ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Tuesday, August 27, 1996               TAG: 9608270079
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL   PAGE: A-6  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: CHARLESTON, S.C.
SOURCE: Associated Press 


WOMEN TAKE CADET OATH

LATE MONDAY, four women made Citadel history, ending the school's 153-year-old men-only policy.

Roused from bed before daybreak with shouts and heavy-metal rock, the four women cadets at The Citadel got short haircuts, received uniforms and started intense military training alongside their male counterparts Monday.

Although two of the women shed a few tears - as did some of the men - everyone seemed to be adapting well, said interim college President Clifton Poole.

``They're trying to march. They're trying to stand straight. They're trying to salute, and they are trying to just keep their composure together,'' he said.

In June, after a 31/2-year legal battle, The Citadel decided to end its 153-year-old men-only policy and admit women. The move came two days after the Supreme Court declared unconstitutional the all-male admissions policy at Virginia Military Institute, the nation's only other all-male public college.

Late Monday, the four women made Citadel history as they marched onto a field and took the cadet oath as a light rain fell.

Shannon Faulkner became a cadet a year ago under a court order but fell ill the first day of training, left school four days later and never took the oath.

The beat of the AC/DC song ``Hell's Bells'' echoed through a barracks courtyard in the dark as the intense freshmen military training known as ``Hell Week'' began. Upperclassmen shouted, ``Get up, knobs!''

Later, while the 572 men received the traditional close haircuts that earn freshmen the name ``knobs,'' the women got slightly longer cuts, though their hair was still well off the collar and above the ears.

``I didn't think it would be that short,'' senior Gary Foster said after seeing Nancy Mace's new trim.

Reporters weren't allowed to talk to the women to get their reactions.

After getting their haircuts and picking up supplies at the bookstore, Kim Messer of Clover and Jeanie Mentavlos of Charlotte, N.C., lost their composure and cried briefly. Messer wiped her eyes while holding her cadet handbook.

A few minutes later they were stoically heading back to their barracks, carrying duffel bags holding their uniforms and other supplies.

Cadets are known to cry during the stressful training, said Harold Poston, senior class president. Several men were also seen crying at the bookstore.

``I know you're scared,'' Regimental Commander Bryant Butler, the highest-ranking student officer, told the freshmen earlier in the day. ``Everybody's been there, but it's not impossible. You can make it. You can do it.''

A bugle call marked the beginning of military training. The knobs had to report officially to their companies, stretching to write their names at a table without stepping across a line on the floor a couple of feet away. All the while, student officers yelled orders at them.

When Petra Lovetinska, a Czech national who lives in Washington, signed in, a cadet sergeant threw up his hands in disgust and ordered her to do so properly.

Mace, who is from Goose Creek, was ordered to run to the back of the line and sign in again, apparently for some mistake. ``Hurry up! Hurry up! Hurry up!'' an officer shouted. ``Run, Mace!''

Beginning Wednesday night, the freshmen must stand and run at attention in the barracks, and must turn square corners wherever they walk. And on the campus streets, they may walk only in the gutters.


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