9/30/2018

The History Mystery Tour is waiting to take you away

Thanks for the input and questions after part one of this story! I assume the "H" in the center of the needlework book cover is for my dad, Howard. Here is the back of the cover:

As for the "Three Musketiers," I have a group of photos:



The dates in November 1945 match with letters written from Wunsiedel and Waldsassen, Germany. During this period Dad was shipping home nailed crates of glassware to use for Christmas  and wedding presents in the future. Some of that glassware graces my dining room now.

What else was he doing? Staging small raids on small villages looking for evidence of weapons or black market activities. Playing ten different versions of solitaire. Going to  a nice beer hall in the center of town with a good four-piece band. Going a little mad after three years in the service. Wiring the florist in Norfolk, Nebraska to send hydrangeas "to the most wonderful mother in the world." And apparently walking around "our lake" at 5 p.m. with the "Three Musketiers."


On December 12, 1945,  Dad left for transfer to the 15th Tank Battalion attached to the 80th Infantry Division, the first step in his slow return to the States.

© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder

9/29/2018

Dot-to-dot, part one


Above the hi-fi behind the sliding cabinet door you may be granted permission to peruse the shelf of grown-up books. Such splendid, serene, sustaining times as a kid flopped down on the living room carpet paging through the big books, smelling the paper and ink and binding, saving the images to memory. I still have three of those books, though I occasionally regret letting go of the first 25 years of New Yorker cartoons, and a history of chair design. Dad was good about answering my questions if I didn't understand the cartoons. Dad would also talk about cartoons in Bill Mauldin's book, though he rarely mentioned his time in the service.

 

He didn't say much about the book in German with the cross stitch cover beyond that it was a gift, which made it mysterious. Seven decades after the gift, and more than five since I suspected it held more than it told, I am trying to decipher the meaning of the cross stitch book. 

Title page
Title page verso


Inscription

Bookmark 
  
After V.E. Day, Tech Sgt. Mastalir remained in Germany eight months. For the first he was just grateful not to be sent to the Pacific. Then he spent his time moving from town to town, packing up, setting up, packing up, setting up. His letters are typewritten, and tell of guard duty, occasional raids, and his overworked state when the First Sgt. was laid up with severe athlete's foot. 

My own toes are tired after a long week, and I am fantasizing about texting in sick due to severe athlete's foot. My boss would not believe I am a severe athlete... That is all for tonight history mystery folks.

© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder

9/24/2018

Quick, hand me the pliers!


Enjoyed my trip to the dentist this morning, which is to say I did not gag or have a panic attack. I was truly dreading my second crown, as the first about ten years ago was a ghastly experience.

Last evening I reread Pvt. Mastalir's description of military dentistry to work up some enthuiasm for the civilian type. Also some gratitude for dental insurance...

When Dad was finishing his Army Specialist Training Corp program at Georgetown University in December 1943 he woke up with a very stiff jaw, sore throat, and sore tooth. He went to sick bay, and the doctor told him he was cutting a wisdom tooth, and the upper tooth was biting down on the gum.

The next day a dentist at Fort Meyer told a different story. Dad's lower wisdom tooth was embedded in his jaw. The upper wisdom tooth biting down had caused an infection in the gum and tooth. The only treatment would be pulling the upper tooth, then treating the infection before pulling the lower tooth. So the dentist yanked out the upper tooth, and Dad wrote his Ma before the feeling came back.

"Treating the infection" seems to mean mostly gargling with hot salt water for two weeks. Dad was a lifelong believer in this practice. A couple weeks after the first extraction he rode the bus back to Fort Meyer. He got in the chair at 1:15, and was all done and back outside waiting for the bus at 1:45. It was the easiest extraction the dentist had ever done, and he was sorry he sterilized so many tools he did not end up using.

Dad gloated about his free dental work that would have cost $25 for a civilian! Not today. Not this civilian.

