Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: FRIDAY, September 1, 1995 TAG: 9509010075 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-5 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: Associated Press DATELINE: CHARLESTON, S.C. LENGTH: Medium
Nancy Mellette, a 17-year-old senior at a North Carolina military boarding school, is asking to intervene in the Shannon Faulkner case, according to federal court papers filed Thursday by lawyers who also represented Faulkner in her quest to become a cadet.
Mellette wants to join The Citadel in the fall of 1996.
``I think she could do the physical part of it ... but I'm not too sure how they would treat her,'' Katherine Mellette, her twin sister, said outside the family home in suburban Columbia, S.C.
Her mother, Connie, said she admired her daughter for ``having the courage to even try to take this step.''
Faulkner fought a 21/2-year court battle to become a cadet at the state-supported military college. She became ill during the rigorous training known as ``hell week'' and quit five days later, saying the stress of the court battle and her isolation at the college threatened her health.
South Carolina Attorney General Charles Condon said he would fight Mellette's bid.
``Obviously they're very adept at public relations,'' he said of the women's lawyers. ``They've taken a bath in public relations and they've gotten a new and improved model.''
Mellette is a second lieutenant in the Oak Ridge Military Academy corps of cadets, court papers said. She is on the cross-country, track, basketball and softball teams. Calls to Oak Ridge administrators to get comment from her were not returned.
Lawyer Val Vojdik originally said two women wanted to join the corps, but she said only one is pursuing the matter for now. She would not elaborate.
Vojdik would not say whether Mellette had approached the lawyers or they approached her after Faulkner dropped out.
Mellette has not yet applied to The Citadel, the school said. Her brother, a senior and captain at the college, did not return a call to his barracks room. It wasn't immediately known what year her father graduated from the school.
Mellette must intervene to have a say in the November trial of a women's leadership program that South Carolina has proposed as a way to prevent women from breaking the all-male tradition at The Citadel, Vojdik said.
Twenty-two students arrived at private Converse College in Spartanburg on Wednesday to begin the first year of the South Carolina Institute of Leadership for Women.
by CNB