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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (270956)7/7/2002 7:30:48 PM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
I found this which is mostly the same story.

a few months after hitting .406, Pearl
Harbor was attacked and the U.S. was drawn in to World War II. Williams,
with a 1A draft status, received a deferment because his mother was
dependent on him.

This was not portrayed well in the press or taken well by the fans. He was
painted as "un-American." Fans heckled him mercilessly. He made it
through the 1942 season, voluntarily enlisting in the Navy reserve and being
called to active duty in November of that year.

He missed the next three baseball seasons, spending his time studying
and learning how to fly. As he did with baseball, he excelled at his new craft.
During his training, he set records for hits, shooting from wingovers, zooms
and barrel rolls. He also set a still-standing student gunnery record, in
reflexes, coordination and visual reaction time.

He never got called into active combat and was discharged in December of
1945. He returned to the Red Sox for the 1946 season, picking up where he
left off. It would be seven years before his military career would continue.

Williams was called from the inactive reserves in 1952 to fight in the Korean
War. He arrived in Korea in February 1953 as a member of the first Marine
Air Wing. It was then he began his friendship with Glenn.

"By luck of the draw, we went to Korea at the same time," Glenn said. "We
were in the same squadron there. What they did at that time, they teamed up
a reservist with a regular to fly together most of the time just because the
regular Marine pilots normally had more instrument flying experience and
things like that. So Ted and I were scheduled together. Ted flew as my
wingman on about half the missions he flew in Korea."

This wasn't a goodwill tour. Williams got hit on several occasions,
managing to escape death each time.

"Once, he was on fire and had to belly land the plane back in," Glenn said.
"He slid it in on the belly. It came up the runway about 1,500 feet before he
was able to jump out and run off the wingtip.

"Another time he was hit in the wingtip tank when I was flying with him. So
he was a very active combat pilot, and he was an excellent pilot and I give
him a lot of credit."

So did the American public, who gave Williams a hero's welcome upon his
return to baseball at the end of the 1953 season. Williams, however, didn't
really understand the what all the commotion was about.

"Everybody tries to make a hero out of me over the Korean thing," Williams
once said. "I was no hero. There were maybe 75 pilots in our two squadrons
and 99 percent of them did a better job than I did. But I liked flying. It was the
second-best thing that ever happened to me. If I hadn't had baseball to
come back to, I might have gone on as a Marine pilot."

There wouldn't have been any complaints from the Marines, least of all from
his squadron leader.