All posts by Jim

A Tale of the Sea and Me – Destiny and Detailers

The Hawkins had completed its submarine Polaris missile shoots and had returned to the new homeport of Norfolk. i was Anti-Submarine (ASW) Officer on the USS Hawkins (DD-873), a FRAM destroyer that had recently changed home port from Newport, Rhode Island to Norfolk, Virginia. i was running with two other officers in the Hawkins wardroom, Andrew Nemethy from Massachusetts and Rob Dewitt from Maine. i was coming up on the time to request to remain aboard for the second half of my three-year obligation to active duty or request to be assigned somewhere else. Andrew and Rob were commissioned later than me but they too would soon have to face the decision.

George “Doc” Jarden was the Administrative Officer aboard the USS Guam (LPH 9), a helicopter carrier in the amphibious force. He and i were roommates and classmates in Officer Candidate School (OCS) and had become good friends. Doc was also facing a similar decision about staying or rotating.

Andrew and i had discussed staying aboard the Hawkins, and after we got out, buying a sailboat, sailing it to Europe, selling it and using the money from the sale to kick around the continent until we ran out of money and came home to grow up.

i had become “the wardroom sea daddy” on the Hawkins and found myself in an awkward position. The XO was new. The Operations and Engineer department heads were new. My weapons department head wasn’t the brightest bulb in the light array. Captain Max Lasell began to rely on me, especially concerning the weapons department. i also think he liked me and saw my potential as a Navy officer. The captain and i would meet often in the wardroom to share thoughts on the ship’s operation and learn more about each other.

i decided i needed to split my tour and go somewhere else. But where?

There were other factors in this problem.

After building up the numbers of service members during Vietnam, the military forces were beginning to cut back the officer corps with early releases, reductions in rank and other strategies. This began to play in our decision about what to do next.

Doc and i often met after our workdays at the Red Mule in Norfolk, a hamburger and beer joint we liked. We discussed our decisions about rotation on most of those occasions. We were so similar our service numbers were only two numbers apart. Doc’s was 726236 and mine was 726238 — it is remarkable to me i can remember such things because the Navy went to social security numbers by the time i returned to active duty in 1972. We had the same detailer, the officer in the Bureau of Personnel who was responsible for determining our fate in staying aboard or rotating.

Doc, a Duke graduate, was a liberal in his thinking. i described him as the hippie’s gift to the Navy. Even then, i was pretty much apolitical and focused on being a twenty-year old man enjoying life. So, i was surprised as Doc and i were quaffing our beers after cheeseburgers and fries when he said, “I’m going to volunteer to go to Vietnam.” i was shocked. We both had agreed one of the primary reasons to get our commission at OCS was to avoid the draft (the draft lottery was not created until a year or so after we were commissioned) with the concern we would end up as ground pounders in the Army. Now, Doc was thinking about volunteering to go there.

“What, Doc? How could you come to such a decision?,” i almost shouted.

“Well, i’ve been thinking about it,” Doc explained, “Our parents had World War II, and whether we like it or not, this is our war.

“I want to be a part of our war,” he finished.

Now, it may have been the couple of beers i had downed, but i mused and agreed.

We began calls to our detailer. It was tough to get through by phone but we did it, often calling at 0500 when they opened up their lines to accommodate officers on the west coast. The detailer — i have not included his name as i have tortured him enough — informed us a release of officers would be coming soon. He told me i would be cut early. He told Doc he didn’t think he would be cut. Doc and i met again at the Red Mule and scratched our heads. Over a beer or two, of course.

The cut came. The powers that be cut those officers in essentially “non-critical” billets. I was ASW officer on destroyer, including being the sea detail, general quarters Officer of the Deck. Doc was Administrative Officer on a helicopter and like me the sea detail and general quarters OOD, i.e., essential.

We were not cut and resumed our calls to our detailer. He told us they didn’t get down to the numbers they needed, and another cut was coming. He told me i would be cut. He told Doc he would not be cut.

The criteria for the next cut was fitness reports. Fitness reports were the assessments of officers by their commanding officers in the performance of their duties. Doc and i had been rated high in our fitness reports (fitreps: officers performance report submitted by his senior every six months) and were not cut.

But wait, the detailer told us. They still had to make another cut. i was sure to be cut, he told me. Doc was told he would not be cut. Perhaps, i guess, it was because i was on a destroyer and Doc was on an Amphib. i do not know.

