MULLINS | It was goodbye to marching, saluting and 4 a.m.
wake-up calls, and back to a suit, State Law Enforcement Division
agents and a state plane Saturday for South Carolina's governor.
1st Lt. Mark Sanford finished his required two weeks of Reserve
Commissioned Officers training at 2:30 p.m. at Maxwell Air Force
Base in Alabama. Within an hour, he had changed out of his uniform
and met his press secretary, Will Folks, for the flight home.
"You've got four more steps as a lieutenant," Folks told the
governor.
A state-owned, twin-engine King Air crossed the muddy and swollen
Great Pee Dee River and landed at the Marion County Airport at 5:27
p.m.
Sanford emerged wearing a white shirt, dark pants, black loafers
and a tie, slightly askew.
"It's a culture shock," Sanford said.
After saluting everything but Coke machines and trees, Sanford
was soon greeted by an honor guard of Marine ROTC students at
Mullins High, where he spoke at a fund-raiser for the Marion County
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Speaking to more than 500 people in one of the state's poorest
counties, the Republican governor said government's role should be
limited, but it has a responsibility to support affirmative action
and help those in need.
"You can have freedom, but if you don't have economic freedom,
you still have a problem," he said, drawing applause from the guests
attending the NAACP dinner.
He said many of his actions, including opposing a "sweetheart
deal" for a developer involved in an automotive-park proposal in
Greenville and his support for a cigarette tax to support Medicaid,
are drawing opposition mostly from his Republican brethren.
Sanford received a direct commission in the Air Force Reserve to
be a medical administration officer. He is a first lieutenant in the
315th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron at Charleston Air Force
Base.
During his training, he said he and the 150 others in his class
didn't have to do push-ups, run with a pack or listen to a drill
instructor calling them maggots.
But the governor had one outdoor leadership exercise, in which he
and five others had to scale a wall and cross a moat with a 24-foot
pole.
Sanford, being the leader, decided to cross first.
"I fell in the water," Sanford said.
He said the fall was only 5 feet, "but it makes for a cold
morning. The rest of the day, you're wet."