FinAid | Military Aid | US Armed Forces Recruiting Programs universities, junior colleges, high schools, and vocationaltechnical schools. call1-800-822-8762 (US military Academy in West Point, new york), 1-800-638 http://www.finaid.org/military/recruiting.phtml
Extractions: Tuition Assistance (TA) allows enlisted servicemembers and offers to enroll in courses at accredited colleges, universities, junior colleges, high schools, and vocational-technical schools. TA will pay up to 100% of the cost of the course and up to 100% of the cost of obtaining a high school degree, with an aggregate annual limit of $4,500. MGIB benefits may be used to "top up" TA benefits, paying the difference between tuition and the TA benefits. Army/Navy/Marine Corps College Funds The Army, Navy and Marine Corps each provide tuition assistance in addition to what you earn through the Montgomery GI Bill. The Army and Navy funds increase the amount of support to as much as $50,000 and the Marine Corps fund increases the amount of support to as much as $30,000. College Funds are awarded on a competitive basis according to academic merit. Community College of the Air Force The Community College of the Air Force (CCAF) is a two-year college open only to enlisted men and women. It offers a variety of programs leading to an Associate's Degree, in more than 70 scientific and technical fields. The Air Force pays for up to 75% of the cost of the college courses through its Tuition Assistance Program.
DoDEA Schools Get Involved - DoDEA Schools Respond To September 11th did several Appreciation of the military projects, including students collected Nickels for new york. ; The Sullivans for the four schools affected by http://www.odedodea.edu/communications/showcase/respond.htm
Extractions: Fort Campbell High School's Fellowship of Christian Athletes raised nearly $1,400 to give to the Red Cross for victims of the September 11th tragedy. The Key Club sponsored a bloodmobile. The band played a short patriotic program before the September 21st football game. Laurel Bay Schools, South Carolina DoDDS Brussels District Brussels American School
Extractions: YES Students deserve to be informed about all of the options available to them as they decide what their post-high-school ambitions hold. Unfortunately, many never learn about the career and educational opportunities available to them in the United States military. According to the armed forces, there were nearly 19,000 instances in the year 2000 when military recruiters were denied access to schools across the country. The Pentagon estimates that 2,000 schools have policies banning military, but not collegiate, recruiters. In some cases, the military is barred from school campuses solely because of an administrator's personal bias or act of protest. Students shouldn't suffer because of their administrators' beliefs. They and their parents should be able to decide what information they want at their disposal as they evaluate their plans for life after graduation. That is what the military-recruiter provision in the No Child Left Behind Act enforces. If a school receives federal funds, then it must grant the military the same access to campus that it would give to colleges, universities, and other post-secondary institutions.
Widener University: Press Release With enrollment in military schools dwindling nationwide, due in large part to theVietnam from Temple University, and earned his Ph.D. from new york University http://www.widener.edu/hotline/articles/2002_12_29/headstory.html
Extractions: Dr. Clarence R. Moll, chancellor and president emeritus of Widener University, died of natural causes Sunday, Dec. 29 at age 89. A native of Doylestown, Pa., Dr. Moll became president of Pennsylvania Military College (PMC) in 1959 and was the architect of the transition to Widener College in 1972 and Widener University in 1979. He became chancellor upon his retirement in June 1981, and in 1988 at age 75 he was officially given the title of president emeritus. He continued to maintain an office on campus. His wife, Ruth Henderson Moll, and two sons, Robert H. and Jonathan G. Moll, survive him. Viewings will be Thursday, Jan. 2, 7 to 9 p.m. and 9 to 11 a.m. Friday, Jan. 3 at St. Matthew's Lutheran Church in Springfield. A service will be 11 a.m. at St. Matthew's. A luncheon at University Center on 14th Street of Widener's Chester campus will immediately follow the service. Moll first came to PMC in 1943 as associate professor of physics and electrical engineering after teaching at several high schools in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and a year as a civilian instructor in the United States Navy. He quickly moved to the position of registrar and headmaster of Pennsylvania Military Preparatory School, and by 1947 he was dean of admissions and student personnel. During his nine years in that position, he also became professor of education and coordinator of the Industrial Training Unit. He was named vice president and dean of student personnel in 1956.