The next cut was done by commissioning date. The date chosen was one month after we were commissioned. Both of us remained on active duty.

i decided to act on Doc’s idea about Vietnam. i volunteered to be a forward Naval Gunfire Liaison Officer (NGLO or GLO). This is a job that requires the officer, aka me, to go out ahead of the front lines, usually with a radio talker and call in fire on the enemy. Really bright people who want to live past the next year stay away from these kinds of assignments. Not me.

The detailer readily, almost gleefully agreed to my proposal. After all, there were very few officers applying for GLO and most that were assigned balked at the idea as much as possible. Not me.

We began planning the rotation when he told me i would be required to extend my active duty for a month. Astounded, i asked why. He explained that any assignment to Vietnam required a complete year for the assignment. To perform the duties of GLO, i would have to go to a gunfire support school and to Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape (SERE) training, a two-week course requiring the trainee to be captured and experience being a Prisoner of WAR (training), including some forms of torture, like waterboarding.

Some sense kicked in: “You want me to extend a month to go over there and probably get my ass shot off? Forget it? What else you got?”

Now mind you, this phase of detailing negotiations took about three, maybe four months of negotiation.

On the next phone call, the detailer told me had an assignment that might appeal to me. i asked him what it was. He told me i would be the executive officer of the Military Sealift Transportation System (MSTS) Transport Unit One (The name of the command was changed later the next year to Military Sealift Command or MSC. i asked him what the job entailed. He said he didn’t know but he would check with the others in the office. i waited on the phone for almost three-quarters of an hour. Fortunately, BUPERS did not have muzak for waiting.

When the detailer came back he explained that no one really knew exactly what it was, but one detailer recalled from the past what he thought was.

“And what did he say?” i implored.

“We think you will be the only Navy Officer on a USNS ship manned by government civilians,” he explained, “The ship is a transport that carries U.S. troops and dependents to and from various ports in the Pacific,” finishing with, “We believe you should hit every major port in the Pacific in your year’s tour.

He paused after my earlier rejection of GLO because of the extension of active duty,  “You will have to extend a month to attend the Register Publication System school for communications in your new assignment.

“Hmm,” i mused, “Extend a month to see all the major ports in the Pacific and being the only Naval personnel on the ship.”

“I’m all in,” i explained.

This occurred sometime in October. Shortly afterward, i received my orders in a radio message to detach from USS Hawkins (DD 873)  in December 1969  and report to RPS school in San Diego and proceed to to Yokosuka, Japan to report to MSTS Headquarters for further assignment to Executive Officer, MSTS Transport Unit ONE. To be honest, i was pretty pumped. i began my preparations in earnest.

As usual, there are several more stories in this too long for inclusion here.

The wearisome and very long flight to Yokosuka put me in late in the evening in mid-January. The next morning, i walked in the rain to the MSTS office building. It was a dreary, dark day. The office was dark and bare. The overweight civilian with a dark tie, white shirt, and dark suit, rose from his chair and shook my hand across the large metal desk and motioned me to sit in the chair in front of him.

He told me i would be leaving that afternoon to fly to Sasebo, Japan. i was not impressed with Yokosuka and wondered if Sasebo would be different. Then, the man behind the desk dropped the bomb on my ideal tour: “Well, it’s not quite what you were told.

“You will be the executive officer of an 18-man unit. There is a CO, a lieutenant commander, you, two doctors, and a chaplain. There is a boatswainmate, storekeeper and corpsman chiefs, 6 corpsman, 3 storekeeper enlisted,  and a seaman.

“There are three troop transports for carrying 1500 Republic of Korea troops to and from Vietnam out of Pusan, Korea. Sasebo is the port for six days of upkeep and resupply. Your unit is aboard the USNS Geiger (T-AP 197), the other ship in the current rotation is USNS Barrett (T-AP 196). The third ship currently in overhaul is the USNS Upshur (T-AP 198). Greatly disappointed, i caught a Navy flight to Sasebo the next day.

i reported to LCDR Hank Fendt on the Geiger and found out we would be dropping off new and picking up ROK’s that had been Vietnam for a year in Quinhon and Na Trang. i sent an letter to that detailer: “Dear sir, all the major ports in the Pacific are Sasebo, Japan; Pusan, Korea; and Qui Nhon and Nha Trang, Vietnam. The “US troops and military dependents are ROK troops and officers. Thanks.”

Yep, i was disappointed. But it turned out pretty well. It was a good recalibration for me, and gave me a lot of time to think. It also was a wild, wild time. That is yet another story.

