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02/06/26 08:02 PM #16856    

 

Michael McLeod

Jocko:

lol!


02/07/26 12:22 PM #16857    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

To paraphrase.

Litte black box, little black box.  Begone.  And it came to be, thanks.


02/07/26 02:13 PM #16858    

 

David Mitchell

Black box all gone.

Thank you Janie (or whoever?)

 


02/07/26 11:49 PM #16859    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike,

Any stunned iguanas falling from your trees again down there in the cold of Florida?

Jim

 


02/08/26 12:41 PM #16860    

 

Michael Boulware

Great News!!!!! Steve Hodges is coming to the 60th reunion. We have heard from Steve, John Jackson, Jeanine Eilers, Lorraine Heitchue,  Sheila McCarthy, Brian and Charlotte, Dan Cody, and Bill Reid. The numbers will be growing.

Congratulations to Sue Lally, Joe Gentilini, Theresa Kucsma(Zeyen), Fred Clem, Gus and Mary Kay DiNovo for being the first ones to send in their money. Way to Go.

Of Course, the commitee will be there as well


02/08/26 01:54 PM #16861    

 

Michael McLeod

I just checked the back yard Jim. Couple slowed-down skeeters came at me and the pool deck needs scrubbing but otherwise all clear.

And I haven't heard any neighbors complaining, so I guess Orlando, which is in orange county, mid state,  dodged the bullet this time. 

And ordinarily we are the part of the state that gets the cold temps and the iguana drops, but this time around, the counties south of us and on the coasts got more chill -and consequently more iguana droppage -than we did. I'm kinda disappointed. So much excitement to sit out on our deck chairs drinking mai thai's and watching iguanas hit the dirt.

But I  rounded up the news from elsewhere - a bit further south. 

 

https://gizmodo.com/iguanas-fell-from-trees-during-florida-cold-snap-and-the-numbers-are-staggering-2000718897

:

 

Florida DistributionGreen iguana populations now stretch along the Atlantic Coast in Broward, Martin, Miami-Dade, Monroe and Palm Beach Counties and along the Gulf Coast in Collier and Lee Counties. There have also been reports as far north as Alachua, Highlands, Hillsborough, Indian River and St. Lucie Counties.


02/08/26 01:57 PM #16862    

 

David Mitchell

Too bad about Lindsey Vonn. Breaks my heart.

 

Oh, and I plan on coming this summer too.

 


02/09/26 12:17 PM #16863    

 

John Maxwell

Over two billion lizards dropped? Because of cold temps? That's a lot of pet food. Who scoops them up? Do they die on impact. Or like squirrels, do the bound away in shock? This is most interesting. Who is watching out for the iguana population down there? I had a friend who had one until it kissed her and bit her lip in half. Word to the ladies they're not frogs. So the prince factor is non-existant. Leave them alone. They've had enough trauma.

I am also planning a visit for the reunion. I hope it all works out.

02/09/26 12:56 PM #16864    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Janie et al,

Janet and I are planning to attend the reunion.

Jim

 


02/09/26 05:58 PM #16865    

Joseph Gentilini

Jim H, glad  you and Janet are coming to the reunion.  JOe


02/09/26 11:08 PM #16866    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Joe,

Looking forward to seeing you and all us grey hairs together once again at our 60th!

Hard to believe we are that old 😮!

Jim


02/10/26 01:58 PM #16867    

 

David Mitchell

A while back, I posted a video of my favorite morning song on AFVN (the Armed Forces radio channel in Saigon) - "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" by the Tokens . 

The station always switched to Country music precislely at 5:00 in the afternoon - and led off every evening with this song by Tammy Wynette. 

It still brings back one particular day as we finished up at the refueling tanks in a place called Moc Hoa ("muck wha"). I was spending that day in the front seat of a Cobra gunship (to free up their pilots from hitting their monthly flight hour maximums). As we hovered backwards from the refueling pads, and pulled pitch to climb out toward home, Tammy's voice hit those words - "Stand By Your Man" and it just struck me emotionally.

Funny, what causes those emotional memories.




02/10/26 03:47 PM #16868    

 

David Mitchell

But talk about music. I think the world could use more of this. I personally think this is the finest piece of sung music in existence.

("Nessum Dorma" - from Puccini's Turnandot)




02/10/26 06:45 PM #16869    

 

Michael McLeod

Jack: I think she made up that story so she didn't have to kiss you.


