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ROTC Policy Battle Rages

Don't Ask, Don't Tell, What Now?

By Anna D. Wilde

Gather up the ammunition: It looks as though Harvard, reacting to the new "don't ask, don't tell, don't pursue" policy on gays in the military announced this July, is ready to start the battle over on-campus ROTC again this semester.

The faces of the participants have changed since the arguments over gay participation in ROTC at Harvard started in the late 1980s, but the essential elements of the conflict have not: balancing a stance against antigay discrimination with the rights and needs of student cadets.

According to MIT's ROTC office, approximately 36 Harvard students will participate in Navy ROTC this year, 13 in Air Force ROTC and between 20 and 30 in Army ROTC. Currently, Harvard pays approximately $130,000 per year to MIT for these students' participation.

While these cadets will probably not be affected by any policy change Harvard makes, future cadets now wait in policy limbo. Last spring, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences endorsed the recommendations of the 1992 ROTC Committee report, which would cut Harvard funding to MIT by 1995 if the military's ban on gays was not lifted.

But the final decision always rested with President Neil L. Rudenstine and Dean of the Faculty Jeremy R. Knowles, and both are backing off, calling for more informal discussion of the issue before any action.

"My hope is that the Verba committee will simply look at the landscape and give us advice," says Knowles. "I hope that committee will meet simply to see how their recommendations sit in the post-July landscape." A re-examination of the issue in the Faculty Council or the full Faculty is also possible, he says.

"I myself didn't estimate the [possibility] of having formal sessions and certainly not another committee," says Rudenstine. He does want to see general discussion of the issue in the Faculty and the general community, he says.

And if the ROTC committee is resuscitated, it will need some new faces. Of the original 11 members of the ROTC committee, the three undergraduates have graduated and three of the eight professors are on leave this semester.

Pforzheimer University Professor Sidney Verba'53, the committee's chair, says the ban was notlifted by the new federal policy, leaving thesituation the same as the one under which thecommittee made its original recommendations. "Inall likelihood, I think we should just carry outwhat the report said," he says.

But while policy at the institutional levelchanges slowly, those who are immediately affectedby the ROTC debate continue arguments begun yearsago.

To students and instructors involved in ROTC,ending Harvard's involvement would deprive theCollege, the cadets and the country of a valuableresource. For example, says Army ROTC cadet CurtisL. Pierce '94, campus diversity would sufferwithout ROTC.

Much of Harvard knows little about themilitary, he says, and he often encountersassumptions.

"I think that a shortcoming that many peoplehave is that their interpretation of army life iswhat they see in the movies," he says. He findsmany students "expect hard-core conservatives" inmilitary occupations.

Pierce says that to counter such assumptions,he "made it a point" to wear his uniform todinner, where he would often field questions onmilitary policy toward gays, the army experienceand other topics.

Without his ROTC scholarship, Pierce says, heand many others would not attend Harvard.

ROTC instructors also argue that servingHarvard's connection with ROTC would hurt thecountry's military by depriving it of a source ofquality officers.

"Those characteristics that are so valuableabout a Harvard education are not going to bepresent in young officers," says Lt. Col. BucknerCreel, professor of military science at MIT. Creelsays, a Harvard student was the top-ranked cadetat this summer's ROTC training camp at Fort Bragg.Such students are "the Colin Powells of 25 yearsfrom now," he says.

But Powell's name, a compliment in any militarysetting, means something different to the gay,bisexual and lesbian students who protested hispresence at Harvard's Commencement this spring.

And the University's link to ROTC for many ofthese students is a reminder of a policy that barsthem based on their sexual orientation."Discrimination against gays is unacceptable,"says Dennis K. Lin '93-'94, co-chair of theBisexual, Gay and Lesbian Students Association.

And he says he expects a "heavy backlash" afterthe disappointment of the Clinton administration'sJuly announcement.

Lin stresses that he does not blame or condemnindividual students for the policy of the nation'smilitary. "We're going to be opposed to havingthem on campus, he says. "I feel very bad aboutthat, but I feel like I have no choice."

So finally, it is once again up to theUniversity and to MIT to make a choice on the ROTCissue, as it has been for over five years.

"We're in the midst of a process that beganback in 1990," says Ronald P. Sudviko '72,assistant to the president at MIT for governmentand community relations. "I think our evaluationstill continues.

Pforzheimer University Professor Sidney Verba'53, the committee's chair, says the ban was notlifted by the new federal policy, leaving thesituation the same as the one under which thecommittee made its original recommendations. "Inall likelihood, I think we should just carry outwhat the report said," he says.

But while policy at the institutional levelchanges slowly, those who are immediately affectedby the ROTC debate continue arguments begun yearsago.

To students and instructors involved in ROTC,ending Harvard's involvement would deprive theCollege, the cadets and the country of a valuableresource. For example, says Army ROTC cadet CurtisL. Pierce '94, campus diversity would sufferwithout ROTC.

Much of Harvard knows little about themilitary, he says, and he often encountersassumptions.

"I think that a shortcoming that many peoplehave is that their interpretation of army life iswhat they see in the movies," he says. He findsmany students "expect hard-core conservatives" inmilitary occupations.

Pierce says that to counter such assumptions,he "made it a point" to wear his uniform todinner, where he would often field questions onmilitary policy toward gays, the army experienceand other topics.

Without his ROTC scholarship, Pierce says, heand many others would not attend Harvard.

ROTC instructors also argue that servingHarvard's connection with ROTC would hurt thecountry's military by depriving it of a source ofquality officers.

"Those characteristics that are so valuableabout a Harvard education are not going to bepresent in young officers," says Lt. Col. BucknerCreel, professor of military science at MIT. Creelsays, a Harvard student was the top-ranked cadetat this summer's ROTC training camp at Fort Bragg.Such students are "the Colin Powells of 25 yearsfrom now," he says.

But Powell's name, a compliment in any militarysetting, means something different to the gay,bisexual and lesbian students who protested hispresence at Harvard's Commencement this spring.

And the University's link to ROTC for many ofthese students is a reminder of a policy that barsthem based on their sexual orientation."Discrimination against gays is unacceptable,"says Dennis K. Lin '93-'94, co-chair of theBisexual, Gay and Lesbian Students Association.

And he says he expects a "heavy backlash" afterthe disappointment of the Clinton administration'sJuly announcement.

Lin stresses that he does not blame or condemnindividual students for the policy of the nation'smilitary. "We're going to be opposed to havingthem on campus, he says. "I feel very bad aboutthat, but I feel like I have no choice."

So finally, it is once again up to theUniversity and to MIT to make a choice on the ROTCissue, as it has been for over five years.

"We're in the midst of a process that beganback in 1990," says Ronald P. Sudviko '72,assistant to the president at MIT for governmentand community relations. "I think our evaluationstill continues.

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