What i didn’t know was what happened to my friends. In the last several years through the new things people love to hate like Facebook i have reconnected to my old shipmates, Andrew Nemethy and Rob DeWitt, and my OCS roommate Doc Jarden.

i thought all three had gotten on the next reduction in force. Now i know the rest of the story.

Rob was not cut, rotated to a command ship, the USS Wright (CC 2), homeported in Norfolk. After a working on motorcycles and getting several post graduate degrees, he ended up in home state of Maine as an orthodontist.

And then there was Andrew. i was sure he made the cuts. He didn’t. i found this out when i inquired after he made a comment about being in Vietnam. When Andrew learned of my new assignment and found out he would not leave the service early, he decided he would follow suit and requested a tour in MSTS. He got it. He was assigned to the MSTS office in Saigon. He describes how he got there:

You were the inspiration for that, traveling all around the Orient on a freighter having a jolly old time in ports, seeing the world, and writing poetry, which as you may recall, We sent back-and-forth to each other. That I ended up in Vietnam is all due to you!

What could go wrong? The glitch was that I had no idea…MSTS had posts in Vietnam. Oops.  That is why Lasell was chuckling at my orders when they came in. Traded a cushy boring job on the destroyer for the excitement of being in the middle of a war. You were the inspiration for that, traveling all around the Orient on a freighter having a jolly old time in ports, seeing the world, and writing poetry, which as you may recall, We sent back-and-forth to each other. That I ended up in Vietnam is all due to you!

The Lasell Andrew mentions was the commanding officer of the Hawkins. He was on of the best i had in the Navy. Ironically, his last tour was the commander of the MSC office out of San Francisco. Sadly, he passed away after i had finally located him in the Southwest corner before i could go see him. i owe him a lot.

Doc’s story was similar to Andrew’s. Again, i thought he had got out early. Again, when i reconnected with him, he straightened me out in the following email excerpt :

JJ…

Hey sailor…belated Happy Vet’s Day.  Note the switch to personal email–my day-to-day involvement with our local NPR station is just now coming to an end.

So, my tour after the Guam.  In early July, 1968 got a nice note from Bupers to proceed unodir within 60 days to DaNang to take over as officer in charge of a river squadron.  Okay, then…not exactly the kind of news one hopes for, but we had all volunteered and that was the way it was.  Lots of anxiety, but basically resignation.

Meanwhile, the CO of the Guam was a tough son-of-a-bitch, and like all COs of carriers–fixed wing or helo–was an aviator.  He was uncomfortable on the bridge, but at the same time had little time or respect for young OCS officers.  He only reluctantly qualified anyone as an underway officer of the deck.  I was one of the few.

You know, I have no idea there was a person, a detailer, making decisions about my next duty. I did request to join MSTS, because I was sick of Norfolk, new we weren’t going anywhere, and wanted something a little different in my last year than the same old same old. You were the inspiration for that, traveling all around the Orient on a freighter having a jolly old time in ports, seeing the world, and writing poetry, which as you may recall, We sent back-and-forth to each other. That I ended up in Vietnam is all due to you!

The glitch was that I had no idea, stupidly, that MStS had posts in Vietnam. Oops.  That is why Lasell was chuckling at my orders when they came in. Traded a cushy boring job on the destroyer for the excitement of being in the middle of a war. What could go wrong?

Fortunately, nothing, and I would not trade the experience, nor taking an in country discharge making money and then traveling back around the world, for anything. Just about killed my poor parents though, especially since I was an only child. Taking four weeks, or maybe it was three, of survival training down at Quantico,, with Marines, was an interesting experience and also launched my interest in fitness and being in shape, which I turned out I was pretty good at. Carried that athletic interest for the rest of my life. It was a cold slosh of reality too, since they threw us in a simu,aged VC prison camp and among the things they did was throw us in a muddy pond, during the winter, so it was really cold, and then “tortured” us and used psy ops tricks on us.

I will never forget that the guy who probed the hero in our platoon and outsmarted our captors to unite our crew was the least likely looking hero of the bunch, a gangly professorial JG. Meanwhile a commander who was going to Vietnam, an older guy and seemingly all no younger,  totally fell apart before our eyes, and was not shipped out as a result, at least that’s what I heard. So you never know who’s going to be the brave one or how people will react. Lesson learned.

