The Learning Curve
They had actually joined the NDA one week earlier than its scheduled opening. All cadets he had met were those who had been denied their mid-term vacations as they had failed in their end of term examinations and had stayed back for the period to get extra coaching prior to their re-tests. Failure in these re-tests meant relegation to their junior course and a loss of six months. Hell would break loose when the entire Squadron re-assembled a week later, he was told.
They had actually joined the NDA one week earlier than its scheduled opening. All cadets he had met were those who had been denied their mid-term vacations as they had failed in their end of term examinations and had stayed back for the period to get extra coaching prior to their re-tests. Failure in these re-tests meant relegation to their junior course and a loss of six months. Hell would break loose when the entire Squadron re-assembled a week later, he was told.
Among those who had been present during that first week
were the Cadet Appointees as Supervisors, all from the sixth term. This meant
that they saw their Squadron Cadet Captain or SCC and their Squadron Sergeant
Major, or CSM. It was these senior cadets’ responsibility to look after the
freshers and guide them through their first week. The first item on their
agenda was a haircut. They had all trooped to the Saloon where a dozen barbers
were waiting. The haircut was fast. The barber had put a beret on their heads
and shaved off whatever was visible. After taking the beret off, they used
their scissors with gay abandon and reduced the length of their hair to one
centimetre.
After
a shower, they had to walk around the entire Campus, a trudge of over 25 km,
including the Gliderdrome, the Equitation Lines, Khadakwasla Lake, still known
to old timers as Lake Fife, and the various establishments along the Perimeter
Road of an area that encompassed some 23,000 acres of land. He could never have
imagined how vast and complete the NDA was, with the imposing edifice named
after the Country that had paid for its cost of construction, the 'Sudan
Block'. The other imposing building was the Science Block, with a clock tower
visible from anywhere to cadets. Its clock, the ‘Big Ben’ and its chimes was an
exact replica of the original as the architect was British. All construction
was solid and totally fault-free. No signs of poor or cheap construction that
was so prevalent in Civvy Street.
The
Library and the Auditorium were replicas of each other, down to the nearest
detail, though their insides were different. The theatre was the largest in
Asia with a seating capacity of two thousand in relative comfort. All lawns
looked like new Billiards Tables, manicured to near perfection. All gardens
were beautiful and a sight for sore eyes. The Cadets Mess could seat two
thousand people though it was generally limited to one thousand six hundred
seats, with the central wooden dance floor, waxed till it reflected even
candlelight, cordoned off. The kitchen was huge, automated and spotlessly
clean. The swimming pool was of Olympic Standards and the water pellucid. The
Gymnasium was again huge and had every facility available; it could house six
hundred heads at any time. The playing fields were neatly laid out, all twelve
of them and all were of the size of a football field. The Stadium that housed
the Cricket pitch was simply superb. It had hosted the West Indian team in 1956
when they played against the Services in a three-day match. The Athletics track
was laid around the Cricket ground. The
Polo grounds seemed vast, nestled as they were between the foothills of the
leeward side of the Western Ghats of India. The Quartermaster's Fort was just
that-a walled Fortress that housed all items of uniform or kits for fifteen
hundred Cadets. The layout inside was perfect, as expected. Nothing seemed out
of place and the courtyard was huge; after all, it had to house fifteen hundred
of them before marching out for the end of term Ceremony called the Passing-out
Parade when they bade the 6th termers goodbye.
The historic Sinhagad Fort dominated the skyline, and
the vagaries of Nature had crafted the peaks of the hill next to it to resemble
what was then known as Ursula's Tit, so named after a prominent film actress of
the current era. Later he would learn the names of the many hills surrounding
the Campus, which was in a bowl of some kind and very similar to the famous
city of Kandy in Ceylon, now Sri Lanka. They were taken to the NDA Gate as the
Portal to the Academy was called. From there, one got his first view of the
NDA, which was so pretty and picturesque that it took one's breath away. Small
wonder that all visitors to the NDA were impressed beyond words. The layout was
so perfectly symmetrical that one couldn't but marvel at the vision of the
Architects and Designers of this hallowed institution. Wordsworth could well
have written his famous poem from there, so entrancing the view and so
salubrious the climate.