The day I Met God
I
received orders to the USS San Francisco SSN 711 in August 1980. My
orders had me going to 'PreComUnit' or duty on a ship under
construction. My new ship was being built at the Newport News
Shipbuilding and Drydock Company (NNSDC) in Hampton Roads Virginia
and it was going to be the 23rd ship in its class. The lucky 711 was
a "Los Angeles" or "688 class "submarine, Los Angeles being
the name of the first in the class with hull number 688. However,
it was the first ship in the tier
two design which
meant it was coming with a host of major improvements and alterations
learned from the other older ships in the same class.
The 688-class submarine 's primary mission is to hunt enemy
submarines as an integral part of fast-moving battel group and is
referred to as a "fast attack". Once the ship completed sea
trials and commissioning it was to leave the east coast and head to
the west coast eventually being home ported in Pearl Harbor Hawaii.
The ship had a scheduled
departure date in February for "alpha" trials which were going to
be the ship's initial underway which among numerous other events
included a flank bell run and a deep dive. Commander Marshall was the
commanding officer, but the focus of the story will be on two
individuals, our Executive Officer (XO) and a larger-than-life person
who will come later into story that I will often refer to as God. The
XO was Lieutenant Commander (LCDR) Mark Keef, and he was a big man
built like a wrestler. In the days before the first got underway he
would spend a lot of time walking around the ship doing what XOs do,
talking to the crew, telling sea stories, and trying hard to bring
out the best in us. He was brash, loud, intelligent, and radiated
confidence, and to us the crew it was all for which we could hope.
Working in a shipyard was
unique and interesting experience for me but something that was
disliked by the majority of the crew. I learned quickly that working
in a shipyard was fraught with danger; new construction is loud and
dirty, and cohabited with low IQ workers who had little patience with
the crew. The ship had a temporary office that was on the second deck
of Building 1, located at the Intersection of 35th
street and West Ave that had been built in 1944. Building one used to
be corporate office of NNSDC but was vacated when a modern office was
constructed. After going up a grand marble staircase that had been
battered over the years you reached the ships very modest and
uncomfortable crew space where we would muster for quarters, hold
training, and try to stay out of the way of the yard employees. Most
of the area on the second floor was used by the shipyard for storage
area; the second deck had no temperature control, so it was either
hot or cold and rarely comfortable. Always present was a
sometimes-choking white dust that was everywhere kicked up every time
a folk lift roared past you. The shipyard tried to control the dust
by hanging thick translucent plastic with cut open vertical strips in
more trafficked passageways; a barrier that a small truck could run
through that could also contain the dust. But the barriers could only
do so much and so it became a daily occurrence of wiping down dirt
that was everywhere.
I noticed there was friction between the navy (at my level) and the
shipyard on the day I arrived and did not get any better over time.
History tells us that
there indeed individuals who lived long enough to change the world
and Admiral Hyman Rickover was certainly one of them, however today I
doubt fewer than one in a thousand Americans would know anything
about him. Soon after the end of the Second World War, he was
considered one of the foremost experts in both mechanical and
electrical engineering and was one of the first to suggest the use of
atoms instead of fossil fuel to generate propulsion on naval ships.
In 1946 there was nobody in the Navy that had any idea of how to do
that and many thought it a fool's errand to put the deadly atom on
a warship already fraught with danger. So, the navy gave the job of
figuring out the feasibility of producing steam using nuclear power
to "then" Captain Rickover. However, not done with that he next
conceptualized a plan to put such fledgling technology on a
submarine. Until then submarines Achilles heel was having to surface
to charge batteries, which meant they had to run noisy diesel engines
that required a lot of oxygen; a submarine running its engines on the
surface has lost all of its stealth and thus making them extremely
vulnerable to attack. Nuclear power would eliminate the need to go
anywhere near the surface and give submarines untold advantage over
any surface ship. In a little more than five years admiral Rickover
made the concept of nuclear power on a submarine a very safe reality
when the USS Nautilus went to sea in 1952.
The Navy had originated the
"Men in Black" (MIB's) long before the Hollywood movie came
out. The navy's version were from the bureau of Naval Reactors (NR)
established by Admiral Rickover in 1949. They dressed the same, were
without personalities or humor; they were like NASA engineers long
before there was a space program. A captain of a nuclear-powered
submarine's highest priority is the safe operation of his reactor
plant, it is paramount, and all other concerns of his command are
dwarfed by it. Any single adverse incident displaying reactor safety
is reported immediately to the ships squadron commander. If he
suspects issues, he could report this to NR which might result in a
NR visiting which in turn be unbelievably bad for the ship.
