All posts by Jim

Liberty Call

Well, i wasn’t expecting liberty to come upon me this fast.

Saturday, i will be leaving for 13 days of liberty in Scotland. There are six of us going to Edinburgh, Pitchlory, Isle of Skye, and Inverness. Sounds nice. i’m sure i will enjoy it.

i especially am looking forward to visiting the University of Edinburgh. The professor who influenced me most through my five-plus years at Vanderbilt and Middle Tennessee was Dr. Bill Holland. When i came to my senses and changed my major from civil engineering at Vanderbilt to Literature at Middle Tennessee, Bill Holland not only blew me away with the Romantics, he became a close friend. Bill’s dissertation traced the themes of Chaucer through the British greats such as Shakespeare and Spenser to the Romantics. i was told (although i have been unable to verify it) he received a “first class” doctorate, one of ten recipients of such an honor, especially since the university was founded in 1582.

Regardless, Bill Holland was an impressive professor, and my respect for him as a professor and a friend makes a visit to the Scottish university a joy anticipated for me.

The locales planned for out visit are interesting. i know i will find them wonderful. But for me, having two weeks with my brother, sister, their spouses, and Maureen is the best part. It will be the first time and likely the only time just the six of us will be together without other family. This is special for me.

Initially, i was planning to take notes, some source material, etc. and continuing to post installments of Steel Decks and Glass Ceilings.

But i am old and don’t multi-task as well as i used to do. Come to think of it, when i went on liberty while deployed, i never, ever took any work with me. So there will be no installments of the book while i am on liberty. Nor is it likely i will post much of anything, except some thoughts about the trip until i return in mid-June.

i just wanted you to know.

A Goober Tale

This morning, there was a “memory” of  mine from three years to share on Facebook:

The caption on the memory read “Adjutant (CHMA yearbook) editor, 1962. Note this goober couldn’t keep his clip-on tie, on.”

It was a long, long time ago. Sometimes i think i should have stuck with that journalism thing, after all sports writers always had their ties askew (except for the dapper Fred Russell of The Nashville Banner). But then i would have missed…oh, all you folks approaching my age understand.

Another thought. That large desktop radio next to my left elbow got me in trouble, or maybe it was Mike Dixon who got us in trouble or maybe it was me who got us into trouble, but regardless, the radio played a part. It happened in October, about a year and a half before this photo was taken by the guy who earlier caught Mike and i in our trouble.

It was midday, Thursday, October 13, 1960 Central Daylight Savings Time, on “The Hilltop” at Castle Heights Military Academy. The lunch formation on the circle was at 11:30 as i recall. Mike Dixon was the sports editor of The Cavalier, the national award winning high school newspaper. i was his sports writer before i followed in his footsteps and edited the annual the next year. In addition, Mike and i played pickup basketball in the gym every afternoon we could until it was way past time to go home for supper. But that was another kind of trouble.

We also played baseball together at Heights and in Legion ball after being on opposition teams through the Babe Ruth and Little League years. i also was the “JV” point guard who was the only one who kept feeding Mike the ball when he got hot. Somewhere in the midst of all of that, we discovered a mutual admiration of the Pittsburgh Pirates, sometime begun around 1955. We could site every statistic of every player, and in back-yard whiffle ball games, we could even come close to replicating the stances of each Pirate batter (i preferred the stances of Roberto Clemente with his head roll and Rocky Nelson who looked like he was sitting on a milking stool in his stance).

So we had a problem. Back then, World Series games were played in the daytime. The damn Yankees — David Hall and Eddie Callis, eat your hearts out remembering 1960 — and the Bucko’s were tied 3-3. The deciding game started just before lunch formation. The two Pirate fans put our heads together, most likely during one of those late afternoon pickup games in the gym. They didn’t take muster at the lunch formation, so we could skip. We did. Company A didn’t catch i wasn’t there nor did Company C catch Mike when they marched in through Main into the mess hall.

We were scrunched down in the Cavalier/Adjutant journalism room in the back of the first floor of Armstrong Hall. That radio in the photo was moved to the middle of the desk and turned down low. Mike and i scrunched close to hear the play-by-play. The back and forth, the blue collar mid-section of the country against the white-collar New York dynasty: drama was rife. David Schoenfield wrote a wonderful description of the game for ESPN (http://proxy.espn.com/mlb/playoffs/2010/columns/story?id=5676003) and cites David Maraniss from Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball’s Last Hero — Maraniss’ recent book, A Good American Family, is powerful — and Rob Neyer from his Big Book of Baseball Blunders. i won’t try and capture the beauty of that game nor the wonderful aspects of baseball and its players back then. Schoenfield, Maraniss, and Neyer have done that if you care to read deeper.

