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Midshipman Follows Family Naval Tradition

When it comes to e-mail writing, she favors exclamation points and capital letters. For fashion, it’s white Lacoste and pearl earrings. And in politics, she leans right.

Vivacious and emphatic, Stephanie H. Hendricks ’05 is the picture of a well-adjusted, unabashedly preppy Harvard student.

Yet for the past four years, she’s risen at dawn to trek to MIT for Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) exercises. This fall, Hendricks will trade in the Lacoste for a uniform as she trains to be a Naval intelligence officer in Virginia.

“It’s fun to keep everyone on their toes,” says Hendricks cheerfully.

Her friends remember the initial surprise. “She used to wear bows in her hair. She has Lilly Pulitzer sheets. But she’s also a badass ROTC girl,” says longtime friend and roommate Hilary S. Thorndike ’05.

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Hendricks seems altogether too chipper to be the brunt of controversy, but her chief extracurricular has seen its share of it on Harvard’s campus.

Originally booted out during Vietnam and kept out by concerns about discrimination against gays and lesbians, the ROTC program has returned to the headlines with the war in Iraq. At Harvard, University President Lawrence H. Summers has strongly supported the program.

Hendricks is something of a rare breed: an Ivy League-educated Midshipman First Class with firm family roots in both the Northeast and the Navy. The numerous members of both sides of her family who have served in the Navy include her grandfather, as well as two great-uncles who graduated from Harvard. All three served in World War II.

“I’m still representing a small, dying population!” she says, adding that the idea of tradition has become increasingly important to her.

Growing up in suburban Pennsylvania, she recalls her father ceaselessly playing in the car the soundtrack to “Victory at Sea,” a television series about the Navy in World War II. The elder Hendricks, whom his daughter calls “one of my best friends,” was forced to give up his dream of enlisting in the Navy during the Vietnam War because of a bad heart.

“I think my father brainwashed me as a child,” Stephanie Hendricks giggles.

That Hendricks is a recruited player on the varsity squash team may have also been destiny: her parents’ first date was a squash match.

Just before starting college, Hendricks would sometimes get nervous about her impending commitment to the armed services. She says her father would remind her that this was a great time to be in the military.

“He said, ‘everything’s pretty calm—there’s no war going on.’”

Recalling his words that summer of 2001, she pauses. “That would be August.”

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