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Father of NASGA Affiliate Tom Fields
1919-1991
What would Irving want me, his son, to
say here? This question is difficult to answer because so much changed
for me on the day he died, just as so much changed for my father on the
day two decades earlier when my mother died.
What meant most to my father throughout
his life was his family, beginning with my mother. The only time that I
ever saw my father cry was the day my mother died. There wasn’t
anything he wouldn’t do for her. He often worked two jobs in an effort
to make our lives comfortable and happy. Sometime around the time that
I was born, he left RCA to start his own business doing the kind of
repair work that he had done for RCA. His customers included many
prominent members of the community with whom he was proud to associate.
His work would take him inside the homes of these people, and he would
beam when I would go with him, carrying his toolbox.
In addition to sometimes accompanying my
father on his service calls, I would also sometimes accompany my father
to local movie theaters where he would supplement his income by
operating the projectors from high up above the audience. That was a
real treat, because the concession workers always treated me royally,
filling up a brown paper shopping bag with popcorn that was loaded with
butter before we went up to the booth. In the booth, my father would
have me sit atop phone books that he stacked up on a chair behind a
small portal situated between the two large projectors. From this perch
I watched the movie. Loading, unloading, and rewinding the film left my
father some free time, which he would use to complete study courses that
he took in order to earn promotions in the U.S. Air Force Reserves,
which he joined following his service during WW II as a navigator.
Although my father worked day and night,
often remaining in his basement workshop until the nightly news was
broadcast at 11:00 PM, he didn’t neglect my mother. He always took
Tuesday nights off to join my mother in a bridge party with three other
couples. On Wednesday nights he would join my mother in a couples
bowling league. On Saturday nights he would join my mother and friends
for dinner and a night out, while Sunday afternoons and evenings were
always spent with my mother’s parents, the best grandparents that a kid
could ask for.
My mother died while I was serving in
the Air Force during the Vietnam War. I was allowed to come home a day
or so before she died. When I returned to duty, my father was left
alone. He sold our home and moved into an older, smaller home a few
blocks away. I completed my service and could have returned home, but I
didn’t. 2000 miles away, my father kept close mostly by calling me each
week and occasionally by arranging visits. One visit was especially
remarkable. I took my father for a short, easy overnight hike, during
which we awakened to the honking of magnificent trumpeter swans. Near
the end of the visit, I proposed to my wife, and after the visit my
father impressed friends back home by showing off the scratches on his
legs from walking through bramble in shorts at the end of our hike. One
of those whom my father impressed became my step-mother.
My step-mother and father began their
marriage with a prenuptial agreement. When my step-mother realized that
my father was going to die first, she wanted to break that agreement.
During my father’s final months, she tried more than a dozen times. Ten
days after my father was admitted to the hospital for the last time, she
tried again as soon as she was notified by the hospital that my father’s
cancer had ruptured his stomach and that he would not live out the day.
My father was still able to tell her No in that condition, but my
step-mother refused to accept No for an answer. With the help of her
daughter, a lawyer for whom my father had expressed “extreme distrust”
to other lawyers, my step-mother was able to get my father to sign the
paper her daughter prepared and brought to the hospital.
Because law enforcement refused to even
investigate what had taken place, I needed to hire attorneys to collect
the evidence which I link online to the webpage http://members.aol.com/tvfields/ILF_Links/Frameset001.htm.
This evidence, which includes the testimony of the doctor who was called
to my father’s bedside when his stomach ruptured, provides many
important lessons which I hope the readers of this memorial will
appreciate. For many people, the most important revelation of all is
that our courts would uphold a financial document signed under the
conditions that I just described, even when a doctor testifies that
while in that condition my father did not even recall that he had a
will.
Because of my experience, I have spent
most of two decades advocating legal reforms that are needed to protect
us against the opportunists who would take advantage of us when we are
least able to defend ourselves and our heirs. My experience has proved
to me what similar experiences have proved to others: the legal
profession in this country is despicable. In order to protect us
against that profession, we need to add to our Bill of Rights at least
one more basic right, without which the others are often given little
more than lip service. This basic right would
1)
guarantee everyone,
without exception, who has evidence of injury due to negligence or
wrongdoing by anyone else, without exception, the opportunity to FREELY
and FULLY present their evidence to an impartial jury that is empowered
and obligated to investigate, judge and remedy legitimate complaints in
a timely manner, and
2)
hold accountable anyone,
without exception, who obstructs or fails to uphold this right.
Without such a constitutional guarantee,
only those who can afford the protection racket
that is run by this country’s bar and
judicial associations are protected by our Constitution and Bill
of Rights.

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