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thedrifter
02-08-05, 09:29 AM
Boys to Marines: Parris Island trip reveals how warriors are made

By Paul Dunn, The Daily Reflector

Monday, February 07, 2005

Fifty-six newly shorn heads ...

Most of them are face down, cradled on arms splayed over plastic school desks. The bodies, many in rumpled jeans and casual shirts, shift nervously under the florescent glare.

Except for the conspicuous sniffling of one recruit, the room is still.

Somewhere among the anonymous bodies sits former East Carolina University student William Joyner. Joyner, like the other 55 boys arranged in neat rows of six deep, is a United States Marine Corps wannabe, one of the newest recruits in the venerable institution's 250-year history.

Joyner and his newfound "brothers," some having yet to feel a razor drag over their peach-fuzzed faces, are about one hour into a three-month rite of passage that will test most of them as never before.

It's 1:30 a.m., Jan. 26, Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S.C. These recruits – many haven't slept for at least 24 hours – will be up until 9 p.m. before they hit their first military "rack."

Until then, they'll fill out mountains of military paperwork, receive clothing and other supplies, undergo medical exams and perform initial strength tests.

Then they'll exhale.

But there will be no moms, no dads, no sisters, brothers or friends to cheer them on.

There will be no sympathy, either.

And no turning back.


Fitting into the yellow footprints

The initial shock of the Marine Corps jolts like a 4 a.m. wakeup call.

As soon as the recruits' touring bus stops in front of the Parris Island receiving station, Staff Sgt. Patrick Wiley bounds through the bus door with jaw set and eyes steeled. Sitting at attention in the midnight gloom, small-town country boys and big-city studs stare straight ahead, at that moment a cold shower many will not forget.

"You're now part of the greatest military tradition the world has ever known!" Wiley yells. "This is Marine Corps Recruiting Station Parris Island. Get off the bus and run to the yellow footprints!"

Scampering out the door like startled jackrabbits, recruits land on pairs of yellow footprints painted on the asphalt – four abreast, some 15 deep. The footprints represent the beginning of transformation from civilian to Marine.

Under the blush of amber street lights, the recruits listen – barely breathing – as Wiley's gravelly voice pummels them like buckshot.

You will do this. You will not do this. You will do this ...

At his command, the 56 strangers sprint to the stainless steel doors of the Parris Island receiving station, the final stop before they cross the Marine threshold.

The recruits line up two-by-two, until another command sends some of them rushing into the building and into a side room with a single barber chair.

Some recruits arrive on the island with hair already shaved. Others cling to the last tendrils they'll see for about four years, a typical length of enlistment.

In 30 seconds, their locks – and their individuality – are gone.


Through the drill instructor's eyes

Wiley walks like a tank rolls – only faster.

No wasted effort, no hesitancy. Wiley's nearing the end of another 18-hour day, but you'd never know it by the directness in his step or the power in his voice. He shows no mercy to the 56 raw recruits he'll soon call "brothers," though he empathizes with them.

"Tonight is a foundation to show them (recruits) the professionals they need to be," Wiley says. "Right now, some of them are shaking uncontrollably. It's the fear of the unknown, an adrenaline rush."

Wiley's been through this many times before. About 1 hours after our conversation, in fact, he was to greet a second busload of recruits, like their predecessors, young, scared and alone in a crowd.

"This is one of the toughest nights for them, and one of the most vital parts of their instruction," Wiley says. "From this time forward, their lives are changed, but I don't feel sorry for them."


A phone call home

Some recruits are barely through Parris Island's doors when Wiley directs them to a bank of beige-colored telephones on a wall. The boys are to call home, telling anxious moms and dads they've arrived.

But this is no Christmas holiday conversation. Wiley tells the boys what to say, reciting the precise lines with them before they dial the numbers.

The recruits are lined up nose to neck, waiting their turns, silent.

Tonight, the first recruit in line dials three different times, to no avail. Recruits behind him – aware of the drill instructor's footfalls – are beginning to look uneasy. Finally, first-in-line gives up, and second steps forward. He has more luck – someone answers on the first try.

First-in-line will get a second chance, but not until after his haircut.


Step up for underwear

Before they're issued camouflaged fatigues, "covers" (caps), boots, belts or anything else, recruits receive two pairs of underwear briefs. From a single-file line, they march past plastic containers on tables filled with underwear in every imaginable size.

As they near the head of the line, they're instructed to yell out their waist size. Behind the tables, enlisted men haphazardly fling packs of underwear at them.

"32, sir!" "34, sir!," "30, sir!," recruits shout.

Then, "18, sir!"

"What!?," yells a Marine behind the table.

"Your waist size, recruit!"

"Oh, sorry, sir," the slight boy replies. "I guess about 27."

Before he can raise his hands, the 27's hit him in the chest.


The end of the beginning

It's 2 a.m.

The other six media types from North Carolina and Kentucky and I leave the receiving building.

