Looking Back At The Old Corps
In 1965, one special career Marine had excelled as a leader of men.
Yes, he had claimed membership in "the few, the proud", but more than that, he was gung-ho,
a hard-charger, a member of the "Old Corps". At age 37, Sgt. J.R. Mickel was senior D.I.
of Platoon #135 Company, 1st Recruit Battalion. To most raw recruits at Parris Island, he
might as well been God Himself. He not only commanded their respect; he led them beyond the
call of duty. As an 0300 infantryman, he'd earned the Silver Star for bravery in Korea,
with combat stars for time of actual enemy encounter. The recruits knew all of this, although
he, himself, never told them.
Now, Mickel was a tough Marine, but so were his assistants, the Junior Drill Instructors.
A serious group of "Jar Heads", they included: Sgt. D.W. Donovan, Sgt. J.W. Haynes, Sgt.
P.D. Crocket and Cpl. R.R. Sibley. Indeed they were "leathernecks", rugged as basic
training. So how come Mickel was such and outstanding leader of this pack?
Was it because of the Bulldog tattoo on his left arm? Or was it because he gave
such good demonstration during training? He could-and did-do it all: instruction
on marching drill, every syllable in the manual of arms with an M-14 rifle-how to
clean it, disassemble it and reassemble it, physical training, obstacle courses.
You name it-he did it-BETTER than anybody else.
Was it because of his running, his stamina? He ran faster going backward than most
privates did going forward. When the platoon went on a 3 mile run, the Senior D.I.
made keeping the pace look easy. In that humid and oppressive South Carolina heat,
Mickel even showed his platoon the "paratrooper strut", a way to make breathing easier.
Showed how to lob along at steady pace, raising his feet slightly off the ground, even
in double-time. Mickel was "all the way", no time for quitters or lagging behind.
No, it wasn't his bulldog tattoo, or excellent demonstrations, nor even his stamina.
It was that, within the camaraderie of the platoon, he stuck up for his men.
Whatever happened, he had drilled 'em, taught 'em, worked with 'em, and come hell
or high water, he stayed right there beside 'em! Let's say, for example, the C.O.
wanted to set a fat body back in training-or some recruit who wasn't doing well in
some other part of his training. Like in the case of, say, "Neuhaus, Newt." Newt
was over weight-balance according to age and height.
Called in front of the C.O., Mickel stood up for this recruit under his care:
"Sir, Neuhaus is losing weight. And, Sir, I'll make sure he gets the weight off
on schedule. We just need a little more time. We are working hard at it.
Neuhaus says he can do it."
Neuhaus, standing at attention, would agree: "Yes, Sir! I'll lose the proper
amount of weight each week." After which, knowing that Mickel was a man of his
word, the C.O. would respond, "Alright, Neuhaus, but the first time you can't
keep up with the training, you're going back. Sgt. Mickel, sent the private to
sick bay once a week to get weighed." Which was met with the predictable:
"YES SIR!" This last exchange terminated in another predictable: "DISMISSED!"
And, during rigorous physical training, Mickel threw buckets of cold water
on the overheated recruits. Cold water and cold towels-techniques just now
being accepted nationwide in sports medicine. But there was no time for heat
prostration, heat strokes or blackouts in Mickel's readiness platoon. The
platoon might have lost some of it's purpose-and that would NEVER happen!
Not if Sgt. Mickel could prevent it!
Yes Sir, he was part of the "Old Corps". Nobody who trained with him in the
Summer of 1965 will ever forget. If you take a look at the group photo at
the end of the Summer's basic training, you'll notice that even his Bulldog
pup, little "Bullseye", sat attention. Why? Sgt. Mickel trained him, of
course, that's why. Any Questions?!

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