Monthly Archives: May 2015

Wednesday, May 20, 2015 – Meet Corporal J. V. McClanahan, World War II Vet

Wednesday, May 20, 2015 – Meet Corporal J. V. McClanahan, World War II Vet

You read about Doc Matthews and Mr. Ray Halliburton in previous posts.  Please meet my veteran, Mr. J. V. McClanahan.  On an Honor Flight each veteran is assigned an escort. I had the honor to escort J.V.

He turned 18 years old in October 1944. He, like all 18 year MEN of the time, was drafted into the United States Army. At the conclusion of basic training, he was sent oversees. His unit joined Patton’s Third Army as the Battle of the Bulge began. On March 2, 1945 J V was taken prisoner and spent the time until VE Day in May 1945 in a German POW camp.

    JV waving from bus (800x530)

When telling some stories, he noted the irony of his capture – Texas Independence Day.

Question “Did you ever try to escape?”

No, a couple of us thought about it and actually marched at the end of the line a couple of times when we were being moved around, but another fellow had tried and was beaten, so we decided not to try.

DRD JV at Pillar (800x530)

Lincoln from WWII (800x530)

The World War II Memorial sits between The Lincoln Memorial and The Washington Monument. The three monuments symbolize Freedom, the Defense of it, and the Price paid for it

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One enters the WWII Memorial through the Pacific pillar because World War II for The United States began there. As I walked through the pillar I had a strange feeling as I looked down at my big NIKON camera around my neck and remembered I drive a Japanese made car.

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Upon entrance – to the right is The Freedom Wall.

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Teachers (800x530)

Teacher interviewing him with her IPAD.

Major Gen Richard Stone (800x530)

General Richard Stone, one of many generals who lined up to shake the hands of the veterans.

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Question “Do you ever think about “things” you saw?”

Not much any more, but all of the things you ever heard happened and I did see some of them.  I just remember how cold it was. I will never forget that. On cold days it takes me back to the time. 

After his return he became a plumber. And not just the household variety. He retired as Manager of Plumbing at M.D. Anderson in Houston.

Question – Did that mean you oversaw all of the waste disposal from the hospital?

Yes, I sometimes had to supervise waste disposal from the operating rooms. Not your ordinary flush (laughing).

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Because of his POW status J. V. was one of the first to return to The United States. He returned on the Queen Mary. Upon his return married Thelma, pictured with him here. They still live in Luling, Texas where they help care for their two great-great-grandchildren.

J. V. and I talk on the phone about once a month.  I have not seen he or Thelma in about a year.  Thelma makes a chocolate chip cookie that rivals my Mother’s.  In fact, Thelma makes the best desserts I have ever tasted. I see a trip to Luling in the near future.

In the winter months I don’t think about being cold much anymore.  I have a warm coat and the freedom to wear it wherever I want to because J.V. McClanahan, Ray Halliburton and thousands more like them sacrificed so I could.  Thank you.

SPONSOR A WORLD WAR II VETERANS ON AN HONOR FLIGHT.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015 – Memorial Day and More Stories from The Greatest Generation

Tuesday, May 19, 2015 – Memorial Day and More Stories from The Greatest Generation

1915  – The 100the anniversary of the start of World War I. (The triggering event (no pun intended) took place the previous year, but actual declarations and opening shots began in 1915).

1945 – May 16 – VE – Day – The 70th anniversary of the end of World War II

1975 – April 30 – The 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon.

Between today and Friday I will be posting some Memorial Day posts about some heroes from The Greatest Generation and My Generation.

You met Lt. Colonel Tom Matthews, Fighting Texas Aggie Class of ’51 on May 12. Dr. Matthew is on the left. Today, please met Mr. Ray Halliburton. And yes, Mr. Halliburton is a relative of those Halliburtons (Google them).  Mr. Ray is in the middle. Tomorrow you will meet the man on the right.

Matthews, Halliburton and McC

Mr. Ray still lives in Lulling, Texas, but I understand his health is deteriorating rapidly.  He, like all of the other WWII vets, speak to the urgency to get WWII Vets to see the THEIR Memorial through Honor Flights. Here are some photos with a bit of Mr. Ray’s history.

