U 19 w nior Navy Battalion Commnder David Derr. "There's the anxiety of being a freshman, out of the normal atmosphere. Most have little idea of what the military is like." "We ease them into military life," Gaul said. I7 he first lesson for the new cadet is getting used to a new hairstyle. "We take them all down to the barbers at once," explained Derr. The cut is the same for everyone: short. Women must keep their hair neat and above the bottom of the neck. "They're nice except when it rains," said Air Force ROTC sophomore James Chitty, a transfer student. "Then it's kind of cold." Classes for first-year students fo- cus on the history of the service and its customs and courtesies. More dif- ficult subjects - radar, weapons propulsions, engineering - are re- served for future years. Each service requires that students take one ROTC cass a semester in addition to a weekly leadership seminar. The leadership seminars or drills are the core of the ROTC programs. Here students learn the basics of marching, wearing the uniform, camouflaging and almost every aspect of military life. But the real value of the semi- nars, according to ROTC instructors, is that they give students the chance to work together as a unit and give upperclass students practice as lead- ers. For the exercises, students are di- vided into "platoons," "flights" or "companies" (depending on the ser- vice) of 15 to 20 people. An upper- class cadet is the group leader and is in charge of training his or her cadets. Being a platooneader is chal- lenging, said Navy ROTC senior Catherine Friday. "I can be shy and retiring a lot of times, but you can't be that way [in the Navy]." Matriculation from ROTC takes two or four years, depending on the program. The Air Force offers addi- tional one- and three-year programs. Since Army ROTC classes to do not count towards an LSA degree, the two-year program is more popu- lar, said Army Lt. Col William Gre- gor. Students who will complete their ROTC training sign contracts for four years of active military duty and four years of inactive duty. The con- tracts must be signed either when scholarships are activated or at the beginning of the third year of train- ing. If a student enters ROTC on scholarship and decides after the first year to disenroll from the program, the money doesn't have to be paid back to the military and the obliga- tion to service is forgone. eciding whether or not to undertake a military career is often made I) only after attending the ROTC summer camps which are required of all ROTC students. They are held, de- pending on the service branch, at various military bases or special camps around the country. As the military sees it, the camps are the testing grounds for officer candidates. But, as Bob Donner, Ma- rine ROTC senior put it, "It's six weeks of hell." On extremely little sleep, often no more than three or four hours a night, students are placed in physi- cally demanding or mind-bending si- tuations where only teamwork and ingenuity will yield a solution. "They want to see if you can take the stress," said Sue Prince, an Air Force senior. Prince described her experience: "We had a bed check each night, and the door was only supposed to be open two inches wide. But I didn't know. My bed was by the door. The F20 [Field training officer] came by and said 'What's wrong with your door; get up and fix it.' Then, when l ,~,...A.THIE MARl Clueless are the young men and women when first they enter the corridors of North Hall, home of the University's Reserve Officer Train- ing Corps. Bewildered by the University's size and uncertain whether military life is as good as the brochures promise, the new recruits swear their loyalty to the Constitution and the President of the United States. Upon completion of their pro- grams in the next two, three or four years,. the students will become commissioned officers of the United States Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marines and will serve in the mili- tary for at least four years. J t's a cold windy morning in Burns Park. Freshly fallen leaves crunch quietly be- neath the feet; the air smells faintly of smoking embers and the sky is a deep azure blue. But it's 10:15 a.m. on a Saturday and the photographer and reporter are wondering if they're at the right place. After all, when the military says an event will start at 10:00, it's very rarely late. Wait, don't go home yet. For suddenly from around the corner comes a rhythmic chanting, and soon 153 students of the Air Force ROTC are jogging into the park for a "field day" of three-legged races and egg-tossing contests. "It's like a home away from home," "a fraternity," "a family," and "a place where everyone's goals are all the same," said four cadets that Saturday morning as they chomped down hotdogs and ham- burgers. "There's a totally different mind- set here. People have a common goal. They know what they're here for, and they know where they're go- ing," said Gary Durman, a senior Air Force cadet. They and fellow ROTC students in the Army, Navy and Marine (a subdivision of the Navy) programs are here to learn what it takes to be a commissioned military officer. And although they have a lot of fun, students take this goal very se- riously. Explained first-year general mili- tary cadet Tamra Chute, "[Air Force ROTC] is going to teach me every- thing I need to know: discipline, how to be an officer, a leader." The first year of any ROTC pro- gram is a trial run. Students use the year to decide if the military is as right for them as the brochures promise; essentially, they get their feet wet. "They come in here as intimi- dated as hell," said Capt. Volker Gaul, an Air Force instructor. "They don't kn~ow what to expect when they come to college," said se- A few "scary guys," a couple of ghosts, a hanged man and quite a lot of other freaky creatures will be con- vening in North Hall this Halloween for another night of ghastly pranks and ghoulish escapades. The haunted house, annually held in the basement of North Hall, an- nually attracts hundreds of thrill seekers who pay S2 for a good scream. North Hall how houses the Reserve Officers Training Corps, but used to be the University Hospital, and the basement, where the haunted house is held, used to be the hospi- tal's morgue. The reputation of the haunted house is wide-spread; each year it raises thousands of dollars for Motts' Children's Hospital, and for some it may be the only ROTC activity that students are familiar with. But the ROTC supports a variety of extra-curricular organizations. The tri-service Rifle Team has placed first in its league champi- onship for the past four years. The team, which competes in the ROTC Southern Michigan/ North- western Ohio ROTC Rifle league, . ,i . 'i 1 r r STORY BY NOELLE VANCE PHOTOS BY JOSE JUAREZ Tim Carter, Navy midshipman 3rd class, tries on the vampire sling in preparation for the annual ROTC Haunted House. Page 8 Weekend/October 20,1989 Weekend/October 20,1989