7:55 AM

7:55 AM

Oakland A”s Quiz (1968 – ): 1) Most hits, season? [I guarantee

none of you will get it…they have never had one get 200.]

2) Most games won, season? 3) Most games lost, season?

4) Lowest ERA, starter? [Just looking for the pitcher”s name.]

Answers below.

Pearl Harbor

With the release of the movie, and seeing that I am posting this

from Honolulu, I thought that during this current trip of mine I

would read Walter Lord”s 1957 classic, “Day of Infamy.” This

book has come under some recent criticism with the

reassessment of who was responsible for the lack of preparation

on the U.S. side. To me, this is totally ridiculous. Lord set out to

write a chronology of events on December 7. He interviewed

hundreds, on both sides, and the result is a work that will be used

by historians for generations to come. Lord is now castigated for

not shedding the Japanese in a poor light, and, in turn, not fixing

the blame on the American side. The folks casting aspersions on

him are idiots. That wasn”t the point of the book, you freakin”.

Sorry. Anyway, it was amazing how when the attack

commenced, at 7:55 AM Honolulu time, it took most Americans

a while before reality set in. Such was the surprise, as I”m sure

the movie will convey.

At 7:55, Frank Stock and six of his mates from the repair ship

Vestal (moored alongside the Arizona) took a launch for church

services ashore. As they moved through the channel, six or eight

Japanese torpedo planes came in low, about 50 feet above the

water, heading toward the battleships they had just left. The men

were mildly surprised, because they hadn”t seen the U.S. planes

come in from this particular direction before. They were even

more surprised when their launch was sprayed with machine-gun

bullets.

As Walter Lord writes, “Stock recalled the stories he had read

about ”battle condition” maneuvers in the Southern states. This

must be the same idea – for extra realism they had even painted

red circles on the planes. The truth finally dawned when one of

his friends caught a slug in the stomach from the fifth plane that

passed.”

On the deck of the Battleship Nevada, bandleader Oden

McMillan waited with his 23 men as they prepared to play “The

Star Spangled Banner” for colors at 8:00. As they moved into

formation, some noticed a group of planes at the other end of

Ford Island. Lots of dirt and sand went up, but McMillan

thought it was another drill. At 7:58, the same planes started

coming in low towards them, accompanied by heavy explosions.

Right at 8:00, as a Japanese plane skimmed across the harbor and

dropped a torpedo at the Arizona (situated directly behind the

Nevada), the band started playing. The plane peeled off over the

Nevada, with the rear gunner spraying the men standing at

attention. Luckily, the guy was a poor shot and missed the entire

band and Marine guard.

McMillan kept on conducting, his training taking over. Then

another plane strafed the deck. McMillan paused and then

quickly picked up the beat again. The entire band stopped and

started with him. “Not a man broke formation until the final note

died. Then everyone ran wildly for cover,” writes Lord.

And this little incident at Hickam Air Base. As the initial shock

wore off, some began to assemble and fight back. Sergeant

Wilbur Hunt set up 12 .50-caliber machine guns in fresh bomb

craters near the barracks. His gunners turned up from an

unexpected source. A bomb had blown off a corner of the

guardhouse, releasing everybody. Again, Lord.

“The prisoners dashed over to Hunt and said they were ready to

go to work. It was just as he thought – the ones who are always

in trouble are the ones you want with you when the going gets

tough. He put them on the guns right away.”

Hopefully, “Pearl Harbor,” the movie, meets everyone”s

expectations.

Animals Continue Their Rampage

So here I just wrote another little bit about the brown tree snakes

of Guam and, lo and behold, the Herald Tribune has a front page

story Monday titled “Mischievous Species Capitalize on

Globalization.” The lead was our snake, one of the invading

”aliens” which are costing the global economy hundreds of

billions of dollars each year, as well as spreading disease and

causing massive ecological destruction. But since these are

ordinary animals, plants, and insects, rather than, say, martians,

governments are doing little.

Now the article gets something wrong right off the bat. It labels

Guam”s snakes as being “poisonous.” The brown tree snake is

NOT poisonous. But it is large and nasty and can bite the hell

out of you. The story does confirm that they came over from

Indonesia (but also mentions Australia).

Meanwhile, the Indian Mongoose, introduced to the West Indies

as part of a program to control the native rat population, has

instead wiped out native species of birds and reptiles…plus the

mongoose carries rabies. I”ve always told folks I meet in airport

lounges, “Geezuz, remember, never handle a mongoose. It could

be rabid.” This always results in weird looks from my fellow

passengers.

Elsewhere, in Asia and the South Pacific, “crazy ants” are

proliferating, and are largely responsible for destroying the rain

forest on Christmas Island. The ants have exterminated land

crabs that play a vital role in the ecosystem. In one 18-month

period, the ants were estimated to have killed 3 million crabs!

That means only one thing, sell the crabs weapons so they can

fight back! Some surplus flamethrowers, for starters, may do the

trick.

Of course in the U.S., you have the zebra mussels which are

wreaking havoc in the Great Lakes, as well as the Chinese

longhorn beetle which is ruining forests, and New York City as

well. At least the U.S. sent China grass for their golf courses,

and now the grass is growing out of control.

Lastly, this is my final anecdote concerning the brown tree

snake. Yesterday, I was walking along a beach in Guam when I

came across a man cutting back the shrubbery that was about 40

feet from the water”s edge.

“Any snakes?” I asked.

“No. It”s too dry. When it”s wet, they come out,” he said.

“Right at the beach?”

“Sure,” said our gardener turned snake hunter.

As I walked away, I turned and said, “Be careful!”

“You be careful,” he replied. Then with a big smile he added,

“They like white meat!”

NBC

I saw some of the network”s plans for the coming fall season.

Debuting on Thursday”s is “Inside Schwartz,” about a would-be

sportscaster whose dating rituals are punctuated by fantasy-like

sports highlights. Forgetting that this will follow “Friends,”

how long would you give an idea like this? 3 weeks? And how

long before we hear, “He…could…go…all…the…way!” 3

minutes?

Stuff

–I had a great experience at the race track in Hong Kong (more

in “Week in Review”). But not knowing anything about the

horses, I kind of went by name. Yes, is it any wonder that I bet

on “Desert Storm” in one race? Actually, it came in a strong 4th,

and it was moving up in class. Give it another 72 hours and it

would have finished first.

Top 3 songs for the week of 5/21/66: #1 “Monday, Monday”

(The Mamas & The Papas) #2 “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35”

(Bob Dylan) #3 “Good Lovin”” (The Young Rascals)

Oakland A”s Quiz Answers: 1) Most hits, season: Jose Canseco,

187 (1988). 2) Games won, season: Bob Welch, 27-6 (1990) 3)

Games lost, season: Brian Kingman, 20 (1980…Kingman went

8-20 for a team that was 83-79. But he pitched 211 innings, gave

up just 209 hits…not bad, considering…and he had a highly

respectable 3.84 ERA) 4) ERA: Vida Blue had his fantastic 1.82

ERA in 1971, a year in which he went 24-8, threw 312 innings,

gave up only 209 hits and fanned 301.

Next Bar Chat, Friday.