Thoughts for Decoration Day -- and Bob Hope’s birthday
Some scattered shots pulled from my clipping file while I try to
decide if the new Patriot’s Act requires me to report my neighbor
down the street who isn’t flying the American flag:
I missed an easy shot at a column with the coming and going of
Memorial Day, but one post-holiday comment, culled from memory, might
be allowed. I read several articles exploring the origin of this
holiday that noted it was once -- in some antediluvian period --
known as Decoration Day. As a card-carrying antediluvian, I can
attest to that.
Decoration Day -- at least in Decatur, Ind. -- was originally set
aside to decorate the graves of those who had served in the Civil
War. Later, it was extended to include all of our loved ones who had
died.
I had it both ways in my youth. My mother’s father was a colonel
in Gen. William T. Sherman’s army and was wounded during the Civil
War at the Battle of Chickamauga.
His grave was always our first stop. Then came my other
grandparents and several dozen aunts and uncles and nephews and
nieces -- all buried in Decatur Cemetery, many of them, including my
own two infant brothers, tragically young.
It was changed to Memorial Day to commemorate all veterans, but on
a richly green, slightly rolling several acres of land just outside
Decatur, it’s still Decoration Day.
Joe McCarthy came back into my life a few weeks ago. McCarthy
would have been pleased to see his name on front pages once again, 50
years after the salad days when he had been a fixture there.
The current catalyst was the public release of long-sealed
transcripts of secret hearings McCarthy conducted in the early 1950s.
The newly released documents underscore the enormous damage that can
be done by public officials using their office to make reckless and
unsupported charges against people in the name of protecting our
safety.
The televised McCarthy hearings that ended with attorney Joseph
Welch saying, “Have you no sense of decency, senator?” and McCarthy’s
censure by Senate colleagues had an enormous impact on my life. I had
quit my only real postwar job a week before the hearings started and
spent my first month as a freelance writer glued to the TV set when I
should have been out hustling work.
No Hollywood western ever had a clearer depiction of good guys and
bad guys than these hearings. I can still see McCarthy’s boy
sidekicks, the oily Roy Cohn and the smarmy G. David Schine,
whispering into the senator’s ear while the patrician Welch, his bow
tie at half-staff, awaited a new attack on his often bewildered Army
clients.
I would hope that McCarthy’s downfall -- caught vividly in a
documentary called “Point of Order” -- is an integral part of the
American history being taught in our public schools.
As Sens. Collins (R-Maine) and Levin (D-Mich.) said in a preface
to the just-released transcripts: “These hearings are a part of our
national past that we can neither afford to forget nor permit to
recur,” an admonition those who didn’t live through this period --
and especially our current attorney general -- might consider.
There were a lot of mixed reactions -- many of them cynical -- to
the careful staging of President Bush’s arrival, in full flight gear,
on the deck of the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln to address
servicemen returning from Iraq. My reaction turned more to irony.
It sent me to a book called “The Slipstream,” a kind of college
yearbook put out for the Naval aviation cadets who finished flight
training and won their wings in 1943 at Corpus Christi, Texas.
I’m on page 137, in the graduating class of May 29, 1943. And,
sure enough, just as I remembered, three pages and two weeks later is
the picture of 18-year-old Ensign George H. Bush. He went on to fly
dive-bombers in combat in the south Pacific. And he really did fly
off the decks of carriers, which was never considered appropriate to
turn into a photo-op while he was president.
Finally, you will be reading this on Bob Hope’s 100th birthday. He
will probably die some day, but it’s hard for those of us who grew up
with Hope inextricably in our lives to imagine that happening.
I was writing Hollywood profiles in his waning performance years
and had the privilege of spending some time with him. One of the
things we did was enjoy a day wandering through the museum of
personal artifacts connected to his home and allowing him to recall
the circumstances of each display. I pulled up my notes from that
day, and here are a few of the things he told me:
* “The greatest form of comedy is tearing down bigness. When I
talked about Eisenhower’s golf, people used to scream because I was
taking him down to the common man as a bad golfer.”
* “How can you say that World War II was a popular war, and
Vietnam was unpopular? What war could be popular when kids are
getting killed?”
* “Mitchell Lyson, the director of my first movie, took me to
lunch and told me that pictures are a lot different from the stage
because in pictures, you do everything with your eyes. So if you
watch “Thanks for the Memories,” I’ve got floating eyeballs all over
the place. It’s the scene that kept me in the movies.”
* “I hear people say to me, ‘You never stop’ -- and that’s not
true. I’m a stickler for health, for physical condition and I
exercise every day. I stay in shape. I could go three rounds right
now with Hermione Gingold.”
* “When a nation calls on us for help, we must help them, but we
must never again make the mistake of Vietnam.”
* “People put a label on you. I was only a hawk so far as I wanted
to see us win and get out of Vietnam. I have seen the results of
fighting in the intensive care wards and the burn wards. When you
smell burned flesh, as I have in three wars, you don’t like war
anymore.”
I once asked Hope why he was doing commercials after such a long
and distinguished career, and he said:
“When I stop working, I die.”
Maybe that will never happen. So, happy birthday, Bob Hope.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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