I always feel like a total failure at the dentist. The dentist, hygienist, and other staff are all trying to carve Mount Rushmore in my teeth with their  picks and mirrors. My tongue is always trying to knock Gutzon Borglum off the mountain.

For the first time in my life I was offered nitrous oxide. Glory Hallelujiah! Then Denise used a magic wand to take digital CAD images of my tooth. I just kept thinking it was like the Google street view camera car back there and I hoped it wasn't bulk trash day on my cul-de-sac. That and trying to remember who sang the songs on the Dental Oldies Radio playlist. (answers below)







Little Ditty About Jack and Diane--John Mellencamp
Runnin' Down a Dream--Tom Petty
Still the Same--Bob Seger
Open Your Heart--Madonna
Gimme Three Steps--Lynyrd Skynyrd
Hit Me With Your Best Shot--Pat Benatar


© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder

9/23/2018

It's Saturday night and I'm reading about mumps

Army immunization register
This might not be healthy. Mumps are on my mind. I had mumps in kindergarten or first grade. It wasn't fun.  I had to stay home in bed for at least a week drinking ginger ale. Mumps was as miserable as chicken pox in my childhood memory.

My kids did not get mumps because they received the MMR vaccine. They did get chicken pox during a memorably miserable spell between Christmas 1987 and Valentines 1988 in Edmond, Oklahoma.  Worse, they shared the disease with an adult male at a Christmas gathering.

My grandchildren will not get mumps, measles, rubella, or chicken pox. At least if they are not exposed to the diseases, before they can be immunized. How would they be exposed? By a child whose parents opted-out of vaccinations. So this Grancy is grumpy about mumps.

Private Howard Mastalir came down with mumps the last day of basic training at Ft. Belvoir, VA.  He was headed to the hospital for ten or twelve days when he wrote his Ma not to worry.  He would miss his TMD [troop moblilization departure] for ASTP [Army Specialist Training Program] but was developing a soldier frame of mind. Who cares? Let the Army worry about it. Never mind that mumps can cause encephalitis, deafness, and swollen testicles in adults! There were other guys with mumps arriving in the ward, and guys with measles down the hall.

Lunching with teachers today, I learned my city, Plano, is a hotspot for nonmedical exemptions (NMEs), children entering school unvaccinated.  With this many exemptions the greater population is no longer protected from illnesses. Parents who have never seen a case of mumps are less likely to understand the consequences to the community of a mumps outbreak. Why have they never seen a case of mumps? Because their generation had required vaccinations.

From the Texas Medical Association:


Researchers identified 15 large metropolitan areas where more than 400 kindergarten-aged children have not received their vaccines. Texas has the most “hotspots” with four. Michigan has three (Detroit, Troy, and Warren); Washington has two (Seattle and Spokane); and Utah has two (Salt Lake City and Provo). The other hotspots are Portland, Phoenix, Kansas City, and Pittsburgh.
“The high numbers of NMEs in these densely populated urban centers suggest that outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases could either originate from or spread rapidly throughout these populations of unimmunized, unprotected children,” the study says. “The fact that the largest count of vaccine-exempt pediatric populations originate in large cities with busy international airports may further contribute to this risk.”

Dad wrote about getting lots of shots in the army. What were those immunizations?  Smallpox, triple typhoid, typhus, and a flu shot after the war ended.

In the prevaccine era, mumps gained notoriety as an illness that substantially affected armies during mobilization. The average annual rate of hospitalization resulting from mumps during World War I was 55.8 per 1,000, which was exceeded only by the rates for influenza and gonorrhea.  --  How WWII spurred vaccine innovation.



A little evening reading while you are sipping ginger ale through a straw. We each have a responsibility to protect ALL of us.




© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder

9/21/2018

Dress your G.I. Joe

Welcome to the Army. Here at Ft. Leavenworth we have a lack of clothes that fit you. Therefore, you can't leave the post. A lack of work clothes is good news/bad news as you also can't have KP or go on details. Instead you go out policing the grounds where you pick up "everything that isn't nailed down or growing or that bites."

