clerk? "1.2 million", was it...?!?!?
Now, now, you're still doing the personal attack thing. I was never
a "radio clerk." :-)
MOS 281.6, Microwave Radio Relay Operations and Maintenance
Supervisor [the dot-six in that old MOS nomenclature stood for
supervisor]. Also brevet to Fixed Station Operations and Maintenance
Supervisor as a team leader at ADA before the microwave equipment
arrived. The Pacific Stars & Stripes military newspaper checked up
on that when they did an interview on me for their 10 November 2002
edition (in their archives section on the 'web).
ADA relayed about 220 thousand TTY messages a month in 1955.
Since ADA had 36 to 43 transmitters on at any one time, some of
them SSB with 8 to 12 TTY circuits and three transmitters were
doing 4-TTY-channel time-division multiplexing, the total estimate
I wrote long ago is still an estimate based on 9-out-of-12 days at
the station and 8 hour shifts. Any way you slice it, nursie, that's
a LOT of message traffic...and every shift supervisor is responsible
for keeping those messages going out.
Had you ever done any military communications, you would under-
stand that. But, you didn't, so you don't. All you can do is try to
intimidate others, bluff and bluster to make yourself far more
important than you were in real life. Not good, not healthy to do
that, nursie.
But, you can't control yourself, can you? [no emotional stability]
Lack of control is very bad for emergency work.
Memorable. And I'm not refering to Memorial Day.
LHA / WMD
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