NR is an organization that "radiates" their involvement would be
painful but result in improvement and is what they exist for.
We should all respect them; their mission was and still is to prevent
reactor accidents, and as of now there has never been one.
Hymen Rickover started out
as a plebe at the Naval Academy during President Woodrow Wilson's
administration; by 1981 he was now a 4-star admiral and the only
director that NR ever had. For over 30 years Rickover was one of the
most powerful men in the department of defense. He ran the bureau of
Naval Reactors with complete unhindered authority. Because he had
ultimate power over anything that was nuclear in the navy and having
cultivated powerful friends in congress he was allowed to remain on
active-duty way past his normal retirement age; he had built himself
a kingdom of sorts that most his peers avoided at all costs. In other
words, if you were in the world of naval nuclear power, he was God.
Rickover had relationship
issues with about everyone during his career. He despised most of his
fellow admirals, the school he was a graduate of and some politicians
who often interrogated him over his policies; anyone who got in his
way was to expect his temper as well as his wrath. He and the MIB's
designed the reactor plant as well as the entire engineering space on
the 688-class submarine. This rankled a lot of powerful folks over at
Supervisor of Shipbuilding or SUPSHIP, who now only
had cognizance over the design of the forward part of this class
submarine. Rickover had the personality of a rattlesnake and fought
with every Chief of Naval Operations that came and went for 36 years.
His reputation more than likely contributed to the Bureau of Naval
Reactors being relocated from the Washington Naval Shipyard, and now
labored in rented office spaces finally ending up in Crystal City, a
stop on the DC Metro system. The men who he hired, these "Men in
Black" had wonderful minds that could perform calculus in their
heads and who could quote verbatim any section of the manuals that
they wrote which decreed how the reactor plant was to be operated.
Rickover had groomed these men and like him were resolute in ensuring
nuclear power safety and perfection.
In the build up to alpha
trials the gouge from the engine room was that Rickover and his boys
were going on alpha trials with us so they could see firsthand how
safely the reactor was being operated. Up to this point I had never
heard of the bureau of Naval Reactors and how important they were. At
quarters one day the non-engineering members of the ships company
were reminded that if at any time NR were around, we were to avoid
having any contact with them, always referring them to the duty
officer. We
were warned that they would come onboard unexpectedly at any time to
inspect the engineering spaces, always looking for discrepancies.
Anyways, I was sure I would have nothing to do with the MIB's and
that the command was overreacting doing everything to elevate the
stress level that was already barely tolerable.
About a month before our
first underway the crew moved out of the barracks and onboard the
ship and started standing normal in port watches while still i
n
the shipyard. The pace doubled as we practiced every evolution that a
submarine needed proficiency in no matter how basic it was. Being
very junior member of the duty section, I started standing topside
watches and hopefully
ensured only authorized personnel were allowed access to the ship.
That watch stood near the brow and closed to the forward escape trunk
hatch, the main access to and from the ship. Then late one very
chilly night after most of the crew evening, after participating in a
fire drill I relieved the topside watch and settled in for a
four-hour watch. The shipyard was deserted all yard birds had long
gone home when I noticed two spooky dudes walking down the wharf
heading my way. As they got closer, I was positive who they were and
called the below deck watch and asked him to wake the duty officer
and report "there here." I kept the phone to my ear trying to
look busy as they started up the brow; my plan was to delay them
until an officer came topside. I was flummoxed by what to do next,
let the Bureau onboard or make them wait for the duty officer.
Standing in front of me there was no doubt who they were, and I now
had eyes on the "men in black." Mr. Smith and Jones presented
their identification to me, and I took longer than usual to locate
the list they were on and could not delay them any longer, so I
cheerfully welcomed them on board without any similar retort.
Curiously, they proceeded down the engine room hatch which is not the
normal entrance point on any submarine. A few minutes later the duty
officer finally made it topside looking very agitated and all I had
to do was point aft and off he went trying anxiously to get in front
of the "bureau" and prevent potential damage control. All the
stories I had heard about them now seemed true, they were creepy, and
their presence affected normally rational offers in strange ways.
