Will Rogers High School
Tulsa. Oklahoma
50th Reunion Address to the Class of 1956
Phillip Butler, PhD 9-30-06
Thank you my classmates. You are very kind and
generous to this old ex con. Today I feel especially privileged to
have been given the honor of introducing others in our class who
richly deserve our recognition and appreciation. But before I do
that, I have a few observations.
We have lived through an
unparalleled and amazing 50 years in which we have experienced
nothing short of an unprecedented social revolution.
First there is War. War is the gift
that just keeps on giving, generation after generation.
In 1956 the remnants of our Civil
War were still haunting our society even though it had ended 90
years before. But we were just beginning to work our way out. Even
today, the economic disparity that still exists between our northern
and southern states is in part a carry over from Civil War
devastation and perceived dishonor.
Look at all our white faces here today. We grew
up and graduated in a segregated and racist culture. The 1954
Supreme Court decision, Brown vs. Board of Education, launched the
civil rights struggle and turmoil of the 60’s and 70’s.
Rock and Roll music got started -
black music often imitated by whites.
Women also began their struggle for
equal opportunity, at work and at home, forever changing stereotyped
images of what women, and men, can be.
Part of that change was a
sexual revolution that followed the invention of “The Pill.”
President Eisenhower instituted our
national highway system that gave birth to the mobile and
consumer-oriented society we know today.
The television era began, changing
forever the way we recreate, communicate and receive information.
Other electronic wonders followed; the computer, the cell phone and
other devices that to many of us might seem to have complicated
rather than enriched our lives.
Space travel began and continued
with landing men on the moon and the exploration of our outer solar
system.
Nuclear weapons were proliferated
to numerous other countries, and the Cold War nuclear standoff
ultimately brought about the collapse of the Soviet Union.
But the defining event of our lives
had to be the Vietnam War. It was a long and terrible venture that
left many of us in doubt. We lost 58,000 killed and hundreds of
thousands wounded and emotionally shattered - our best and
brightest. It also left the Vietnamese with an unimaginable 2
million killed, many millions more wounded and shattered, and a
landscape that has been environmentally devastated for generations
to come.
For those of us who saw it first
hand, Vietnam was like all wars – chaotic, destructive, dehumanizing
and I must say, disgusting. War is the worst possible thing that
exists in the lexicon of human behavior.
But remember I said earlier that
war is also the gift that just keeps on giving. Many of us have
experienced and perhaps continue to experience anger, resentment and
polarization over the Vietnam War. There were the doves and the
hawks back then, so I’m told, because as you all know, I was
“vacationing in the tropics” as we former Vietnam POW’s like to say.
The war caused polarization even among friends and family.
But at some point my friends, all
good people seek to heal the wounds of war. And that’s what I’d like
us to start doing here today. Others outside this room can carry on
with their resentments and anger, but let us classmates begin to
heal ours here and now.
To do this, first I’d like to
recognize and honor all our military veterans, those who served in
any of our services, in any capacity. Would you please stand and
receive our appreciation.
Second, I’d like to recognize and
honor those who also struggled to end the war and bring us safely
home, those of us who were the doves, protesters and activists
against the Vietnam War. Would you please stand and receive our
appreciation.
And finally, I’d like to recognize
and honor our Vietnam Veterans who often, tragically, were not
appreciated for their sacrifices. They all deserve the same welcome
I received from you when I came home to Tulsa in 1973. So would all
of you, my Vietnam brothers and sisters, please come up and stand on
this stage with me.
(Each Vietnam veteran says his/her
name, service and years in Vietnam. "Welcome home"
by classmates
Finally, I hope all of us will
remember our past mistakes and seek to help keep new generations of
graduates from making the same ones over again. Surely all of us
here today can understand and appreciate the privilege of being
here, 50 years later, and the responsibility we have to pass on that
wisdom. And I hope all of us will continue to help heal the wounds
of war, past and present. Remember. You can hate the war but never
forget to love our warriors.
Thank you.
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