Dixon and i were oblivious to the books, the cultural changes coming to the sport and our country. We were glued to that tinny-sound play-by-play description of the game by Bob Prince, the Pirate’s announcer. And then came the bottom of the ninth. And Bill Mazeroski powered the ball over Yogi Berra’s head in left field. In my sometimes faulty memory, Bob Prince yelled his well-known phrase “You can kiss that baby goodbye!” Pirates win, 10-9. Pandemonium went nuclear at Forbes Field.

It also went nuclear in the Cavalier room. Dixon and i were rejoicing. We were slapping each other on the back, whooping with joy, and jumping atop the desks and continuing to jump and holler.

Oops.

Major (at the time) JB Leftwich, the mentor, sponsor and all things adult about that award winning newspaper and annual was working through lunch in his classroom. His classroom was in front, adjacent to the Cavalier room in back.

He came in, catching us in mid-air celebration, and put us on report. i think it was the only time i went before Colonel Dan T. Ingram because i was on report up until my last month the next school year

(Colonel Ingram, the commandant, also was my American History professor that year. i remember him walking to the old single pane window in the front of the classroom, looking out, and thinking the pane was pushed up and the window open, spitting his wad of snuff from under his lip. The snuff landed in the center of the pane. The dark brown liquid dribbled slowly down the pane with the colonel quietly looking at it. He turned and walked back to his desk as if nothing out of sorts had occurred. His students managed to muffle their laughs. Not one said anything. Class went on, eventually dismissed at the bell.)

i was awarded five demerits. Mike was awarded five as well but already had three. He had to march the “bullpen,” aka the circle in front of Main for an hour of punishment. i escaped.

We didn’t display the decorum of cadets expected of us. But you know what? i’m glad i did it and would do it again.

“Murphy’s Law”

From my “Murphy’s Law” desk calendar archives thanks to Aunt Evelyn, Uncle Pipey, and cousin Nancy:

Bucy’s Law: Nothing is ever accomplished by a reasonable man.
Goofy guy’s caveat of  Bucy’s Law: Except a reasonable man lives a reasonable life…not too bad considering how our world is operating today…more reasonable men would be welcomed by me right now. 

Something Borrowed

Each Memorial Day weekend for the past decade or so, i’ve tried to post something about my feelings honoring those who died for our country. i don’t always do it, but i try. And i was going to try this weekend with thoughts already swirling around in my brain trying to put some order, some sense into my remembering those who had fallen for us.

Then early this morning, i read the below. i have included the link, which is a better graphic representation of the article, and also pasted the text here.

As you probably know, i am not a big fan of television talking heads, hired guns for analyzing all things they used to know, experts they say. Nor am i a big fan of flag officers. As with all people in all situations, amongst that particular grouping, there are good people and some people not so good, and some criminals. There are good admirals and generals, more than the other kind, and there are some who got there for personal glory and abuse the position. As Rickover once told the House Armed Services Committee, “The first thing i would do to make the Pentagon more effective would be to give half the flag officers a private office in the “D” ring, give each of them a memo pad and let them write notes to each other without those notes ever leaving the “D” ring. Then i would have the other half of the flag officers take care of business.” Not exact words, but i think you get the point.

But this morning, i have a bit more respect for retired Admirals who analyze their speciality in the news. Rear Admiral John Kirby (USN, ret.) wrote the below piece.

i think we should all remember his words this weekend.

i would add that kind of valor did not just exist in WWII. There was Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, many other smaller conflicts, and i’m sadly sure, too many more to come.

i was in one cross-fire (mistaken friendlies) of .50 cals, stood on the weather deck waiting for some zappers to blow up our ship, had the merchant behind us at a DeLong pier have a hole ripped through her cargo hole at 0200, watched about two dozen firefights from a distance, did a lot of stupid things that could have gotten me killed, and did my job on twelve ships. No hero here. But man, i served with a whole bunch of heroes, some from each of those wars except the last couple. i didn’t die, didn’t even get wounded. Many of those heroes did.

And they are the ones we should honor today. Admiral Kirby captures the spirit of the United States Military personnel who have lost their lives for us. It is a much better job than i would have done with a post, so i am sharing his article. And i too will remember and honor all of those who are no longer with us who made such great sacrifice, many the final one this weekend.

And tomorrow morning, i will walk up to my ensign flying atop our hill, lower it to half mast, look down on the Navy ships in the harbor, and further away past the blue arch of the bridge to Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery, and remain silent for a moment or two while remembering those who ensured i, and all of the citizens of this country, would be free.

Thank you, Admiral Kirby.

https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/24/opinions/world-war-two-veteran-said-he-didnt-do-anything-kirby/index.html

The World War II veteran said he didn’t do anything. I almost believed him

by John Kirby, CNN National Security Analyst

(CNN)The old man said he didn’t do anything. I only half believed him.

People of his generation say that all the time, especially when they talk about their service.

That’s one of the reasons we call them the “Greatest Generation.” It’s not just because they won World War II. It’s because even in that most ultimate of victories, they remained humble.