Ft. Leavenworth sounds more like Camp Kiwanis, my sixties Camp Fire Girl camp on the Blue River in Milford, Nebraska, than I would have expected. Dad writes home to his Ma with the odd expression, "please send right soon." He needs socks, underwear "that [sic] in good shape," stamps, electric razor, towels & wash rags.

[Please, Ma, I know we are just coming out of the Great Depression, but don't send the underwear with holes or tired elastic!] I totally relate as the mother of teen sons! Sending the guys off to college I always requested they not bring the towels home at the end of the year. Too darn scary!

It cost a whopping six cents to airmail a letter, although Dad had the option of free military mail. Through the war the speed of mail delivery is amazing. Not exactly Amazon Prime free two-day delivery, but fast.

Early sixties G.I. Joe doll/action figures, like Ken, had strange fuzzy yellow scalps. My dad reports it took only four minutes to achieve that look.  Buzzzzzzz.


Postmarked April 5, 1943


Please send right soon
Through the war Ma sends many more stamps and briefs, plus gym attire for boxing sessions at Georgetown. It just surprised me how often and how much the folks back home were providing basics for soldiers. 

One outfit Ma sent touched my heart--a set of hand-knit dog tag sweaters. 

Dog tag sweaters


Healthy as hell


© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder

9/20/2018

All aboard! Discoveries by rail.

On my recent Colorado visit we played Ticket to Ride, a board game for three generations, ages six to almost Medicare.  If you have family get-togethers or blizzards in your fall/winter schedule, I highly recommend it.


After blogging Sunday about my dad's letters to his Ma during WWII, I could not let go with such a meager sampling of the contents. Reading through all the letters was delightful and revealing, as I found clues to later family dynamics reaching ahead for decades.

Let's start with delightedness on a train, or as Sam-I-Am might ask, "Could you would you on a train or in the dark or in the rain?" Not yet twenty-years-old, my dad took his first long train trip courtesy of the U.S. Army in April 1942, and it was a mind-blowing education. I am envious of his opportunity and enthusiasm for seeing the landscapes, the cities, and understanding physically the sizes and distances and time of our country. When we fly, or drive with movies playing for the kiddies in the back seat, we don't get that spatial feeling in our bodies or heads.

"I have decided to travel east this year. It shall be rather interesting."
Who wrote that? Marco Polo? Samuel Clemens? 

The  very young men riding from their Army intake at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas to their basic training spa and resort at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, went by way of St. Jo and Hannibal, Missouri to St. Louis. "The steamboats on the river were of great interest for me." Illinois and Indiana had cherry orchards in bloom, oil fields, and small coal mines. On to Cincinnati!

"I will hate to sleep tonight for fear I will miss so much. But it will be dark anyway."


Another tunnel.
Roast beef and rolls with butter in the dining car! The next day the train went through Harper's Ferry to D.C. The Potomac River made a big impression, winding slowly through the country. I wonder if Dad was reassessing those stories about George chopping down a cherry tree or throwing a silver dollar across the river.

"I'm afraid I walked around with my mouth open most of the time.


"
© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder

9/16/2018

Trunk mail

Taking on the long-delayed project of "The Trunk." What's in it? What does any of it mean? Would it mean anything to my sons?

I vaguely knew World War Two was in the trunk, and that my kids did not want me to get rid of WWII. Specifically, it is WWII as experienced by my father, their Gramps.


"The Trunk" is a very heavy storage container slash television stand. No elephants. No magician's assistants or saws. Just a library cataloger on a busman's holiday.


I untied the bundle of ninety-nine letters written by my father to his mother with no plan to read them beyond recording his mailing address and some dates. My Grandma kept all Dad's letters in their envelopes, tied up with string. What a generational indicator! When was the last time you used string? 

