Traffic:   4 Incidents
Weather: 65°F Go
  03:41am, 08/30/08
Search:      wwj.com  Web  Audio
Local News
 
 

Posted: Friday, 04 July 2008 5:48AM

Fit To Serve? Most Young Adults Aren't

Washington (CBS)  -- Summer, when school is over, is the military’s prime recruiting time. But when the Army goes looking for young people to enlist, says Gen. William Wallace, it runs into an astounding fact.

“About 28 percent of them, based on our analysis, are fully qualified for military service,” he said.

Put it another way: Only three out of 10 young people between the ages of 17 and 24 even qualify to serve in the Army, CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reports.

The rest are ineligible either because they didn’t graduate from high school, have a police record or are not physically fit.

“It doesn’t surprise me, because I really think we don’t see as much physical activity either in schools or outside of schools as we used to,” said Maria Tukeva, the principal of Bell Multicultural High School in Washington, D.C., where, until recently, gym class was impossible.

“We had no gymnasium, no sports equipment or field of any kind,” Tukeva said.

Now she has a new building, complete with a weight room. But Coach Iwan Balcet says the kids who use it are the exception.

“It’s getting worse and worse. I mean, I think that the video-game era, especially now, the video games are getting cheaper and cheaper and cheaper,” Balcet said.

Call them the softest generation, but you really can’t blame them. In four years at Bell, a student is only required to take nine weeks of gym class.

That’s it?

“And that’s it pretty much,” Balcet said.

Nationwide, an increasing number of students don’t stay in school for four years.

“Every 26 seconds in our country a young person drops out of high school,” Wallace said.

At Bell, Michael Connors, a former Air Force pilot who flew in and out of Iraq and Afghanistan, teaches English as a second language.

How hard is it for him to keep kids on the right track?

“It’s tough,” Connors said. “This job, teaching, makes going to war look easy."

A nation, it’s been said, is only as strong as its children. And that’s never more true than in a time of war. The evidence says our children are getting weaker, both mentally and physically.

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Page Email This Page
Top News
Penske on Kilpatrick: It's Time That He Moves On
Decision Tues. On Gov. Hearings To Remove Mayor
Alaska Gov. Is McCain's VP Shocker
Nissan to Make Price Hikes in Japan
Obama Promises Change For America
Stores Pull Bassinets From Shelves
Mayor Seeks To Halt Gov's Removal Hearings
Presidential Candidates Headed Back To Michigan
Gustav Grows Near Jamaica, Threatens Gulf
 
 
WWJ 950 Video On Demand
 
 
Recent Podcasts
Jazz Fest 8/29
Chris Collins, Director of Jazz studies at Wayne State University, has info about the Detroit International Jazz Fest in Detroitl
Education Minute 8/29
WWJ's Pat Vitale explains some ways for high school students to get the jump on college credits.
Feldman Report-P.M. 8/29
WWJ and Fox2's erudite Biz Man Murray Feldman has financial news that you and your family can live with.
GreatStuff 8/29
Lots of action this long weekend and Roberta Jasina aptly covers the biggies.
Caring For Aging Parents - 8/29
WWJ's Pat Sweeting advises that a Geriatric Medicine Specialist may be better suited to care for your aging parents' needs.