Dick Conner: Part 8
The 77th Special Forces was one of three groups, the others were the 10th in Bad Tolz Germany, and the first in Okinawa. The 77th was stationed on Smoke Bomb Hill and was an elite group whose goal was to train others in special warfare. Smoke Bomb Hill was located at Ft. Bragg which is a U. S. Army post in North Carolina.
This elite force had to have secret clearance, and for some, crypto clearance. Coach Dick Conner soon found out it had all kind of characters: men with combat patches on their uniforms from the 101st Airborne, 82nd Airborne, Rangers, Merrill’s Marauders, just to name a few.
At that time Conner was assigned to a team and the first action was attending a demolition class. A class that involved test and field work with explosives. The next thing on the agenda was two months in Utah, in the middle of the winter. This consisted of ski training and then playing war games.
The young solder’s weight training gave him a great edge on everyone else, as he was, by far, the best skier on his team. In the war game field he could carry his own equipment plus a hand generator. The war games were simple - get to the target and blow it up.
“The main test for our team went like this: we would jump in the Rocky Mountains, in about four foot of snow, and then proceed for days to knock out the target.
Me and another trooper, whose first name was Tom, were selected to push out the heavy drop on the second pass. What we were to do was let the team jump, then the plane would turn around and we would push out a heavy bag full of skis and equipment. Then we would jump behind it. Well, the heavy bag had a black parachute and Tom, the trooper with me, noticed it in its bundle…just as we were jumping. He started to yell about it and sure enough it took his air from his chute and collapsed it, but it opened before landing..so we began our target hunt.
That night after trying to make it through deep snow, with all the equipment we had to carry, was followed by the best night I ever slept. Waking in the morning covered with new snow,” recalls Conner.
This was called a field problem. The days in the mountains, in well below zero weather took its toll on some. One of the big mistakes was the boots the soldiers were wearing – called Mickey Mouse boots. They caused one man’s feet to get so bad he had to be thrown out of the war games. Dick also saw one cry from the cold. Another soldier high in the mountains took off his clothes and got in a stream of freezing water that flowed like mad in the mountains.
This was one method used by Special Forces/Green Berets to find out about you and train you according to your strengths. Because of Dick’s weight training, again he was able to do anything physical as good, or better than anyone else. “One more time I remind you…few people at that time understood the great value of strength training – not even Special Forces,” says Dick.
Conner did well in Utah except for one thing. The two weapons men on the team were sent out to do recon on the target. They were to find out when a train would travel the track, and determine the next target to be hit. The team captain sent Dick along, he supposes, to learn from both men, who had combat experience.
“Well before leaving I had put an antenna high in one of the trees in the mountains – when we got back, things were in an uproar, as the team had been located by the enemy. They were trying to leave – but no one could climb the tree to get the antenna wire. Again, weight training was the reason I could climb that good. The captain was NOT HAPPY --- ‘Never do that again Conner,’“ Dick fondly remembers.
After two months in Utah the team returned to Ft. Bragg, N.C. At that time, a Special Forces team had two radio operators, and radio school was Conner’s next assignment. “I knew my heart was not in it, as I could not see me working through learning the process of Morse Code, and all that was included,” says Dick.
What followed may be hard to believe, and Conner adds that he “was once called a liar over it.”
The Special Forces teams were disconnected in some way with the first sergeant, who was in charge of roll call every morning. Just a few days before Dick was scheduled to go to Radio School, the first sergeant asked for volunteers for permanent K. P. (kitchen patrol) duty, during morning roll call.
He added that K.P. duty would be the same as the cooks, which meant working the same hours as cooks. What it meant to Conner was “plenty of time to workout – plus, if they didn’t catch me in time, I wouldn’t have to go to radio school!”
Well, Conner was not caught and by the time he was, it was too late to go to radio school. On the very morning the school started, an officer came into the mess hall and said something like this to the young Conner, “you’re supposed to be in radio school – and then he told me to go back to my team and report to my sergeant.”
It goes without saying that Conner’s sergeant was very angry. He had served with Conner in Utah, so Conner was aware of how mad he could get. But all said and done, Dick says that he thought he could get by with it. And, he adds, he did get away with it, at least for a while.
Conner continued to work on K.P. not being bothered at working jobs that other soldiers hated – and working cook hours made it perfect for him to do what he loved the most, lift weights. This snafu went on for about 60 days and then he was quickly directed to Special Duty. “To this day I do not know how the Army messed up what follows,” says Conner.
The Special Duty was meant to be a punishment for Conner, and he was joined by two other duds who failed to do what the Army directed. “These two and me were put in charge of firing several furnaces that heated hot water for several Army barracks that housed some troops from another country….and it was, as we soon found out, a dream come true,” explains Conner. “Whoever the officer was that signed the papers putting three men on this job had no idea what the job was. The actual job took about one hour twice a day … for one man. Three men, (myself and the two duds) could not have dreamed this up for ourselves. These two other men were as special as I ever met. They were put on this detail because they didn’t get along with the Army. One of the guys was named Billy, he was a Christian and would witness to his faith to anyone and everyone. I did not know for sure if this is why he got in trouble with the Army, but I believe it was. The second guy, Bob Dothast was “Cool Hand Luke”! Bob was about 6’3” and a great athlete. This is what I remember about him. He eventually went to college on a diving scholarship – at Wisconsin. He transferred to Iowa where he played football on the team that played in the Rose Bowl. He played tennis in the Pan American games, and he played golf with the officers on post. Bob was fearless. One day he said to me, “let’s go swimming” and we did. As I remember, it was the officer’s swimming pool where we didn’t belong, but Bob thought he belonged anywhere. Well, it was the summer of 1960, and again as I remember, Bob gets the idea that we should talk Billy into firing the furnaces for a week and we could take a vacation … he did and we did.”
Dick recalls that everything was hunky-dory, except for one thing. Being a paratrooper meant he had to jump every 90 days or lose his jump pay. “The duty I was on was so good and I didn’t want it messed up. I had a buddy who was the company carpenter, his name was Royce Adams. So I talked to him about getting me on a jump manifest, and he did. The jump was a night jump, so I thought I could go from my present barracks without being noticed by anyone. Well, as I walked across the area, not more than 100 yards from my then present barracks, I heard a voice yell “Hey aren’t you Dick Conner? We have been looking all over for you.” He went on to say I was supposed to be in Germany….
Well, again, it has to be hard to believe, the Army for some unknown reason thought I had a crypto clearance. In other words, they had somehow messed up, and I took advantage of it.”
Dick Conner’s next duty was to be Bad Tolz, Germany, probably the best duty in the Army at that time.
Stay tuned for Part 9 of “In The Pit with Dick Conner”
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