02/11/26 12:22 PM #16870    

 

Michael McLeod

 Every  now and then I go back and look at stories I wrote in my years as a journalist, mostly down her in Florida.

Thought that just this once I'd share one written about 15 years or so ago. As is often the case , I don't remember much about writing it.

It kinda represents how much being a journalist exposed me to people who live well outside the comfy surroundings we were fortunate enough to enjoy.

This piece ran in the orlando sentinel quite a few years ago. Pierson is a small town in north Florida.

just thought you'd enjoy a look at a world far different than the one we enjoyed. my work as a journalist would often humble me and open my eyes and I say to myself dang I was lucky. Dang we were spoiled.

 

PIERSON — The office where Guillermo Martinez works is a cramped, bare-bones arrangement of overflowing filing cabinets and folding chairs, jammed tightly against tables and desks.

But someone was careful to make a place on the cinderblock walls for two maps of Mexico, along with portraits of the pope, Cesar Chavez and Our Lady of Guadeloupe.

The rap sheet on Christopher Columbus has a less-favored place.

“Wanted,” it says beneath the picture. “Grand theft and genocide! Racism. War crimes. 500 + years of globalization.” A postscript at the bottom darkly suggests: “Steal this poster — you’ve stolen everything else.”

Top workideos Rains further batter storm-hit Portugal, thousands evacuated
 








 
 


It’s an alternate view of the explorer that adds to the counter-culture, border-wars atmosphere here at the Farmworker Association of Florida’s field office. The farm workers, most of them Mexican immigrants, come to this place for assistance in disputes with their employers, fern farm owners.

Organizer Martinez looks up from helping a fern cutter who says he was fired after asking for better bathroom facilities. Martinez, a compact man with a heavy black mustache and a resolute air, nods at the portrait of Chavez, the tireless farm-workers advocate.

“We are doing the same work here,” he says.

Pierson is at the center of a three-county area — encompassing Lake, Putnam, and Volusia counties — where roughly 5,000 acres are devoted to the decorative ferns, which flourish in the region’s sandy soil. Since the early ’80s, Mexican immigrants have provided a steady and cheap source of labor, cutting the ferns for about 20 cents a bunch.

 
 

For as long as they’ve been here, the workers have suffered from what people in the area refer to as “fern poisoning” — chronic itching and burning that is mostly on their hands.

Adrian Villegas, who works part time at the farm workers credit union, rolls up a pant leg to point to a dark, spongy area on his leg. It looks like a very bad bruise. He says he has had it for three years, and he thinks that it was caused by pesticide residuals caught in his boot and rubbed against his skin while he was harvesting ferns.

“The doctors do not believe me,” he says. “They give me only cream to rub on the skin.”

Villegas says he still cuts ferns, in spite of the injury. “I have no other choice,” he says.

It is a refrain among many workers, who accept the malady as part of a life whose difficulties don’t compare to those they left behind. They accept it, just as they accept the strangeness of a crop whose seasons are dictated by sentiment, not the sun: The big harvesting months precede Christmas, Valentine’s Day, and Mother’s Day.

Catalino Frias says he got over being puzzled by that long ago.

At 68, Frias is one of the oldest of the workers who cut ferns. He has worked in the area for 20 years after leaving his home in Mexico where he had farmed corn. He points to a trail of white spots between his thumb and forefinger on the back of his right hand, saying through a translator that it is an area that for years has been constantly irritated from cutting ferns.

But then he brightens: In a good month, he will make $500; in a bad month, less than half of that.

He and his wife, Remigia, and a daughter, Julia, both of whom also cut ferns, own a 1985 Mustang between the three of them. They live with four other family members in a one-room house, which they rent for $200 a month.

Yes, yes, says Frias, it would be good to make more money, to have more. He seems embarrassed, for a moment, to be talking about such things.

“We have the necessities. We have a house, we have food, we have clothes; clothes are easy to buy.” He shrugs in resignation. “With money,” he says, “there are always problems.”

His daughter is equally stoical, though she says that, in addition to the skin irritation, she suffers from cramps, dizziness and numbness after picking ferns.

It is a good life, she says, but adds that when she talks to her own three daughters, she tells them:

“Study hard, or this will be your life, too.”