During the weeks before the
initial reactor plant startup the Bureau of Naval Reactors were all
over the engineering spaces; sniffing out any discrepancies that were
occurring or about to happen and correct it accordingly. Any major
violation of reactor plant safety during startup would require a
complete shutdown and cause a serious delay in the schedule. If this
happened, it would have significant consequences for the commanding
officer as well as the entire crew. Likely it would mean a two-week
delay in alpha trials while the ships engineering department went
through remedial training, more drills, lectures, and procedural walk
throughs. Thankfully, the engineering department did an excellent job
in starting the reactor plant up with zero glitches and Rickover gave
the USS San Francisco his blessing to proceed with alpha trials.
Then 10 February 1981 came
and at 0800 all departments had reported ready to get under way for
the first time. Already, in total there were an additional
thirty-four riders from the shipyard and squadron stuffed onboard
taking up space in the mess decks as usual; Rickover's "team"
of six would make 160 souls onboard a submarine designed for 120 men.
We had no weapons onboard, so the torpedo room became a makeshift
berthing compartment with twenty-five portable racks lined up neatly,
athwartship. I had no idea why we even bothered with this because
even the deepest of sleepers was not going to get the chance to use
them. Of course, we were fashionable late waiting for our celebrity
rider and his inner circle to arrive. Once onboard they were all
shuffled down to the wardroom, and we singled up all lines and we
were finally underway on nuclear power, followed ominously by a
rescue ship.
Lcdr Keef had the hardest
job of all during alpha trials, not only was he the ships XO, but he
was also the trials director as well as being Rickover's personal
bodyguard. As trials director he would coordinate every test that the
ship would conduct that was directed by a rather lengthy list of
events that were to be performed in the next 20 hours. Keef would
make effective use of the ships 1MC announcing system coordinating
events in no particular order some events were all hands, but others
were local and required only select individuals. Event 01 might be
open then close torpedo tubes at various depths or raise and lower
the periscopes at 150 feet, all these events were recorded properly
with discrepancies duly noted. The crew had practiced for over 3
weeks where each and every one of us had to be for each event. My
assignment was simple enough and required me to be in various places,
manning the JA phones (sound powered and basic circuit used on naval
ships) reporting the status of each event when directed.
A major concern to the
command and entrusted to the executive officer was ensuring that
Rickover was always separated from the crew. It had been reported
from past sea trials that he sometimes would mosey around unscripted,
searching for some very unlucky member of the crew so he could rattle
him by asking improbable questions then tripping off the line when he
did not get the answer he wanted. Young sailors are always a
challenge to control, they can be an unpredictable source of sarcasm
when faced with unknown etiquette. The XO was fully aware of this,
and shadowed Rickover were ever he went, always making sure he
arrived wherever he wanted to go without issues. We were told to look
away and not make eye contact if suddenly Rickover and his troupe
went by.
Alpha trial was a truly
short underway to quickly evaluate the ships' ability to operate
submerge, run as much of the ships major equipment at maximum loads
and ends with an attempt to break
the ships propulsion system by attempting a flank bell while
stressing the propulsion system to its design limit. I say break
because at this point the navy did not own the ship, and the builder
still had contractual obligation to fix all discrepancies that were
discovered. God had a dim view of ship builders cultivated over 30
years of disputes over quality of their building practices. The
thought process was if the ship was going to breakdown in some way,
it was better if happened on alpha trials close to home with a rescue
ship standing by. If anything occurred to prohibit propulsion the
ship would have to get a very embarrassing tow back to the shipyard
where the builder would incur all costs of repair and not the
taxpayers.
In reality fast attack
submarines very rarely operate at a flank bell. Every submarine that
accelerates to a flank bell just significantly increased their sound
output, often needlessly, compromising its warfare advantage and
contradicting its mantra of the "Silent Service." Going to flank
requires additional maintenance during the next upkeep that would not
be necessary if the ship kept it at or below a full bell. However,
the Navy needed to know that this submarine could, if the time came,
achieve its maximum designed speed.
