December 1970

National and world events 50 years ago.

The Aristocats premiered on December 11. One of the most popular films of 1971, the animated movie was the last project approved by Walt Disney before his death in 1966.

Jim Morrison and The Doors performed together for the last time in New Orleans. Morrison experienced an apparent nervous breakdown during the performance. He later recorded the album L.A. Woman with the group before beginning a leave of absence and moving to Paris. He died in Paris in July 1971.

Love Story was released on December 16 in the United States and Canada. Starring Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal, the film would go on to be the highest-earning film of 1971. 

Elvis Presley visited the White House on December 21, greeted by President Richard Nixon and leading to one of the iconic photos of the time. The visit was actually not made public for more than a year until it was mentioned in a Washington Post column in January 1972. It later became the subject of several books and two films.

Also on December 21, the Navy F-14 Tomcat made its first flight. The prototype F-14 crashed nine days later, with the pilots able to eject safely.

The North Tower of the World Trade Center in New York topped out to its full 110-story height on December 23., becoming the tallest building in the world.

The U.S. Defense Command announced on Christmas, December 25, that 23 American servicemen had been killed in combat in Vietnam during the week December 12-18, the lowest number in more than five years.

Hello Dolly, the longest-running Broadway musical up to that time, closed on December 27 after its 2,844th performance. Its longest-running status didn’t last long, as it was surpassed by Fiddler on the Roof in July 1971. Ethel Merman played the role of Dolly Levi in the closing run. She had been preceded by Carol Channing, Ginger Rogers, Martha Raye, Betty Grable, Pearl Bailey, and Phyllis Diller.

 

November 1970

Stuff that happened in the country and world 50 years ago this month.

Marxist Salvador Allende was inaugurated as president of Chile on November 3. He had been selected by Chile’s congress after winning a narrow plurality of 36.2 percent of the vote, beating the second-place finisher by 1.3 percentage points. Elected to a six-year term, Allende would die in a military coup less than three years later.

Aerosmith, early years

Aerosmith played its first concert on November 6. The band appeared at Nipmuc Regional High School in Massachusetts.

Tom Dempsey, field goal kicker for the New Orleans Saints, set an NFL record on November 8 by kicking a 63-yard field goal on the last play of the game to beat the visiting Detroit Lions, 19-17.

More than 300,000 people were killed on or about November 13 when a cyclone hit East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). Three days after the cyclone struck, Radio Pakistan said 13 densely populated islands had lost their entire populations. The dead toll could have been as high as 500,000 people.

A plane carrying 37 members and five coaches of the Marshall University football team crashed into a hillside on November 14 as it made its approach to a West Virginia airport. Thirty-three other passengers and crew also died.  The team was returning from Greenville, N.C., after losing to East Carolina University, 17-14.

L-1011

The Lockheed L-1011 Tristar, the company’s version of the jumbo jet, made its first flight on November 16, flown by test pilots. The L-1011 was to compete with the Boeing 747 and McDonnell-Douglas Dc-10.

In “Operation Ivory Coast,” a joint U.S. Air Force and Army team entered North Vietnam on November 20 to rescue American service members thought to be prisoners at the Son Tay camp. Upon arriving at the camp, the raiders discovered the prisoners had been relocated.

On November 25, a bank in Buffalo, N.Y., became one of the first U.S. banks to offer its customers access to 24-hour Automated Teller Machines (ATMs). The Marine Midland Bank-Western attached two of the devices to the exterior wall of two branches. Customers could take out $25 or $50 as a loan on a credit account rather than as withdrawals from their own accounts.

The U.S. Census Bureau announced its final count of the 1970 decennial census on November 30. The bureau reported that on April 1, 1970, the U.S. population was 204,765,770 persons. It was the first census since 1800 in which New York did not have the largest population, California having become the most populous state in 1962. (U.S. population in 2019 was estimated to be 328.2 million people.)