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He served in General George Patton’s Third Army in the Battle of the Bulge.  He was 19 years old. In December 1944 in the Ardennes the Third Army frustrated the German counteroffensive as it swept into Germany and into Czechoslovakia. Mr. Halliburton was taken prison in Germany and spent the remainder of the war in a POW camp.

He returned to Lulling where he farmed and raised a family.  He had never been to Washington D.C. until the Honor Flight. I love the expression on his face.

Mr. Ray with U.S. Senator John Coryn from Texas.    However, everyone who saw the second photo said, “Now that is more like what Mr. Ray would be doing. Telling the Senator what he thinks about things.” Notice Senator Coryn seems to be taking in all in.

066067137 Here he is with Robyn, his escort at the Iwo Jima statue. For you Marines out there, he said “Never would have made it without the Marines.”

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Students and teachers (and everybody else who saw the veterans) swarmed them like rock stars.  Here is Ray and another veteran answering questions.

Tomorrow you will meet the soldier I had the honor of being with on the Honor Flight.

Remember,  these and all the other brave individuals are why we celebrate Memorial Day.

Monday, May 18, 2015 – Graduation, Family & Bikers

Monday, May 18, 2015 – Graduation, Family & Bikers

“What a wild, wacky weekend in Waco,” she said with alliteration. I stole today’s title from Great Niece Courtney’s tweet.  She is one of my new followers on Twitter. She joins several new FFs. (Facebook Friends). Fortunately and thankfully my trip to Waco only involved the first two descriptors.  What a tragedy. I bet the Waconians (?) thought Stephen King’s The Stand was taking place.

But for my new social media friends – Welcome to Here’s What I’m Thinking.  Here are my rules. They are always subject to change.

I write a post everyday Monday through Friday and maybe Saturday and/or Sunday if something happens to interest me. I try to post around late morning unless I play golf. If the rains ever cease and I can play golf again, postings will appear in the afternoons. Note: “around late morning” is from the bureaucratic time zone – the one used by state and federal agencies.

I write mostly about college football (and a few other sports), the Texas educational institution, politics and anything else my great mind thinks about.  Just because it appears to be sports oriented does not always mean it is about sporting event, itself. I say this for the Sports Challenged who do not follow sports.  I may critique and rank the college football uniforms for that Saturday. For example from last fall “Is it just me or do the Texas Tech football helmets look like the Dairy Queen logo?”

Topics range from snarky to moving.  Remember my sister reads this daily.  So try to refrain from using the F word too often. My family only tends to use it around her when there is a bear chasing one of us in Alaska.

To get people to read what I write I created this mission statement – aka my business plan.

If I have known you in the past, know you now or will know you in the future, I WILL write about you.  There is a high statistical probability that what I write about you will be positive.  But are you willing to risk that you fall outside the standard deviation and are written in a negative light and not read Here’s What I’m Thinking?  Those who do not read, will be written about.

The intent is to make at least one person think and/or laugh daily.  I am not responsible if coffee, red wine or any other substance hits your computer screen while laughing or crying.

I try to be bipartisan snarky, but the political writings do lean left and tend to be more blue oriented than red.  And sorry, Greg, Courtney, Principal Judy, et al, they lean far to the Maroon and White rather than the burnt orange.  I anxiously await your snappy comebacks.

Jennifer, check out some previous posts with me and Reveille VIII or the implosion of the West Side.  Yes, me and 7000, at 6:30 AM on a Sunday morning to watch a wall full of memories fall.  Why? Because we are the Aggies. That and money and better ESPN angles for football games. It is amazing what a Heisman Trophy will bring, isn’t it Baylor? And we get to play on real TV. (Paraphrase to Chancellor John Sharp), but I understand The University is booked until 2027.

Remember, you do not have to like anything I am thinking.  The goal of a writer is to evoke emotions. (A big shout out to Mrs. Traugh and Mrs. Burnside for teaching me that in high school and I did not split my infinitive either.)

Comments are most welcome even if you have a different point of view or perspective.  It is a diverse world.  Remember the site is called Here’s What I’m Thinking, not Here’s What I Believe.  Often the postings are parodies or satires.  It is written on multiple levels with multiple items embedded.

You can access the site by going to Drdrd85.me and one does not have to go through social media (i.e. Facebook or Twitter).

