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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here. ©
2002 The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Veterans
reunite in Sisters
Jack Kinsey invited
a couple of old friends to Sisters last week -- friends who haven't all
been together since 1946, when they were stationed in north China with the
6th Marine Division.
Kinsey, Ralph Meyerdick (Sun
City, California) and Vic McIntire (East Lake, Ohio) were members of the
32nd Special Battalion of Seabees -- the Navy's construction outfit, which
handled tasks from unloading ships to building hospitals and air strips
during World War Two.
After war's end, back in '46,
they were helping the Marines repatriate Japanese soldiers and their families
who had been occupying that part of China since 1938.
North China wasn't all dreary
duty. The Seabees were stationed in a nicely built European-style compound
built by the Germans during the Boxer Rebellion at the turn of the century.
There was a nice stadium there,
where the Navy boys took on the 6th Marines in the memorable New Year's
Day, 1946, Rice Bowl football game.
The Marines won on the final
play -- a tipped ball that fell into a receiver's arms.
Football was a passion for
the three friends.
At the end of their tour of
duty, "we pretty much knew what we wanted to do -- we wanted to go to
school and play football," Kinsey said.
The GI Bill allowed that to
happen and all three went on to careers in education and coaching.
The men saw each other individually
a couple of times in the intervening years, but this was the first opportunity
all three men and their wives had gotten together.
The men enjoyed their reminiscence,
each one's memories triggering a memory in another.
They recalled a terrible typhoon
in the fall of 1945 that pushed huge tankers 100 yards ashore in the Philippines.
They recalled salvaging wreckage
from planes that crashed during the campaign in the Philippines.
McIntire remembered the moment
when the cost of combat became clear to him.
He served on a burial detail
that took a body of a young man who had died suddenly of meningitis to
the military cemetery on Leyte Island.
"That was an eye-opener for
me," he said. "White crosses as far as you could see." |
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