The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 10, 1991 - Page49 ROTC offers n short hair and by Rob Patton Daily Staff Reporter You see them on campus, jogging in formation and calling out ca- dences, or walking around in full military uniform. But what exactly do the roughly 400 men and women in the University's ROTC program do to fulfill their obligation, and what do they get in return? One expectation is a commit- ment of anywhere from four-and-a- half to 10 or more hours a week to ROTC classes, physical training, and other duties, said Lt. Colonel William Gregor of the Army ROTC program. First year and sophomore stu- dents in the program spend two hours in physical training and two- and-a-half hours attending ROTC classes in areas such as tactics and civil-military relations. Juniors and seniors take on six or seven hours of additional duties. In addition, Army and Air Force cadets and Navy a shipmen must spen the service after gra army, however, not commissioned into vice. "Roughly 70 p cadets will not se Gregor said. Thosev full time spend eigh serves. And most a spend only half thei duty. All of those com the Navy and AirF enter active duty f years, Gregor added. These officers p1 role in the military Berke of the Air Fo "Unlike officers fr academies, these off in close contact w community ... they people." Students in theF iore than just scholarships nd Marine mid- are more closely supervised than d eight years in other students. "I am their parent aduation. In the on campus," Gregor said. "If per- all of them are sonal behavior is not within the o full-time ser- norms of the military" or if aca- demic performance falters, ROTC ercent of army counselors step in. e active duty," "Let's say a student fails Math who do not serve 115. He will be put on probation t years in the re- and must meet once a month with a f those who do counselor after that to discuss his ir time on active progress." So what do the cadets and mid- imissioned from shipmen get in return for al Of Force programs this? Many students think of: the or at least four ROTC program as a trade-off: time commitment for a scholarship. ,In ay an important fact. this is not true, Gregor said. y, Major James Only about 60 percent of the stu- rce ROTC said. dents in the ROTC program receive 'om the service scholarships. ficers have been "By the time you talk to a junior ith the civilian or senior, their focus is on obtaining 're closer to the a commission, and whether they are scholarship or non-scholarship is a ROTC program secondary factor," he said. Georgian President Zviad Gamsakhurdia stands with some military supporters at a rally supporting him in Tbilisi yesterday. Tadzhikistan becomes 11th .republic to break with USSR . MOSCOW (AP) - Tadzhikis- tan declared its independence yes- terday, the eighth Soviet republic to do so since last month's brief coup against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. "We can't lag behind other re- publics. Everybody is declaring in- dependence so we are as well," said Aleyev Abdodezhabad, parliamen- tary spokesperson in the Soviet Cen- tral Asian republic of 5.1 million people. Eleven republics have now opted for independence, including Azer- baijan, where incumbent President Ayaz Mutalibov won 90 percent of the vote on Sunday as sole candidate in an old-style Soviet election. Yesterday's independence decla- ration by a special session of Tadzhikistan's parliament was largely symbolic, given the decision last week to transform the Soviet Union into a loose confederation of sovereign states. Tadzhikistan's sluggish response to change after the Aug. 18-21 coup, and opposition charges of intimida- tion in the weekend election in Azerbaijan show how the predomi- nantly Muslim republics trail in achieving political reform. Tadzhikistan's parliament also set a presidential election for Oct. 27. Incumbent President Kakhar ' Makhkamov, elected by the Com- munist-dominated legislature in December 1990, has kept a tight lid on opposition movements. In renewed violence this week- end, 13 people were killed and more than 30 wounded in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, the Tass news agency reported yesterday. The pre- dominantly Armenian enclave is in- side Azerbaijan. Opposition leaders in Azerbaijan said they would not recognize the election of Mutalibov, who quit the Communist Party only after last month's bungled coup and the sub- sequent collapse of the party. THAE.LATOVEBERTY 761-700 sTDALY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM a ALL DAY TUESDAY .STUDENTWHTiTHI.D. $3.50 : . . . . .- - -LOVE WTHOUTPITY THE DOCTOR (PG-13) "t BUY A 22oz. DRINK AND GET ONE FTree 46 oz. Popcorn SPRESENT THIS COUPON WITH PURCHASED TICKET THRU 9112191 Best Service in Town! Best Service in Town! Best Service in Town! 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