My theory was that if the Viet Congress wanted to get me, I would try to at least be able to run like a bastard and at least be as fit as they were. Plus I had good boots and no flip-flops.

Now the rest of this story also is dripping in irony. The funny thing is three of us ended up in journalism of sorts. Doc became a television producer. Andrew was a journalist in Vermont, and i have been all over the charts in my writing efforts.The real rest of the story is there are three guys with whom i had great relationships and shared good and hard times and we have reconnected. We have our lives to live and they are in Maine, Vermont, North Carolina, and the Southwest corner. i might get to visit with them in the coming days, but time, which does not change, is getting shorter. It doesn’t matter. i have reconnected with three pretty special people.

And as you can see, Andrew and Doc can tell stories as well or better than me.

My Favorite Saint Patrick’s Day

It was in March 2005. Maureen and several of her pals at Parron-Hall Office Interiors had been awarded a Kimball Office Furniture “SPIFF” to join a large group in Dublin. i tagged along.

It was my first time in Ireland. i immediately determined i could live there. We wandered the streets with my jaw somewhere around my kneecap in awe. There was this feeling of Keats, of Joyce, of Shaw, of Samuel Beckett. We ate Irish. The dinners were great. We went to Trinity College where i came up with my plot. We went across the street to a haberdashery and more Irish shopping to lure in tourists. It worked. i bought an Irish tweed sports coat, which i still wear today. It’s me.

We walked around the corner to a pub for lunch. I felt like i was in the “Quiet Man” pub. Next door there was an old, and i mean old book store. You could feel the dust on the shelves that contained first editions of Yeats, Joyce and Wilde works. We went back…several times. The churches, the city buildings smacked at history. The group had a small section of seats for the St. Patrick’s Day parade.

i can assure you it’s an entirely different thing in Dublin compared to the silliness we conjure up in the good ole U.S. of A. There wasn’t a commercial float or ads on sides of the cars…in fact, don’t remember automobiles in that parade at all. It was high school bands. It was local bands of all sorts. It was amateur magicians, acrobats, and unicyclists. It was fun.

After the parade, we wandered into a pub just off of St. Patrick’s Close near that magnificent cathedral. It sat about fifty and the fifty were all Irish except for the eight of us and ranged from around four years old to about ninety. We had our Guinness. The bartender gleefully showed one of the several beautiful women in our group how to draw an Irish four-leaf clover on top of the foam.

On another sortie, we had gone on a tour to see a castle, the Irish Sea, and to an Abby turned restaurant, show place. We sat on picnic tables, ate traditional Irish fare, and the Irish band lulled us with Irish Melodies, and the rinnce fada, or the Irish step dance. It ended the show with “Danny Boy.” The young singer was beautiful and perfect for the song. i noted that Maureen, most of the other women, and even a few males, had tears running down their cheeks.

♦︎ ♦︎ ♦︎

Our next trip in 2015, ten years after visiting Dublin, was to join Joe and Carla, my brother and sister-in-law, in Tuosist, near Kenmare in County Kerry. i fell in love with the Beara Pennisulsa and Kenmare. The beauty, the peacefulness, the food, everything was damn near perfect. It did not possess the bustle and the big city feel of Dublin. And there was John Moriarty, the head barkeep at the Park Hotel. The man knows his whiskey, and in turn taught Joe and Carla wonderful things. i had perhaps the best whiskey i’ve ever had at the Park Hotel bar. There are several stories there, but i will hold them for a later time.

i remain entranced.

♦︎ ♦︎ ♦︎

As for that plot, i had: Sarah was choosing what college to attend at the time of our first trip. She had intimated she would like it to be in Europe. Trinity is the college of fine arts, including drama (the Irish system is much different from ours in the states where the various fields of studies are located together across the country, not in universities like ours that offer degrees in many fields). Sitting in that Sean Thornton pub in Dublin, i remarked to Maureen we could get Sarah into Trinity. To add to the bait, i noted we couldn’t afford to live in Dublin, but we could get a relatively inexpensive cottage thirty or so miles away. i continued to explain Ireland had a great train system (i was guessing), and we could spend a couple of years there giving Sarah moral support. The coup de gras ending was suggesting after two years when Sarah had her feet on the ground, we could get a place for a couple of years in Southern France.

Maureen liked the idea but she wasn’t exuberant. i passed right over that and when back in the Southwest corner, began my pitch to Sarah.

She wasn’t interested. If she was going to study abroad, she preferred England, London i think.

