Kent Yrchik-Shoemaker oral history interview
Description
Oral history interview with Kent Yrchik-Shoemaker, Assistant Dean of the College, for the Dartmouth Vietnam Project. Yrchik-Shoemaker describes his experience growing up in Minnesota, Washington D.C., and London, England. He attended Michigan State University as an undergraduate student and participated in the Air Force Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC). He describes racial tensions on campus and why he chose to participate in the ROTC. Yrchik-Shoemaker describes his internal conflict with not believing in the Vietnam War and his sense of duty to serve his country. He shares why his friends called him the “ROTC Hippie” and his involvement with anti-war protests. Yrchik-Shoemaker discusses race relations in the military, his feelings of paranoia, and decision to leave flight training school through a process called self-initiated elimination. He explains why and how he had a mental health note in his military file and describes his transfer to Vandenberg Air Force Base in California where he was trained as a satellite operations controller and his job as crew chief. Yrchik-Shoemaker discusses how he stayed an extra two years in the service and attended classes for counseling. He shares his growing mistrust of the military the longer he worked for them. Yrchik-Shoemaker discusses his role as an Assistant Dean at Dartmouth and his involvement with the undergraduate veterans and the challenges returning to school presented for them. He shares his feelings on the current challenges veterans face when they were active military.
Dates
- 2016-08-24
Language of Materials
English
Extent
4 Files (1 .docx transcript (65 pages); 1 .docx transcript word list; 1. pdf transcript (65 pages); 1 .wav audio file (2 hour, 45 minutes, 55 seconds))
Part of the Rauner Library Archives and Manuscripts Repository