“After we got hit in Hải Vân Pass, I guess you’d say I got a little paranoid. It was the last month I was there and when you get short, when you’re about to rotate out, you get to where you don’t want to go in the field, but that was my job. I never quit going in the field, our bunch was about the last to rotate out. They had this guy come in who was an E5, a specialist five, and there wasn’t much to do then, we pretty much had all the heavy stuff evacuated, so I got my going home orders. We carried our flag home to Leonard Wood, or they did, I left a little before they did. I went back to Cam Ranh Bay and they had so many units pulling out at that time, they had a guy on a loudspeaker calling out names. You had to be there to hear your name, and it was over and over and over they would call names. Me being an E5, when I went up there to sign in, they said, ‘Sarge, do you want to carry a DD home?’ That’s some guy who got a dishonorable for some reason. You had to be handcuffed to him and you had to carry his records, I could have just grabbed one of them and latched him to me and gotten on a plane. I said, ‘No, man that’s not what I signed up to do, I just want to go home. I don’t want to carry some squirreled out dude handcuffed to me with his records on the other side.’ They told me, okay, you’ll just have to wait for your name. It was like five days, twenty-four hours a day they’re calling these names. I slept on the top of a bunker of sandbags for those five days and five nights. Most of the time during the day I’d go get in the shade somewhere but at night I’d pile up on there. There’d be four or five of us there and you’d find out everybody’s name and listen for each other when you’d catch a couple of winks or go get some chow, the buddy system. Finally, five days later they called my name. I went out on the tarmac with the rest of them and we got on this big ole plane, it was a military flight. We were just getting ready to blast off, and there was some sort of conflict. These guys came in and started calling names, about ten of them and mine was one of them. I was thinking, what the #3!! Did I do that they’re going to bump me off this flight. We got downstairs and there were five buck sergeants and five DD’s, we got bumped for those damn DD’s, dishonorable discharge’s. Everybody was mad! We told the guy who drove the shuttle and dropped them off, an E4 or something, that we got bumped for DD’s. They had a little ole NCO club at the end of the runway and he asked us if we wanted to go get a drink. We said we might as well, but what do we have to do, go back up to that center and wait another four or five days. He said, ‘No, let me see what I can do, I think I can get you on the next flight,’ and sure enough, he did. After we blasted off we stopped, I think in Kobe, Japan and they had a duty-free store there. They had these five fifths of whiskey in a briefcase which, of course, makes one gallon of whiskey. They had any kind of alcohol you wanted, and it was cheap, really cheap. I knew my brother, Eddie and Daddy liked Wild Turkey, and so I bought a gallon. Everybody did, we boarded and the pilot looked at us and said, ‘You know, you’re still representing the United States military and blah, blah, blah. Everybody on there was armed with plenty of alcohol and they broke it out. I didn’t break out daddy’s cause I didn’t have to. The ole boy next to me handed me a fifth of rum and he had one. They didn’t give us anything to chase it with, so it was water. Everybody was hitting the bathroom and getting a cup of water so you can just imagine what it led to; that was a long flight too. We’d had a little bit of a layover, but not much and from there we flew straight into Fort Lewis, Washington. I got back to the states on December the 7th of 1970, everybody got off the plane and kissed the ground, me included. I said thank God, you let me get back here to the world, that’s what we called the United States. We went in the barracks, and they fitted us for Class A uniforms cause we were going home and they fed us a steak, a nice steak too. We were in our old jungle fatigues, and they were falling off of us too. After we ate our steaks, we went to the barracks and showered and cleaned up and we were looking sharp in our Class A uniforms. Mine had my sergeant stripes, campaign medals, and the braids, we were proud of them. A lot of people said ‘baby killer’ and this and that when you were at the airport, but I never ran across it. Honestly, the way I felt, if they messed with me, shame on ‘em, ain’t no telling what I’d have done to ‘em. Just leave me alone man, I’m going home, that’s all every GI wanted to do, go home and see mamma and daddy and a girlfriend. But I never did encounter that, if I had I’m certain it would have had a bad end to it. We had all gone over there and done our best, what else could we do, we were representing our country,” declared Sam with pride.
“I met this guy, he was going to Deweyville and me and him got to talking it up and I told him I was going to go to Anahuac. They were supposed to fly us into Intercontinental in Houston, and I was still wagging this big ole case of whiskey around. I didn’t think I’d had that much to drink and this ole boy either, but we woke up in the airport, it wasn’t Houston either, it was Reno, Nevada. I looked beside me and there was a big ole slot machine right there beside me and I thought, man this is not Houston, Toto, we’re not in Kansas! It was the fog of war, I guess or alcohol amnesia,” laughed Sam. “They flew us back to Houston and they had a Hertz Rental Car there. I went in there about two o’clock in the morning and I wanted to surprise Mamma and daddy, they knew I was coming in but they didn’t know when. I told the two ladies at the counter I wanted to rent a car, and they asked me for my credit card. I didn’t have a credit card, and I said usually my orders will get me pretty close to where I want to go. I said, ‘Do you have a manager?’ and they went back and got him. He said, ‘Soldier, where’s your orders?’ I handed them to him and he said, ‘Yeah, I see where you’re coming from, you want to go to Anahuac, Texas?’ He told the girls, ‘Give him whatever he wants on the lot.’ He turned to me and said, ‘Don’t tear my car up too bad.’ And laughed and walked off. I got a brand-new Grand Torino and it was nice too! Me and this ole boy got in there and we were living large. I told him to call his mamma and daddy or someone to pick him up and they met us at 563. So, I got in and surprised mamma and daddy and Joe and Ed were at the dear camp. I drove that Grand Torino right down one of those ole muddy roads and got up there to see them, I was spinning around and slinging mud everywhere and we had a large time,” laughed Sam.