Saturday, May 28, 2016

When the costs of war came home...

...During World War II The Breeze was owned by C.N. (Clyde) “Breezy” Brust and his wife, Marie. The paper was solidly behind the war, with stories about rationing and war bonds, a weekly service news column – “With the U.S.A. Colors” – that had small items about who had been home on leave, or who was where and what they were doing, and even ads, such as one for the Kuner-Empson farm implement company that had the headline: “You can kill Nazis with a plow” and talked about farming’s importance in the war effort.

Then, just as 1943 began, on the front page of the Jan. 28 issue, in the upper left corner, was a headline: “Milliken’s First War Casualty Reported is Private Ralph C. Stroh.”

“The cruel hand of war struck near home,” the short, half-dozen graph story started, “when it was announced by the War Department Monday that Private Ralph Stroh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Stroh living north of Milliken, had been killed ‘in defense of country’ on November 26th.”

And, almost heartbreakingly, on the other side of the front page, another headline: “Brother of Mrs. Jack Gilbreath was killed in Southwest Pacific.”

Walter Weglin, 25, (from the neighboring town of) Greeley, the brother of Marie Gilbreath of Johnstown, was killed in action Dec. 2 and his parents were notified Tuesday, the story said.

Within 24 hours the community found out two young men had died. Weglin and Stroh had been inducted at the same time, trained together in Australia, and served in New Guinea “and were close buddies” the stories said.

Walter’s mom was home alone when she received the news, her husband working more than an hour away in Denver, “and Mary was taken immediately to Greeley by her husband and expects to remain with her mother indefinitely.”

The day after the paper came out, Ralph Stroh was buried at the United Brethren Church. In the next week’s issue of The Breeze the funeral was recounted under a headline: "Memorial Service here largely attended by sorrowing friends.”

The church was filled to capacity “by bereaved relatives and friends of the young man,” the story reported. “In honor of the young soldier, the flag was at half-mast in Milliken and the schools there dismissed for the afternoon.”

The story also reported the comments of George Z. Mellen who spoke at the service, though it makes no mention of his connection to either the Stroh family or the community. Perhaps it was so deep nobody needed to be told.

Under the subhead “Heroism” he was quoted saying, “The most tragic aspect of war has come to us. Two of our own boys, known and loved by all, have made the supreme sacrifice.

“The people of Johnstown and Milliken are justly proud of them and pay high tribute to their heroism,” Mellen said. “Our profound sympathies are extended to their immediate families, and we feel a deep obligation to them, acknowledging an indebtedness that can never be paid. We can only strive to be worthy of their sacrifice.”

In 2011, on Memorial Day, the town of Milliken dedicated a memorial to the 'sons of Milliken' who had died in wars over the years. The reporter who wrote the story talked with Ralph Stroh’s sister, Frances (Stroh) Farnsworth.

Farnsworth, then 89, described her brother as “a beautiful man with a head of unruly hair, big brown eyes and a tender spirit. ‘I just don’t know what to say about him, because in my idolized eyes he was perfect,’” she said.

She called him “her best friend” and talked about his extreme intelligence and delightful sense of humor. He had a short but successful career as a boxer before volunteering and going into the Army in January of 1942 at age 26.

“It was a surprise to us,” Farnsworth said. “Of course, the whole war was a surprise to us. Farm boys were the salt of the earth and we were told they wouldn’t be drafted because of that … But of course Ralph volunteered.”

News of his death came over the telephone as then 20-year-old Frances and her mother sat in their kitchen planning her upcoming wedding.

“It was just an ordinary day until the phone rang and life was never the same anymore,” she said.

Asked the classic ‘what if’ question, Ralph Stroh’s sister said if her brother had made it back from the war, “I think he would have stayed on the farm. And he probably would have gotten married, too, and had a hundred children.”

And there have been others. At the same ceremony, Virginia (Belo) Martinez shared her memories and grief about her brother, John, who joined the U.S. Navy and died in October of that same year – the third death the communities had to endure – when his crew failed to take off from an aircraft carrier, plunging into the Pacific Ocean. His body was never found.

“I don’t remember much about him,” Virginia, who was 8 when her brother died, said, “because I was so young. But I do remember him teaching me how to tie my shoes. And he would always brush my hair before school.”

