thedrifter
05-06-06, 08:07 AM
From The Northwest Herald
Pomp, unusual circumstance
When Pfc. Maureen Gard was in grade school, the other children joked that "Maureen Gard would be a Marine guard."
Now, Gard is a Crystal Lake South High School graduate and a private first class in the U.S. Marine Corps.
And if she is stationed at the Crystal Lake recruiting office at the end of May, something her mother, Joanne, Gard is 95 percent sure of, Gard will be the first student in recent memory to walk across the stage June 3 as an active-duty Marine.
"I called and asked if I could wear my dress blues and be called private first class at graduation," Gard said.
"They had to double-check with the principal because no one had done it before."
Director of Guidance Mike Dunker has worked at South for the past 22 years, or most of the school's 28-year history.
"As far as I know, I don't remember it ever occurring before," Dunker said.
After graduating early from South, Gard headed to boot camp at Parris Island, S.C., as a 17-year-old recruit.
For three months, Gard endured hand-to-hand combat and rifle training, miles of swimming and jogging, and numerous physical fitness tests.
Then there was the weeklong rite of passage known as the Crucible.
In the Crucible, recruits receive three ready-to-eat meals to ration over 54 hours and sleep four hours a night while confronting 29 problem-solving tasks and traveling 42 miles on foot.
But Gard said her only moment of hesitation in her decision came long before she passed the grueling tests and completed miles of hikes.
She was on the bus entering the recruiting facility when she had her first doubts. The instructors told the recruits to close their eyes and lower their heads. They wanted to make sure no one knew how to escape.
"I heard the drill instructor say, 'there's no freedom,'" Gard said. "If we tried to leave, we would be prosecuted," Gard said. "They made me feel like I wasn't a person. I thought, 'I don't know what I just did. I just want to go home.'"
But Gard did not go home. She completed boot camp and graduated as private first class April 21.
Gard, who played tuba in high school, will join the Marine Corps Band after six months of music training in June. She left May 1 for three weeks of military combat training at Camp Geiger in North Carolina.
When Gard first mentioned her military plans to her mom at the beginning of her senior year, she immediately vetoed the idea.
"I told her, 'Do you realize we're at war?'" Joanne Gard said.
She also did not understand why her daughter wanted to join so soon.
But Maureen Gard, who always had considered graduating high school early, continued pursuing the idea. One day while she was at the Marine recruiting office in Crystal Lake, her mother called her cell phone. Maureen Gard told her mom she was working on a project at school.
She said she knew how her mom felt about her enlisting, but Maureen Gard already had made up her mind.
Because she wanted to join the Marines at the age of 17, Maureen needed the written consent of both of her parents. Like boot camp, persuading them was no easy task. Thoughts of U.S. troops scattered across the Middle East made Joanne Gard's objections even stronger.
It was not until her 15-year-old son, Mitchell, also expressed interest in the military that she realized her mistake.
"My reaction to him was completely different than to Maureen," Joanne Gard said. "I said, 'I am not being fair.' That's not how I was brought up, and that's not how I brought my kids up."
After that, Joanne Gard and Maureen's father, Jeff Gard, finally gave their permission.
After that, Maureen began going to the recruiting office not just to ask questions about the Marines, but to watch the film "Full Metal Jacket" and just hang out.
"The recruiters were really supportive," Maureen said. "I loved the office. It became like a second home for me."
Now, Gard has a new support network and a definite plan for the future, something she says not many other teens her age can claim.
"I'm set with a career," Gard said. "I have a plan that I know will work. It's a really good feeling, that I'm out of that teenage stage."
Gard turned 18 April 29, and hopes to play tuba in the "Commandant's Own" Drum and Bugle Corps, a small, elite horn and percussion sector of the Marine Corps Band. At her age, to be a high school graduate and a Marine is something to be proud of, Gard's former guidance counselor Kerri Bowers said.
"You can tell she has that sense of accomplishment," said Bowers, who Gard visited while on a 10-day leave in April. "She knew what she wanted to do and she went out and did it."
