Ich bin ein PT skipper?
Moderators: Joel Billings, Tankerace, siRkid
Ich bin ein PT skipper?
Please forgive a silly question (which has probably been raised before), but I'm curious. Where is JFK on the PT-109? It seems some imposter named Westholm has taken his place.
My understanding is that Kennedy took command of the 109 in April 43, but the scenario (10, I think) starting in June 43 has Westholm in command of the 109.
Is this an oversight? Or is JFK belowdecks with some intern?;)
BTW, I've been reading a book by Bob Ballard (of deep sea exploration fame) in which he found parts of the 109 in the
Solomons (mainly a torpedo tube...most of the rest of the wreckage scattered with the currents---PTs being made of mostly flimsy stuff).
My understanding is that Kennedy took command of the 109 in April 43, but the scenario (10, I think) starting in June 43 has Westholm in command of the 109.
Is this an oversight? Or is JFK belowdecks with some intern?;)
BTW, I've been reading a book by Bob Ballard (of deep sea exploration fame) in which he found parts of the 109 in the
Solomons (mainly a torpedo tube...most of the rest of the wreckage scattered with the currents---PTs being made of mostly flimsy stuff).
"The Navy has a moth-eaten tradition that the captain who loses his ship is disgraced. What do they have all those ships for, if not to hurl them at the enemy?" --Douglas MacArthur
Ich bein ein PT Skipper
"The first action for PT-109, then commanded by Lt. Rollins E. Westholm, took place on the night of 7-8 December 1942, after reconnaissance planes reported eight Japanese destroyers moving down the "slot.""
http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/p/PT-109.htm
Mystery solved.
Anthony
http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/p/PT-109.htm
Mystery solved.

Anthony

"The Navy has a moth-eaten tradition that the captain who loses his ship is disgraced. What do they have all those ships for, if not to hurl them at the enemy?" --Douglas MacArthur
Mystery not Solved
Alright you have me there. Maybe it has something to do with the game programing and the "original" Captain has to be "killed" before a replacement can be named.
Maybe someone can run a test with a ship that survived the enite campaign but had a change of Commanders during the campaign.
There also might have been legal problems involved using his name. IIRC the old game PTO ran into some legal issues using the real names of historic figures so they ended up using fictional names.
Anthony
Maybe someone can run a test with a ship that survived the enite campaign but had a change of Commanders during the campaign.
There also might have been legal problems involved using his name. IIRC the old game PTO ran into some legal issues using the real names of historic figures so they ended up using fictional names.
Anthony
Re: Mystery not Solved
Originally posted by Navare
Alright you have me there. Maybe it has something to do with the game programing and the "original" Captain has to be "killed" before a replacement can be named.
There also might have been legal problems involved using his name.
Anthony
But some scenarios BEGIN when JFK should have been in charge.
I don't think the Kennedy family would sue....they seem to have enough legal problems as it is.

"Let the word go forth" that we would like someone from Matrix to solve this mystery!
"The Navy has a moth-eaten tradition that the captain who loses his ship is disgraced. What do they have all those ships for, if not to hurl them at the enemy?" --Douglas MacArthur
I think they wanted to avoid emotional and psychological trauma to those of us from Massachusetts if Cmd J.Kennedy was killed... 

"Money doesnt talk, it swears. Obscenities, who really cares?" -Bob Dylan
"Habit is the balast that chains a dog to it's vomit." -Samuel Becket
"He has weapons of mass destruction- the world's deadliest weapons- which pose a direct threat to the
"Habit is the balast that chains a dog to it's vomit." -Samuel Becket
"He has weapons of mass destruction- the world's deadliest weapons- which pose a direct threat to the
- pasternakski
- Posts: 5567
- Joined: Sat Jun 29, 2002 7:42 pm
Originally posted by Drex
Now there's a real "What if". WWII wouldn't have changed, but Goldwater might have been President.
Or Nixon might have been president from 60-68. Or LBJ might have defeated Nixon in 64, depending how his first four years went. Also, without Kennedy letting Vietnam sneak up on us like he did, the whole thing might never have happened (but think of what other conflicts might have arisen).
Put my faith in the people
And the people let me down.
So, I turned the other way,
And I carry on anyhow.
And the people let me down.
So, I turned the other way,
And I carry on anyhow.
The Cuban Missile Crisis might have turned out very differently (or not happened at all). Had Nixon been elected, the Bay of Pigs might have been a success (it was dreamed up during the late Ike admin) since Nixon probably would have supported it to the hilt. No Castro! Florida might be a bit different too!
Would Nixon have been assassinated in 63???? Henry Cabot Lodge (jr) would have been president!
(Lodge-Kennedy connection: both were from Mass, JFK defeated Lodge for senate seat in early fifties, 54, I think).
Who would Lodge have chosen for his running mate in '64???? A hero of the Pacific War named......WESTHOLM!!! The circle is complete!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Would Nixon have been assassinated in 63???? Henry Cabot Lodge (jr) would have been president!

(Lodge-Kennedy connection: both were from Mass, JFK defeated Lodge for senate seat in early fifties, 54, I think).
Who would Lodge have chosen for his running mate in '64???? A hero of the Pacific War named......WESTHOLM!!! The circle is complete!!!!!!!!!!!!!

