Fear and loathing in the Marines By JEFF RISTINE WASllIN(;ToN --The two drill instructors shouted at Marine recruit Ronald Bannister from both sides. "One kept saying, 'You're nuts! You're unts! You're nuts!' " Bannister testified at a House Armed Services Subcommittee session last week, "And the other was saying, 'You're crazy! You're crazy! You're zrazy'! "Yes sir! Yes sir!" he shouted over and over in response. THE INCIDENT, and other cases of unjustified abuse from superiors, led Bannister to attempt suicide while he was in boot camp. That he failed is sur- prising, for his drill instructor had instructed him to cut his jugular vein if he ever wanted to kill himself because "you'll go faster that way." Marine drill instructors "feel they can play God," says former Marine Private Harry Hiscock, whose in- structor allegedly beat him, kicked him, pushed him,tbit him, threatened to kill him and finally, shot him in the hand. "There is a very good chance that t will have a disability for the rest of my life," says Hiscock. If there is irony in the two men's horror stories, it is thatneither belonged in the Marines in the first place; they seem out of place in uniform. Bannister, 17, has unusual difficulty answering direct questions; his uncle had to help him testify. His grasp of chrono- ology, including major events in his own life, is weak and incomplete. He has trouble understanding written material and never made it past the tenth grade. He also had problems getting along with social workers and his foster parents. HISCOCK WIL say only that he has always had "sime problems with coordination" in his hands; one suspects there are somewhat more unfortunate skele- tons in his closet. lie was 21 when he graduated (his dritl instrtuctors catted him "the old man"), and he reluctantly admits he could not march like the other recruits. Batnnister asd llis-- pck are only Iwo of counttess unfit Marine recruits enlisted across the country de- spite clear disqualifications. The reason? Men like former Staff Sgt. Kenneth Taylor, a smartly-dressed, fidgety type, who says over half the recruits he ap- proved for boot camp were unqualified but cleared through illegal or unethical recruiting methods. "The beginning of the problem is at the recruiting center," says Taylor, who served for four years as a recruiter at the Marine Command Center in Detroit. "To succeed in today's recruiting system, you have to cheat. You have to." TAYLOR CLAIMS recruiters work under "terrible pressure" from above to meet monthly and even weekly quotas-or face loss of vacations and stiff fines. The only way to avoid such wrath is through deliberate attempts to see that "marginal applicants who stand little or no chance of surviving the rigors of Marine recruit training" are accepted anyway. "There are millions of ways of getting around an unqualified recruit," Taylor says confidently. Men who were classified as "permanent rejects" for physical reasons-heart murmurs, high blood pres- sure, or flat feet-were allowed to re-enlist under slightly altered names, and were later approved for recruitment. One was processed eight times in 13 months, and disqualified time after time for physical and mental deficiencies until finally being accepted. "It was a big joke," says Taylor. "It was so absurd." AND AGAINST the rules. Taylor directly violated orders from superiors by lying about his applicants' police records. If a special police okay was required to authenticate a record check, he would submit the request with a few letters missing from the potential recruit's name and correct it after the check turned up no criminal background. He also coached applicants in mathematics to help them pass tests and, in some cases, illicitly supplied actual answers for potential recruits before their exam- ination. "It would take me no more than three months to compromise the entire test," says Taylor, who wa able to get the answers from his contacts. Taylor's conscience appears to be bothering him; h took his stories to the House subcommittee on militar personnel to help prove that some recruits-includin Lynn McClure of Texas, now dead as a result of Marin recruit training-should never have been enlisted the first place. He has been collecting and savin official Marine documents and memos to back up h assertions. "SOMEBODY HAS to tell the story or it would cop tinue and continue," says the former recruiter, wi was discharged recently for hypertension. Recruitin once considered a plush job but now likened to comb8 duty-is enough to tear apart families and drive so men to attempt suicide, Taylor says. He suggests thi the quota system be eliminated or that the recruitin force be doubled. But it hardly seems likely that Taylor's suggestio will change the real problems the Marine must de with today. When countless recruiters have no qualms ab enlisting young men they know are unfit to defe their country, something larger than mere quotas wrong. When recruits such as Bannister and Hiscock a taunted, beaten, threatened and almost murdered their drill instructors, something very basic is deep amiss in the Marines. WHEN MEN like Private McClure die in trainin it is clear the whole ssytem of recruiting desan drastic reform. Perhaps the crux of the Marine problem is reveal in the Corps' own advertising slogan: "The Marines a looking for a few good men." They must look much harder. Daily ManagingF ditor Jeff Risline is a Wahi based intern for the Knighst Newspaper chain. The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, June 2, 1976 News Phone 764-0552 A Soviet double