I've been up since 4:30 a.m. the day before, but the yelling and commotion has shocked the fatigue out of me.

As I walk toward the waiting Marine van that will escort us back to our Beaufort, S.C., hotel, I think: "Wow, are those boys in for a rude awakening."

As you read this, ECU's William Joyner should be on his fifth day of physical training.

Already this morning, he's been up for about three hours; he's made his rack, slipped on his fatigues and eaten breakfast. If he's followed the normal recruit routine, he's outside on the training course scaling a wall, climbing a rope or running in the sand.

Most likely, a sour-pussed drill instructor is on his tail – as he is on every recruit's.

"Go! Go! Go! Faster, Joyner! Can't you do any better than that!?"

Joyner, probably hoarse from bellowing the same two words every few minutes since he arrived at Parris Island, juts out his chin and yells them again ...

"Aye, sir!"

If Joyner says the words with enough conviction, Mr. Drill Instructor moves on to someone else. If not ...



The Drifter's Wife

Ellie

schoolcircle
02-08-05, 09:37 AM
Great Article.

Sgted
02-08-05, 09:42 AM
Nice (?) flashback.

I remember too well of pulling up to recieving barracks on that bus.
We all quieted down, not knowing what to expect.
The bus driver opened the doors.
It seemed like an eternity before the DI blasted through those doors looking meaner then a dog, shouting at the top of his lungs causing the biggest cluster f**ks I've ever seen in the small confines of the bus.
It was August 19, 1965.

I'd do it again.

USMC-FO
02-08-05, 12:04 PM
Oh absolutely a flashback !--August 7, 1962--Yemessee SC, screaming sgt's.....bus ride to hell...arrive MCRD-PI around 2300--dark except for the screaming and cussing and a silver helmet liner thrown at my head from the front of the bus....puckered butts...shaking with fear....tired...thinking "what the F have I done here!" Made it through....a Marine till the day I die, then I'll be a dead Marine .... No greater honor no greater privilage !

thedrifter
02-08-05, 12:40 PM
Making Marine -- A Special Report
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Feb. 7, 2005
Amanda Butterfield Reporting

The United States Marines were the first called and deployed to the Middle East for Operation Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom, and even now make up over 21 percent of the fighting force there. Every year more than 5200 men and women enroll in the Marine Corp, hundreds from Utah. And this week, we're following two of them.

Every man who signs up for the Marines west of the Mississippi is trained at the Marine Corp Recruit Depot, in San Diego California. That's where two Utahns, Ryan Soules of Salt Lake, and Kyle Christensen of Payson are right now. We've been following the two new recruits from the minute they signed up with the Corp to their first day of training.

Kyle Souls and Ryan Christensen are two of 679 Utahns who join the marines every year.

Kyle Soules, Marine Recruit: "I picked the marines because of the pride they always walk around with, and they always get the respect from everyone around them."

19-year-old Kyle's father couldn't be more proud.

Kyle: "All the men in my family have always joined the military."

Ryan has the support of his parents, but not his entire family.

"Ryan: My brother, older, he thinks I'm making the wrong decision."

But at 25, Ryan needed a change.

Ryan Christensen: "I want to keep going, learning. I want to better myself and life, and I think the marine corps is the ticket."

First stop: Marine Corp Recruit Depot, San Diego California for 12 of the hardest weeks of training in the military. And the first steps to becoming a marine are taken.

Though Ryan and Kyle weren't in this group of recruits, they'll never forget taking this step.

Kyle: "I go to church every Sunday, since I stepped on the yellow footprint."

From now until graduation the yelling never stops, as instructors slowly drill the civilian life out of these young men.

Staff Sgt. Ryan Schepis, Drill Instructor: "We're trying to mold them into what they need to be, take all that nasty civilian life of sitting on the couch, eating potato chips, and training them to a proper marine they need to be."

Then all their pockets emptied of chewing gum, receipts, plane tickets. They are allowed to keep a bible, identification, credit cards, family pictures but it's all stowed way. The recruits are given only seconds to do this, and expected to do only as they are told.

"Are you done scratching your face and are you done looking at me? Are you done scratching your face?" "Yes sir!"

It is ultimately the Drill Instructors who decide what a recruit keeps.

"What is it?"
"It's a ruler sir."
"It's trash now."

Once they are issued underwear, shorts, a shirt, and socks, they make a physical transformation, for good reasons.

Drill Instructor: "Disease, lice, infection, we don't want them to get sick right off the bat."

After each recruit is shaved, they'll make another change, into their issued clothes. For this day as a recruit, they'll be lucky to get four hours of sleep. For Ryan, it was one of the worst days of his life.

Ryan Schepis: "It was scary and kind of intense, you didn't know what to expect."

And this is only the beginning. Coming up tomorrow we'll visit Ryan and Kyle in the midst of training. We'll show you all the training they've had to complete and you'll be surprised at how much they've changed in the course of eight weeks -- you might not even recognize them.

