Dick Conner: Part 6

The next day, Dick dressed and presented himself to the Army recruiter. He was joined by his buddies, Larry Goodman and Billy, who witnessed Dick enlisting in Airborne, per his drunken warnings the previous night. “I did have second thoughts about what I was doing – but not for long,” Dick mentions wryly.
Before he could bench press a set of 200 pounds, Dick was on a bus with the other recruits, heading to Fort Ord, California, leaving all his worldly goods with Goodman and Billy.
“I had no plan in life beyond the drive to lift weights,” says Coach Conner.
Dick said he called his dad and told him what he had done. His dad was not happy about Dick’s impulsive move, furthermore, he was not happy that Dick had not been home to visit in over two years.
Conner recalls that it took about two days, for trouble to find him.
“I should have known better than to listen to another recruit, but my situation was different and difficult. As we stood in chow line, one that extended about a half block, I was told by another recruit that I did not have to stand in line because I had a “strip” on my shoulder. When you enlisted from the Navy to Army, etc., within 90 days or so, you get to keep some rank.
I proceeded to listen to him, as it did make some sense to me. He told me that I was to go in the back door. So I did. Almost the very second I entered the back door, I was confronted by a cook who wanted to know what I was doing…..
And I told him I was going to chow to which he announced, “No, you are going on mess duty.” Not mincing words, I told the cook that I had no intention of doing that and just like that ….we were in a fight. Bad deal for a recruit in Basic Training. The cooks jumped in to stop the fight and to my surprise they did nothing but put me to serving butter. At that time basic trainees never got enough to eat, at least back then and more butter was right down their alley. So I gave to them what they wanted, not the one pat of butter the Army directed. But I said how much you want? Before I knew it, one of the cooks said “get that crazy man out of here.” I proceeded to get a tray and went through the chow line, ate and left.”
Dick had been lifting for several years and at that time only about one person in ten thousand lifted weights. Conner was stronger than the average man, but he had no idea how much stronger some men were genetically.
After several days the Army decided Conner needed Basic Training, in order to instruct him on how to shoot an M1 rifle. Basic Training took practically no effort for Conner. The young man had been weight training and he had been through Navy Boot Camp. To his surprise (and lack of explanation), he found Army Basic Training to be much easier than Navy. Since weight-training was rare, Dick found that nobody in his company in Boot Camp was acquainted with the sport. Dick easily beat anybody in the physical training test.
To Dick’s amusement, he played on the flag football team and “had a blast.”
“We had a black guy who wore a size 17 shoe. We were best of friends as he played on the team, and was real fast even with this size shoe. I mention this because I ended up in Germany and about two years after Boot Camp I read in “Stars & Stripes”, the military newspaper in Europe, about this big-footed running back who was a star football player. And yes, it was my buddy from Basic Training.”
Dick notes that most people did not know that football and boxing in Europe at that time was like the movie “From Here to Eternity”. If you were good, that is all you did. No work, only play.
Conner’s basic training was coming to an end, and it was sooner than he anticipated. About December 14, 1958, an order from the commanding General came down that Ft. Ord would be shut down over Christmas, and his company was to cut their training by a week, so they pressed into fast forward, and his orders were to report to Ft. Campbell, Kentucky for Jump School.
Dick recalls, “I knew all the tricks of the trade for hitchhiking. As soon as we were out of Basic, I went to a Greyhound station and found a guy who worked as a bus driver and paid him to put my duffle bag on the bus for Evansville. Then I began to hitchhike.
I have been called a liar on this part of the story, but so be it. Ft. Ord was located near Monterey Bay, California, so I took off without a map and without a clue as how to get to Evansville, Indiana. I completely depended on the people who picked me up, plus I wanted to go through Sacramento to see my buddies from the Navy, but I don’t remember much about my short visit with them. But I do remember Larry Goodman had taken a beating from the Hell’s Angels for something he had done to one of their girlfriends.
It took me four days to get home, but on the way I went through Reno, which I knew little about at that time. But I remember how exciting crossing the border was and how I actually saw a ghost town between Sacramento and Reno.
At that time, 1958, the highway was not two-lane and it was the winter route between California and Chicago. One guy picked me up and he was driving like he was nuts. He also told me I was hitchhiking at a time I could get snowed in.
But the one ride I got was the one that is hard to believe. It was two girls and they were going to Idaho. As they talked, and I sat in the front seat with them – yes, they started talking about two guys they met in Sacramento. And … you guessed it …. It was my two buddies. Anyway, I got home just before Christmas, and having been gone for over two years, nothing was the same. So about a week later I headed for Ft. Campbell, home of 101st Airborne, Division and Jump School.”
Stay tuned for Part 7 of “In The Pit with Dick Conner”
I asked Dick why did he want to be strong (and increase his size) ---
His response: To some degree, not all, but a lot of guys who lifted back then were loners and I fit that group – why, I don’t know. I do know that when I started to lift while on the USS Hornet I was no preoccupied to a troubling extent.
I see this today in some others, we call it an inferiority complex, I believe I fit that mode – in my case, my love for weightlifting set me apart. But it also caused me to be more and more aggressive, in time and as my story goes on, much of it I can not write about, but I will tell as much as I can – and I will be truthful.
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