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ROTC programs return to Ivy League

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NEW HAVEN, Conn.?— Yale sophomore Andrew Hendricks has gotten used to receiving strange looks when he crosses the Ivy League campus in his Air Force uniform.

Hendricks, the only Air Force cadet at Yale, wears the uniform on days he drives to the University of Connecticut to train with the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, a program that had been barred from his university until faculty agreed to welcome it back beginning next fall. Judging from the reaction of Yale students, he does not expect much of a stir when cadets start conducting drills amid the Gothic buildings in New Haven.

“I never get anything negative,” said Hendricks, 19, of Fairfax Station, Va. “I think it’s mainly that people are really curious because they don’t see a lot of military influence on campus.”

Four decades after Vietnam War protesters cheered the departure of ROTC programs from some Ivy League universities, their return is bringing little more than a symbolic change to campuses where a new generation of students is neither organizing against them nor lining up to enlist.

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Yale, Harvard and Columbia all signed agreements this year to bring back ROTC. The antagonism with elite universities faded with the end of the draft, and much of the lingering opposition to the military dissolved with last year’s repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” the policy that banned gays from serving openly in the armed services. The universities said the policy violated non-discrimination rules for campus organizations.

A tiny number of students at these schools pursue ROTC — a total of three at Yale and five at Columbia do so through off-campus arrangements — and those numbers are not expected to rise dramatically anytime soon. But the agreements to revive ROTC are important to the schools, which once produced many of America’s most decorated military officers, and the armed services, which are regaining a presence at some of the country’s best-known universities.

Officials are excited about ROTC because it offers students another path to national leadership, the dean of Yale College, Mary Miller, said in an interview. She said the administration was influenced by appeals from President Barack Obama, who used his State of the Union address to call on universities to engage more directly with the military, and a survey by Yale’s student government that found support for ROTC.

“We hope by making a path to military leadership available on campus, that students will pursue it in part because the opportunities for that leadership come so early in military careers. It has a strong youth culture component, which has been quite striking to me,” Miller said.

The ROTC program, which was founded in 1916, has 490 host units, most of them concentrated in the South and Midwest. Students receive scholarship money in return for agreeing to military service after graduation.

In the years surrounding World War II, thousands of soldiers and sailors trained on Ivy League campuses. But last year, only 53 students from the conference’s eight universities were commissioned through ROTC programs.

Yale has agreed to host Naval and Air Force ROTC detachments next fall. Air Force officials say it is too early to assess how many might enroll, and Navy officials say they are hoping at least 15 freshmen, from an incoming class of about 1,300, will attend Yale next year on Naval ROTC scholarships.

The change is likely to be even less visible at Harvard and Columbia, where Naval ROTC gained formal recognition but students are expected to continue training at nearby campuses. At Harvard, which has nine midshipmen training at other Boston area schools, the Naval ROTC director said it would not make sense to create a new detachment.

“You need some type of sufficient numbers to be able to have a battalion and meaningful leadership roles, and nine does not cut it,” Capt. Curtis Stevens said. “You can barely man a color guard with nine.”

Regardless of the numbers, he and other advocates said it is important to the military to be represented on elite campuses.

“Symbols matter, and the symbolism of America’s leading universities declaring or even implying that there is something illegitimate about serving your nation in uniform was shameful. Fortunately, we’ve now gotten over it,” said Graham Allison, director of Harvard’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and a former U.S. assistant secretary of defense.

Stanford University’s faculty also voted this year to invite ROTC back to campus, but it has not reached agreements with any of the service branches. Other prominent schools including Princeton, Cornell and the University of Pennsylvania already host units.

But there is still some resistance in the Ivy League. Brown University’s president, Ruth Simmons, said this week that she continues to back the school’s policy of denying ROTC recognition as an academic program.

A music professor at Brown, Jeff Todd Titon, said many on the faculty feel there is no place for the military at a liberal arts college.

“The military is a chain of command organization where obedience is required, and that’s just antithetical to our ideals and goals,” he said.

Susanna Kotter, a Yale junior from Boston, has concerns about sexual violence in the military, but she said having future officers on campus could help her learn about an institution that is not part of her daily life.

“If that will elicit more conversation about the Army, I’m OK with it,” she said.

The bans’ reversal marks a renewal of long military traditions at Yale, which had 25 graduates serve as generals for the Union Army during the Civil War, and Harvard, which has produced more Medal of Honor recipients than any institution outside the service academies.

Hendricks is looking forward to dropping the three-hour weekly commute to Storrs when ROTC comes to New Haven, and he also thinks it will make him feel more at home on his own campus.

“Knowing that I’ll be doing this for Yale, I’ll feel more school pride,” he said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Casey Anthony will not have to return to the AFL.