At the top of the stack Dad is just a dorky college sophomore living on "Q" or "Que" Street in Lincoln. He had worked over the summer of '42 for a mechanical contractor in Grand Island and had a union IHCB&CLU of A Local Union No. 651 permit card. He enlisted in the Army Reserve Corps December 5, 1942, after eating a bunch of bananas to boost his weight to the required level. His enlistment certificate with photo and thumb print were in the trunk.



After a few weeks in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Dad is shipped to Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Once there, he learns about the Army Specialist Training Program set up by General George Marshall, and sends newspaper clippings to his mother in Nebraska about the program. Suddenly this kid from a town of 1200 people in Nebraska is living and studying at Georgetown University in D.C. for six months, August 1943-March 1944. He writes home about the wry humor and Southern drawl of his physics professor.

March to June 1944 are spent in Camp Swift, Texas. Dad sends his little sister photos of the UT campus tower. From Texas he goes to Fort Dix in Trenton, N. J. where he works the Philadelphia Transit Strike in August 1944. Dad's letter show he was still a nineteen year old asking for spending money, but at least writing home regularly. He was developing political, moral, and philosophical ideas of his own. A tension is building in the letters as he gets closer to deployment. He shows a commitment to keeping his mother informed to decrease her natural worries.

From September 1944, Dad's letters are sent through the postmaster of New York City from "somewhere on the Atlantic Coast." Signing a power of attorney and making financial arrangements for his pay and life insurance to benefit his mother seems to have clicked a switch in his brain.

I did not read all ninety-nine letters. To be honest, most are pretty dull. Dad enumerates the letters and packages he has received from his Ma, his sis, his aunts, his neighbors, teachers, and other townsfolk, and tells what he had for supper. He answers their questions, and requests snacks for the next boxes--candy, fruit cake, Aunt Ada's cookies, cheese, summer sausage, and popcorn. He reports that he cast his first ever election vote from a foreign country.

October 1944 finds Dad writing from "somewhere in France," then "somewhere in Germany." His unit moves through Holland into Germany. He clearly feels responsible to keep his mother reassured of his well-being, and through her his family and greater community. He lets them know he received and appreciates their letters. His commitment to easing the concerns of those on the home front makes me teary. But when he stares evil in the face, he reports that, too. In May1945 he writes from "somewhere in beaten Germany" about how nice it is not getting shot at.

A few letters are tucked into the stack that were written to other family members. A single letter to Dad's aunt, my beloved great Aunt Em, emphasizes how he is going mad and desperately needs to get out of post-surrender Germany. This is a much-changed writer, not just older, but more responsible, clearly exhausted, and injured by his experiences.

The last letter in the stack dates from the end of January 1946, still in Germany. 

© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder

9/06/2018

Mountains of work, mountains off work

Lily Lake is mirror calm, surrounded by mountains, and looped by an easy, level trail of gravel and boardwalks. The obstacle of parking the car is past, the future is just this moment, and this moment. Shared with a six-year-old the mountains and the lake shrink in significance. Instead we listen to the swish of our steps on the gravel path. We watch brilliant blue dragonflies hover, circle away then back to the same spot along the lake shore. Ducks float, then tip heads under and bottoms up to eat. A water snake performs a hypnotic dance near the boardwalk. An unafraid chipmunk darts in and out between two boulders, capturing the imagination of a grandson. We are savoring small joys with a beginner's mind.


Home again, jiggity jig, back to the office, where mountains of work climb way past the timberline. Progress is at capital I ice age glacial speed, not the global meltdown pace. I must cultivate acceptance, but adding a cool reflecting lake to my meditation visualization couldn't hurt.




One of my favorite mindfulness meditations is "The Mountain," used by Jon Kabat-Zinn. The visual aspect seems to help me stay focused. In this guided meditation we sit as the solid base of stone mountain as the sun, clouds, and stars pass over, and the seasons change on our slopes.




© 2013-2018 Nancy L. Ruder