It was 1972, and I was stationed at Milwaukee Navy recruiting after boot and tech training in San Diego, a year aboard "my" minesweeper off Vietnam and ported in Subic Bay PI and Long Beach Cal., and Midway Island mid-Pacific. I'd signed up for four years. I'd walked up the block to Marquette University to take the Graduate Record Exam and had gotten accepted in a masters degree program in N.C.
Suddenly the Navy came up with a program that allowed sailors getting into an academic program to get out in time for the beginning of the fall semester, rather than living in their parent's basements maybe getting stoned. So rather than early October, I got out in early August, like early retirement from a career.
The Navy didn't call it that, but it was essentially like the demobilization after WWII, when the military had masses of unneeded personnel and wanted them back to work or school in the civilian world and off their payroll.
As U.S. vets know, you don't get out with a discharge. Most one-hitch guys have an inactive reservist obligation, so they only get separation papers, with the discharge coming along once the reserve obligation ends.
When I got to UNC Greensboro, I sat down on a big soft sofa in the student union and watched the students come and go, like I'd just woken up from a long nap. The next morning ordering breakfast at the student union, I realized I had to slow down the cadence of my speech from my Yankee talk, so the breakfast cook could understand my order. It was a whole new life.
Suddenly the Navy came up with a program that allowed sailors getting into an academic program to get out in time for the beginning of the fall semester, rather than living in their parent's basements maybe getting stoned. So rather than early October, I got out in early August, like early retirement from a career.
The Navy didn't call it that, but it was essentially like the demobilization after WWII, when the military had masses of unneeded personnel and wanted them back to work or school in the civilian world and off their payroll.
As U.S. vets know, you don't get out with a discharge. Most one-hitch guys have an inactive reservist obligation, so they only get separation papers, with the discharge coming along once the reserve obligation ends.
When I got to UNC Greensboro, I sat down on a big soft sofa in the student union and watched the students come and go, like I'd just woken up from a long nap. The next morning ordering breakfast at the student union, I realized I had to slow down the cadence of my speech from my Yankee talk, so the breakfast cook could understand my order. It was a whole new life.