FOOTLOCKER– APRÈS VIETNAM

When I returned home, the Air Force decided they didn’t like me anymore. I had gone native and no longer shined my shoes after two years in the sticks. Hair was another issue which became a deal breaker. We parted company in February of 1973 and I went on to drive a cab for Lancaster, California Yellow Cab. That didn’t pan out so I went down to Bermite Powder Co. and applied for a job. Anyone could get a job there And you could meet babes.  I knew no one so this was the perfect social climber job.The other place across the way was Space Ordnance Systems (SOS). It’s title accurately described it. Explosives were their specialty but OSHA safety was several decades away. They used giant mixmasters  to combine lead azide ( a precursor to nitroglycerin). Lead azide was only marginally more stable that the nitro and the Santa Clarita canyon would resonate with a good, solid boom every time one of their mixers went up. They normally were crewed by three guys. Every time they had an explosion, the employment office would post in increments of three.

It was extremely dry and humidity was always low there. The conditions were perfect for making and mixing gunpowder. Unfortunately, those very same conditions caused a lot of static electricity to build up on things. If you reached to touch a piece of equipment, a spark always jumped across. We were all forced to wear a grounding bracelet that connected us to a ground wire. It looked like a leather wrist band with 4 feet of an 18 gauge wire than terminated in an alligator clip- quite handy as a roachclip in those days.

Due to the strenuous conditions and moving around large quantities of the azide meant disconnecting from the grounding system. Failure to “pre-ground” before coming in contact with the mixers was what caused a lot of SOS’ problems. The pay was the same at both places but Bermite was much bigger. This was the height of the Vietnam War. Business was booming at both joints and there was heavy turnover every time something went boom. Something about flying bodies turns off some people. Top pay over at Bermite was as a mechanic for $3.05/hr. That was my calling.

Bermite was building and assembling 60mm and 81 mm mortar flares. In addition,  they manufactured the 505 fuse assembly for 155mm artillery shells. The fuses had our old friend lead azide in them. On break one day in November 73, I watched a fellow take a large tray of these out of a bunker and begin to carry them into the assembly bunker. Bunkers were designed to send explosions vertically inside “explosion walls” to avoid blowing up other buildings adjacent. We all wore aprons to keep azide and magnesium powder from accumulating on our clothes. Nothing was done about shoes.

The fellow had his apron strings untied and tripped over one of them. The aftermath was predictable  He dumped the whole tray on the ground and the explosion obliterated him. We were 30 yards away and it parted our hair. He lasted about 5 minutes-not even enough time for the meat wagon to arrive.. This happened a lot. The 332 building assembled the rocket motors for Sidewinder missiles. It went up in smoke due to “unknown” just before I began working there. My future bride’s sister lost her new husband in that one and became an instant lotto winner for his SSI.

I worked mostly in the 335 building on the line drilling and pinning the tail cones onto the mortar bodies. We only had one scare when a guy dropped one at the end of the line and the propellant went off. It ignited a lot of spilled powder on the floor for 15 minutes and everyone bugged out. Well, almost everyone. I was the lead man on the line so I ran to the explosion. I wrapped my apron around the flare and ran outside dumping it in a half shell 55 gal. tub full of water. The magnesium hadn’t ignited or it would have been a wasted effort. I was almost demoted for that. I violated protocol by running in the wrong direction. I never even got a thank you Nod letter for saving 335.

We used to “requisition” the 81 mm candles and take them home for entertainment. They’d turn night into day for 5 minutes. You could put them in the old fashioned phone booths and slag them down to the pavement. We even took a bunch up to Barstow to my future intended’s 160 acre ranch and lit them off on their dry lake bed. I’m sure this is what prompted all the calls in about UFOs. Army choppers from nearby Fort Irwin would buzz the place for days afterwards.

There were mudpots on the southwest side of the lake. They were liquid vents of boiling mud much like quicksand. You could light a candle and toss them in by their steel parachute lanyard and make the pots belch like mud volcanoes.

The 505 fuses were a different story. There was no safe way to ignite them. My room mate Gary opened one with his trusty P-38 can opener and tried to light it with his Zippo. It  blew all the skin off the back of his hand and didn’t even make a decent boom. I had to drive him to the hospital because he went into shock. What a pussy.

My next door neighbors had a Christmas party and someone who worked in the slurry building had her feet up on the living room table. In the waffle stomper pattern of her boots was almost a pound of dried flare slurry. We dug it all out with car keys and filled the big ash tray on the table with it. It burned the ceiling when we finally got it to ignite. Young folks did stupid things way back then. Working around high explosives was, to me, an opportunity to get all kinds of neat stuff. The C-4 used to propel the 60 mm mortars was a case in point. If you collected enough of the little sewn-together sheets and made a pipe bomb out of it, you could almost send an upside down wheel barrow into orbit.