The Drifter's Wife


Ellie

thedrifter
02-10-05, 05:07 PM
Making Marine - Graduation
Feb. 10, 2005
Amanda Butterfield reporting

After 12 weeks of the most intense training at the Marine Corp Recruit Depot, civilians officially become Marines. All week long we've been looking at the process of making a Marine, and today it's graduation day.

About 90-thousand moms, dads, and friends sit in the graduation stands every year to celebrate their loved ones big day. In the crowd you can always find a proud Utah family -- there to watch as their son becomes a Marine.

In uniform and in unison, these groups of recruits are only hours away from becoming the country's newest Marines.

There are two different ceremonies recruits participate in at the end of their training: First, the Emblem Ceremony, where recruits are pinned with the eagle, globe and anchor: the sign of the Marine Corps. The family is invited to watch.

Amy Galvze, Mother of U.S. Marine: "I can't tell you how proud we are, it's the most exciting thing."

This is the first time in three months Amy and her family have seen their son, Adam. Adam graduated from West High School just last year. His mom can't help but notice a change.

Amy Galvze, Mother of U.S. Marine: "From this 19 year aimless on the road to who knows, to now being so focused."

But Adam didn't join alone, he came with his best friend, Robert Clark.

Adam Galvze, U.S. Marine: "We've played baseball since we were young, went to school, did everything together."

Both agree, it was nice having a buddy around.

Robert Clark, U.S. Marine: "We were really lonely when we first got here and it was nice to have someone who cared and who could get you through everything."

After the Emblem Ceremony: Graduation. This is where recruits take the title of Marines, and all the hard work of the past 12 weeks seems worth it.

Robert Clark, U.S. Marine: "I don't think 95 percent of the world understands what we've been through the last three months."

Adam Galvze, U.S. Marine: "Now we can claim the world’s greatest title, United States Marine."

Next, Robert and Adam get a 10 day leave to come home to Utah. Then it's off to where ever they're ordered. It could be Iraq, which makes Adam's mother nervous, but she has faith he's ready.

Amy Galvze: "He's a Marine now, trained, capable, I have a lot of confidence in him, he's a wonderful young man now."

After graduation, new Marines are given 10 days off. Then they report back to the Marine Corp Recruit Depot for more training. From there, each Marine will attend one of three dozen different Military Occupational Specialty Schools to receive further training in their specific job field.

Then it's off to wherever the Marine Corps needs them.

Coming up tomorrow, we'll show you what a group of Utah schoool teachers were doing at the Recruiting Depot. They spent a week in boot camp too... well, sort of.

Ellie

thedrifter
02-15-05, 11:46 AM
Marine training more intense during wartime
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Fox41.com
Louisville, Kentucky

Thousands of recruits join the Marines each year and nearly ninety percent of them could end up fighting in the war in Iraq. So what does it take to prepare a young man or woman to go into battle?

Ask anyone who's been in the military, they will tell you boot camp is no walk in the park. The intensity and challenge of Marine Boot Camp takes on a whole new meaning when America is at war.

They arrive as young men - those who make it - will leave as Marines. But it's the 13 weeks in between that will make all the difference. Each week, dozens of recruits step onto the yellow footprints AT Parris Island, SC, and into a whole new world.

They come with their cool clothes, long hair and all about me attitude - all will be erased in a matter of minutes. The first contact they have with family will be the only contact for a while. It is a quick, scripted phone call - no I want to come home, no I miss you, no I love you. The phone call home goes like this:

"This is recruit(name). I have arrived safely at Parris Island. Don't send any food or boxes. I will contact you, thank you for your support. Goodbye for now."

They are told to stand heel to toe, fingers curled, look straight ahead, don't talk. Their hair is the first piece of identity to go. They will be taught comfort is an illusion. Drill Instructors immediately teach recruits comfort is neither welcomed nor tolerated here. There is no comfort in war. 90 percent of these recruits will likely be going to the War in Iraq.

The new recruits are not allowed to talk, even to press. But there are thousands of recruits on this island who remember getting off that bus.

Recruit Jason Moch is a 19-year-old from Shepardsville, Kentucky. Weeks into his training, it is already natural for him to not begin a sentence with "I."

A graduate of Bethlehem High School in Bardstown, Moch spent time in college and the working world before deciding to join the Marines. Roughly seven percent of the male recruits will not reach graduation - nearly 17 percent of the female recruits drop out. But even those would-be Marines are a minority.

Beneath their harsh demands, fierce demeanor and constant yelling, the drill instructors realize they are on a mission to prepare these young men and women for a battle. Though the thought of war looms over his head, Recruit Moch says this has been the best experience of his life.

Boot camp grows more intense each week leading up to graduation. Tuesday night we'll meet more recruits from Kentuckiana as they progress thru bootcamp and get ready for war.


Ellie

LivinSoFree
02-15-05, 12:15 PM
Funny how every local news station's suddenly found a renewed interest in this topic...