Anyway, the old man kept saying it over and over. “I didn’t do anything. I didn’t do anything.”

And then he wept … openly, valiantly. And then he said it again. And I stood over him, all decked out in my dress blue uniform, ashamed for the first time to be wearing it. I’d been invited back to my hometown of St. Petersburg, Fla. in the spring of 2013 to give a speech, and I wanted to stop by the local veterans’ hospital to pay my respects.

But who in the hell was I to be in his presence? What could I possibly say to such a man

Here he was, at the end of his life, dying — and ready to go, I might add — a hero, a man who landed at Anzio with the 179th regiment of the 45th Army Division.

A man who by his own account spent 91 consecutive days in combat.

A man who, along with his unit, pushed on past that deadly beachhead at Anzio in the winter of 1944 and eventually took Rome back from the Germans.

A man who proudly — no, reverently — showed me the picture of a beautiful young woman he knew he would marry before he even knew her name. And she was a beauty, too, let me tell you. Her name was Shirley, and she was a nurse.

I joked a little, asking how in the world a homely guy like him could score such a babe. The truth is, he was still a fine and handsome man, even as he lay in that hospital bed. The years had furrowed lines across his cheeks, but they hadn’t dimmed those blue eyes. They hadn’t stolen his charm.

He reminded me a little of screen legend Richard Widmark. A movie critic once called Widmark a man of “unconventional good looks,” who “boasted a chiseled face, all angles and shadows.”

That was the old man, too. The blond hair had grayed, but he still had a chiseled face.

There wasn’t any doubt in my mind how he won Shirley’s heart. He must have bowled her over.

Anyway, the old man shrugged and giggled and said as honestly as I think anyone could say that he had no idea how he won Shirley’s heart. He just knew she was the one. And he handed that little metal picture frame to me like it was gold … like it was her.

Here he was, a man — a dying man — whose proudest achievement in life, he told me, was the life he and that gorgeous young nurse gave their kids. He had helped set Italy free, helped free the world of Nazi tyranny, but the biggest legacy he believed he was leaving behind was his children.

There’s a lesson there, I reckon. Perhaps we ought not to strive for lives of success, but rather lives of value. And it has to start with what you actually do value. The old man valued love and loyalty and duty. He didn’t say that to me, of course. He wouldn’t stoop to say such a thing, not someone of his generation. Those things were simply expected. They were the norm. They were the things that got you through the sheer terror that was combat.

“I didn’t do anything.”

Well, he survived Anzio, and that was surely something. If you haven’t read up on Anzio, you should. The battle was a bloodbath, “hell itself” according to one soldier in the old man’s regiment.

The whole idea was to conduct an amphibious landing on the Italian western shore, outflank German forces there and then attack Rome. The success of a landing at that location, in a basin that was basically reclaimed marshland and surrounded by mountains, depended on the element of surprise. Any delay at all would result in German occupation of the mountains and Allied entrapment down below.

And that’s exactly what happened.

Week after bloody week the German army pounded away at Allied troops stuck in the basin with nowhere to hide. The shelling and the bombing were relentless. It was said that any man who claimed he had been around Anzio two days without having a shell hit within 100 yards of him was just bragging.

“Sometimes you hear the shell whine after you’ve heard it explode; sometimes you hear it whine and it never explodes,” wrote Ernie Pyle of the battle. “But I’ve found out one thing here that’s just the same as anywhere else, and that’s that old weakness in the joints when they get to landing close … your elbows get flabby and you breathe in little short jerks, and your chest feels empty, and you’re too excited to do anything but hope.”

I’m certain there were many days and nights and in-betweens when Charles Nease, Private, U.S. Army, was too excited to do anything but hope. My guess is that he simply willed himself onward, driven not by some sort of superhuman courage but by the fear of letting down his buddies, of failing in his duty. I can’t imagine that he ever did fail, though.

Charlie Nease died a few days after I visited with him in the hospital back in 2013. He was 87 years old. His children were there to see him off before he met back up with Shirley, the only nurse he really wanted to see.

We’re losing World War II veterans at a pretty fast clip these days. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, fewer than 500,000 of the 16 million Americans who served during the war were alive in 2018.

Next month sees us commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Normandy landings. So, it’s important for us to remember them and their stories. It’s important for us to put a human face on history, to remember that once, a long time ago, they were young and scared and brave and in love.

I know Memorial Day honors those who were killed on the battlefield. And Private Nease surely wasn’t, though many of his friends surely were. And yet, right around this time of year, I can’t help but think about him. The more I do, the more I think he was right after all.

He didn’t do anything. He did everything, everything a man could hope to do with his life and still call himself a man.

And we are all richer, whether we know it or not — whether we choose to appreciate it or not — for having had people like him walk the earth. That’s seems one hell of a memorial to me.