Full dress

JG in full dress

Early in October 1970, Naval Special Warfare Group, Pacific got a new commander. CAPT R. F. Stanton relieved CAPT T.R. Fielding.

I don’t really remember either of them. I might have given a briefing attended by one of them, but that is probably the closest interaction I had with the man in charge.

Actually, the only reason I bring up the topic is to include a picture of me in full dress blues. I believe the change of command ceremony would have been the only time I wore the uniform as a LTJG.

Sorry for the lack of focus in the photo. This was, of course, 50 years ago, prior to any digital cameras. I was experimenting with the auto timer on my Nikon. I didn’t know if the photo was good or bad until the film had been developed and I picked up the slides. So, not so good, but it captured a slice of time.

‘Men with Green Faces’

Screen capture from “Men with Green Faces”

One of my principal tasks while on the staff of Commander, Naval Special Warfare Group, Pacific (CNSWGP) was presentation of the command brief. I did so in 1970-71 both as Assistant Intelligence Officer and as Intelligence Officer. I think LT Webber, the Intelligence Officer when I arrived, was happy to hand it off.

It was typical that high-ranking officers (Captains and above) about to assume duties in WESTPAC that might include oversight of or interaction with units of Naval Special Warfare to visit the command beforehand. In addition to meeting with top brass of the command, and perhaps a tour of the spaces, they would have the pleasure of listening to a LTJG . . . me.

I gave the brief in a small “auditorium” in a building on NAB Coronado. The command brief was a prepared text that gave some of the history of the Naval Special Warfare community, described its size and structure, and gave information about the various tasks assigned to and completed by Naval Special Warfare units. Visitors only had to hear it once. I had to hear it over and over and over. This was not difficult duty, but it was somewhat tedious.

Most of the brief, though, was more interesting than my recitation. A movie! Just the year before (1969), the Office of Information at the Naval Photographic Center had produced for the Chief of Naval Operations a film entitled, “Men with Green Faces.” It was filmed by US Navy Combat Cameramen of the Atlantic and Pacific Fleet Combat Camera Groups. And yes, it’s on YouTube.

Screen capture from “Men with Green Faces”

Just under a half-hour long, the film focused on the SEALs. It again gave a little bit of history, showed training, etc. But it was film from in-country Vietnam that added realism and interest. There may have been film from actual missions, particularly involving PBRs (Patrol Boat, River) and helicopter gunships. But the footage that showed SEALs on the ground, on patrol, was pretty clearly staged. Besides the fact that a real mission would have been dangerous for camera operators, the “missions” in the film were in daylight and SEALs operated more commonly at night. Interesting, though, to see the technology of 50+ years ago. 

(Rewatching it after so many years, I was surprised anew that the movie never explained its title. As I remember being told, “men with green faces” was the moniker given the SEALs by the Vietnamese. Another interesting element of the film is the music behind the closing credits. Nothing like the more martial, Sousa-like music in the rest of the film. To me, the closing seemed something I would consider like “bebop.”)

October 1970

National and international events 50 years ago.

A chartered airplane carrying 14 members of the Wichita State football team and its head coach crashed into 12,447-foot-high Mount Trelease in Colorado on October 2, killing 32 of the 40 people onboard, including the Wichita State contingent. They were flying to a game against Utah State the following day. Twenty-three team members were on a second plane that made the trip safely. 

Janis Joplin

Janis Joplin was found dead on October 4 in her room in a Hollywood hotel. She died at age 27 from an overdose of drugs.

The Public Broadcasting System (PBS) began broadcasting October 5 as successor to National Educational Television.

Soviet writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature on October 8. The Soviet government did not allow Solzhenitsyn to leave the country to receive the award.

On October 12, President Richard Nixon announced that an additional 40,000 American troops would be withdrawn before Christmas.

Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau announced on October 16 the only peacetime state of emergency in that nation’s history, outlawing the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ). The act permitted civil rights to be suspended for six months and sent additional military forces into Quebec. The next day, Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte, kidnapped a week earlier by the FLQ, was murdered by his captors. His body was found in the trunk of a car at an airport near Montreal.

The North Tower of the World Trade Center became the tallest building on earth at 2:51 pm ET on October 20 when a piece of framework was added, bringing the height to 1,254 feet, topping the Empire State Building’s 1,250 feet.

Muhammad Ali and Jerry Quarry

Muhammad Ali, stripped of his title as world heavyweight boxing champion because of his refusal to enter military service, began his comeback on October 26 with a technical knockout of Jerry Quarry in the third round in Atlanta, Ga.

Doonesbury, a politically-themed comic by Garry Trudeau, made its debut in 25 newspapers on October 26.

The fire that time

Sunday morning, 50 years ago, I awoke later than normal. I remember being puzzled at the light in my room at the BOQ, Naval Amphibious Base, Coronado. Maybe it was more the lack of light, or its “look.” I pulled back the curtain to the door to my deck and saw this.

This was my first exposure to California wildfire. The fire that produced this sky had started the morning before, at a reported 6:15 am, when Santa Ana winds had downed power lines that ignited brush in the Laguna Mountains in East San Diego County.

I remember going out to my car later in the day and realizing that I had left my driver-side window down overnight. The interior of my car looked like an ashtray.

The Laguna Fire moved quickly because of the Santa Ana winds, which are warm and dry and often exceed 40 miles per hour. During its first day, the Laguna Fire had burned west for 30 miles, into the outskirts of El Cajon and Spring Valley.

Santa Ana winds are typical in Southern California in the fall. They originate  in the Great Basin, just east of California. They often bring about the lowest relative humidities of the year in Southern California. This, plus the often high wind speeds, causes high fire danger conditions.

There was concern within Naval Special Warfare Group, Pacific about the speed and range of the fire. I remember a map being posted on a wall, probably in the Operations spaces, where someone was tracking the boundaries of the fire. The concern was less about our location (we were separated from San Diego by about three miles of harbor) than with the Naval Base, San Diego, where dozens of ships and facilities were located. Someone said, as I recall, that if the fire crossed a nearby mountaintop, “It could go right down to the sea.”

This was in an era, of course, without many of the resources available to firefighters and to the public. Initial response to the fire was limited and slow because other fires in Southern California were using up available personnel. High wind speeds restricted use of firefighting aircraft.

As a “civilian,” at least in terms of firefighting, I remember no alarm or notification of the fire. We obtained information from local radio and television. (In comparison, when I was ordered to evacuate because of wildfire in December 2017, I received notice by email, text, and phone call. I also received frequent status updates through the same media.)

US Fire Service map

The Laguna Fire burned until October 3, 1970. By the time it was contained, it had burned 175,425 acres, killed eight civilians, and destroyed 382 homes. At its time, it was the second-largest fire, in terms of acres burned, in California history. It is now 17th, with five of the fires supplanting it taking place in 2020.

 

Two Presidents in Coronado

Presidents Nixon (circled) and Diaz Ordez in the motorcade on Orange Avenue, Coronado.

On September 3, 1970, the small community of Coronado, Calif., became “presi-dense.” U.S. President Richard Nixon and Mexico President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz came to Coronado where President Nixon hosted President Diaz Ordaz at a state dinner held at the Hotel del Coronado. It was the first state dinner held outside Washington, D.C.

Presidents Nixon and Diaz Ordaz had met in August in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, where they reached agreement on pending U.S.-Mexico border issues. The state dinner in Coronado was to celebrate that agreement.

Both Presidents arrived at Naval Air Station, North Island around midday. While I don’t know from where in Mexico Diaz Ordaz had left, Nixon had taken a helicopter from the “Western White House” in San Clemente, less than 60 miles north.

They traveled from North Island to the “Hotel Del” in a motorcade along Orange Avenue, Coronado’s main drag. A 30-minute leisurely drive with thousands lining the avenue. (I have a picture that’s closer than the one above, but Nixon’s waving arm blocked his face. Much better views in the video further down.) I assume I and others at Naval Special Warfare Group Pacific had asked permission to use our lunch hour to watch.

Here’s a gallery of street scenes that day.

There’s actually a brief film of the motorcade, taken by Rosemary Kelly with a Bell & Howell 8mm movie camera. Her son later incorporated it into a report about the day’s events and, of course, it’s on YouTube. (Not sure why this particular background music was chosen.)

Also in the motorcade were lots of California Highway Patrol on motorcycles and a bunch of “floats” celebrating patriotic and military themes and generally featuring young women. (There may have been others that did not feature young women, but I may not have taken pictures of those.) I’m guessing the floats had been part of Coronado’s famed July 4 parade and were making a repeat performance. A gallery:

The dinner was attended by some 1,000 guests, including former President Lyndon Johnson and Lady Bird Johnson and California Governor Ronald Reagan and Nancy Reagan. In addition to U.S. and Mexican officials and California/San Diego luminaries, there were also popular culture stars of the time, at least those appreciated mostly by older adults. Among them were icons Frank Sinatra and John Wayne, and somewhat lesser folk like Art Linklater, Hugh O’Brien, Cesar Romero, Red Skelton, Efram Zimbalist Jr., and pro golfer Billy Casper, a San Diego native.

The two Presidents didn’t stay overnight. Both headed back to NAS North Island around midnight and took off on their trips home.

September 1970

National and world events, 50 years ago.

On September 5, the U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division, joined by the South Vietnamese 1st Infantry Division, began Operation Jefferson Glen to drive Viet Cong from Thua Thien Province. It was the last major operation by American ground forces in the war. The U.S. turned over the operation to the South Vietnamese and withdrew on October 8. Four days later, President Nixon announced future U.S. troop actions would be defensive only.

Jimi Hendrix performed his final concert on September 6, appearing on the German island of Fehmarn. Hendrix was found dead 12 days later in London.

After a span of a dozen years spent mainly performing in Las Vegas, Elvis Presley began a concert tour on September 9. 

The ill-fated Ford Pinto

The Chevrolet Vega, General Motors’ entry into the subcompact car market, debuted on September 10. List price for the first model was $2,091. On the following day, Ford introduced its second subcompact (first was the Maverick), the Pinto. Ford charged $1,919, $17o less than the Vega price.

The U.S. “Sky Marshal Program,” intended to protect American flights from hijacking, began on September 12. That same day, USC played football against Alabama in Tuscaloosa. It was the first time the all-white Alabama team hosted a team that was racially integrated. USC won 42-21.

One hundred twenty-six men and women ran in the first New York City Marathon on September 13. The first race was four laps around Central Park on its walking paths.

Flip Wilson

Several notable American television series made their debut during the month:

  • The Flip Wilson Show premiered on NBC September 14, marking the first TV variety show to be hosted by an African-American, Clerow “Flip” Wilson.
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show began a seven-season run on September 19. 
  • Monday Night Football debuted on ABC on September 21. Announcers were Keith Jackson, Howard Cosell, and Dan Meredith. In the initial game, the Cleveland Browns defeated the New York Jets, 31-21.
  • The Odd Couple, starring Tony Randall and Jack Klugman, premiered on September 24.
  • The Partridge Family made its debut on September 25.

The longest-running American television show at the time, Ted Mack’s The Original Amateur Hour, made its final appearance on September 28.

Going forward

By the beginning of September 1970, I think things had settled into a somewhat normal routine. I believe I had finally left the Glorietta Bay Inn and moved into the Bachelor Officers Quarters (BOQ) on Naval Amphibious Base (NAB), Coronado.

This photo was taken recently (building is circled in red, upper right). Great shot, hunh? There are not many overhead photos of NAB and definitely not from the Seventies. The compound containing Naval Special Warfare Group, Pacific was located in an area at bottom left in the photo. My commute was comfortable. I hope I walked.

The facility, remodeled I’m sure, is now part of the Navy’s “Gateway Inns and Suites” intended for military personnel on TDY (temporary duty) and short-term stays.

“Bachelor” has been outdated in the Navy for a long time. I think much of the on-base housing now is described as being for “unaccompanied” personnel.

This shot of the BOQ is a little more contemporary to 1970. 

Those “decks” provided a view to the south, and a great one it was. The “Silver Strand” to the right was the land connection to Imperial Beach and the rest of San Diego. On clear days, of which there were many, one could see the mountaintops in Mexico.

And here’s a gallery of pictures of the interior of the room, the least interesting view. (Why I decided to take pictures of the room at night, in a mess, is unfathomable.) As you can see, the bed was a convertible couch.

I remember there being a small kitchen at the BOQ and no common dining area. Menu was “limited.” I guess I would call down and place an order for take-out. My usual was a cheeseburger and milk shake (which probably had a bit to do with my weight gain). Another might have been franks and beans.

The room included a small, built-in refrigerator, mainly for liquid refreshment.

The base had a small Navy Exchange, like an adjunct to the main facilities, which were located at Naval Air Station, North Island and the Naval Base on the other side of the bay. There was a McDonald’s, I think. San Diego was the home of Jack-in-the-Box, but I suspect McDonald’s had the federal contract.

I did go a few times to something like this. 🙂

 

An anxious August

My first weeks at Commander Naval Special Warfare Group Pacific in August 1970 were marked by anxiety and stress. The first inkling of my prospective future came when I inquired about the officer I was replacing as assistant intelligence officer.

“Oh, he’s still in the hospital,” I was told, “recovering from his wounds.”

Gulp.

I don’t remember anyone ever sitting down with me and explaining what was to happen. In bits and pieces, I gleaned that the plan was for me to deploy to Vietnam with a SEAL detachment. It had been the routine assignment for the assistant intelligence officer, as I later understood it, and I was next.

(I was also ill at this time. No clear diagnosis from the command’s medical doctor. He used terms like atypical mono. I thought of it as “the crud” — elevated temperature, fatigue, etc. The following year, when I was being released from active duty, the doctor doing my physical said a spot on my lung indicated I might have had San Joaquin Valley Fever at some point. Just added to feeling down.)

At the time, I was pretty “left” — anti-Vietnam War — and had been through college. I thought the war was a mistake and wrong. When the deferment for grad school went away and the draft loomed, I considered options other than military service. I took the exam for OCS, not really knowing whether I wanted to be successful. But I was accepted and it seemed a reasonable option. (I’m trying to think back to what I thought and felt 50 years ago and it’s not real easy. I’m also surprised at the level of angst I’ve felt these past few weeks thinking again in depth of this time. When I know what happened!) After OCS, I had been assigned to a ship due to make a WESTPAC deployment because the Navy was experimenting with placing intelligence officers on such ships.

I guess I felt blindsided by what I understood the plan was to be for me at Special Warfare. I had no training and very little confidence in my ability to succeed in what I understood I was to do — be a recruiter and runner of “informers” among the Vietnamese. I was aware of SEAL participation in the CIA-coordinated Phoenix program, to which I had moral objection. Was I also scared? Yes. Was the basis for what I did more principle than fear? I hope so.

I believed then that it would be wrong for me to follow those orders, if issued, without raising objection. I’m trying to remember how I found information about any options. Obviously, I didn’t “google” the info. Communication 50 years ago was phone or letter. I expect that I got some information from alternative newspapers published in LA and San Diego. I also remember reaching out to friends and shipmates asking for “references.” I wasn’t asking them to approve what I might do, but to share some background about me, e.g., was my objection to this duty out of character?, had I expressed concerns consistently?, etc. Several sent me supportive material.

