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Catchword for “Dust Off”
Catchword: Dust Off
Filed Under: , , ,
Part of Speechn.
The part of speech reflects that used in the full entry, and not necessarily the part of speech as it is used in the quotation below.
Quotation: The 57th had worked without a tactical call sign, simply using “Army” and the tail number of the aircraft.…Major [Lloyd E.] Spencer decided that this slapdash system had to go. In Saigon he visited Navy Support Activity, which controlled all the call words in South Vietnam. He received a Signal Operations Instructions book that listed all the unused call words. Most, like “Bandit,” were more suitable for assault units than for medical evacuation units. But one entry, “Dust Off,” epitomized the 57th’s medical evacuation missions. Since the countryside then was dry and dusty, helicopter pickups in the fields often blew dust, dirt, blankets, and shelter halves all over the men on the ground. By adopting “Dust Off,” Spencer found for Army aeromedical evacuation in Vietnam a name that lasted the rest of the war.
Article or Document Title:
“Dust Off: Army Aeromedical Evacuation In Vietnam” (URL)
Author:
Peter Dorland, James Nanney
Article, Document, Publication, Web Site:
Office of Medical History
Dateline:
Office of the Surgeon General
Date of Publication:
1982
This cite belongs to a full entry for Dust Off.

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