The alpha trial event
listing started immediately after getting underway. Very few events
did not require all hands involvement and if you were lucky, you
might be able to relax somewhere out of sight. Soon we had arrived at
our assigned operations area about fifty miles east of Norfolk and
submerged for the first time to periscope depth, and the fun was just
getting started. I was correct in assuming that I would be on my feet
the entire time we were underway; emanating from the mess decks as
usual was usual cynicism with catch the phrase "don't worry if we
make it back you can sleep then. And so, the next 12 hours went by
hectically, you either participated in an event or were getting ready
for the next one. If that was not fun enough for us then there were
always long lines waiting to eat, long lines to use the head or yard
birds that you had never before met standing in your way, this was
fun at its core.
I was soon back on watch in
the control room enjoying a peaceful break in the action. It was now
four o'clock in the morning and 20 hours into the trial; there was
a quiet lull in the control room, too good to be true. Next the crew
was told to take station for the main event that some were calling
"showtime." It was time for the infamous "crash back" and in
control the order was given to proceed to 750 feet at all ahead full.
In the meantime, Admiral Rickover had started to head aft chaperoned
as always by the XO. Going aft from the wardroom required passing
through the mess decks where normally there will be a gaggle of mess
cooks cleaning the deck and supervised by a large cook in the
passageway blocking traffic. This is the reason that the XO
spearheads the way by making sure that anyone that is disgusting is
out of sight before the MIB's passes by.
Everyone up forward felt
the two main coolant pumps being placed in high-speed mode that is
necessary in achieving flank speed. Once settled in the maneuvering
space, standing directly behind the ships enlisted throttleman,
Rickover would order a flank bell. It takes about sixty seconds to go
from ahead full to ahead flank. In the control room all eyes were on
the inertial navigation system digital readout of speed over ground.
We were all hoping that because we were the first tier two ship that
the modification in the engine room would render a speed record. I
was not there but sure that everyone in the engine room was bracing
themselves, waiting for the speed report that was soon to come from
the control room. Soon came all the loud congratulations and shouting
when the ship reached and sustained 36.4 knots, a full two knots
faster than all other ships in the same class which was duly reported
to Admiral Rickover. Then came the order for all
back two thirds; a
rarity that only happens during alpha trials. It is strange to say
not really knowing but I am sure God wanted something bad to happen
to his beloved propulsion plant just so he could say "I told ya so"
and that his constant accusations of inferior workmanship were now
justified. What happened next is a once in a lifetime experience for
most of us. What was occurring was the equivalence of jamming an
automobile into reverse at 40 miles an hour. The absolutely
astounding power of the reactor plant was about to be displayed. A
submarine going at a flank bell is a sublime experience that is
impossible to forget. Only at a flank bell will you feel as well as
hear the power of the propeller pushing millions of tons of sea water
out of the way. The noise caused by the rushing of the sea across the
hull is distinct as well as feeling the gentle sway in a circular
motion that only happens during a flank bell is all unforgettable.
When all back two-thirds is ordered, the ship starts to quickly slow
all the while shaking violently as the propeller works against the
flow of the sea. If the ships drive train or shaft was going to snap
it was now. Then suddenly forward progress comes to zero and the ship
starts moving backwards. Submarines are not designed to go backwards,
back two-thirds' was designed only to slow the ship down or back
out of a pier. Depth control is impossible when moving astern at 6
knots, a submarine cannot go backwards for long, and danger awaits
those who try. Then when he has seen enough, Rickover mercifully
orders "all stop," and the crash back is over. For those of us
crammed in together tightly in the control room we could breathe
again. The engine room did not break off and sink to the bottom, no
casualties no alarms, just a combined sense of relief, a hushed
silence that seemed longer than it was. Alpha trial was history; we
had a propulsion system that worked properly, next came surfacing and
transiting home.
