Griff Murphey
11-15-2011, 05:28
Our local dental society recently honored a man who was drafted during the Korean War. He had a Texas Tech degree in Zoology and had been working in a hospital lab in Amarillo (dental school would come after his Army service courtesy of VA). He was, and still is, a great shot. Having grown up with a gun in his hands at all times he had the best score on the range and was told he would be trained as a sniper, which was not to his liking! Fortunately for him the Army looked at that college biology degree and sent him to Brooke Army Medical Center for training as a medic.
I sometimes wondered why i was sent to the USMC as a dentist. Was it my previous Army ROTC commission? I recently found a 1975 letter I had forgotten about that the Navy Dental Corps Detailer sent me about my request to go to Pendleton after Okinawa. He recalled visiting the Baylor dental students in our senior year at a Navy Reserve Captain's house. I had brought a collection of 1:1200 waterline ship models similar to the WW2 ID models, to show my fellow dental students the relative size and types of different type ships. The Detailer said: "When I saw those ship models you brought, I knew you were the right man for the 3rd Marine Division!"
So I guess he figured if I was gung ho enough to have a ship model collection I should go to the Marine Corps? Actually as it turned out it was great, but as far as hobbies go, my shooting was a bigger asset at making USMC friends. I guess my point is that someone in charge can pick up on something and reach an illogical conclusion that can have far-reaching consequences for an entering individual.
What I am looking for is: did any of you have any oddball hobbies or educational factors that came to the attention of your superiors and somehow led the military to put you in an unexpected or shall we say an undesired job or duty station?
I sometimes wondered why i was sent to the USMC as a dentist. Was it my previous Army ROTC commission? I recently found a 1975 letter I had forgotten about that the Navy Dental Corps Detailer sent me about my request to go to Pendleton after Okinawa. He recalled visiting the Baylor dental students in our senior year at a Navy Reserve Captain's house. I had brought a collection of 1:1200 waterline ship models similar to the WW2 ID models, to show my fellow dental students the relative size and types of different type ships. The Detailer said: "When I saw those ship models you brought, I knew you were the right man for the 3rd Marine Division!"
So I guess he figured if I was gung ho enough to have a ship model collection I should go to the Marine Corps? Actually as it turned out it was great, but as far as hobbies go, my shooting was a bigger asset at making USMC friends. I guess my point is that someone in charge can pick up on something and reach an illogical conclusion that can have far-reaching consequences for an entering individual.
What I am looking for is: did any of you have any oddball hobbies or educational factors that came to the attention of your superiors and somehow led the military to put you in an unexpected or shall we say an undesired job or duty station?