Word: tellã
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...Lawrence H. Summers broke with precedent and spoke at the annual ROTC ceremony every year during his presidency. Harvard and other elite universities have barred military recruiters from their campuses due to the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell?? policy, which prohibits gay individuals from serving openly in the military. A federal law mandates that universities allow the military access to their campuses in order to receive federal funds. ROTC has chosen not to open an office at Harvard, and Harvard cadets participate in the program...
...peaked in April 1969, when students stormed University Hall to protest, among other grievances, ROTC's presence on Harvard's campus. In recent years, Harvard and other elite universities have barred military recruiters from their campuses due to the military's “don't ask, don't tell?? policy, which prohibits gay individuals from serving openly in the military...
...reference to the controversial “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell?? policy that is in part responsible for Harvard’s stance today towards ROTC, Sand said that the policy is part of the country’s law and should not be seen as a military policy...
Frank then criticized the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell?? policy of the American military. He said that gays and lesbians serve openly in the Israeli army, and said that Israel is a safe haven for gay male Palestinians, who may fear death in their societies...
...when the organization was first removed from campus after students stormed University Hall in protest to the military presence. Decades later, the University severed ties with ROTC because of the military’s exclusionary “Don’t ask, don’t tell?? policy. In light of the fact that the military is conspicuously missing from Harvard’s undergrad campus, the armed services are rarely counted among the various niches Harvard graduates fill in the job market. Donald M. Coates ‘07, an NROTC midshipman, says that although some...