By ELIZABETH SABRIO
esabrio@nwherald.com
Ellie
Pomp, unusual circumstance
When Pfc. Maureen Gard was in grade school, the other children joked that "Maureen Gard would be a Marine guard."
Now, Gard is a Crystal Lake South High School graduate and a private first class in the U.S. Marine Corps.
And if she is stationed at the Crystal Lake recruiting office at the end of May, something her mother, Joanne, Gard is 95 percent sure of, Gard will be the first student in recent memory to walk across the stage June 3 as an active-duty Marine.
"I called and asked if I could wear my dress blues and be called private first class at graduation," Gard said.
"They had to double-check with the principal because no one had done it before."
Director of Guidance Mike Dunker has worked at South for the past 22 years, or most of the school's 28-year history.
"As far as I know, I don't remember it ever occurring before," Dunker said.
After graduating early from South, Gard headed to boot camp at Parris Island, S.C., as a 17-year-old recruit.
For three months, Gard endured hand-to-hand combat and rifle training, miles of swimming and jogging, and numerous physical fitness tests.
Then there was the weeklong rite of passage known as the Crucible.
In the Crucible, recruits receive three ready-to-eat meals to ration over 54 hours and sleep four hours a night while confronting 29 problem-solving tasks and traveling 42 miles on foot.
But Gard said her only moment of hesitation in her decision came long before she passed the grueling tests and completed miles of hikes.
She was on the bus entering the recruiting facility when she had her first doubts. The instructors told the recruits to close their eyes and lower their heads. They wanted to make sure no one knew how to escape.
"I heard the drill instructor say, 'there's no freedom,'" Gard said. "If we tried to leave, we would be prosecuted," Gard said. "They made me feel like I wasn't a person. I thought, 'I don't know what I just did. I just want to go home.'"
But Gard did not go home. She completed boot camp and graduated as private first class April 21.
Gard, who played tuba in high school, will join the Marine Corps Band after six months of music training in June. She left May 1 for three weeks of military combat training at Camp Geiger in North Carolina.
When Gard first mentioned her military plans to her mom at the beginning of her senior year, she immediately vetoed the idea.
"I told her, 'Do you realize we're at war?'" Joanne Gard said.
She also did not understand why her daughter wanted to join so soon.
But Maureen Gard, who always had considered graduating high school early, continued pursuing the idea. One day while she was at the Marine recruiting office in Crystal Lake, her mother called her cell phone. Maureen Gard told her mom she was working on a project at school.
She said she knew how her mom felt about her enlisting, but Maureen Gard already had made up her mind.
Because she wanted to join the Marines at the age of 17, Maureen needed the written consent of both of her parents. Like boot camp, persuading them was no easy task. Thoughts of U.S. troops scattered across the Middle East made Joanne Gard's objections even stronger.
It was not until her 15-year-old son, Mitchell, also expressed interest in the military that she realized her mistake.
"My reaction to him was completely different than to Maureen," Joanne Gard said. "I said, 'I am not being fair.' That's not how I was brought up, and that's not how I brought my kids up."
After that, Joanne Gard and Maureen's father, Jeff Gard, finally gave their permission.
After that, Maureen began going to the recruiting office not just to ask questions about the Marines, but to watch the film "Full Metal Jacket" and just hang out.
"The recruiters were really supportive," Maureen said. "I loved the office. It became like a second home for me."
Now, Gard has a new support network and a definite plan for the future, something she says not many other teens her age can claim.
"I'm set with a career," Gard said. "I have a plan that I know will work. It's a really good feeling, that I'm out of that teenage stage."
Gard turned 18 April 29, and hopes to play tuba in the "Commandant's Own" Drum and Bugle Corps, a small, elite horn and percussion sector of the Marine Corps Band. At her age, to be a high school graduate and a Marine is something to be proud of, Gard's former guidance counselor Kerri Bowers said.
"You can tell she has that sense of accomplishment," said Bowers, who Gard visited while on a 10-day leave in April. "She knew what she wanted to do and she went out and did it."
By ELIZABETH SABRIO
esabrio@nwherald.com
Ellie