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Remembrance by Mark Shields, Washington Post
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I've Never Liked
Any Politician More
Mark Shields
Washington Post April 3, 1993
Let me
confess: I generally like politicians: they're willing to
openly risk public rejection. And of all the politicians I've
known and liked, I never liked any one of them any more than
California Assemblyman B.T. Collins, who died much too soon at
52 after a massive heart attack last month in Sacramento.
As a Green
Beret captain during his second tour in Vietnam, B.T. lost his
right arm and right leg to a grenade. He spent 22 months in
seven military hospitals. I never heard him complain about the
pain that was his daily fate. Instead, he would cancel his
schedule to drive hours to comfort and counsel someone he had
never met who had just lost a limb.
Loud, brash,
irreverent and funny, B.T. (he was baptized Brien Thomas,
named for an uncle killed at Tarawa in 1943) first won press
attention - which he candidly and thoroughly enjoyed - for his
controversial and successful 1979 leadership of the California
Conservation Corps. Appointed by Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown,
Collins enlisted high school dropouts for his boot camp, where
every recruit was required to rise at 5 a.m., run two miles,
work eight hours and take classes three nights a week. He even
gave it a slogan: Hard work, low pay, miserable conditions.
B.T. touched
and changed hundreds of lives. One of them, John Banuelos, a
reform school graduate, told the Sacramento Bee's John Jacobs,
"He taught me how to live. He became and uncle to my children
and a brother to me. I have tried to model my life after his."
A mostly
conservative Republican who believed passionately in public
service, B.T. was an old fashioned pol who knew all the cops
and elevator operators and waitresses and secretaries by their
first names. In 1991, when Republican Gov. Pete Wilson
appointed Collins to head the California Youth Authority, the
ex-Green Beret demanded that the young prisoners put any
complaints to him in writing and in English. Aware that some
would see this policy as discriminating against the many
Spanish-speaking prisoners, B.T. challenged, "I hope the ACLU
sues me for depriving these people of their right to be
ignorant."
He
practically built the breathtakingly beautiful California
Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the state capitol grounds, where,
last week. a crowd of 5,000 including Democrat Brown and
Republican Wilson, turned out for B.T.'s memorial service.
Earlier that morning, 1,000 people had attended a Mass at
Blessed Sacramento Cathedral in Sacramento for Collins, who
called himself an atheist but who throughout his working life
gave 10 percent of his gross income to the Catholic college of
Santa Clara from which he graduated.
Only after
constant urging by Gov. Wilson did B.T. run for and win a
California assembly seat, defeating the organized right wing
to do so. At the memorial service, ex-leatherneck Pete Wilson
cried openly and remarked afterward that for such an emotional
display, B.T. would have labeled him a "candy-ass Marine."
In a business
where "on deep background" and "not for attribution" are the
only conditions under which so many timid public figures will
even comment on the NCAA basketball tournament, Collins was
blunt, candid, quotable and honest. He never trimmed, and he
never truckled.
B.T. dunned
me and everybody else on his bulging Rolodex to help WEAVE
(Women Escaping a Violent Environment), a center to shelter
and counsel battered women. Because he needed 39 pints of
blood after his Vietnam wounds, he became the Sacramento
Valley blood bank chairman and a regular donor. His charges at
the California Conservation Corps were "encouraged" to become
donors by their director who told them, "You will give blood
because there's no black blood, no white blood, no
Mexican-American blood. There's only red blood."
One day over
lunch, B.T. gave me his basic rules: You stand up for your
people. You dig your own foxhole. You take the heat. Don't
tell your best friend who to marry. Never argue with a cop.
Always send handwritten thank-you notes. The best friends
you're ever going to make are the ones you don't like in the
beginning. The best friend that will never let you down is
integrity."
At the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Sacramento, somebody last week
left his own medals and a note for B.T.: "You more than
anybody made us proud to have worn these."
B.T. Collins
was 52, and when he died he left thousands much better for
having known him. The world is a better, more humane and more
fun place for his having been here.
From
the Santa Clara University archives.
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The Stepinac High
School - B.T. Collins Scholarship Committee |
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William
Choquette ’58 Co-Chairman |
Thomas
Griffin ‘ 58 Co-Chairman |
James
Boyle ’58
William Driscoll ’58
James Gmelin ’58
Joseph Kerwin ’58
Thomas Lantry, Jr. '59
George Lyddane ’58 |
Michael
McCauley ’98
William Plunkett ’58
William Reagan ’58
John Shanahan ’58
William Wetzel ’58 |
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Mail letters and checks to:
Archbishop Stepinac High School
Attn:
Paul Thomas
950 Mamaroneck Ave.
●
White Plains, NY 10605
Please make checks payable to: "Stepinac HS Foundation-BT Collins"
Telephone 1-914-946-4800
● Email:
pthomas@stepinac.org
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