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A few years back, I asked a friend in the Bay Area to take me by the Oakland docks. My friend had some trouble finding his way in. He'd lived on the East Bay for almost his entire life, and he'd never toured the docks. What we saw was as fresh to him as it was to me - mile after mile of cranes and containerized cargo, Subarus and Sonys and God knows what. And all of it got here by sea. But most of us think the stuff just shows up in showrooms and stores in St. Louis.
When we think about it at all. And if our maritime-nation status is way off in the back of our minds, so is the Navy that protects that status.
Oh, sure, America has its Navy towns -but not nearly so many as it once did. And a lot of those Navy towns are stuck off in some coastal corner. Bangor, Washington. Kings Bay, Georgia. Those places aren't exactly Brooklyn, or Philadelphia, or Boston, or San Francisco.
The only sailors most Americans ever see is the chief at the recruiting station. Think about it. Here in St. Louis, we see a lot of the Army, thanks to the kids in ill-fitting uniforms who come and go from Fort Leonard Wood through Lambert Field. And although we see less of the Air Force, we're aware that it's just across the river, at Scott Air Force Base.
But the sea services? The Marine Corps is small, and far away. The Navy is big, but it, too, is far away -- on the coasts, in places like Norfolk and San Diego, places we rarely visit. And then, as I said, when we do make contact with the Navy, we're up against an institution that draws most of its vocabulary and traditions from the Royal Navy of a century and half ago - from Victorian England. To i people like me, sometimes, it seems quaint -people saying Aye aye, sir; instead of Yessir, and talking about port and , starboard, instead of left and right. But sometimes, it seems downright alien. On a sunny day I in December 1991, I was chatting with some lookouts on the battleship Missouri, bound for Pearl Harbor for the 50th anniversary observance. We were on the flying bridge, or whatever it is that you people call the open bridge on top of the enclosed bridge. Like most young military people dealing with reporters, they asked whether I had prior military experience. Yes, I told them, I had once been an infantry platoon leader in the Army in Germany. They asked me what I thought of the Navy. I said, "Good chow". They nodded. And I said, but I can't get over the class system. They asked what I meant.
I said, Well, in the Army, I wore the same fatigue uniform as the enlisted men. When they got muddy, I got muddy. When they got cold, I got cold. And when the chow truck came out to the field, the other officers and I stood at the end of the line. If the chow ran out, we went without. The sailors' eyebrows rose. I continued, if I'd ever had an enlisted man wait on me the way they do in the wardroom, I'd have been court martialed. And don't the officers ever talk to you guys? Does everything go through the chiefs?
Just then, the lookout with headphones barked, XO on the bridge! Away flew the cigarettes. Up shot the binoculars. I don't know if those kids could have spotted a Soviet submarine ambush. But the XO never had a chance.
(Continued on page 5)
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