At a  2008 gun show meet in Puyallup, I spotted one of the 81mm candles for sale. The guy had no clue what he was holding. He took it back to his car after I explained what it was capable of. As you can see, Bermite went out of business in 1987- 14 years after I moved up to Seattle. The odds just weren’t in it to keep working at either outfit. You’d draw the short stick eventually and the money sucked. SOS didn’t fare any better. The best job at either outfit was EOD. We all volunteered for that. You’d drive from building to building in a company truck with a huge piece of braided metal hanging off the axle and touching the ground underneath to keep it grounded. At each building you’d collect all the damaged or misconstructed explosives and cart them to the disposal area in a remote canyon. We’d usually ignite it with a quarter stick of Dupont 40 stump dynamite and a 20 second quick match. Someone decide it was too dangerous so they switched over to detcord just before I left. Those were the good old days.

Here’s a picture of the Bermite Co. housing my future first wife was living in when I met her:

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AFGE OUTTAKES

An AFGE photographer just sent me this outtake he was getting ready to throw away. Fortunately he decided immortalizing one of VA’s finest Human Resources managers on celluloid was almost a crime to pass up. Hence I received this.

Apparently the unnamed  VA employee in higher management had not received enough of the Holy Sacrament near the ice sculpture and misplaced her glass. New member Ron has earned his stripes today for what may become the poster child of Orlando.

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Hep C maps: Access BIG data online

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Map Hep C
source: National Minority Quality Forum

For an overview of HCV demographics, register (name, email, password), agree to “personal use only” of the mapping application, and you can explore HCV prevalence and hospitalization data to 2006.   You can drill down by zip code or whatever parameters you are interested in.  You can search by legislative district too.

I found the site while thinking about the much higher rates of HCV in males for the 45-65 year old demographics.  I think this can be explained, in part, by the fact that very few females joined the military 40 years ago when compared to males.

August 4, 1964 – January 27, 1973
Total who served in all Armed Forces:
 8,744,000

Deployed to Southeast Asia: 3,403,000

In comparison, a VA 2009 press release states:

“About 250,000 women Veterans served in the military during the Vietnam War and about 7,000 were in or near Vietnam.

The VA is requesting about 10,000 female Vietnam Era veterans to participate in a four-year health study.

Those who were in Vietnam, those who served elsewhere in Southeast Asia and those who served in the United States are potential study participants.”

It will be interesting to see the results of this study since the women who did serve were often exposed to blood as healthcare workers.

Ed. note: It would be nice if this site also delves into genotype by geographical distribution in the sixties and seventies to show the predilection for 3A on the Indochinese Peninsula, 2A and 2B  distribution in Korea and Japan, 1B in Europe and of course 1A in the US.

Posted in Guest authors, HCV Health, Nexus Information, Tips and Tricks, Vietnam Disease Issues | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

GARAGE DOORS FOR VETS

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This just in from Da Nang Tombo. Everyone wants that unique signature look-one that no one else on the block would dare  copy. Vets, of course, march to the beat of a different drummer. Yes, no ordinary garage door closure will give them that je ne sais quoi they crave more than one of these babies from VETDOORS™.

Imagine pulling up and hitting the opener knowing all your neighbors are drooling with envy. Witness the TV Vans cruising the block looking at your door. Crime will decrease immediately and there will be noticeably less car and pedestrian traffic in your environs.

Choose from these exciting themes:

Air Force 1

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Air Force 2 for the Covert Tactical bunch

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Air Force 3 for the free-spirited:

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Army/ Marines Heavy Metal types.

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Navy (Brown Water)

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Retired AirAm PICs

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See-Bees

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Homesick homies from Pacoima Lowriders Association stationed at Fort Lewis

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$499.00–FOB Detroit. Dealer prep and destination fees may be extra; Fuel Surcharge Mon.-Friday; Insurance is the responsibility of the purchasor: Not responsible for accidents, drive-by shootings or drunks injured by depictions. All images are copyrighted and intellectual property of VETDOORS™. Custom door designs available on request. Aircraft are merely symbolizations and no warranty as to their airworthiness is created or implied in a contract to purchase. Images are not to scale.

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Bodybuilder champ, Vietnam Veteran Steve Michalik (1949-2012) R.I.P.

My personal trainer is 96-years old.  Twice a week, she runs a 30-minute stretch and strength class using a VHS developed by Steve Michalik over 20 years ago.  It’s called “Fitness after Sixty,” features big band music and mostly chair exercises with weights. You leave feeling better than when you came in. In fact, the participants feel a lot better;  I  conclude that lots of endorphins get released during the actions.