standard THE SOVIET UNION announced Monday that after a week of high-level talks between party chairman Leonid Brezhnev and Angolan Prime Minister Lopo do Dascimento, it had decided to provide the south African nation with further military aid, following up the assist- ance provided to the MPLA during the winter's civil war. Calling the liberation movements - in Angola and Mozambique "lawful," the joint communique declared that "The U.S.S.R. believes it is the duty of all freedom- loving peoples to give support and assistance to Angola." Without debating the merits and demerits of the fledgling government in Luanda, it is certainly possible to look askance at the Soviet Union's new move for im- perial influence among the black nations of Africa. If one may decry President Ford and the State Department for encouraging American involvement in the internal affairs of such nations as Angola, one may certainly do the same for the U.S.S.R. For all Moscow's pompous proclamations concerning "freedom-loving peoples," it is clear to the most naive that the Soviets have little in mind besides a foothold for power in Africa. Their commitment to freedom, in establishing such a foothold, is dubious at best. If American leaders are to be lambasted for their attempts at imperialism, the Soviets must bear the force of the same arguments, TODAY'S STAFF News-Lani Jordan, George Lobsenz, Jennifer Miller, Ken Parsigian, Tim Schick, Barbara Zahs Edit-Jay Levin, Jin Tobin Photo Technician-Scott Eccker Letters toI clericals To The Daily: As a clerical at the University, I would like to express my vehement opposition to any attempt to get rid of UAW Local 2001. To whose advantage is scuttling 2001? Clear- ly, the only people who would gain from 2001's demise would be the University administra- tion. Some clericals have the unfortunate idea that the University is interested in paying rclericals what they are worth and in being fair and benevolent. Let's look at the Uni- versity's record. For years, U-M clericals have been grossly underpaid. There have been no cost of living increases, and no longevity benefits. I per- sonally know one woman who worked for 20 years, and retired at a salary of $8,000. In comparing U-M clerical salaries with other g area university clerical salaries, it is clear that U-M clericals are getting screwed. When Eastern Michigan University clericals were strtktng fur a decent wage, they were told that they shouldn't complain, because they got more money than University of Michigan cleri- cats xaTraditionally, the Uni'versity has been com- mitted to paying the faculty high wages in order to attract high quality professors. Some- one has had to bear the brunt of this, and it has been the clericals. The University knows as wel it is the only game in town for many people. In other cities, competition from in- dustry or government forces universities to pay decent wages. In Ann Arbor, - the classic company town - there is no place else to work other than the University. Know- ing this, the University has taken scandalous advantage and has not only paid very low wages, but has gratuitously fired anyone who does not toe the line. The avowed program of the University this year is to give all staff members a 5 per cent raise at most. For faculty who make $20,000 a year, a five per cent raise comes to $1,000. For clericals who make $7,000 per year, a five per cent raise is $350. This is why we need . a union. The University will not be fair to clericals out of the goodness of its heart. Those clericals supporting decertification have made the mistake of blaming the union The Daily - an organization which has beenta ard for a very short time - for the accunwataaed ills inflicted on clericals by the Univer ity. The union, no matter how strong, cannot in one year win for clericals all the benefits and raises they have been denied for thirty years. However, a strong union, actively supported by all its members, is the only way to bepi the long process of winning a living agp for clericals. Susan :McGee May 12 g i'(uh's To The Daily: I read "Grade inflation: making soncne of everyone", and I feel that Mr. Routh left out a very important view of the problem of grade inflation. He said nothing about the fact that public education is not preparng prospective college students with adequate training. My high school's English department offered such options as "Self-Development" and "Sensitivity." Students were not re- quired to take good English Lit or Grammar. Grammar is not even offered in many schools anymore. With the quality of education on the decline in our public schools it shouldn't come as a big surprise that grade inflation i col- leges is apparent. Needless to nay, colleges need money to keep afloat, therefore entrane requirements and grading scales must drop if students are coming to colleges less quai- fied to handle the work of five to ten years ago. I do feel grade inflation implies that sty dents aren't as successfully handling work loads as they usei to. I agree with Mr. Routh that if students are to improve their mitds the college must be demanding. However, I think that it would be most advantageous to begin reform on the public school level, rash- er than penalize college students for educe tion never attained or inadequately admit tered in their past. If college instructors s using the standards of yesterday, it will lY drop college enrollment and won't affact the real heart of the problem. Public school edt' cation must be upgradade if the image and value of college graduates is to be maintained Janet Riggs May 9