ORLANDO, Florida – Casey Anthony may continue his secret life for the moment, after a judge ruled Wednesday that it is not to immediately return to Florida to start his probation for fraud verification service. Life Inc.: no new car this year, I am ruined erratic MOM: new trial “a risk I am willing to take” updated 17 minutes 8/4/2011 6 h 17: 47 + 00: 00 US aid begins to drip in the schools of Somalia dispute “haves” against “poor” Teen pits buried in the sand: “I thought I was going to die” where are people of colour in national parks? Company gives $ 1 million to the Group of pro-Romney, dissolves

A hearing on his course was set for Friday, said judge Belvin Perry. Anthony will have to display to.

A different judge ordered Anthony report to Florida for his probation, but no later than Thursday, the judge was functus officio and presented the case to Perry, who presided at the trial for murder of Anthony.

Anthony was out of the public eye since she has been paid the month last on the death of her 2 year daughter, Caylee. The decision of the jury angered many people online and elsewhere, and threats were made on the life of Anthony. She disappeared after leaving the prison on 17 July.

Video: Casey Anthony will probably not return to Florida (on this page)

Counsel for Anthony said local authorities would ensure security if she was compelled to return. To back up this claim, they included a flyer in their arguments that showed a photo of yourself of Anthony with a brand of ball on the front. Under the photo reads in part: “with a front that big, the Combo will be easier.”

Anthony was found guilty of having lied to detectives but released due to the time period.

Judge Stan Strickland sentenced Anthony in January 2010 to probation after she pleaded guilty to using cheques stolen from a friend. The State Corrections Department had interpreted the sentence means that Anthony could serve probation, while she was in prison for his trial for murder, but the judge said last week that he intended the probation to be served after his release.

On Monday, Strickland signed a “corrected version” of the Anthony probation order clearly was intended to start the mandate of one year after his release from prison. Strickland recused from the case of probation without giving a reason, although the defence lawyers accusing of showing prejudice against Anthony in television interviews that he gave after his trial for murder.

Strickland said it was “shocked” by the verdict in an interview in July with the cable TV host Nancy Grace, a critic of Chief Anthony who gave him the nickname of “Tot MOM.” In another interview with the Orlando WESH TV station, Strickland said jurors did not understand that “circumstantial evidence is evidence.”

“There is very rarely cameras running at the time someone kills someone or a child is ill-treated,” he said.

In a motion filed Tuesday, Joan Baez and his team have said that anthony has already served his probation while in prison and have his would be so new dual criminality. They said Florida law stipulates that the judge cannot change his sentence, more than 60 days after its signing, which was in January 2010.

But Karin Moore, Professor of law at Florida A & M College of Law, said that an inmate can serve probation in prison, Strickland has the ability to correct the sentence.

“He may correct an illegal sentence at any time, it considers that it is now,” said Moore.

Counsel for Anthony has also supports moving Tuesday that Strickland was more qualified to issue the amended order since it is functus officio criminal Anthony case and that the amended order was fraudulently filed since no there was no judicial proceedings attended by Anthony or his lawyers.

Judge Belvin Perry, who presided at the trial for murder of Anthony, was taken on the case of probation.

Baez said today the NBC Wednesday that bring Anthony to Florida it would pose a threat, and he argued that order of Strickland was legally flawed.

“The last thing we want to do is to put Casey in danger,” said Baez today. “We are very concerned.” It is not something we take lightly. ?

Fraud check of a shopping Anthony stems went using checkbook from her best friend. In 2010, she pleaded guilty to writing five cheques totalling $644.25.

Are there no photos or reported observations of Anthony because she was acquitted. On Wednesday, the site of gossip that TMZ.com allegedly displayed photos of Anthony in Ohio who were apparently taken over the weekend. The site said, Anthony was spotted at a former Navy store and has several relatives in Ohio.

NBC News was able to confirm the report.

Where live Anthony?
If Anthony did return to Orange County, it is unclear where she will live.

“They had closed streets to leave Orlando,” Baez said Wednesday. “I certainly do not think that it is something they want to adopt for it to come back.”

According to Kerry Sanders the NBC, parole must give an address or location so that they can be supervised under Florida law.

The Act requires that the address to be part of the public record unless a special exception is made.

Station of NBC-affiliate WESH 2 reported to its legal analyst, Richard Hornsby, believed that if Anthony is probation, it will be not be very strict.

“It is not as if it will have to wear a GPS monitor or have a constant contact,” said the defence counsel.

Anthony pleaded guilty in January 2010, at 13-count indictment in the case station, NBC affiliate fraud check than Wesh.com reported.

She was sentenced to 412 days in Orange County prison, with credit 412 days time served and ordered to pay $5,517.75 in legal fees, in addition to probation the year of.

NBC News has obtained a copy of the documents modified, which explains that “the defendant is Probation report to release”.

Within its mandate, it must “make a complete and truthful report your [him] Probation Officer” not later that the fifth day of each month, pay to the State of Florida at least $20 a month towards the cost of his supervision, does not change his residence without consent and do not carry any firearms or weapons without permission.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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