Out in the Mountains Dartmouth Reverses ROTC Stand Dartmouth College trustees have reversed their 1991 decision to discontinue the ROTC Program if the military continued its ban on homosexuals. Without referring to its earlier decision, the Board has stated that it now has two goals: first "to preserve the opportunity for students to participate in ROTC" and, secondly, "to bring about an ROTC program that does not discriminate against anyone on the basis of sexual orientation." A year ago, the Board had extended its April, 1993 deadline for military compliance to April, 1994, hoping that the Clinton Administration would lift the ban on gays. The decision to retain ROTC was strongly opposed by the faculty and administration of the Ivy League college, and largely supported by students and alumni. For members of the gay, lesbian, and bisexual community, the decision has been experienced as a serious weakening of support for the inclusion of sexual orientation within the College's Equal Opportunity Statement. According to John Crane, co-convenor of the faculty/staff Coalition for Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual Concerns, "The trustees have taught a very damaging lesson to students —— that sexual orientation is not firmly included in Dartmouth‘s nondiscrimination statement and that the College is willing to permit discrimination in exchange for a few scholarships. We feel we need to teach a very different lesson." V WEYGHTY MATTERS jrxmcetr ENERGIZED BY HER RECENT CHlRoPRAcT I ‘- Au1wmE>IT. OUR HEROINE UIIDERTAKE) ... NIHE. . .TEN.' om’, you're ALL Dons, no.’ TNAT3 I ma Mgr/~vcHlNE ON 1115 (many. Nor BAD FOR yaw? Fnzsr DAV. A PEN mmls wommsourur E-Mr, N\o.’vJH/IT ARE vbu Dome HARRIET, we're: some our Fol: D/wen TONIGHT. . . meurrlzz as ml: uml ‘r’ - News Ar£lr.ul'. PLU5 SHE‘; 1.1 nmmaa FOR THE GA)’ GAMESJHE AND HER RACOUETBALL PARTNER FLA)’ FOUR _ TIMESANEEK. . x 31151 feudal)! 194 ' rumus o\I£ll A ~:wLa«F, HARRIET! I'M 6ETmI5 A Lor in I IIIII I1ll'l“lIIIIII"l,I So HARRIET. mm me you T KNOW. Bur I V; Dome HERE ? Him! we HERE Alwlyx LIKED MMNG. 1'O6E1HER, ywAu./A75 raw l:,jj.1_‘ Ml>TH|s 1; -me omyuéd exams: wArmAun-rewuulsr .323‘-‘ TIME I ocrn ssr E PLOT to MAKE wmm Last 2% LATEL7. Sui‘; so Busy. wslelrr AND DIJAPK/IR. » on. UH... NEVER MIND. BUT SPEAKN6 oF smur- WAI4 25, l>od‘1)’w‘nlI»JKTl1u Hu6E, SLICK PART)’ meykt Tllkowht. Harms -rwz KEVol.\mmJAP~7’ SHRIT ormz‘69 RIoT Tum TAD? I'll SURETHE cmusnw near I; JUST nlklusp welt a£$l>wl>mo g A z:u,;o;l 51Ja(5 vmnovluc N N£sJ>'oRK l~K1‘EAD 0F 0»! FIGHTNG ML 1»; PNTI-GAY lul1’IATI\/E; 551:3 WORKING ovmm: , 0:1 THE cury covvlcu, hmnla 1‘ ‘roecmse THE Domestic lumen; BILL. Auo Rams v ‘me LO0It calraa Pskmrl Fol Sroylewu 251’ ME)‘ UP ALL HERSPAKE Tmz. -. ;‘»*'3d AMEIHEROFTIESEARSFNANCMLNEYWORK (802) 878-5600 BUS.. 878-0096 FAX (800)488-5609 BUSINESS (802)862-1375 RESIDENCE REALTOR’ COLDIUEU. BANKER CI JACQUELINE L. MARINO —.-—n vuouiw COLDWELL BANKER REALTY MART 22 MAIN ST. ESSEX JUNCTION, VT 05452 N1 ' ‘ Defldenlly Owned and Operated Member ol Coldwell Banker R ' ' Allilialas. Inc. Marianne Marsh, MD. Psychiatry 177 Battery Street Burlington Vermont 05401 Mansfield Psychotherapy Associates 802-865-3230 12