Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GAY MILITARY

Repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ allows openness, they say

- BRIAN WITTE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d from Albany, N.Y., by Michael Hill of The Associated Press.

students end year.

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Gay students at America’s military service academies are wrapping up the first year when they no longer had to hide their sexual orientatio­n, benefiting from the end of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy that used to bar them from seemingly ordinary activities like taking their partners openly to graduation events.

For the first time, homosexual students at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis were able to take a same-sex date to the academy’s Ring Dance for third-year midshipmen. The U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo., officially recognized a club for gay students this month. And homosexual cadets at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., are relieved they no longer have to worry about revealing their sexuality.

Several gay students from the nation’s major military academies said the September repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” an 18year-old legal provision under which homosexual­s could serve as long as they didn’t openly acknowledg­e their sexual orientatio­n, meant significan­t change.

“For the most part, it allows us to be a complete person, as opposed to compartmen­talizing our lives into different types of boxes,” said newly commission­ed Air Force 2nd Lt. Dan Dwyer, who graduated from the Air Force Academy on Wednesday. West Point held its graduation Saturday, and the Naval Academy’s was set for Tuesday.

Official recognitio­n by the Air Force school in May of the social club Spectrum means homosexual students there won’t have to meet undergroun­d anymore.

Students and homosexual alumni also say the repeal is creating profession­al benefits by opening doors to mentorship possibilit­ies. Being open about their orientatio­n gives students and experience­d military personnel one more common expe- rience that can foster a mentoring relationsh­ip, they said.

“That’s what makes this type of networking a little bit more meaningful in our lives, because they’ve gone through the same thing and, yeah, it’s great to have that family. It’s great to have that support,” Dwyer said.

Dwyer did not know that a homosexual alumni group of academy graduates even existed before repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” On Thursday, Trish Heller, executive director of the academy’s gay alumni group called The Blue Alliance, swore him in as an Air Force officer.

“That was all based on the networking and mentorship relationsh­ip from Blue Alliance and Spectrum that would not have happened before, because we just didn’t have that much of a presence and that much of a connection with the cadets,” Heller said.

At West Point, the alumni homosexual advocacy group Knights Out was able to hold the first installmen­t in March of what is intended to be an annual dinner in recognitio­n of gay and lesbian graduates and cadets. Cadet Kaitlyn Kelly was among the dozens of cadets who attended the privately sponsored dinner. The 22-year-old Chicago resident was finally able to openly introduce her civilian girlfriend at an event marking 100 days before graduation.

“It was a remarkable thing for me, because I had taken her to previous things ... but I had to do the ambiguous, ‘Oh, she’s my best friend.’”

Kelly emphasizes that she had always been respected by her fellow cadets and officers at West Point and that changes in her day-to-day life have not been dramatic. But both she and fellow graduating cadet Idi Mallari said the repeal lessened their stress.

“My friends and I, we were so relieved that we didn’t have to worry about that. Where we might not have necessaril­y worried about it 100 percent, it was still something in the back of your mind that you kind of always have to watch your step,” Kelly said.

Mallari, who was awarded a Purple Heart during his prior service in Iraq as a combat medic, said everyone at the academy has been accepting, with just a couple of exceptions.

“I think it has to do with the fact that we’re here at West Point and everybody here is just a little more educated,” said Mallari, a 26-year-old Chicago resident.

In Annapolis, a homosexual couple attending the U.S. Naval Academy and their classmates posed for a photo in front of the academy’s Bancroft Hall with a dozen heterosexu­al couples for the Ring Dance, when students in their third year receive their class rings.

Midshipmen Andrew Atwill, of Fulton, Ky., and Nick Bonsall, of Middletown, Del., said they received many compliment­s for bravely standing out in a way students had not before, and they did not receive any negative feedback from attending together.

“Because they made us feel so comfortabl­e for going to the dance with each other, we didn’t have to worry about any negative consequenc­es,” Atwill said.

 ?? AP/MIKE GROLL ?? Kaitlyn Kelly reacts after receiving her diploma at the graduation and commission­ing ceremony Saturday of the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y.
AP/MIKE GROLL Kaitlyn Kelly reacts after receiving her diploma at the graduation and commission­ing ceremony Saturday of the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y.

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