I googled the creator of the program and was sad to learn that he committed suicide last year.  I never found a proper obituary, but the Web contains numerous articles, images, and videos about Mr. Michalik’s career.  He did use steroids and drugs but later gave them up.  But according to one article, he was also stationed in Guam.  At the time I was researching Steve, I read Nod’s post about Agent Orange in Guam and a BVA win for one veteran.   So this father and grandfather, was exposed to many toxins during his lifetime.

Another 2004 article (NYT) said,

“After high school, he volunteered for a tour in Vietnam. While in the Eighth Air Force, he ignored sniper fire and did bench presses in a clearing using a cinder-block barbell.”

That may have been marketing hype but you never know.   At the end of the year, media outlets take note of celebrities who have died.  There has been little attention to Mr. Michalik’s passing outside of boby-building forums.  One wrote:

Steve Michalik Dead at 63
“John DeFendis just confirmed that Steve Michalik has died at the age of 63. He was found by his girlfriend, dead at his home of a self inflicted gunshot wound. He had just recently had a kidney transplant.”

I don’t know if his military service contributed to his decline and demise but regardless, this is sad news.  I’m grateful that he took the time to create an easy but effective low-impact video for seniors.  If you want to exercise your whole body safely, you may be able to find the workout online or in the library.

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1965 Jet gun injector image to save

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Front view of a hand-held jet-injector, also known as a Ped-O-Jet. 

The jet gun’s wide surface area makes it easy to intuit how easily it transmitted  blood-borne pathogens’ DNA and RNA through percutaneous mass vaccinations.   (Latin: “by way of the skin /or through the skin”).  Contrast it with the width of a needle used on just one patient.  It’s also easy to see why these dirty devices had to be withdrawn from military and civilian use.

Would this be a useful photo to include in claims folders and to show to ignorant VA C & P examiners?  An investment in an 8 x 10 enlargement will cost under $5.00.  A color copy costs about $1.00.

Ed. note. You all will be pleased to see that VA is actually starting to adopt our nickname for these (jetguns). I’m starting to see the name pop up more and more frequently. I started using it shortly after I came to the HCVets site when writing up BVA decisions. It sounded more ominous than “pneumatic air inoculation devices”. Since there was more than one brand, it seemed appropriate. Kiedove brings a wonderful perspective to this site with her hard work.

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VA–MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

Here’s the conclusions of the GAO on VA’s hoped for transition to VBMS and the virtual claim in 125 days with 98% accuracy by 2015. Two words. Good Luck.

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HOTS SPRINGS VAMC CLOSURE

 

From the Squidley, South Dakota Newswire

At a time when incredibly large numbers of Vets are entering the civilian ranks (again) as they are wont to do after wars, the need for VA medical care rises exponentially. No more are the existing facilities adequate to the task. Vets are not sub-humans nor should they be treated like Negroes in the post-Civil War south. They are entitled now to several free years of health benefits from VAMCs to ease their transition back into civilian life. If injured, this is a lifetime entitlement. Vets shouldn’t have to choose where to live based strictly on VA’s whims.

After every war, as America’s population grows, it spreads out and covers an ever-larger   geographical area. Let’s examine one. The Hot Springs VAMC, located in western South Dakota for the last 105 years, is a good example. The next-closest VAMC is located north of I-90 up near Ellsworth  AFB. It’s outside of the famous Sturgis, SD motorcycle extravaganza that is put on every August  I’m not sure how many miles away it is from Hot Springs but it’s the only other major VA facility in that neck of the woods.

Hot Springs also has a Veterans Home. The medical facility is designed as a satellite to the  Sturgis facility and serves it’s purpose well. It’s close to the three contiguous corners of Wyoming and Nebraska as well. Since it’s off the beaten path of an Interstate, the Vets who use this probably travel longer, time-wise per mile, to access it as they are using rural roads. It’s certainly a hell of a lot more scenic so I’d drive more slowly. In fact, if you’ve ever driven through  Custer State Park, you’d think they subscribed to Better Housekeeping Magazine. The place looks freshly swept and vacuumed every time I’ve gone through there. It’s the back way off I-90 to Mt. Rushmore if you’re not in a hurry.

Because of this expansive rural setting, Vets tend to congregate more closely to where their medical care is provided. Since this creates a “pocket” of Veterans, it follows that closing a VA medical facility will force a lot of Veterans of limited means to relocate closer to a different one. What, then, of the Veterans Home in Hot Springs? Will the Sturgis facility be offering a daily dustoff back and forth or a meat wagon once a day up State Route 79? Something tells me not to even expect valet service.

