Jerry Melin's lasted the longest, I think. It started out as Hobart, and was later shortened to Bart. Bart was short for The Hobart Dump, a garbage dump way way out in the sticks east of Kent. . .so far east it's almost in Issaquah. In later years, I called him Jed (a nod to one of our heroes Jerry Garcia), and finally settled on Mel, short for Melin.
Kevin Curran's was Mort. I don't know the genesis of this one. I don't think it's short for death. I think it just went along well with Hobart as a kind of guy's guy name. When we all vacated the west coast to live in New York City (Kevin, Nick Gattuccio, Colin Curran, Keelin Curran, Jan Newberry, Vicki Lenti, and I), I re-christened him Scooter because we loved the Yankees (and Phil "Scooter" Rizutto). That name has stuck off and on for years now.
I was usually Johnnie, although they tried to make Catfish stick for a year or so. Later, it became Doc and even later Jack, when I was christened that by a boss because "John is a pussy name." That hilarious tale, of my life as a man's man in the world of construction is here: My Worst Jobs, Part 1: McGoo.
Phil had a couple of names that I clearly remember. The first was Pomeroy. And Pom for short. I don't remember how that nickname came up (I suspect he was christened Pomeroy by Jerry and Kevin in their year at the Humboldt Street house), but for Phil, it kind of worked and somehow fit. He could have been a Pomeroy!
Sometime after that we started calling him Root, and that one stuck pretty well, so much so that his sister Claudia remembers it. I vaguely remember it was some sort of reference to "root of love" as opposed to "root of all evil," which would have not applied.
I seem to also remember our friend Chris Petersen a/k/a Milo nicknamed him The Gentleman, which would make sense if you knew him. After Phil's death, Milo composed a jazz tune called "The Gentleman."
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