Associating more than I thought
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ROBERT GARDNER
I am not a joiner. I belong to no fraternal organization, no civic
organization, no lodge, no temple, no nothing. Or so I thought. Yet
when I went through some old records recently, I seem to have
belonged to a remarkable series of organizations.
Some are familiar names, such as the Newport Harbor Elks Lodge,
the Salvation Army Advisory Board, the Executive Council of the Boy
Scouts of America, the Congress of Parents and Teachers, the Orange
County Pioneer Council and the Newport Beach Historical Society. I am
also a member of the Friends of the Oasis and the Neptune Society,
neither of which is very exclusive. For the first, you just have to
be old, and for the second you have to eventually die -- something
anybody can (and will) do.
Some of the memberships hark back to my military service: the U.S.
Pacific Fleet Cincpac Advance Headquarters Officers’ Club, the
Officers Club of Pearl Harbor, the Officers’ Club of the Naval Base
at Saipan and the Officers’ Club of Guam. I was big on officers’
clubs because they were a good place to drink, which might lead one
to question how I also became a member of the American Temperance
Society and the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, but my mother was
a lifelong member of the WCTU, even an officer at one point. So I
guess I was sort of a legacy.
Another family connection stood me in good stead when I was in
China in the 1930s. Thanks to my sister Marion and her way with men,
I became a member of the Peking Club when we were in that city.
As golfers, my wife and I were members of the Lava Lava Golf Club
of Pago Pago, American Samoa. The name is a little more catchy than
the Irvine Coast Country Club, where we had previously played.
Speaking of Samoa, I was also a member of the Pago Pago Yacht Club.
This one is very select. At the time I belonged, its fleet consisted
of two Hobie Cats. And while on the subject of yacht clubs, I was
also a member of the Promontory Point Yacht Club, of which Blackie
Gadarian was commodore. The Promontory Point Yacht Club had the same
mission as the Balboa Island Punting and Sculling Society, which was
nothing to do with boats and everything to do with having a convivial
drink with friends.
How I became a member of the International Assn. of Turtles, and
what the International Assn. of Turtles does or stands for, I haven’t
a clue. But as for the Australasian Order of Old Bastards -- well, I
don’t know about the Australasian part, but I’m certainly old, and I
was referred to as a bastard many times in my career on the bench, so
maybe they waived the other part.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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