Originally, the site was modeled after the vanity cards, at the end of Chuck Lorre and Bill Prady productions.  Many are aware my favorite TV show that is not on ESPN is The Big Bang Theory. The vanity cards are the paragraphical writings on the cards that flash at the end of the program.  Mine were supposed to be “bathroom” in length, meaning one should be able to read what I writing during an ordinary visit to the bathroom or about 500 words. But sometimes I become verbose. But hey, I have a PhD. That is how we talk – long and boring – just like I did now.

Anyway, hopefully there is a little something for everyone.   Thanks for reading.

 

 

 

Friday, May 15, 2015 – “Are We There Yet?” said the Snark

Friday, May 15, 2015 – “Are We There Yet?” said the Snark

To all my friends and colleagues’ who were and especially those who bravely continue to be in the institution commonly called – K-12 Public Education:

Remember when we used to say “The Legislature wants schools to do more with less. However, someday they will ask us to do it all with nothing.”

Are we there yet?  I believe so. Once again the boys and girls of Texas get one of the simple machines from the Texas Legislature.

For your daily assessment, select from the following which simple machine the public schools were given by the Texas Legislature.

(a) Lever

(b) Wedge

(c) Wheel and Axle

(d) Pulley

(e) Inclined plane

(f) Screw

Thursday, May 14, 2015 – Hidebound – The Word for the Day

Thursday, May 14, 2015 – Hidebound – The Word for the Day

Every day for some reason I reason I receive the word of the day from dictionary.com in my email.

The word for May 12 was hidebound.

Hidebound means:

  1. narrow and rigid in opinion; inflexible: a hidebound pedant.
  2. oriented toward or confined to the past; extremely conservative: a hidebound philosopher

With the word of the day comes the use in a quotation and the origin of the word.

Quotes

I never saw a man so distressed as you were by my will; unless it were that hidebound pedant, Lanyon, at what he called my scientific heresies.

— Robert Louis Stevenson, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, 1886

Origin

Hidebound entered English in the mid-1500s as a descriptor for malnourished cattle. It joins the words hide meaning “the pelt or skin of one of the larger animals” and bound meaning “made fast as if by a band or bond.”

As this is Texas and we assess everything in education, here is your assessment question.

For the writing portion, write a paragraph answering the following question:

Doesn’t this sound like the Texas Legislature?

 

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 – “An Embarrassment to FSU?”

UPDATE: 11:36 am

Thank you, RL, for discovering the error in today’s posting.  I realized it just as you called it to my attention. For the rest of you, you must take the assessment to see if you caught the error.

Ready? Begin.

Select the response that does not belong in the following statement:

In today’s post on Here’s What I’m Thinking, I

(a) Can still graduate from high school  if a selected committee says “OK” even though I cannot pass the STAAR test.

(b) Did not get out of the Wayback Machine yesterday and should have said the former FSU coach talking about The Embarrassment.

(c) Should have said Fisher continued to allow it in order to win and  “Jimbo Fisher” grow a pair.

(d) Decided for some reason to have crab legs for lunch.

(e) I was really just seeing if anyone on Twitter, FB, or DRDRD85.me was reading and paying attention.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 – “An Embarrassment to FSU?”

Did you see where Bobby Bowden said “I think it’s a consensus among FSU fans and boosters that he (Jameis Winston) was an embarrassment to Florida State University?” Note: for the NCAA Division I College Football Challenged, Bobby Bowden is the head football coach at Florida State University.

Here’s what I’m thinking. You now say the quarterback embarrassed the school. Yet, Coach Bowden, you allowed the embarrassment of a major academic university to continue as The Embarrassment helped you and FSU, win a national championship, win a Heisman Trophy and bring buckets full of money and exposure to the institution.

So let me see if I understand.  You will allow, ignore, look the other way, or do whatever, regardless of the allegations to win football games.  What kind of message does that send? Maybe Jameis Winston is not the only embarrassment to Florida State University.   You and Tom Brady both need to grow a pair and keep them inflated and do what is right and ethical.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015 – The Oldest Living World War II Veteran

Did you know the oldest living World War II veteran is 109 year old Richard Overton? And he lives in Austin, Texas. Mr. Overton served in the all-black 1887th Aviation Engineer Battalion from 1942 until 1945. Unfortunately, I only know Mr. Overton via the news.

Did you know that World War II veterans are passing away at a rate of almost 900 PER DAY?

With Memorial Day approaching, I think about all who serve and sacrifice.  Notice the present tense is intentional.

