Here is what I remember of my Father’s history. Born on 25 August 1925, some place in northern Illinois (I think). He was raised at: 1015 Irving, Royal Oak, Michigan He was drafted into the Army Air Corp in 1943. I have no idea where he went to basic training or where he went to technical training. He was sent to Okinawa while the Army and Marines were still fighting. He was an oxygen machine operator. This was a cryogenic system which provided LOX for air crews conducting high altitude air raids over Japan. His base was probably shelled but he never said if he was in danger. His main stories were about boredom and Soldiers making home brew. This brew was made in drums filled with left over sweets, raisans and sugar then screened and left in the jungle to ferment. They left this mess there for a week and drank this awful sounding stuff. I suppose it was better than being sobor. Soldiers got a six pack of cheap beer a week and officers and senior NCOs got whiskey. He did see those who got whiskey sold it to trustworthy soldiers. After the Army Air Corp, he went to Wayne State. He got his degree in Economics (I think) and was in ROTC. I emailed the Dean at Wayne State and asked him to confirm this information. I do not recall where your Grandmother went to College. I had this early complete when the bloody computer ate my most recent text! Could someone please tell me why WInDoze 11 is supposed to be the miracle machine??? I'm pissed off enuf to start screaming but Aunt Kathie is taking a nap (we took a mini-vacation in Wichita Kansas and she drove back in winds gusting to the 50s mph and occasionall dust with visibility under a quarter of a mile. She likes driving much more than I do!) I am typing this the hard way on my Kindle. At least I know it will not eat my text! Your Grandfather was probably commissioned in the USAF out of college and went to basic flight school at avance Air base in Enid Oklahoma in late 1949. He was then transferred to an Air Base ib San Antonio Texas. Your grandparents were married on 28 August 1950. He was sent to Vance AFB Enid Oklahoma in late 1950 for TDY (temporary duty). Said TDY lasted long enough for me to be born 14 August 1951 and your Father to be born on 7 May 1953. (In the Navy, we called this "PCS" - Permanent Change of Station. He was a flight instructor in basic flight school. Around 1955, he was sent by Pan Am Clipper to Kadena Air Force Base Okinawa. (I just uploaded this text to Aunt Kathie's lap top computer. The real reason we went to Wichita was to buy a replacement for my desktop, which had "gracefully" died on me.) Interruption done and back to me narrative! This meant my Mom had to get me and Jim from Bay City Michigan to San Freancisco in order for us to board the USNS GENERAL M M PATRICK. The PATRICK was a retired troop carrier which was retrofitted to take military families from point A to point B. The PATRICK did not have stablizers and rolled in heavy, long period, North Pacific wind swells. I am sure there were occasioal cold fronts adding to the "fun"... An amusing aside: my mother was trying to move several overpacked suitcases, your Father and I from a taxi to the ship. I held her hand, she had your Father on a leash and was paying a porter to actually haul the luggage. I vaguely recall that sailors near the ship put the luggage onto the ship and moved it into our cabin. Your Father and I had your Grandmother's delicate stomacks and the three of us vomited a lot. Jim and I both outgrew this... We were meet at the Pier by my Father who had borrowed an Air Force truck. For the remainder of his tour, our wheels were a motoscooter he had bought from a fellow officer and later sold to another pilot. I went to Kindergarden and the first half of First Grade on Okinaewa. In Kindergardenm, I vaguly recall my philosophy was "what is mine is mine, what is yours is mine". There was at least one typhoon which clobbered the island. The roof leaked. My Mother had to move us to one end of the house until the winds shifted and rain started coming in at that end and she moved us to the other end of the house. This was unfun. My Father, as an SA-16 Command Pilot, had flown his flying boat and crew to Hong Kong where he and his "shelered" in British military housing and drank very cheap Brit gin or beer. My Mother was not synpatetic whe she learned of the hangovers my Father had suffered through... Lawn work was easy! Litttle Okinawan "Mommasans" sat on the lawns, measured the heights of grass and neatly trimmed them. The cut off grass went into wicker baskets. This was necessary as the local economy was still trashed from the war. Paying for "haircuts" for the lawn was trivial for USAF officers and NCOs but provided the major source of income for the families of the Okinaean "Mommasans". The economy later picked up and the Papasans started pulling in real money! We got around on my Father's motorscooter. My Father driving, me in front of him, Mom behind him holding your Father was not an uncommon sight. It was something that gives me the creeps thinking of it today... Ah, the bloody Air Farce. (Yes, Christopher, I left out an obscenity that say after "bloody". I'm being polite. What can I say? Me Father earned his flight pay (which is really a form of hazarous duty pay!). sy The nice story is his Squadron worked part time for the "Company". (CIA) They would fly up a major river, drop off a Chinese agent and fly back while never going above the tops of trees. They were lucky! The ChiCom were not interested in bagging USAF air crews and the infiltrating agents were never heard from again. The "Company" later gave this up as a bad idea. There was an article in Argosy Magazine about this squadron published in the late 1950s or early 1960s. This was the nice evil story; the unnice evil story is this: My Father's aircraft was an SA-16 seaplane. They could stream (deply) long long-wire antennas to receive very low frequency radio. They could carry several people or boxes. On one trip to a place called Backini Atole, my Father landed in the Atole and was told he and his crew were to swim to shore. They then had to swim back to the SA-16 a day or two later. It was only much later they learned an H-Bomb (tritium/duterium device I think) was set off. He and his men received large doses of radioactive Iodine and this buggered their Tyroid {sp} glands. This illness caused him to be taken off flight status in the late 1960s. My Mother was sympathetic but secretly delighted he would not be going off to fly around thunderstorms. I went to an year of Junior College at Perkinston Junior College, Stone County, Mississippi. It was a lovely school and for the first time after 6th grade, I enjoyed going to school! Your Grandfather retired from the USAF in sunner 1970. We moved to Klamath Falls, Oregon. He had been hired to teach a class at the local junior college. He charged out looking hopeful. He returned looking absolutely defeated. When he showed up at the Junior College President office, he was told a meeting had been held the day before and his salery was zeroed out and his benefits cancelled but he could come teach on his own time, his own dime and take all risks.k of this I this and boil with impotent rage! He immediately went to northern California and signed up for unemployment. Your Grandmother read the local Community College was offering a refresher training programme for RNs who had been out of practice for years. When my Mother and a number of other ladies signed up, the College President told them they simply could not possibly survive retraining and they should do lesser activities. (My Mother had been away from nursing for 44 years years.) Pissed off husbands threatened a class action suit and maybe a sexual discrimination law suit.) This merde tet penjudo saved. (This is a French obscenity followed by a Spaiish obscenity.) All the Ladies did outstanding in class and did well at subsequent jobs. family riding on the scooter bakina atole Red China visits
Sunday, October 23, 2022
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