"The Navy has a moth-eaten tradition that the captain who loses his ship is disgraced. What do they have all those ships for, if not to hurl them at the enemy?" --Douglas MacArthur
One of my favorite speeches would never have been given:
"But why, some say, the moon? Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask why climb the highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? Why does Rice play Texas?
"We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard . . . "
--JFK at Rice University, September 12, 1962, http://www.rice.edu/fondren/woodson/speech.html.
"But why, some say, the moon? Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask why climb the highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? Why does Rice play Texas?
"We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard . . . "
--JFK at Rice University, September 12, 1962, http://www.rice.edu/fondren/woodson/speech.html.
"War is the remedy our enemies have chosen, and I say let us give them all they want." Gen. Wiliam T. Sherman
JFK speeches
I agree, that is a great speech (I'm from Texas, also).
I also like JFK's address to the country during the Berlin Crisis in 1961:
"I hear it said that West Berlin is militarily untenable. So was Bastogne and so, in fact, was Stalingrad. Any dangerous spot is tenable if men, brave men, will make it so."
Good advice for those UV players facing the "invasion of Noumea!"
I also like JFK's address to the country during the Berlin Crisis in 1961:
"I hear it said that West Berlin is militarily untenable. So was Bastogne and so, in fact, was Stalingrad. Any dangerous spot is tenable if men, brave men, will make it so."
Good advice for those UV players facing the "invasion of Noumea!"
"The Navy has a moth-eaten tradition that the captain who loses his ship is disgraced. What do they have all those ships for, if not to hurl them at the enemy?" --Douglas MacArthur
- pasternakski
- Posts: 5567
- Joined: Sat Jun 29, 2002 7:42 pm
Re: JFK speeches
Originally posted by dwesolick
I agree, that is a great speech (I'm from Texas, also).
I also like JFK's address to the country during the Berlin Crisis in 1961:
"I hear it said that West Berlin is militarily untenable. So was Bastogne and so, in fact, was Stalingrad. Any dangerous spot is tenable if men, brave men, will make it so."
Good advice for those UV players facing the "invasion of Noumea!"
Depends on the context. West Berlin was militarily untenable and survived only under a nuclear umbrella and intense diplomatic activity. Bastogne was militarily untenable and survived only because of extraordinary efforts to relieve it and a fortuitous break in the weather. Stalingrad was militarily untenable for the Germans only because the flanks of the supporting army were militarily insufficient. Give the Germans sufficient resources, and Stalingrad would have been untenable for the Soviets.
I am a jelly-filled pastry.
Put my faith in the people
And the people let me down.
So, I turned the other way,
And I carry on anyhow.
And the people let me down.
So, I turned the other way,
And I carry on anyhow.
Aaannnnnyyyway :rolleyes: Back to the original question: Why does JFK not appear in the game? Legal reasons? Oversight? Belowdecks with Marilyn?
The truth is out there. (WAY out there, probably).

"The Navy has a moth-eaten tradition that the captain who loses his ship is disgraced. What do they have all those ships for, if not to hurl them at the enemy?" --Douglas MacArthur
Everyone knows that the whole Kennedy being a Navy veteran was a pure fabrication. You people probably believe we really walked on the moon too.
"Money doesnt talk, it swears. Obscenities, who really cares?" -Bob Dylan
"Habit is the balast that chains a dog to it's vomit." -Samuel Becket
"He has weapons of mass destruction- the world's deadliest weapons- which pose a direct threat to the
"Habit is the balast that chains a dog to it's vomit." -Samuel Becket
"He has weapons of mass destruction- the world's deadliest weapons- which pose a direct threat to the
Found this
I found this in one of the faq's. It is direced at the Pilot Database but the same might be true of the Captain's database.
"With regards to the Black Sheep Squadron, squadron commanders were transferred around a lot, so Rich chose to use the historical commanders effective May 1, 1942. There are over 1500 historical pilots already in the database; of these, there are approximately 470 historical aces with appropriately set experience levels. I have tried to locate the pilots in the proper units at the appropriate time, but sometimes this detail is sketchy, particularly dates of service. It is inevitable that I have missed some pilots. I already have a list of almost every ace that served during WWII, including kills and units they served in. Needless to say, the historical pilot list will be significantly larger in WITP. If you have detail on what periods each ace served in each unit, this info would be useful. (reported by Mark W. Carver)"
Here is the link to the faq file.
http://uncommon-valor.chez.tiscali.fr/faq.htm
Anthony
"With regards to the Black Sheep Squadron, squadron commanders were transferred around a lot, so Rich chose to use the historical commanders effective May 1, 1942. There are over 1500 historical pilots already in the database; of these, there are approximately 470 historical aces with appropriately set experience levels. I have tried to locate the pilots in the proper units at the appropriate time, but sometimes this detail is sketchy, particularly dates of service. It is inevitable that I have missed some pilots. I already have a list of almost every ace that served during WWII, including kills and units they served in. Needless to say, the historical pilot list will be significantly larger in WITP. If you have detail on what periods each ace served in each unit, this info would be useful. (reported by Mark W. Carver)"
Here is the link to the faq file.
http://uncommon-valor.chez.tiscali.fr/faq.htm
Anthony