02/11/26 02:38 PM #16871    

 

Michael Boulware

I woulld like everyone to know about Bill Reid. He sent a check for $500 for our reunion. Bill wrote" There maybe some classmates who can"t afford the $60 fee, so this should cover them". Bill is an example of the type of people that we all should strive to be.

Bill, I noticed you mailed the check on February 3; I just received it. Our postal delivery system has been hampered by horrible weather. I will get it in bank and THANK YOU.


02/11/26 03:41 PM #16872    

Joseph Gentilini

Bill Reid - thanks for doing that for some classmates who couldn't pay - so generous of you.  joe


02/11/26 09:41 PM #16873    

 

David Mitchell

Mike M.

Very interesting article. And my oh my, yes we were spoiled.

 


02/12/26 11:23 AM #16874    

 

Sheila McCarthy (Gardner)

Two things: FIrst of all, thank you, Bill, for your generosity; second, (if you're counting) The mysterioouis black box is back ..... 


02/12/26 11:51 AM #16875    

 

David Mitchell

Yes Sheila, it is back.


02/13/26 10:16 AM #16876    

 

Michael McLeod

Back to black for me too.

by the way  thanks dave for the compliment - and just for taking the time to read and, hopefully, enjoy it.

For a stretch of my time at the orlando sentinel I wrote a men's column. yes, we had a women's column, too.

Both ran weekly in the lifestyle section of the orlando sentinel. looking back now I realize how lucky I was to get that gig.

I might scrounge around and see if I can find one that folks might find amusing. They weren't very long.


02/13/26 11:42 AM #16877    

 

Michael Boulware

I have instructions from the bank. When you send me the $60 check for our reunion, please make it payable to: Watterson Class of 1966, Jane Blank. Janie set up the account and it is her name. If you already paid, NO PROBLEM!!! All of the checks went through and are in the account ready to be used for our 60th.

If you run into any of our clasmates, please mention the July 25th date.


02/13/26 02:06 PM #16878    

 

David Mitchell

Here is another chapter in two parts. I hope this isn't too much for the Forum.

 

 

17 - PHIL TRIES TO GET ME KILLED  

                        - Four Passes Is Enough !

 

 

         We were working out of Vi Thanh (again) one day and had just finished our lunch break when somebody heard a call on the radio. An important enemy sighting had just been made and we needed to get after it ASAP! I was flying one of the two Scout team Leads with Paul Patry (again) as my Wing. Our Air Mission Commander that day was my good friend Phil Lange, who was flying as our AMC for his very first time. He had plenty of hours as the co-pilot of that ship, and by this time he was either a very senior First Lieutenant, or a new Captain. It wasn’t like he was unfamiliar with our operating tactics, but he had yet to actually “run” the mission himself until this day.

 

(Recall, we still have another team of Cobras and Loaches, plus our four “Slicks” staying behind on the runway if needed.)

 

            The next team - 2 Cobras, 2 Loaches (my team) and the C&C all cranked up in a hurry and took off in the direction of the reported sighting. We got an accurate compass direction, and it had been estimated about ten minutes out. But in a mere 5 minutes or so we were approaching this one singular small cluster of trees in the midst of otherwise wide-open rice paddy landscape. I was already at low level, and I adjusted my flight path straight toward that clump of trees - a square island of trees about a half the size of a football field. They were a type of deciduous trees (cannot recall their name) with tiny narrow leaves and thin upright branches that one could not easily see through from the side, but see clearly down through them from above. 

 

            As I passed over them, we could clearly see a large circle of about 15 or 18 men, all in black pajamas, sitting on the ground in a large circle with legs crossed. And just outside the circle were several groups of three and four AK-47s leaned together in “tee pee” style clusters.

 

            As surprised as we were to have found them so quickly, we seemed to have also surprised them as we approached. They had just begun to scramble to their feet and lunge for their weapons as we crossed over the top of them. As they scrambled, a few of them got off a couple of bursts of fire (that distinct “crackling” sound of their AK-47s), before we were already passed over this small, wooded area. I had never seen that many VC in one place before, and their circular seating made me think we had caught them in some sort of cadre meeting.

 

            Anyway, we took a brief burst of fire from them as we flew over and Phil (that day’s new AMC) called the “guns” to make their usual rocket run on them - the usual one or two dives, firing their wing pod-mounted rockets and hosing down the area with their mini-guns. Meanwhile my Wing, Paul and I circled shortly out of range as normal to await the results.

