I met them during the war
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I saw the doctor for my regular checkup. I go to John Storch, and
since I’ve managed to reach the age of 91, I guess he knows what he’s
doing.
I knew John’s father, who was a World War II ace. I thought he was
the first ace of the war. That wasn’t John’s memory, but he did allow
his father shot down 11 planes.
It’s probably hard for the younger generation to realize just what
an amazing feat that was. They’re used to things like the war in
Iraq, where missiles launched from miles away can take down an
airplane. In those days, it was much more like the gunfight at the
O.K. Corral. Enemies were yards, not miles, apart.
The conversation about John Storch Sr. reminded me of the
remarkable people I met during the war. For some reason, Adm. Chester
Nimitz selected me to be on his staff, and as a result, I became the
chief press censor. This threw me in with all the writers covering
the war in the Pacific, people like Robert Ruark, who went on to
write “Something of Value,” and St. Claire McElway of “New Yorker”
fame. I got on well with most of them because I took a pretty liberal
view of what I let through.
The only one who gave me a hard time was Frank Tremaine. He worked
for one of the news services and he was always pushing the line.
Almost every day, there was some violation, and I would cheerfully
have tossed him off the ship except he was bigger than I was.
Instead, I spent idle hours plotting how an artfully placed banana
peel might accomplish the task.
We were getting ready for the big push on Japan, the battle that
was going to end the war and cost us, as we were told at the time, a
million casualties. I was being sent to Washington for a briefing,
and then I would return to the fleet, where I hoped I wouldn’t be one
of the million.
Suddenly, my orders were changed. I was going to have a day off to
be with my family in California, and then my wife was going to be
allowed to accompany me to Washington.
Whom did I have to thank for this? My old nemesis, Frank Tremaine.
He had pulled strings to make it happen. I was very glad then that my
nefarious plotting against him had never gotten past the drawing
stage.
As we bounced around the Pacific, I ended up rooming with a number
of different people. For a few days, I bunked with Adm. Raymond
Spruance. He spent most of his time moving tiny model ships around a
big map of the ocean. He would set them up in one configuration and
study that, and then rearrange them and ponder his new set up. He was
widely acknowledged as a naval genius, the one who would craft the
plan to win the war, so I tried not to think of how much he looked
like a boy playing with his tin soldiers.
Another time, I roomed with Chestie Puller, recipient of four gold
medals. We were on some island or another, and there was one woman on
the entire island. To say she was homely would be kind, but a woman
is a woman, and Chestie and I set out to vie for her attention.
Chestie was a big man with a chest like a pouter pigeon and a bona
fide war hero. I was a skinny guy who drew lines through writers’
copy. Didn’t matter. She had no use for either one of us, and we left
the island with our virtues intact.
I also roomed with Gene Tunney, the boxer who took the
championship from Jack Dempsey and then won their rematch in the bout
famous for the long count. They were doing a goodwill tour in the
Pacific, and at the end of their bit, to give it that extra oomph and
to show his confidence in our fighting men, Dempsey said, “OK, you
guys. See you next week in Okinawa.”
Somebody had told him that was our next target. They’d forgotten
to tell him it was top secret, and everyone scurried around beating
the bushes in case some Japanese spy was hiding in them.
Fortunately, our initial landing was unopposed, and Dempsey didn’t
have to be hung as a traitor.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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