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ON A SUNDAY MORNING in
October, while many Stanford students sleep off the excesses of Saturday
night, Andrew Obara stands at attention near a garbage dumpster in a narrow,
puddled service road behind the French House, practicing salutes. The
only sounds are the rustle of his crisp blue Navy uniform and the occasional
clacking of his black shoes on the pavement, echoing off the nearby buildings.
With him are two other Stanford freshmen, Chris Pratt and Silvia Cruz,
of the Navys Reserve Officer Training Corps.
Obara and his mates arent hiding, exactly, but the fact that they
have chosen this out-of-the-way place to practice seems somehow appropriate.
Eighty-five years after it was established at Stanford, and more than
30 years after it left campus during a spasm of antiwar fervor, ROTC survives
at the margins, kept alive by a handful of determined students. This year,
29 Stanford students are enrolled in ROTC, representing three branches
of the Armed Services.
In many ways, they are like any other students. They wear sandals and
shorts, and in class or at the dining hall, theyd be nearly impossible
to pick out of a crowd. But for several hours each week, Stanfords
ROTC students study a parallel curriculum, with subjects like naval systems
and military leadership, and perform training exercises in full military
dress. None of which is done at Stanford.
To fulfill their ROTC obligation, these students drive to UC-Berkeley,
San Jose State or Santa Clara University to participate in the Navy, Air
Force or Army programs, respectively. On a recent Wednesday at Santa Clara,
six students from the Farm joined 40 other fatigues-clad trainees at Moffett
Field. Bayonets unsheathed, they wielded M-16 rifles during a series of
weapons drills under the watchful eye of an Army sergeant. Simulating
a search for a concealed enemy, they stabbed a pile of hay. Later, standing
near a stack of tires, they carefully lifted one tire off the one below,
using their bayonets as levers. Their movements were crisp and deliberate,
their bearing professional. Were it not for the traffic on the nearby
road, one could imagine them crouched on a battlefield, weapons at the
ready. They looked and acted like soldiers.
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| WAR GAMES: Freshman Grant Lee commutes to Santa
Clara for his ROTC training. |
Back on campus, they seek each
other out for support and encouragement. ROTC students say they are virtually
invisible at Stanford. A lot of people didnt even know I was
part of the military, recalls Lt. Lore Aguayo, 93. I
didnt have to wear my uniform on campus, and our activities took
place in Berkeley, so there was no way for people to make the connection.
This dual existence doesnt leave much time for regular college stuff,
says Obara. I have my normal schoolwork, ROTC homework and marching
practice, not to mention the time it takes to commute to Berkeley every
week. I cant participate in other extracurricular activities, which
is definitely frustrating.
And ask an officer trainee what he or she thinks of the Universitys
policy regarding ROTC, and you probably will get the same irritated response:
Stanford is out of step.
They chafe at the fact that their counterparts at other universities earn
academic credit for their ROTC classroom work, while Stanford does not
recognize courses in military sciences. The reason traces to a 1969 vote
by the Faculty Senate that stripped military instructors of their status
as faculty, denied students credit for ROTC courses and prompted the military
to move the program off campus. The measure came amid a virulent and sometimes
violent antimilitary movement by student activists, and in spite of a
student referendum vote favoring ROTC. The Senate declared that its decision
was based on academic unsuitability, not antiwar sentiment.
Basically the curriculum was awful, says Barton Bernstein,
a Stanford history professor who helped lead the 1969 movement against
ROTC. It was on the level of mediocre coursework in high school.
The readings were sophomoric. The ROTC faculty were not PhDs. I think
it was the case that some [opponents to ROTC] had deeper political purposes,
but everybody could agree that it was an intellectual embarrassment.
That decision still determines University policy, although it was revisited
a few years ago when every academic department examined ROTC courses to
see whether they met Stanfords requirements. In nearly every case,
the answer was no.
Some ROTC students see this as a double standard. I dont see
why I can get credit for posture and hip-hop [one-unit courses in athletics]
but not military navigation, says Gary Hernandez, a Stanford senior
and the executive officer of his Army ROTC battalion.
According to University registrar Roger Printup, Stanfords cross-enrollment
agreements with schools that offer ROTC programs allow students to petition
for transfer credit. Each course must pass muster for rigor and applicability
in an established degree program. We evaluate them just as we would
any other transcript from another school, he says.
The ROTC curriculum is still found in the Stanford Bulletin. Some
examples from the course catalog: Foundations of the United States Air
Force; Troop Leading Procedures/U.S. Army; Sea Power and Maritime Affairs.
Most of those courses, in our view, are not applicable to be used
toward a Stanford degree, says Printup.
There is another impediment to earning academic credit. Because the courses
reside at other schools, students would have to pay those schools to have
the credits transferred. ROTC students from Stanford would have
to pay thousands of dollars for credits they had earned at Santa Clara,
says Printup. Honestly, I dont know why they would do it.
During World War II, an estimated 50 percent of undergraduate men at Stanford
participated in ROTC. The postwar pinnacle was in 1956, when 1,100 students
were officer trainees. The ranks gradually began to thin, and by the time
the Senate acted 13 years later, ROTC numbers had shrunk to a few dozen.
In 1968 and 69, there was a complete metamorphosis in the
way ROTC was viewed, says Barry Hennings, 70, MBA 72,
an ROTC graduate who participated in the program from 1966 to 1970. In
1966, the Armed Services were given time during orientation to pitch the
merits of ROTC. Two years later, antiwar protesters burned down the Navy
ROTC building, and we were being physically attacked on campus.
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| ON BOARD: Freshman Alex Pagon is one of 24 Stanford
students in ROTC. |
Although under duress at other
area schools as well, ROTC lived on at taxpayer-supported universities,
such as UC-Berkeley and San Jose State, which were legally bound to house
the program.
Despite their low profile, lack of campus support and inconvenient weekly
commute, a few Stanford men and women have been enrolled in ROTC every
year since the program left the Farm. Todays trainees profess the
same motivation that drew earlier generations to the programa sense
of duty, patriotism, and a tuition-free college education.
Midshipman Steve Young recalls the day he received a letter and a facsimile
check from the Navy when he was a high school senior. The letter
said, Stanford costs a hundred thousand dollars; ROTC will pay for
it, says Young, 03. In return, Young agreed to an eight-year
military commitment, including four years immediately following graduation.
All the Stanford ROTC students interviewed for this story acknowledged
that the money was an important incentive, but said they would not have
chosen ROTC if they hadnt felt drawn to military service.
I believe in honor and duty, says junior Melissa Corley, an
Air Force cadet. And I feel that being involved in something big
will give me a much broader opportunity to make a difference.
To Gary Hernandez, the military is a unique opportunity. He says that
when he receives his officers commission upon graduation, he is
likely to be put in charge of 40 enlisted men and millions of dollars
worth of military equipment. There is nowhere else in our society
where you can get that much responsibility at 22, he says.
Stanford ROTC students arent the types who want to live in
the mud and kill people, adds Hernandez. We want to be the
people making plans, building stuff and using our brains to make the world
safer.
Among Stanfords peer schools, Princeton and MIT still have accredited
ROTC programs on campus. At Harvard, which eliminated its onsite ROTC
program in 1969, a group of alumni and donors has petitioned the university
to reinstate it.
There is no such effort under way at Stanford. If there were, it would
face significant opposition from several quarters. ROTC represents
a group of pseudo-faculty preparing students for war and training them
to kill, and that is fundamentally unacceptable at a university,
says Bernstein.
I understand that there are times when society wants militaristic
approaches to problems, but I dont think its the place of
first-rate universities to feed those desires, says Cecilia Ridgeway,
a professor of sociology and a Faculty Senate member. Universities
are about solving problems through discussion, not military approaches.
Some supporters of gay rights say allowing ROTC back on campus would violate
the Universitys own antidiscrimination rules. The events of
September 11 do not change the fundamental fact that Stanfords nondiscrimination
policy directly contradicts the militarys dont ask,
dont tell policy, says C. Dixon Osburn, 87, executive
director of Servicemembers Legal Defense, an advocacy group for gays in
the military.
For its part, the military believes
that Stanford has an obligation to reconsider. I think Stanford
has a responsibility not only to support the career choices of its students,
but also to [support] society at large, says Col. Gus Anderson,
department chair of the Army ROTC program. When you look at the
national budget, the largest item is the military. If we dont use
that money intelligently and have really smart people managing it, we
could screw things up pretty badly.
ROTC students echo Andersons sentiments, but not all of their arguments
are philosophical. In a lot of ways, its fun, says Hernandez
of his service. So what if I miss a frat party because of the Army:
Im out shooting an M-16. You dont get to do that every day.
Joshua Davis, 96,
is a writer and filmmaker in San Francisco.
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