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Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis '68 has vetoed a recent Undergraduate Council resolution to ban the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) from holding its commissioning ceremonies in Harvard Yard.
The resolution requests that Lewis oppose a compromise which terminated the University's financial support of the ROTC program but continues to permit the commissioning ceremony to be held in the Yard.
"This bill...is basically a request that I oppose the compromise announced by then-Acting-President Carnesale at the February 14, 1995 meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences," Lewis wrote in a letter Wednesday to council President Robert M. Hyman '98-'97 explaining his reasons for the veto.
"As far as I am aware, neither the sponsors of the U.C. bill nor any letters I have received since the bill was passed have raised matters that had not been considered during [the] deliberations [which led to the compromise]," the letter added.
The council's resolution, which passed last month by a vote of 30 to 20, also requests that the College omit any mention of the ceremony in official Commencement week programs.
The resolution further calls for the council to send a letter protesting ROTC's discriminatory policies against gay, lesbian and bisexual Harvard students to Congress, President Clinton and the ROTC program.
Supporters of the resolution said they hope that its suggestions will not be misconstrued as a punitive measure against ROTC cadets.
"We really appreciate the students who go into the ROTC program," Hyman said. "But there are too many reasons to justify moving the commissioning ceremony off campus."
University officials do not deny that the ROTC program's admission policies are discriminatory.
"We understand that [the federal government's policy regarding ROTC] is discriminatory and if we could change it we would," Provost Albert Carnesale said in an interview yesterday. "But given that, it would be a greater wrong to preclude those students who choose to participate in the ROTC program from doing so."
Questions regarding the ROTC commissioning ceremony were initially raised in the 1992 report of the Committee on the Status of ROTC, which was chaired by Pforzheimer University Professor Sidney Verba '53.
But Verba himself says he is satisfied with the current circumstances as defined "The important point is that the University is not an official [financial] supporter of ROTC," Verba said. "And this strikes me as a not unreasonable compromise in an area where there is no perfect solution." And although reactions have been mixed since the implementation of the compromise, a number of ROTC cadets say they are satisfied with the current situation. "No cadet's participation was actually affected by the [compromise] so as far as I'm concerned..., as long as the people who were pushing for change are satisfied, it was a perfect solution," said Army ROTC cadet Joshua M. Simer '97. But gay, lesbian and bisexual students and their supporters say they are deeply concerned by Lewis' veto. "[Lewis'] decision raises a real fear within the gay and lesbian community that we are not at all protected by the University's anti-discrimination policy," said Joshua L. Oppenheimer '96-'97, political chair of the BGLSA and a co-sponsor of the bill. In a letter sent to Lewis following his veto, the BGLSA asked the dean whether an organization which discriminates against racial or religious minorities would be allowed to conduct ceremonies in the Yard. The BGLSA also asked Lewis whether they may protest non-disruptively against the ROTC ceremony's exclusion of gays and lesbians and be granted publicity commensurate to that being offered to the ROTC program. Lewis was unavailable yesterday afternoon for comment. The bill's sponsors have stated that the council still intends to send its letter protesting ROTC's discrimination against homosexual and bisexual students at Harvard
"The important point is that the University is not an official [financial] supporter of ROTC," Verba said. "And this strikes me as a not unreasonable compromise in an area where there is no perfect solution."
And although reactions have been mixed since the implementation of the compromise, a number of ROTC cadets say they are satisfied with the current situation.
"No cadet's participation was actually affected by the [compromise] so as far as I'm concerned..., as long as the people who were pushing for change are satisfied, it was a perfect solution," said Army ROTC cadet Joshua M. Simer '97.
But gay, lesbian and bisexual students and their supporters say they are deeply concerned by Lewis' veto.
"[Lewis'] decision raises a real fear within the gay and lesbian community that we are not at all protected by the University's anti-discrimination policy," said Joshua L. Oppenheimer '96-'97, political chair of the BGLSA and a co-sponsor of the bill.
In a letter sent to Lewis following his veto, the BGLSA asked the dean whether an organization which discriminates against racial or religious minorities would be allowed to conduct ceremonies in the Yard.
The BGLSA also asked Lewis whether they may protest non-disruptively against the ROTC ceremony's exclusion of gays and lesbians and be granted publicity commensurate to that being offered to the ROTC program.
Lewis was unavailable yesterday afternoon for comment.
The bill's sponsors have stated that the council still intends to send its letter protesting ROTC's discrimination against homosexual and bisexual students at Harvard
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