|     
            From Dateline February 27, 2003  
             
            Former Marine Returns to 
              El Toro This Time as a College Student 
              by Dave Reid 
            Talk about big-time jitters on the first day 
              of classes....   
             “My heart started pounding, I had goose bumps 
              the size of Mt. Rushmore.” 
            That was the reaction of Herman “Mitch” 
              Mitchell last fall when he drove through the gates of the former 
              El Toro Marine Corps Air Station on his way to the opening day of 
              classes at Cal State Fullerton's El Toro Campus. 
            No ordinary student, Mitchell, a Marine for 28 years, 
              was returning to the former base where he was stationed prior to 
              his retirement in 1998. He believes he is the only El Toro-based 
              Marine to attend school there. 
            His crime and delinquency class was not only in the 
              same building complex where the former master sergeant worked as 
              supply chief for the 3rd Marine Air Wing, but it was the same room 
              where he directed the shipment of weapons and equipment.  
            It was a heavy-duty case of deja vu. As he entered 
              the reconfigured room for the first time, images of friends, co-workers 
              and officers flooded his mind. 
            He could hear voices and see visions in his mind's 
              eye from the past as he passed the commanding general's office down 
              the hall, now the office of George Giacumakis, director of the El 
              Toro Campus. 
            It was a heavy-duty case of deja vu. As he entered 
              the reconfigured room for the first time, images of friends, co-workers 
              and officers flooded his mind.  
            He could hear voices and see visions in his mind's 
              eye from the past as he passed the commanding general's office down 
              the hall, now the office of George Giacumakis, director of the El 
              Toro Campus. 
            The days of spit-and-polish uniforms and drills have 
              changed to those of a deeply committed student. “I made myself 
              a promise - that in spirit - I would join the class of '72 [the 
              year he would have graduated from college if he had gone straight 
              from high school] and earn a bachelor's degree.” 
            In addition to his classes, Mitchell is working on 
              two special projects that draw upon his experiences in the Marine 
              Corps and his tour of duty at El Toro 
            One project, with Giacumakis, involves compiling photos 
              and other materials for a history of the base. He is also working 
              with James R. Lasley, professor of criminal justice, on a project 
              that compares and contrasts the military system of justice with 
              the civilian justice system. “Most of us in the field are 
              very familiar with our justice system and the way it works,” 
              says Mitchell. “But not many are familiar with the military 
              system.” 
            After he completes undergraduate studies, Mitchell 
              plants to pursue a master's or a law degree. “Not bad for 
              an old guy,” he quips. He wants to work in an area of justice 
              that deals with children. “I see so much injustice toward 
              children, particularly minority children.” 
            His higher education quest began almost immediately 
              after retirement from the Marines when he enrolled at Irvine Valley 
              College. He transferred to Cal State Fullerton in spring 2002 and 
              continued in the fall at the El Toro Campus.  
            Mitchell's commitment to education was underscored 
              in dramatic fashion two years ago when he was invited to speak on 
              “Black Pride in the Community” before the Orange County 
              chapter of the NAACP. The import of the occasion and the real message 
              behind his talk hit him like a ton of bricks just as he arose from 
              his chair. 
            “I had just started school,” he says, 
              “and then something happened when I walked to the podium. 
              I asked myself, 'What gives you that pride?'” 
            “I got to the podium and told everyone that 
              I had spent a week on my remarks, but not until now did I realize 
              it was the wrong speech.” He took the prepared speech out 
              of his pocket and tore it up in front a gasping audience. 
            “I told them, 'I want to talk to you about education 
              because the key to pride in our community is to educate our children.'” 
              He went on to deliver a message on the importance of education that 
              made a lasting impression. A nuclear physicist in the group later 
              told him the speech inspired him to return to school. 
            Born in Chicago and raised by grandparents in Columbus, 
              Ga., Mitchell once dropped out of high school. His grandfather physically 
              picked him up and took him back. “He said he wasn't going 
              to let that happen to me.” 
            Following high school, he enlisted in the Marines. 
              His tours of duty have taken him to various places around the world 
              and given him life experiences and a perspective that separates 
              him from younger students. 
            Besides education, another of his passions is music 
              - particularly jazz. He is a drummer and singer in his group called 
              Blueprint, and is the only musician in his family. 
            Mitchell got hooked on the drums as a child when he 
              heard a marching band playing in a parade. His grandfather helped 
              him get his first set of drums, and he's been playing ever since. 
             
            “I don't think my grandfather ever thought my 
              interest in drumming would last as long as it has,” he says. 
            All through high school, Mitchell stayed after class 
              for band practice and then loaded his drums on a city bus that had 
              its last stop four miles from his home. He walked the rest of the 
              way with the drums. 
            Mitchell has high praise for his professors, who often 
              chat with him after class. “I wish I could have done it earlier,” 
              says the 3.75 GPA student. His enthusiasm has spread to his wife, 
              Antania, who he encouraged to quit her job and return to school. 
              She will eventually transfer to Cal State Fullerton. 
            When asked about his successes in education, Mitchell 
              can only say, “It just goes to show, you can teach an old 
              dog new tricks.” Semper Fidelis. 
              
             |