Having looked at reducing or eliminating the VA medical in Hot Springs, has the VA even considered how that will impact some of the aforementioned deluge of new Vets now returning to this area? Or future ones?  Closing any VA facility where the need clearly exists is always counterproductive. Not discussing it with the “VA stakeholders” is tantamount to hostile indifference. Yet there you have it. VASEC remained intransigent over this for months. Pleas had been shunted off to the undersecretary where purposeful misunderstandings (as only the VA can misconstrue) seem to crop up with regularity. This creates the “he said- she said” vitriol that distracts everyone from the problem-the imminent loss of Hot Springs VAMC.  We shall see what develops. I’d be willing to bet that he has to pull his horns in. The other scenario is he “retires” by punting on 4th and 15 from his own 25 yd. line to the next VASEC. This is a lose-lose for him and the President although I suspect it’s not a black eye because it’s a “red” state.

If anything, VA should be doubling down on Hots Springs because they already have the infrastructure and a labor pool of willing and trained employees. What’s more, Veterans cannot be expected to travel vast distances from their homes to access these services. South Dakota and the upper Midwest is a enormous area. Folks from the east coast don’t comprehend driving 120 miles to go shopping at a Walmart. You’re talking Ponderosa country, Hoss. Why, its a three day ride to the kitchen in those parts.  Folks out there install extra gas tanks on their trucks for good reason. The nearest VAMC to Sturgis is clean on over in Sheridan, Wyoming and another 3 ½ hours. I wager to say you could hit  four VAMCs on the East Coast in a day and still make Happy Hour.

Veterans in Hot Springs, not to mention those in neighboring states adjacent to it,  will find themselves traveling a good 3 hours to go up to the Black Hills VAMC. Younger Vets might not find this an obstacle but it will pose a much larger hardship  for  older Vets (and their wives) who purchased homes and built their life around the availability of the Hot Springs facility. We don’t need to discuss the privations VA employees will face if this happens. Who speaks for them?

It is hoped someone will come to their senses and exercise common sense on this. We went through the military base closure contractions over previous decades and it appears the VA is trying to take a page from their game plan. Supersizing one regional Air Force/Army base situated cheek and jowl and condensing all your assets there might work for F-15s and C-17s  but medical care has to be far more sub-regional. Many Veterans of this latest conflict suffer from mental and physical elements that do not translate into mobility. Pretending they are is not going to make it so. The ultimate cost in uprooted families and financial privations on those least able to survive it is not well-thought out.

The Community-Based Outpatient Clinic (CBOC) model of VA healthcare is already strained to its limits. I tried it at the Bremerton, Washington facility when I began at the VA and it was typical hurry up and wait. Beware the red light camera at the intersection, too.  Removing whole sub-regional VAMCs needs some intense rethinking. Hot Springs will not be the only one. This will simply be the harbinger of many more. In conclusion, one can only surmise that it flies in the face of the logic espoused by VA-that of a community-based medical system accessible to all. Rural VA medical facilities march to the beat of a different drummer and should be accorded far more leeway to serve their far-flung constituents.

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Hot Springs VAMC

105 years of serving Veterans and a beautiful piece of architecture

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NEW DEER HUNTING TECHNOLOGY

Brown water Jim is showing off his brand new Victor “single shot” deer rifle. I say rifle loosely as it’s steel spring is made from old rifle barrels. Never one to obey deer season time strictures, he’s experimenting with new techniques now in light of what is purported to soon be an Obama gun grab. While we understand his concerns about having to relinquish his older style of hunting, this seems to be taking it to the extreme. On the other hand, he may have something here.

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NEW VIETNAM MEMORIAL MUSEUM

Check this out. It’s too cool for school. Member Tombo sends me this today. It’s hard to conceive of Chicago coming up with this. Because they didn’t.

“Above and Beyond”

When visitors first enter this museum, they will hear a sound like wind chimes coming from above them and their attention will be drawn upward 24 feet to the ceiling of the two-story high atrium.

 Dog tags of 58,226 service men and women who died in the Vietnam War hang from the ceiling of the National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum in Chicago.  The 10-by-40-foot sculpture, entitled Above & Beyond, was designed by Ned Broderick and Richard Steinbock.  All these metal dog tags are suspended 24 feet in the air, 1 inch apart, from fine lines that allow them to move and chime with shifting air currents.  Museum employees using a kiosk and laser pointer help visitors locate the exact dog tag with the imprinted name of their lost friend or relative.  The dog tags are displayed in chronological order as they are on The Wall and each one has the name, branch of service, and date of casualty.

Thank you Ned and Richard for not immersing the dog tags in urine or desecrating our flag to make a statement. This was tastefully done.

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Posted in Milestones, Vietnam War history | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments