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The Ice Cream Officer

The officer in charge of the Executive Division on the USS Los Angeles was a mustang, a commissioned officer who began his career as an enlisted man, and he was as drunk as could be.

His last name was Lemorande. His first name, at least as far as I was concerned, was Lieutenant. He was a good officer.

Lt. Lemorande
Lemorande. His first name was Lieutenant.

It was close to midnight when he stumbled into the compartment where JO3 Gary Greve, my boss, and I were hanging out, drinking coffee, smoking Crook cigars, and listening to the sweet sound of the Percy Faith Orchestra.

The lieutenant joined us. For a little while, at least, it seemed like he wanted to be an enlisted man again. He told us he wanted some ice cream and didn’t we want some too?

Well, sure, we said. But there was no way for us to get ice cream. The enlisted men’s mess deck was closed.

The officers have ice cream, Lt. Lemorande said. Let’s go get some.

Enlisted men were not allowed to wander in officer country, but Lt. Lemorande ordered us to follow him, so we did.

Their wardroom was closed too, of course. But there was a hole in a half door through which food was passed out of the galley and Lt. Lemorande, in full uniform, wiggled through it. He found bowls, silverware — and ice cream — and soon the three of us were on our way back to our compartment.

The ice cream was good but now Gary and I had a problem. What were we supposed to do with the spoons and bowls, which obviously belonged to the officers’ mess?

The lieutenant looked at me like I was an idiot.

“Throw them overboard!” he said.

And we did.

Coming Monday: Calm Down, Pat.

“F”

The writing course I took my first semester at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill must have been required.  I was 20 years old and I thought I already knew just about everything I needed to know.

All kidding aside, I really did know one or two things. After graduating from high school I had worked a summer reporting sports for The Charlotte News and I had worked 20 months as a journalist in the Navy after I finished boot camp and went to sea.

Didn’t that make me a professional?  Sort of?  Nevertheless, I worked hard on the first paper I wrote for class, and the second.

62ddfe19e89c71e51542a7b3fbf1eea7_carolina-tar-heels-clipart-1-unc-logo-clip-art_1050-869I got the first one back when I turned in the second paper. My first grade was an “F.” I worked even harder on the third paper and when I turned it in, I got the second one back. It was an “F”, too.

At that point I went to see the instructor, not to whine about my grades, no, I just wanted him to show me an “A” or “B” paper. I wanted to see what one looked like.  Just how good were the other people in my class? How far was I was missing the mark?

The instructor didn’t show me a paper with a high grade. Instead, he said to me, “Mr. Stith, if you knew how to write when you took my class you wouldn’t have needed to take my class.”

Then I understood. Perfectly. And I relaxed. I still tried to do decent work. I checked my spelling. I turned in my papers on time. But I stopped sweating it.

As the weeks went by my grades improved — a “D” and then a couple of “C’s,” a “B.” And then “A’s.” My final grade for the course was “A.”

Under his tutelage, according to him, I had learned to write.

Coming Friday: The Ice Cream Officer