The next spring, Maureen and i were headed to Padre baseball game. We were waiting for the trolley when i re-launched my campaign, reiterating all the positives, and suggesting we could convince Sarah to change her mind.

i received the Maureen “look.” i said, “You really don’t want to do this do you?”

She nodded her head.

I, flummoxed, asked, “Why not?”

She simply replied, “Too many pubs.”

Story ended.

♦︎ ♦︎ ♦︎

i am not Irish. Maureen is really, really Irish. We are locked into living here until we are not. There are now only two other places i would move. One would be back home. My near life-long fantasy has been to live in a place like the cabin my parents and aunt and uncle had on Old Hickory Lake. And to the Beara Peninsula. Neither will happen.

♦︎ ♦︎ ♦︎

This morning, Barbara Leftwich Froula sent a photo of her father’s column in The Democrat. It was about his Irish heritage. As usual, JB’s column was on point, thoughtful, and funny in the right places. i and many of his students in journalism labeled him “Coach.” His column ran for years in the newspaper. For several years, his column would run on Tuesday (i think) and mine, “Notes from the Southwest Corner,” would run on Thursday. For me, that was like validation of being a good columnist.

♦︎ ♦︎ ♦︎

i may not be Irish, but one of the greatest guys i have ever met is. Mike Kelly now lives in Houston. Jim Hileman introduced me to him. The three of us became golfing buddies and pals for years. Today, Mike posted a photo of his family when he was a young man. Mike is the second from the left on the back row. Now folks, that’s Irish:

Happy Saint Patrick’s Day!

A Short Cornucopia of Thoughts from the Goofy Guy

i sit on our patio. It is 3:33 p.m. in real time, 4:33 in political maneuvering, and 11:33 Greenwich Mean Time, the latter of which is all that matters. It occurs to me that at sea, the critical times are first light to shoot morning stars, twilight to shoot evening stars, noon to shoot the noon fix. The other important times was eight bells, that’s when the watch changed every four hours.

So instead of sun setting about an hour from now, it will set about two hours from now.

i am having a Martin (Thank you, Cyril Vaughn Fraser, Jr.) reflecting. The photo here is one i’ve posted before but it was earlier in the season. You see, the are subtle changes in the seasons of the Southwest corner, not noticed much untill you’ve lived here for about twenty or thity years.

The coral trees have lost their leaves and the corals are beginning to bloom, there are two or three buds on the coral tree in the photo. The lilac colored ice plant is finally beginning to bloom amidst the yellow and the orange. The Coronado (ground hugging kind) of bougainvillea is taking off.

i have had a good day. i fixed a couple of problems with an incredible mountain of technical support after listening to really annoying piano concertos for about 40 minutes. i picked up some Kona whole bean coffee and suffered a near heart attack when i found how much it cost, but what the hell, the aroma can knock you off your feet with goodness.

i chipped some golf balls and, as usual, thought i might have found a secret (Not). i found a photo that took me back to good times: Yosemite’s Command Master Chief, BMCM Weaver with the XO in Rota, Spain, 1983. He was as good as you could get for the liaison between officers and enlisted. Oh Lord, those days were just about perfect.

We’ve gone to the San Diego Air & Space Museum. We have lunched at Panama 66 in the Park among the Museum of Arts sculptures.

And all this leads up to where i am. There are naysayers out there who rant about how awful Californians are. i’m not going to lower myself to argue about that. i am sad that it would be financial disaster for my daughters and their families to move here. Home prices, rent, taxes makes moving here no sense whatsoever. But i was here before the insanity of inflated housing costs and have benefited greatly from it.

i can play golf all year. The Southwest corner has about thirty days a year when it rains. The temperature is a little warm, in the 80’s and low 90’s for a month or so. There are a couple of days of Santa Ana conditions when it can get to the high 90’s, even just around 100, and very dry. As i have noted on many occasions, i have seen a great deal of the world and nearly everywhere has more 10s out of 10 than here. That is because it is relative. There is no place on earth that has more 7s, 8s, and 9s.

As for all of its ills, i long have noted San Diegans denigrate Los Angeles but keep trying to be just like them. Places i love, Nashville, Austin, Seattle, Atlanta, seem to be doing the same, outgrowing their appeal, their uniqueness. Even my home of Lebanon, Tennessee appears to becoming a bedroom, suburb of Nashville.

Once again, i am a lucky man to be living here in a beautiful place with a wonderful wife…

and i’m not leaving.