Dutch Clarke -- the War Years. Brian Psy.D. Ratty
our corporal shouted, “Attention!” Then the corporal who was forming the first floor of recruits also shouted, “Attention!” So here we were, one hundred and fifty Idiots standing in line, at attention, listening to the sounds of the wind and morning crickets. We must have stood there for a good three or four minutes before, out of the inky shadows, a tall, slender man appeared, wearing a pressed Marine utility uniform. He was holding a swagger stick with both hands in front of his body. He stood there for a moment, some fifty feet in front of both groups, just looking up and down our ranks. His funny little hat kept his face in shadow from the street light above.
Finally he spoke, in a loud, firm voice. “I’m Gunnery Sergeant Crane, the lead Drill Instructor for Dog Company. I’m in charge of what the Marines loosely call recruits. You will notice I didn’t call you Marines because, from what I have seen here this morning, I’m not sure any of you will make it through the next ten weeks of training. You are the sorriest bunch of people I have seen in my eighteen years in the Corps. Our country must be in bigger trouble than I thought, because they are scraping the bottom of the barrel to send me Rainbows like you! I ask for men and they send me plow boys. I ask for tigers and they send me Soda Jerks. I ask for sixteen weeks of training and they cut it to ten. Well, Rainbows, you will have sixteen weeks crammed into ten. This will be the longest and hardest ten weeks of your young lives. You had your last laugh when you met me.” Pounding his riding crop into the palm of his right hand, he started walking up and down the line of recruits. Pausing every now and then, he continued, “This is not a vacation, this is not camp, and I’m not the camp master. Mommy will not be bringing you breakfast in bed, and you are not going to be playing grab ass with your girlfriend or driving dad’s car to the malt shop. For the next ten weeks, your ass is grass and I’m the lawnmower.”
When he walked in front of my row, I could finally see part of his face from under his hat, and I discovered that he was wearing sunglasses in the dark. Stopping and turning to our group he said in a belittling tone, “When I or any other real Marine on this post tells you to do something, your reply will always be. ‘Aye, aye, sir!’ Do you understand?”
The group replied, “Aye, aye, sir!”
“I can’t hear you clowns,” he shouted back.
Louder came our response, “’Aye, aye, sir!” “
Walking back to where he’d started, he turned once again and yelled, “Sergeant Nelson will be leading you clowns to chow. After that, you will be given what all of you need, a Marine haircut, after which you will be called Mop Heads. You will then be taken to supply, where you will be issued Marine clothing to replace the Rainbow uniforms you are wearing. Sergeant Nelson, Sergeant Brice take the men.” Turning his back on us, he briskly walked back into the shadows from which he came.
There was total silence for a moment. His appearance and mannerisms reminded me immediately of a character from a childhood book, Ichabod Crane from The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Somehow, I knew already that he was the headless horseman we would all come to fear.
Always Faithful
The sergeants stepped forward and shouted in unison, “Right face! Forward march.”
By the time Sergeant Nelson started us marching, I could see a red dawn brightening the eastern sky. He led us down a few blocks and then turned the group right at a large athletic field. As we marched along, the only sound was that of our shoe leather beating against the blacktop, and the occasional cadence count from Sergeant Nelson.
“Hup, two, three, four…hup, two, three four.”
The first floor group with Sergeant Brice, from last night, followed us. Then, suddenly, the still air was cut by the loud sounds of multiple bugles blaring out their morning song. It was 6:00 AM, and air rang with the sounds of Reveille.
A few moments later, we reached a large, single-story building. Stopping the group, the Sergeant had us turn towards the building, “This is the Mess Hall for Dog Company. You will be taking all of your meals here. You will march single file into the hall and there will be no talking. Once inside, you will take a tray and go down the chow line. You will take and eat what’s given to you. When you are finished with your meal, you will take your empty tray, I repeat your empty tray, to the KP area for cleaning, and any paper trash will be stowed into the appropriate trash cans. You will not take any food with you. You will eat all the food on your tray. Marines do not waste food. Do you understand?”
“Aye, aye, sir!” was our loud reply.
“After your meal, you will form your ranks on me here again. You will not wander off or go to the head or talk to anyone. Do you understand?”
“Aye, aye, sir!”
”Fall out in rows,” barked Sergeant Nelson.
Standing on the stairs, waiting to enter the hall, I felt the first rays of the morning sunlight brush my face. Turning, I could see the bright red ball just rising over some buildings in the distance.
A new day…a new adventure, I thought.
Inside the door on the right was a stainless-steel table stacked with steel trays. Next to them were piles of utensils, napkins and plastic glasses. Next to the table was a long row of stainless-steel serving tables with steam rolling off the covered food. On the other side of the room were rows and rows of bench-type tables, enough to feed hundreds of men, but not half the size of the chow hall we had used the night before. At the far end were large open bays and trash cans. The room was clean and humid but smelled stale from the lack of fresh air.
We were the first group in the hall, and I was about the twentieth person in line. Grabbing my tray and utensils, I followed along the column. Behind the serving tables were two men, dressed in white cooks’ clothing. The first cook was having fun by shouting out, “Well, lookie here! We have new Rainbows. They’re not even Mop Heads yet. Come on, boys. I made you the ‘house specialty’ for breakfast, SOS. You’ll just love it! Take all you want, but eat all you take.”
Approaching him, I held out my tray. On it he placed a piece of toast in the large compartment, then poured some kind of white gravy over it. The gooey mixture looked and smelled awful. The next cook slopped a large spoonful of peaches into one of the two smaller compartments. At the end of the line were cartons of milk and large pots of coffee. Taking two cartons of milk, I moved to an empty table, a few yards away. Moments later, Kurt from Ketchikan sat down across from me. At first, I didn’t even look up. I was more interested in the white slosh on my tray. Taking my fork, I scraped the gray off the toast and cut into it. The soggy toast tasted like grease and moldy milk. It was awful!
From across the table, Kurt whispered, “Do you know what SOS stands for?”
His whisper caught me off-guard. Slowly looking up I shook my head no.
“Shit On a Shingle…that’s what it stands for. I’ve had this before. It’s not so bad after you get by the grease,” he whispered again, with a big smile.
Returning to my food, I started to wash it down with my milk, and finally I got a good look at Kurt. He couldn’t be much older than eighteen and still had freckles on his light-brown face. His hair was blonde, his eyes green, and when he smiled, his young face lit up like a candle. His body looked firm but seemed to fit loosely in his civilian clothes. He didn’t look like much of a Marine, but I liked him, even through he talked too much.
From the Mess Hall, both groups were marched back to the barracks, where we used the head and made our beds. Then we marched off to the post barber shop, this time following the first-floor group. Upon arrival, we were again placed in single file, standing at attention while we waited for our turn with a barber.
The line moved surprisingly quickly. The recruits entered the shop looking like normal people and left, a few moments later, looking like bowling balls. This was not surprising to me, as my recruiters in Ketchikan had warned me about the first Marine butch haircut.
Sergeant Brice was directing traffic at the front door. Giving