And there was John Robert “Fini” Velasquez, of Johnstown, who was killed in the spring of 1968 in Vietnam. He was the first, and only casualty from the community in that war.

His sister, Gloria, grew up to be a professor of modern languages and literature teacher in California and a well-known poet. In 2008, I wrote a story when she was trying to start a scholarship at the local high school in her brother’s name.

“He remains forever just a kid,” I wrote in the lede. “Frozen in the amber of grief over a life lost too soon. After nearly four decades, eyes now framed with wrinkles have to squint when they look back to recall when he was alive, but even today, tears still come when they do.

“But perhaps, his memory will help send another minority young man or woman off to college, rather than to war.”

Gloria’s brother dropped out of school in the seventh grade. He enlisted in the Marines when he was 17. His mother had to sign the papers to let him.

In part, Velásquez believes, her brother chose to join the Marines because he felt the door to education was closed to him as a minority, and the military was a way out of the fields and the farm labor he had grown up doing.

“In a novel I’m working on, I’m trying to capture the frustration he felt,” she said. “He didn’t feel valued in school and sort of felt pushed out and into the working world. At that time, what they now call the ‘push-out rate’ for Chicano males was extremely high.”

Her brother, 11 months older than her, was a smart young man, Velásquez said.

“He was so young,” she said. “He was proud that he was serving his country, but I think it was that he had dropped out of school, there weren’t any jobs, and he felt the doors weren’t open to him for that chance at an education. Look at the long history of the Chicanos in the military and I think many of them were frustrated like that and falsely believed they’d have better opportunities if they joined.”

Jesse P. Molinar Sr. of Johnstown is Johnny’s uncle. His sister is Johnny’s mom. Nobody called him John, or Johnny though, he said. People called him “Fini.”

“His dad used to always say ‘Que finito es mi hijito,’ (“How very fine my baby is”), and it sort of stuck,” Molinar said. “It started out as finito, and then just got shortened to Fini.”

About a dozen years older than his nephew, Molinar remembers pushing him around in a carriage when he was a baby – and partying with him when they were young men.

“He lived a fast life. He lived the way he wanted to live, and he liked to party,” Molinar said. “Maybe he knew something; that he didn’t have a lot of time. When he came home on leave before he left for Vietnam, we went to Juarez together.” Molinar pauses for a moment.

“We had a pretty good time,” he continues with a laugh, leaving it at that.

“I think he joined the Marines because back then things were pretty slow, and if a kid didn’t finish school, that, the military, was a route to take.”

On that trip to Juarez, Molinar recalls, “Fini told me ‘You know uncle, I got a feeling that I won’t make it back.’” I told him not to worry about it.

“My sister and her family were living over by the drug store. My brother-in-law always had the greatest magazines to read, so they’d leave the door open, or I’d use my key to get in to read when they weren’t home. I was sitting there one day when outside a car door slammed and I looked out the window. There were two Marine sergeants and I thought, ‘Oh my god.’ They said Fini was hurt pretty bad. I asked if he was going to make it, and one shook his head no.

“I had to tell my sister,” he said.

Velásquez, who had just recently been promoted to Lance Corporal, was with his mortar unit April 30, 1968, when a shell exploded during firing. He was burned over more than 90 percent of his body and lingered for nearly a week before he died on May 6.

“You know, I remember something else about that time he came home on leave before going to Vietnam,” Molinar said. “We went to Gilcrest to drink some beers, and we saw a kid Fini knew. Man, he was a big kid, six-foot-two, and I don’t know how much he weighed. They called him Bullwinkle.

“The kid was getting ready to graduate from high school, and he was saying he was going to join the Marines just like Fini had. Fini tried to talk him out of it.

“You know, I heard later that he did join the Marines, and he was killed in Vietnam.”

Memories of her brother haunt the pages of Velásquez’s writing.

One poem, “Black Shoes,” was the one she chose to read in 2005 when she was selected as San Luis Obispo’s eighth Poet Laureate. It’s the one that’s been printed widely, bringing the memory of her brother to an international audience. It’s the one about the box that came home with his personal effects after he was killed:

Just another pair of black shoes,

Vietnam shoes,

Fini’s shoes

stained with blood,

the stench of war,

mom’s piercing cries,

dad’s alcoholic eyes,

Louie’s broken heart

and my wounded soul

as I stare day after day

at those old, black shoes

sitting in my closet,

waiting,

hoping for your return.