The sun was about 30
minutes away from rising and the ship was on the surface heading due
west to Newport News. At night on the surface a submarine usually has
the Officer of the Deck stationed on the bridge and the control room
rigged for black or all lighting off. I was still on watch with three
hours left before making port. There was still too many crewmembers
abounding about performing there assigned duties coming and going and
hard to make out their faces due to the darkness. I was standing
mostly out of the way on the back starboard side of the control room
next to a chart table keeping my log up and trying to stay upright
having found a way to cat nap by wedging snuggly my left arm through
a cable run and a stanchion all the while remaining unnoticed in the
darkness. Up till now I had not seen Rickover at all like some of my
shipmates who got a very brief glace at him walking through the mess
decks. Hours before I heard via the rumor mill that he "went off"
on a friend of mine who was vacuuming the wardroom, demonstrating his
well-known temper; thoughtlessly glad that it was not me. Then
suddenly without any warning the forward door leading in and out of
the control room opened at the same time all the white overhead
lights came on, bringing shouts and groans most of us present. Making
a blunder by turning white lights on when rigged for red is usually a
big no-no but today was not a normal day. It was as if a sunrise
service was about to start, and heaven had opened up; all eyes now
straining to adjust to the lights and wondering if we were about to
witness something divine. It became clear that our XO was the cause
of the sudden brightness as he barged in pushing watch standers out
of his way. My blurry eyes now told me that he was coming in my
direction as I instinctively pulled my left arm free. But then a
mysterious shape moved away from behind Mr. Keef and became annoyed
waiting for a startled watch stander to vacate a bench locker so he
could sit down. Of course, this had to be God, and my first
impression was that he really was smaller than everyone had said. He
was wearing a set of khakis that was too big and without any epaulets
that displayed his rank, he looked disheveled and very tired. I was
shocked at how old and fragile he looked. Now in the control room
there was complete silence as everyone became aware of his presence
as well as wondering what was going on. It soon became evident that
God was about to hold court for some unknow reason, and he wanted to
do it dangerously close to where I was standing. I tried to give him
some space by backing away, but more riders started filling in the
control room from the aft door and now I had someone pushing me
forward peering over my shoulder, vying for a spot to witness what
was soon to come. Once all of the need to be in control disciples had
taken station God's presence was now revealed and that he soon
would speak to us, a bible quote or a sermon seeing that it was
indeed Sunday. The XO had the honor to present Rickover to the crew
over the ships 1MC, his introduction was succinct, but God gave a
long, rambling unscripted speech that was difficult for me at the
time to comprehend. I was almost pressed against him when he started
to talk, he had to use both hands to steady the microphone that was
presented to him. It was a unforgettable moment for me; I was staring
at god; Keef was staring at me and Rickover was staring at something
unknown, maybe he could see where our country was going, perhaps a
warning that he describes so hauntingly at the end of his speech
about an America that he would likely never live to see.
The XO was thinking the
worst of me because up till now no crewmember that I knew of had been
allowed to be in such close proximity to Rickover and for that long
of a time; I was close enough to touch him. My XO must have been
thinking that I had it in me to wreck the sea trial by punking an
admiral which would have caused a ruckus that would have had been
heard at the pentagon. I now understand his concern because in the
days that followed, I received several suggestions coming from the
mess decks as usual on what I should have done; any one of which
would have put me into the Infamous Hall of fame and now will be
better if left unmentioned. Keef was staring at me and with his eyes
he was saying "don't do it" and if you do it you will pay. The
man did not know that I did not have it in me to be so low and soon
the "sermon from a bench" was over without interruption from me
or anyone. As God got up to leave, I did think momentarily of patting
him on the back but thankfully did not and now realizing how absurd
that would have been. So, there I was frozen in the moment trying to
recount and understand what he was talking about. Luckily, his speech
was recorded and later made available, after reading it repeatedly I
now know what he meant as well as its timeless meaning, so relevant
in the America of today and it went:
We
just completed alpha trial on the San Francisco and the propulsion
plant operated satisfactory. I want to once again congratulate the
Engineers and craftsman of the Newport News Shipbuilding and drydock
company for their excellent work as evidenced by this successful
trial. The men and women of Newport News continue the tradition of
shipbuilding competence that the navy counts on. I especially want to
congratulate the officers and men of the USS San Francisco. Anyone
witnessing these trials would find it hard to believe that over half
of the crew had never been to sea before except for short training
periods. The men and officers have demonstrated they are capable of
doing an outstanding job. I know that you will continue to do your
duties in the same outstanding manner. Our country should be proud of
Commander Marshall, the officers, and his men. On behalf of the Navy,
I thank all of you for a job well done.
Since
no church service could be held on board the San Francisco this
Sunday, I am taking advantage of the occasion to deliver a little
homily: I was born in the first year of this century and experienced
a childhood which had not changed much since that of the time of the
Civil War. I now live in the age of nuclear weapons, space travel,
and silicon chips. These diverse experiences make me feel as though I
have been a participant in two separate lives. But I am much the same
person I was in the early days. There were no automobiles on the
road; horses were still man's most important companion and friend
from the animal world. At night with no electricity there was total
darkness, only lit by the moon and stars. Except for the barking of a
dog or the hoof-beats of a horse, it was quiet.
