In the twight light of life, one goes about recalling old friends. One of those is Dick Mickley.
I first met Dick at Officer Training School (OTS) at Lackland Air Force Base, TX. Lackland is located in San Antonio, and it has no runways; it is strictly a training facility. It rests up on a hill across from and adjacent to Kelly Air Force Base, no longer an active duty facility. The Texas Air National Guard still operates from Kelly but the San Antonio Air Material Center, a one time employer of thousands is long closed as a budgetary action. It was closed by BRET, Base Realignment taskforce that closed a number of facilities for all services across our great nation. I am sad to say, it is closed forever now, much of the facility is disbanded, abandoned or otherwise in disrepair and well on its way to total rot. Lackland remains a going thing where new officers and enlisted go through basic training of sorts.
The fateful day was August 10, 1963 when I entered OTS with a host of others and one of which was Dick and another was Bob Cooke. We were in the same initial flight together. Dick, a prior service man, was quickly scarfed up and sent to the OT Staff. He was after all a sharp cadet, knew his way around and had been to Lackland before (as a basic trainee). Bob and I, on the other hand were the great unwashed and were remanded to be fodder for the Training Officer.
We have long forgotten many of those who were with us. Names like Poteet come back, a pimply faced lean tall Cajun was one. He was cashiered out in short order. There were others. We started with 16 fellows and I think only eight of us got commissioned. I recall one cadet that self initiated elimination and they made him do two years of enlisted service. It was so bad, that our flight was disbanded when the next class appeared.
We were then considered upper classmen. We were absorbed by another flight and learned that the Training Officer was much more amenable. Our Captain was bucking for promotion (and I don't think he made it either, he was too stiff and to hard on his minions). At least, I think he was canned as a TO.
Bob and I were destine to be OTS 2nd LTs, that is the bottom of the barrel thanks to that TO. Dick, our buddy, on the other hand, was out of the clutches of the dreaded Captain and flourished as a member of the OT staff. He was, I believe, an OT Lt Colonel, way above Bob and I.
Dick and Bob were both from Ohio. Bob from Cleveland and I think Dick from central Ohio. He went to a small college, Wooster or the like. And he was a couple of years older than we were.
Bob and I have long been corresponding. He and his family actually visited my mother and father in Louisiana. I never had the honor of doing the same as I only made to Cleveland area well after retiring from the USAF and his parents were long gone by then. I visited with Bob while he was stationed at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida once.
After I retired, I looked up Bob. He had run afoul of a Brigadier General in Iran and that ensured he would never get promoted beyond Major. He was a Distinguished Graduate of Squadron Officers School, I barely made it through the place. He was and is a brilliant man, graduating from Case Western Institute in Cleveland in the College of Business. His degree was in computers, today, he would be considered a computer engineer.
Unfortunately, Bob and his wife divorced, but he remains quite close to his children. I found him living close to Eglin Air Force Base and visited with him once. Bought him a steak dinner. He began working for H & R Block, and has been there for more than 12 years now. He is a retired Major, his wife has remarried to a Lt Col retiree. He likes his job in that he has three months of intense work and then nine months of relaxed work. He is the senior guy and takes care of the software and does tax audits on their prepared returns.
We reminisced about Dick and I chased him down. We have reopened a dialogue with Dick, now a lay Presbyterian preacher and semi-retired lawyer that lives in Marysville, OH but a stone's throw from Wright Patterson Air Force Base and Dayton, OH. Had I but known, and we could have gotten together back when we were stationed there.
We were all commissioned 2nd Lieutenants in the USAF on 5 November 1963. Dick got out after six years, Bob did 20 years and I stayed around for 26 years. Dick was surprised to learn that I was a Colonel. A long way for a OTS 2nd Lt to rise.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment