
The First Day
30" x 40"
Oil on Masonite
Fort Ord, California – March, 1967
Robert Milner – Winnesboro, Texas
David A. Wilson – Hickory, North Carolina
Joseph McKay – Whittier, California
Michael Cooper – Valdese, North Carolina
Terry W. Rogers – Las Vegas, Nevada
Ted Blair – Glennwood, Minnesota
Donald Overfield – Fairmont, California
Staff Sgt. Joshuaway Ashley, Drill Sergeant – Newark, N.J.
Private Michael E. Fox, Roster Guide – Ridgecrest, California
"Bewildered" is the word most often used to
describe new recruits on their first day
at the Army Reception Center.
They have come
from everywhere; from cities, farms, suburbs, from schools, jobs,
or lives
of leisure.
Some are eager for military training and achievement;
some
would rather be anywhere else.
Eager, frightened, curious or resistant.
All are at first lost in a strange world with new rules, new goals,
and
instant discipline.
Each struggles with loneliness and disorientation as
a profound change comes over his life.
In the painting,
The First Day, the recruits are met in the cold dawn of a stormy day
by
Private Michael E. Fox,
a Roster Guide, who will teach them
basic marching
formations
and take them from place to place for processing.
Private Fox
is an Officer Candidate
assigned to the Reception Center
until he reports
for OCS.
Looking on is Staff Sergeant Joshuaway Ashley, who will be this
group's Drill Sergeant
when their three-day processing routine is
completed.
On this day the
recruits will exchange their civilian clothes for army fatigues,
and will
submit to military barbers.
For some it is a time of anguish,
but very soon they will be caught up in a busy schedule of orientations,
interviews,
record work, equipment issues, details,
tests, and more tests.
There will be little time for loneliness or apprehension.
They learn what is expected of them,
and that the Military Code of Justice
assures the fair and impartial
treatment.
This
day will be long, but there will be satisfying achievement, and unforeseen
opportunities
will begin to beckon these
bewildered new recruits. They are men to be proud of .
The youth of the nation – now in the service
of their country.