If I were to die today, I would be proud to say that I knew Major Thomas W. Matthews. You will hear more about him and two others from World War II in the coming days.  Lieutenant Matthews was a pilot.  After the war ended, 70 years ago this month, he went to the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College in College Station and became a veterinarian.  He practiced until he was in his late 80’s. He rose the rank of Lt. Colonel in the Air Force Reserves.

Here is a photo of Dr. Matthews and me at the World War II Memorial in Washington D.C.

Dr. Mathews and Duffey

It was taken on the maiden Honor Flight from Austin, June 2012 taking veterans to visit their World War II Memorial. This photo was in the Texas Aggie magazine of March/April 2013. It was said that Dr. Matthews showed the picture to any and all at every VFW meeting and anyone who would stop and listen. I heard he carried the magazine with him at all times. Dr. Matthews passed away at age 90 July 15, 2013, shortly after the magazine came out.

What can you say you have done for a World War II veteran, Purple Heart recipient and hero?

You can read about Dr. Tom and his life at http://www.purpleheartaustin.org/matthews.htm

Joseph Heller’s book, Catch 22, is based on the airmen stationed in Corsica with then, Lt. Matthews.

If nothing else, remember all who served and pray for all who continue to protect us and keep freedom for us. If you see a soldier today, pat them on the back and say “Thank you.” They are indeed, The Greatest Generation.

Monday, May 11, 2015 – Who’ll Stop The Rain?

Monday, May 11, 2015 – Who’ll Stop The Rain?

Raining (Storming) Trivia Monday – what group sang Who’ll Stop the Rain? Extra credit if you know you wrote the song.

Long as I remember the rain been comin’ down

Clouds of mystery pourin’ confusion on the ground.

Good men through the ages tryin’ to find the sun.

And I wonder still I wonder who’ll stop the rain.

I went down Virginia seekin’ shelter from the storm

Caught up in the fable I watched the tower grow

Five year plans and new deals wrapped in golden chains.

And I wonder still I wonder who’ll stop the rain.

Heard the singers playin’, how we cheered for more.

The crowd had rushed together tryin’ to keep warm.

Still the rain kept pourin’, fallin’ on my ears

And I wonder, still I wonder who’ll stop the rain.

Who’ll Stop The Rain is track #6 on the album More Creedence Gold by Creedence Clearwater Revival. It was written by John C. Fogerty.

Friday, May 8, 2015 – Snark Attack

Friday, May 8, 2015 – Snark Attack

What has the Texas Legislature and Governor done for the people of Texas this week?

Open carry of handguns is shooting forward through session.

The Governor said he would sign a bill saying “clergy do not have to service people whose belief structure is against theirs.” Note: this is fancy bullshit language for discrimination and bigotry. And this has nothing to do with where people go to the bathroom.

Then the Governor decided to send the Texas State Guard to protect the people of Bastrop County from The Attack of the Federal Government. Was the Texas State Guard the military branch W. Bush was in?

And then to add sprinkles to the cupcakes, Texas State Representative David Simpson, REPUBLICAN from Longview, filed a bill Monday that would repeal the state’s ban on growing, possessing and selling marijuana – something he believes God intended.

Here are some quotes attributed to Mr. Simpson: “I don’t believe that when God made marijuana he made a mistake that government is to fix.” Or how about, “Civil government should value everything God made and leave people alone unless they meddle with their neighbor.” And finally, albeit taken out of context somewhat “All that God created is good, including marijuana.”

Am I the only one finding this triad worrisome? Hand guns, bigots and pot, Oh My!  I hope there are enough sane people around when the zombie apocalypse takes place.

Thursday, May 7, 2015 – The National Day of Prayer

Thursday, May 7, 2015 – The National Day of Prayer

Today is the National day of Prayer.

The National Day of Prayer was established as an annual event in 1952 by a joint resolution of the United States Congress and signed into law by President Harry S. Truman. The observance of the National Day of Prayer is founded on the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and freedom of religion and can be celebrated by all Americans.

The National Day of Prayer 2015 Will Focus on 1 Kings 8:28: ‘Lord, Hear Our Cry.’

President Obama did not cancel the National Day of Prayer. So pray for me as I call those of you who believe he did, Dumbasses.

http://nationaldayofprayer.org/