Gloria Velásquez said in the story that she knows her brother will only return in her heartbroken dreams. By starting the scholarship in his memory, she said, maybe someone else’s son and brother might have the chance she feels he never got, and maybe not have to bargain their life for the chance to get ahead.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Behind every great editor....


I went to a funeral at Johnstown United Methodist Church Tuesday afternoon. It was a death in the family.

It was the memorial service for Joyce Williams, who along with her husband, Paul, owned The Breeze from the mid-1950s to the late ‘70s. Joyce died March 26 in Wray. She was 89.

I say it was a death in the family because anyone who has worked at The Breeze: pounded on a keyboard writing a story, behind a camera shooting a picture, selling an ad, laying out a page, is part of something bigger and greater than themselves. Together we have all brought the news … good and bad … to the communities of Johnstown and Milliken now for more than 112 years.
During part of Joyce’s service they had a picture of the front page of The Breeze up on the projection screen. A copy of an issue produced by Lesli and me. What I thought looking at it wasn’t so much pride, however, as gratitude.
Gratitude that Paul and Joyce came in to the paper each week and put out an issue, so that I had a newspaper to come to in the early 1990s. Every Thursday since 1904, a copy of The Breeze has hit the streets. That is a legacy that none of us who have worked here take lightly. The story I’ve been telling since Joyce’s death, which I told again on Tuesday, is one she told in 2004, when all the living publishers of the paper sat down for an interview as part of the centennial celebration issue.

As Joyce told the story, she and Paul were traveling during a snowstorm. Joyce was driving. The car started to skid, and it was obvious that it was going into the ditch.

“I just remember trying to steer it so if someone got hurt it would be me and not Paul,” Joyce said. “Because Paul could put the paper out without me. But I couldn’t put it out without Paul.”

Tuesday, after the service, Joyce’s son-in-law, Paul Neubauer, came over to where I was sitting at the reception and, as Paul Harvey used to say, told me “the rest of the story.”

Apparently, after going into the ditch out by Limon, Joyce called Paul and their daughter, Kathy, who were living in Woodland Park at the time.

“She said we needed to come out to Limon and get them,” Paul said. “I kind of pointed out to her that there was a blizzard going on, but Joyce told me we needed to come get them … because they had to put out the paper.”

So Paul borrowed a Jeep and they went and got them, and the paper came out.

Believe it or not, for all the love and adulation and vast riches that one gets running a small town newspaper, there are those Wednesday mornings when the alarm goes off and deadline day dawns when you’re not so sure you really want to put out a paper, or why you should. But yet you do. I have seen people do it sick. I have seen people do it grieving.

Joyce was one of a legacy of “newspaper wives” who have been at The Breeze. Over the years it has published, the paper has for the most part been owned and operated by husbands and wives who put the paper out together. But if you look back at the individual histories, it is usually the husband who gets most of the ink. Most of the credit.

Reality is, and I guess to be fair I should say I am only speaking from my own personal experience here, reality is that the Breeze Wives not only worked at the paper, they also took care of the kids, did the shopping, cooked the meals and everything else that kept a house a home. What’s the old saying about Ginger Rogers? She did everything Fred Astaire did, only backwards and in heels.

There’s a book from 1940 called “Country Editor.” It was written by Henry Beetle Hough, who ran the The Vineyard Gazette in Edgartown, Massachusetts, on the island of Martha’s Vineyard, for more than six decades. In the business it’s somewhat of a textbook on running a small weekly newspaper. It’s a beautiful book. I’ve read it, plenty of times, when I needed a little ink-stained spiritual recharge.

What I’ve also read are histories of the paper that point out that the credit also should rightfully go to Hough’s wife, Elizabeth Bowie Hough, who was the co-owner, co-publisher and co-editor. Some articles even point out that after Henry got all famous with his book writing and stuff, it was his wife who really did the day-to-day at the Gazette.

It was hard to be sad at Tuesday’s service. I know Joyce is again with Paul. As you read this week’s issue, yet another Thursday that the Breeze has published, think of them, as I will, and thank them for their part in writing the history of these communities.

Rest in peace, Joyce.

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