 

            And of course, Phil’s voice came over the radio. “Okay One Eight, can you guys go back in and check it out?” Normal procedure for us two Scouts to follow up and assess the damage.

 

            The “second pass” is often the most dangerous and creates the most anxiety for us Loach pilots. We now know they are down there. And we know that they are now waiting for us, fingers on their triggers - and that they know that we know they are there. It becomes a sort of a game of nerves. Sort of like, “Here we come - we know you’re there - stop us if you can.”

 

            So back over this large group of VC go Paul and I, with the expected results. I called out -“Cevein’ fire, cevein’ fire. One-Eight’s receiving’ fire!”  This second pass we took far more automatic weapons fire than I had ever encountered before. And again, the gunships go into their next dive after we are clear and pepper the trees with heavy rocket and mini-gun fire.

 

            Now our (new) AMC, Phil calls out, “Okay One-Eight, you can go back in and check it out again.” I had seldom had to go back over a live target three time before, and this was making me pretty nervous. But back in over the trees we went, with even scarier results. Now we are flying through the most intense amount of automatic weapons fire I had ever encountered as a scout pilot. I was just thankful this little forest area was so small, and we were over it and beyond it so quickly each time we passed over it.

 

            After yet another “run” by our “gunships”, Phil says “Okay One-Eight, let’s go back in and check it out.” By now I was well past being scared. I was angry. I don’t recall any of us Scouts ever having to make four passes over a “live” target. By his time, we were usually looking to insert troops to surround the trees and let them finish it as a small ground operation.          

                                                                                                                                                                            As we circled back towards the trees, I called out to Paul, “One-Nine, don’t follow me directly. When I zig, you zag, and we are going over at really high speed this time. You got it?”

 

“Paul answers with a brief “Copy that” (yes - I understand) and in we go for our fourth pass. This time it was like we were flying through what I call “upside down rain”. I had never seen so much AK fire before, and finally, at about 90 knots (103+ mph), I took two hits in one of my rotor blades - a small miracle I thought later.

 

 Just as we began that last pass, I was struck with a memory. I recalled being at the Ohio State Fair with my dad for the first time about 1953. I must have been five years old, and we were on my first Ferris wheel ride. As we swung up over the top I started screaming and crying – terrified of the height. My Dad said, “Don’t look down. Look straight out in the distance and don’t look down.”  It worked. I was able to look out in the distance and avoid crying. 

 

It worked then and it worked again now. I looked out way beyond the tree line and avoided the panic of looking down at the VC directly beneath us. 

 

TBC


02/13/26 05:27 PM #16879    

Joseph Gentilini

Once again, David and Mike, I love your stories and your writings. Thanks for sharing  yourself in this way. 

I love this message Forum - it keeps us in touch with each other.  

 


02/13/26 06:39 PM #16880    

 

David Mitchell

 

PHIL TRIES TO GET ME KILLED - conclusion

 

After Phil calls the “guns” back in for yet another rocket run, he calls me again. “One Eight, ya wanna go back in and check it out?” Now even as I was about to disagree, there would be a proper protocol for my answer - something like - “Comanche Two, this is Comanche One-Eight, I’d advise that due to this enemy strength, we should try inserting troops with our Lift platoon” - (normal procedure).  But I was past any concerns about protocol. I was now scared out of my mind and really pissed off at my pal Phil. 

 

            My actual response was (yelling into my microphone) “Phil (we never used names on the air) No, Man! I’m not going back in there. We know what we’re dealin’ with. We’re in over our heads here. We need to go to plan B and call the Slicks to bring troops out here!”

 

            A prolonged moment of radio silence. Then Phil’s voice with a vague and surprised tone of voice, “Yeah - Oh yeah. Sure. That’s a good idea. We’ll call the slicks.... Yeah.”  

 

            It hit me that Phil had gotten frozen in the moment and had no idea what to do next until I yelled at him. As this occurred to me, I suddenly felt overwhelmed with relief and burst out laughing in the cockpit.   Whew!

 

            I teased Phil for years to come about trying to get his buddy killed.

 

Note: At a reunion I organized in 2014, I brought this story up with Phil again. He had no memory of this incident whatsoever. That really puzzled me. It wasn’t long after that that his wife learned he was experiencing early Alzheimer’s, which he finally succumbed to a few years later. 

                                       

Damn - why is it always the good guys?

 

My good buddy Phil Lange

 

                                    


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