In
the present age there is no unifying faith to bind us together; in
its place there is only half-hearted adherence to many conflicting
and diverse forms of ideological or emotional nonsense.
Another
attribute for the vanished age which distinguished it from that of
the was the reliance on reason; on the cumulative knowledge of the
past; of common sense, instead of pop, fashion, or craze.
Despite
the vast improvement in living and social conditions and great
technological and scientific advances that I have witnessed in my
lifetime, there is one thing that I should like to be reborn which is
missing in the materially guided United States of today. This is the
belief in the importance of honorable conduct and dealings'
confidence in men and women of all classes and callings in their own
capacity for reasons of good sense, and a pride in our country and
its achievement, past present and future.
This
was shared by aristocrat, bourgeois and working man alike. These,
despite all the differences in the individual circumstances and ways
of life, made us united as one nation. And these ideals which cannot
be served by money alone are what make people great.
And what our people are is what our country is.
Then it was all over, and
alpha trial was complete. The San Francisco was back tied up at the
shipyard and Admiral Rickover was gone as well as the MIB's. Next
up for the lucky 711 was sound trials where technicians got to listen
to how much noise we made at various speeds and reported back that
the ship with the new tier two silencing improvements was now the
quietest submarine in the fleet. On the 24 of April 1981 the San
Francisco was commissioned at pier 4 Naval Base Norfolk attended by
none other than the Secretary of Defense Casper Weinberger who told
everyone in attendance that my ship was now the fastest, quietist and
most deadly submarine in the world. We proudly left Norfolk for good
in June 1981 and headed for the Panama Canal. Once in the Pacific
Ocean we turned north to our namesake city and participated in Fleet
Week, a four day party where Mayor Feinstein present our captain the
key to the city and a good time was had by all; once the party was
over my ship sailed west to Pearl Harbor and had a long-storied
career.
I left the San Franscisco 2
years later to continue my journey elsewhere. I retired from the Navy
in 2002 while stationed at Cape Canaveral Florida. During my stay at
the cape, I was tracked down by the Navy's Bureau of Medicine or
BUMED because of their concern about my time working at Newport News
Shipyard. I was directed to get an X-ray and take various lung
function tests for mesothelioma; it turned out that all that nasty
dust back in "building 1" might have been spiked with asbestos
and other unknown air born guck. Thankfully, my test was negative,
however, years later through the wonder of social media I found out
that several of my shipmates had developed serious lung issues that
were related to the time in the shipyard.
As for Admiral Rickover he
went back to Crystal City but not for long. He participated in one
more alpha trial on the USS La Jolla that did not go well at all;
during the crash-back the Admiral froze and his inaction by not
ordering "all stop" while backing at two-thirds caused a horrific
loss of ships depth and trim which caused a controlled panic in the
control room resulting in the their Captain ordering an emergency
main ballast tank blow to the surface, that saved the ship. Several
days later, once back in Washington, Rickover was ordered to the
White House to answer for it in person to the president. On 31
January 1982, the then 83-year-old Admiral was told while sitting in
the Oval Office that his service to the navy was no longer required
and was now retired. It took President Regan to break the news to
Rickover and after 67 years in the navy he was unceremoniously let
out to pasture.
Now, at this point the
astute reader would assert that the author had never really met
Admiral Rickover. Then the author would have to define the term
meeting.
Does meeting someone mean a hardy handshake and idle conversation, if
so then, I never met God but then no one met him on the San Francisco
that day. The author would explain that at this point in Rickover's
earthly existence "meeting" someone was not what God did. It was
germane to Rickover that by the time a ship started builders'
trials everyone on it was competent; superbly trained and had the
complete confidence of the cognizant local commanders to proceed to
sea and then safely operate the ship. Rickover was not there to get
to know anyone let alone a lowly 19-year-old control room watch
stander that for a moment had a chance encounter with him. So,
without any preconceived meaning of the word "meet" I still say
that I met God.
I am not a frequent visitor
to Arlington National Cemetery, but when I do go, I always stroll
past where people I respect now rest. Near president Kennedys grave
and under a Japanese cheery tree you will find where Rickover is
buried, and I always stop there for a moment and remember the time I
had the chance to reach out and touch him.
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