S - c 8200. 0 0 0 0 Wednesday October2008 - Daily ROTC AND THE PUBLIC SERVICE THAT DOESN'T GET A DIAG DAY BY ANDY KROLL Daily News Editor Under the glow of the con- struction floodlights, Gunnery Sgt. Kenneth Bodisch's shadow stretched to superhuman size along the 50-yard-line of Michigan Stadi- um. A thick, brick wall of a man, Bodisch stood at the bottom of the Big House's eastward facing seating section, shouting at the students sprinting up the stairs of the stadium's concrete bowl. "Push it!" he barked. "Make it hurt!" He turned to a student near- by who was hunched over, his elbows resting on his knees. "You feel like jello yet?" On the opposite side of the empty stadium, about 60 men and women dressed in the same white shirts and blue shorts ran the vertiginous rows of stairs and the connecting concourses. A group would slow for the occa- sional straggler, but they never stopped, and the sound of their rubber-soled shoes hitting each step faintly echoed throughout the bowl. After 45 minutes of running, everyone moved down to the field for the conclusion of this particular Friday morning's physical training session. They laid down on the dewy artificial turf field for sets of abdominal exercises and push-ups led by Bodisch. "You should be try- ing to cause some violence to their body," he explained to the weary-looking group scattered around him. High above Bodisch and the naval battalion of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps at the University, a last glimpse of the previous night's sickle-shaped moon could be seen before dis- appearing into the brightening sky. A few feet away from the corps, a sweat-drenched mid- shipman collapsed to his knees and puked on the field. By 7 a.m., physical training was over. The midshipmen in the battalion slowly made their way through the abandoned stu- dent section and out of one of the stadium's main gates. They had just enough time to return home, shower, eat breakfast, change into their civilian clothes and blend back in with the rest of their classmates as if they too had just rolled out of bed. For the students in the Naval ROTC program, and also the University's Army and Air Force ROTC cadets and midshipmen balance the demands of student life with a commitment to the military. programs, this routine - up at 5:30 a.m. for physical training, then into the daily grind of school - is normal. Unless it's Thurs- day, when all the cadets (Army and Air Force) and the midship- men (Navy and Marines) wear their military uniforms for the day's laboratory class, students in the ROTC are just anonymous faces on the Diag. But participation in the ROTC is very much a second, parallel wlife. Depending on the pro- gram, that commitment can include anywhere from two to six early morning physical train- ing sessions each week, weekly classes in North Hall and one or two weekend events each month. Many students also take on ROTC-related commitments each summer, like shadowing an active duty officer on a base in Germany or completing the month-long Warrior Forge lead- ership training program at Fort Lewis in northern Washington State. And, of course, there's the four years of active duty in the military for students who con- tract with the Air Force, Army or Navy while at the University, which almost all do. Here on campus, the belief in the importance of public service is resurgent. Each year, swaths of graduates join programs like Teach For America, AmeriCorps and the Peace Corps. But in spite of this renewed emphasis on serving the public, it is clear that one of the most obvious forms of public service - military service - is no longer included under that umbrella by many young people. "There just seems to be a big disconnect for our generation with the military," said Ben Karek, an LSA junior and ROTC cadet. "Who knows what those reasons are for." The life of a student in the ROTC is hard to comprehend for the vast bulk of college stu- dents, who shun Friday classes altogether and wouldn't ever consider waking up hours early for a grueling morning work out. Even the most goal-oriented students wouldn't understand dedicating that kind of time to a large group like the ROTC - for a generation that values individ- ual success, a long-term commit- ment to military service doesn't quite click. So why, then, do these nearly 300 students, unlike so many of their peers, decide to commit the better part of a decade to the order and rules and decorum of the military? For the cadets and mid- shipmen in the Univer- sity's ROTC programs, there's no single definitive answer to this question. Rather, in talking with the men and women forwhom NorthHall isa second home, an array ofreasons emerges. For one, students often mention their family's military background. Many had grandfa- thers who fought in World War II, uncles who had served in Vietnam. "The military is very legacy- based," said Ellen Racklyeft, a Nursing senior and the Naval ROTC battalion commander, the highest-rankingstudentofficerin the Naval ROTC. "There's alot of, 'Well, my dad did it. My grandpa did.' That's a huge thing." In the case of Lee Collins, an LSA sophomore and Army cadet, his family tradition of military service dates back as far as the birth of this country. Although no one in his immedi- ate family served in the military, Collins said his distant relatives had fought in both the Ameri- can Revolution and the Civil War. It was these family mem- bers, he said, that inspired him to join the ROTC. "One distant ancestor was an aide to General Washington. Another received a medal of honor at Gettysburg," Collins said proudly. "That really inspired me going back to those roots, and kind of carry the torch." Not all cadets and midship- men can boast having relatives who served under the most famous general in American history. But even those with- out a military legacy view their participation as a way of begin- ning such a tradition in their own families. Karek, who joined the Army ROTC in hopes that it would help him land a career in federal law enforcement, said joining the military "would be a good chance for me to represent my family." Mentioned nearly as often as family legacy are financial rea- sons. As the University's tuition increases while the availability of student loans decreases, more students see ROTC programs quite simply as a way to pay for college. A quick glance at the informational material greet- ing visitors in the lobby of North Hall confirms this: "NROTC: MONEY FOR COLLEGE," reads one Naval ROTC brochure; "Col- lege Expenses? 100% Tuition Coverage - Navy," says anoth- er; "LET USAA HELP JUMP- START YOUR FINANCIAL FUTURE," exclaimsyetanother brightly colored pamphlet for the Air Force ROTC. Captain Rick Vanden Heu- vel, the commanding officer in charge of the Naval ROTC pro- gram, said the economic appeal of the program couldn't be over- stated, especially considering today's economy. "It's about not only the ser- vice for the ROTC and the even- tual service in the Navy, but it's, 'O.K., we're offering a full-ride scholarship to the University of Michigan and Eastern Michi- gan University,' " he said. "So that alone, there's an economic appeal to that." The same applies to the Uni- versity's Air Force ROTC pro- gram. Although many cadets in the program compete for a limited number of scholarships, the Air Force ROTC has recent- ly begun offering automatic scholarships to students pursu- ing majors in selected foreign languages, nursing and several types of engineering, according to Capt. Victoria Misek. Cadets who don't receive a scholar- ship, she added, can take out low-interest loans through the Air Force to help pay off student loans after graduation. Still, Misek hesitated to say students join the program pure- ly for the money. "You know, I'm not goingto even lie and say, 'Hey, that's not the reason some people do it is for financial aid,"' she said. "But I wouldn't neces- sarily say thatthey're going to be here because of financial aid." The importance of financial aid or family tradition varies from student to student. There is, however, one reason for join- ing that nearly every ROTC member mentioned: the desire to contribute to a larger cause, a greater good. Some, like Ryan Hall, call it patriotism. "I'm a very patriotic per- son, and it was always a patri- otic decision," said Hall, an LSA senior and the commander of the Naval ROTC's Marine Option Charlie company. Others compare the ROTC to the generic-college-student life- style - a lifestyle that for these students would feel empty with- out a greater purpose. Devon Stanforth, an Engi- neering senior and Army cadet, said he knew the way some of his peers went through col- lege wasn't for him. "I'm seeing people around me just going to college to get a job. And what are they doing with their job? They're just making money - and that doesn't seem too excit- ing or productive," he said. "I knew I wanted to do something that actually meant something." On this, almost all of the cadets and midshipmen agree. Their service in the ROTC, and one day likely as an active duty officer, means something to them that is greater than them- selves and their own personal goals. Where these young men and women feel conflicted, though, is whether their voluntary com- mitment to defend their country means anything to their peers on campus. By no means are they asking their peers to serve; on the contrary, each student inter- viewed for this story adamantly stated that joining the ROTC is not for everybody. "And that's something I think is awesome about college cam- puses," Hall said. "We can all agree that we're into different See ROTC, Page 8B