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Excerpt from the book:
Peter
Woodley and I became friends because our last names began with
W. At the Navy Officers Indoctrination School men were grouped
in alphabetical order, so he slept in the bunk next to mine
and our schedules were identical. We got involved in a series
of comic-opera episodes, and if the navy's need for men in 1942
had not been desperate, both Woodley and I might have failed
to graduate, though not for the same reason.
Woodley was twenty-one years old then, a clean-cut, good-looking
blond boy. Six feet tall and weighing 190 pounds, he had played
football and baseball in college. He had raced motorboats for
years and he loved the sea. But he didn't like to memorize the
sub-divisions of the fleet and he couldn't write a letter in
correct navy format. I memorized all the sub-divisions and wrote
a number of perfect letters, but I had trouble reassembling
revolvers and I never learned how to tie a navy knot. In the
eight weeks at indoctrination school I learned to tie only one
kind of knot, and that proved to be a commonplace civilian knot
that roused the voluble contempt of the boatswain's mate to
whom I showed it. I never did pass the knot-tying test, nor
did I ever have occasion to tie any more knots during my naval
career, except once when I mailed a package of souvenirs from
the Aleutian Islands.
I never reassembled the revolver I had taken apart in the
gunnery drill, either. It happened a long time ago and I suppose
that by now someone has managed to put it together again. But
I still don't believe it was an ordinary revolver, in spite
of the unsympathetic remarks of the gunner's mate who was instructing
us.
Woodley had a way with revolvers and tied knots nicely, but
naval correspondence upset him. After the first class meeting
he said to me indignantly, "How can you write a letter without
using the first person?" "By using the third person," I said.
"I can't talk about myself like that," he insisted. "It's indecent."
I laughed but he was serious. "Look at this," he said. "My
assignment is to write an official letter to the Bureau, asking
for change of duty, I'm not permitted to say that I am asking
for it. Oh no. I have to say, 'It is requested that Ensign Peter
Woodley, DV-(s), 874-139, be granted a change of duty from the
battleship Cleveland to a crash boat.'"
All battleships are named after states," I told him. "There
isn't any battleship named Cleveland." He revised his letter
glumly and brooded about the principle of the third person.
He spent much more time on his letters than their eventual quality
merited.
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