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MARS program has a history of getting messages to troops, families
Jacksonville, NC Daily News ^ | February 07,2006 | Anne Clark

Posted on 02/07/2006 8:29:09 PM PST by Denver Ditdat

Rooted in the 1920s, the Military Affiliate Radio System (MARS) began as a way for amateur radio operators to train soldiers to use the latest radio equipment. By the begin-ning of the Korean conflict, MARS also became a way for troops and their families to communicate faster than ever.

As a newly enlisted Marine, Bert Ponsock worked as a radio tech at the operations center in Itami, Japan, from 1952 to 1954. The site was a popular stop for American servicemen on R&R. Every morning, Ponsock took stacks of service members’ written notes to the ham shack.

“The Lieutenant had to work at night to send messages out,” said Ponsock, a retired master sergeant. “Back then, radios were not as reliable. It was hard to contact people in the States.”

If the weather was good and the antennas up, the officer used voice radio to reach message stations in the U.S., near the service members’ hometowns. In turn, those stations called the service members’ loved one and delivered the message.

“The notes were mostly to girlfriends and moms saying, ‘Hi, I’m fine,’” said Ponsock, who served nearly 27 years in the Corps. “It was just a little something, just to get your name on a scrap of paper and say hi to mom, that was an important thing to us.”

By the Vietnam era, MARS made possible real time conversations between deployed troops and their families. The U.S. Army began a personal radio and phone hookup ser-vice in 1966. In Vietnam, it worked this way: The Vietnam MARS station connected a base telephone to an amateur radio operator in the U.S., who in turn made a collect call to the service member’s house. The calls were brief, usually just a few minutes; and stilted, with the radio operator relaying the messages between the service member and his loved ones. By early 1970, the MARS program was relaying 42,000 such messages a month.

Satellites now link the world, and today, many deployed troops can contact loved ones fairly easily by e-mail or, when authorized, by cell phone. For those whose families don’t have Internet access, MARS still offers free “MARSGRAMS” and 24-hour relay services. The Department of Defense continues to sponsor MARS, which now primarily offers emergency communications to local and federal safety officials. Many MARS stations are operated by licensed amateur radio operators.

Too-frequent contact between service member and family can make things harder, said Ponsock. Back in 1952, he accepted that he’d be out of touch with his family, trading monthly letters with his sister.

It would have been depressing otherwise, he said, “to look at all the stuff I’m missing.”


TOPICS: Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: amateur; amateurradio; ham; hamradio; mars; military; militaryfamilies; radio; troops
MARS is an old and honored ham radio tradition. Barry Goldwater K7UGA was a MARS op as well and regularly relayed messages from troops in Vietnam to the folks back in the States. I'm glad to see that the tradition is still alive.
1 posted on 02/07/2006 8:29:11 PM PST by Denver Ditdat
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To: 1066AD; 1ofmanyfree; AlexW; ASOC; bigbob; Calamari; CenTex; CharlotteVRWC; Chemist_Geek; clee1; ...
Ham Radio Ping List

Please Freepmail me if you want to be added to or deleted from the list.

2 posted on 02/07/2006 8:29:48 PM PST by Denver Ditdat (No Islam, Know Peace.)
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To: Denver Ditdat

I still remember making one MARS call home from RVN in 1969. Thanks to all those who made it possible. Semper fi.


3 posted on 02/07/2006 8:32:41 PM PST by clintonh8r (If you don't support the mission you don't support the troops. Period.)
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To: Denver Ditdat

For many years I was a regular on Air Force Mars nets.


4 posted on 02/07/2006 8:38:53 PM PST by teletech (Friends don't let friends vote DemocRAT)
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To: Denver Ditdat

I had many conversations at sea that ended "I love you, out."


5 posted on 02/07/2006 8:46:25 PM PST by neodad (Rock Chock Seahawks - I guess it's time to change my tagline.)
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To: Denver Ditdat

My dear Father, WB9CFN, became a "Ham" and MARS member just so he could talk to me in far flung places during my military service.


6 posted on 02/08/2006 12:12:52 AM PST by shamusotoole
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To: clintonh8r

I, too, have a similar memory. In 15 months I think I got to make two of them. A real treat at the time. Then I reflect on the almost instant and continual commo the troops have from Iraq and realize how much our world has changed in 40 years.


7 posted on 02/08/2006 2:45:25 AM PST by x1stcav (Fear not the enemy. It can only take your life. Fear the media. It can take your honor.)
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To: x1stcav
It's amazing to think of the changes that we've seen in the past couple of decades. When I started working with electronics in my high school years (mid-1970s) tubes were still common, our family had owned a color TV for only a couple years, and I had never seen a computer outside of the movies.

GREAT tagline, btw.

8 posted on 02/08/2006 6:31:33 AM PST by Denver Ditdat (No Islam, Know Peace.)
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