I spoke to my parents on the phone before doing anything definitive, but shared some possibilities with them. My father, a WWII veteran, was angry with me. My mother was concerned about me.

I ultimately decided that if I was to receive the orders, I would apply for conscientious objector status. I understood, I think, what that action might mean for my future. I made an appointment to speak with CDR Robinson, Chief Staff Officer, #2 in the unit hierarchy. I remember lying awake the night before, thinking it might be the last night I would spend outside the brig for a long time. I remember sitting on the couch in CDR Robinson’s office the next morning, telling him my feelings and intentions. When I finished, there was a long pause. Then he got up, told me to stay there, and went into the adjacent office of the Commanding Officer, CAPT T. R. Fielding. I have no idea what transpired between CDR Robinson and CAPT Fielding. After several minutes, CDR Robinson came out and said something like, “You’re not going. Let’s just keep all this between us.”

If I felt relief at that moment, I’m not sure the numbness I was feeling would have allowed it. CDR Robinson, I suspect, simply told people later that plans had changed. No one else in the command, including the intelligence officer to whom I reported, ever questioned me or asked about the change in plans. I’m sure that soon after I certainly felt relieved and I appreciated CDR Robinson’s actions.

(My first fitness report from the command, issued early that October, was, as you might imagine, not stellar. The evaluations of my performance and “desirability” were in the meh range. I was described as “sincere,” but also “immature” and “extremely sensitive.” My lowest grades among “personal characteristics” were in “judgment” and “moral courage.” The report recommended that I not be considered for retention in the military beyond my initial commitment.)

I was immature and, I guess, sensitive. I was 23 and, compared to other officers of my age, I sometimes felt a little out of place. I did, however, want to demonstrate to CDR Robinson and others that I could do a good job at Special Warfare. I hope I did and my later fitness reports there were quite positive. Indeed, in my final fitness report at the command, likely drafted by CDR Robinson, my moral courage was rated “is not exceeded.”

I believe what I did at the time was what I thought was right. No one was required to take my place. If my action had meant someone else would have had to go in my stead, I believe it would have been a very different calculation. The practice of sending a junior intelligence officer with a SEAL detachment to Vietnam ended, as SEAL participation in the war was already declining.

(Working with CDR Robinson often during my tour, I noticed he kept a plaque on his desk that read “Think Water.” Over time, I inferred that CDR Robinson may not have been a fan of the role SEALs played in Vietnam. They did little of the work Navy SEALs did in other settings. To a significant extent, they operated much as Army Green Berets did. [That’s been even more the case in this century with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.] In regard to SEAL activities, I think CDR Robinson was more old-school UDT [Underwater Demolition Team].)

Were I a few years older at the time, I might have considered things differently or at least responded in a different way. I have changed over time as just about everyone does. When I had the opportunity to affiliate with a Naval Reserve unit in 1978, I took it, and completed 20 years service overall, retiring as a Commander. (That October 1970 fitness report did come back years later to bite me in the butt, though, when I was being considered for promotion to Captain.)


CAPT William A. Robinson

There is a tragic coda to my interactions with CDR Robinson. When I first moved here in 2012, I looked him up, hoping he was still in the area. I wanted to thank him personally for the profound role he had played in my life and to let him know I had “turned out all right,” serving honorably in the Navy later on and making Commander. I found reference to him in a newspaper article. He had stayed in San Diego and was a real estate developer after retiring from the Navy as a Captain. In 1988, he and a colleague were examining some property, an “empty canyon,” in San Diego and the colleague left him to get something from their nearby office. When the colleague returned, he located CAPT Robinson’s body in some bushes, his throat slashed and his chest stabbed several times. It remains a cold case. CAPT Robinson was 57. He left a widow and then-10-year-old daughter. That was stunning and so sad. I deeply regret not trying to communicate with him much earlier.