Working Families Party Home Page A liberalleft "independent voice of new york's working people" which endorses candidates Category Regional North America Politics Parties Latest news Resolution against US military Action against Iraq 2003 Endorsements**2003 State Budget Fight new york faces deep cuts to schools and other http://www.workingfamiliesparty.org/
NEW YORK, Brooklyn Information Page Index Eagle Obits/NY Times/NY Journal/schools/Directory pages new york State History, Priorto 1901. Department of the Interior) which includes military grants, grants http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~blkyn/Bklyn.Info.Page.html
Extractions: Site search Web search THE GREAT DEPRESSION 1929..Timeline N.Y.City Bread line Photo Pushcart peddlers colony in NYC during the depression Brooklyn Bridge Timeline ... History of the Streetcar PAPER TRAILS Info Page What to do with all the info and certificates that don't belong to you ? We have created a home for those 'lost' pieces. Birth/Death/census/Marriage/Assorted pages Bklyn Eagle Obits/NY Times/NY Journal/Schools/Directory pages...etc. PLEASE BROOKLYN SURNAME FORM BROOKLYN SURNAME SEARCH ... Teresa has done a wonderful job with her website.She has many surnames that need new homes.Birth/Death/Marriage certificates, in an easy to understand,alphabetized formula. GenConnect Surnames Board.. ETHNIC Interests NEWBIE HELP Simple explanations to some common questions Sent in by subscribers. Will be constantly updated. ... Easy to use, converting surnames to Soundex codes Enter a name: Given Name(s) Surname Filter your search by: Keyword(s) Record Type Databases With People's Names Census Records Court, Land, Probate
MonsterTRAK.com york University new york University schools of Health State University of new york,Westchester Community Trocaire College US military Academy, Association http://www2.monstertrak.com/trak2000/schools/schools_NY.html
Chief Judge Mayer Biography He was educated in the public schools of Lockport, new york, before attending theUnited States military Academy, West Point, new york, from 1959 until he http://www.fedcir.gov/pr.html
Extractions: January 5, 1998 Circuit Judge Haldane Robert Mayer became the Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit on December 25, 1997. Chief Judge Mayer has been a member of the Court since June 19, 1987. He replaced Judge Glenn L. Archer, Jr. who will remain on the Court as a Senior Judge. Born in Buffalo, New York, on February 21, 1941, Mayer is the son of Myrtle (Gaude) Mayer of Lockport, New York, and the late Haldane R. Mayer. He was educated in the public schools of Lockport, New York, before attending the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, from 1959 until he graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1963. His law degree was earned in 1971 at the Marshall-Wythe School of Law, The College of William and Mary, where he was editor-in-chief of the William and Mary Law Review as well as a member of Omicron Delta Kappa. He is a director of the William and Mary Law School Association. Judge Mayer is admitted to practice in Virginia and the District of Columbia . Chief Judge Mayer served on active duty in the Army of the United States from 1963 until 1975 in the Infantry and the Judge Advocate General's Corps; he has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal, Army Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, Combat Infantryman Badge, Parachutist Badge, Ranger Tab, Ranger Combat Badge, and several Campaign and Service Ribbons. He resigned his Regular Army commission to take an Army Reserve commission, retiring in 1985 as a lieutenant colonel.
Gale - Schools - Trade Shows military Library Workshop; MLAMountain Plains; Medical Library Group of SouthernCA and AZ; Northern California Nevada Medical Library Association; new york http://www.galegroup.com/schools/trade_shows.htm
Extractions: 2003 Trade Show dates Date Show Location Jan 2-5 American Historical Association Chicago, IL Jan 25-28 ALA Mid-Winter Philadelphia, PA Jan 30-31 Ontario Library Association Toronto, CA Feb 3-5 Ohio School Net State Tech Conference Columbus, OH Feb 3-7 Texas Computer Educational Association Auston, TX Feb 4 Illinois Vendor Fair Chicago, IL Feb 4-6 Florida Educational Technology Conference Orlando, FL Feb 6 Illinois Vendor Fair Springfield, IL Feb 25-28 Illinois Technology Conference for Education St. Charles, IL Mar 5-7 South Carolina Association of School Librarians Columbia, SC
International A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now To Stop War & End Racism!) Activist group against war and racism, formed in response to the rush to war following the September Category Society Issues Peace Activism and Peace Work war walkouts from hundreds of high schools and colleges new york City Council DeclaresBlack History Month to be evidence that Iraq poses a military threat to http://www.internationalanswer.org/
Ralph Nader: The Pentagon Connection categories of public works, including schools, drinking water The military economydrains the civilian economy example, last year the new york City government http://www.counterpunch.org/nader01202003.html
Extractions: home subscribe about us books ... feedback Counter Punch January 20, 2003 by RALPH NADER I wonder how Seymour Melman feels these days. For over half a century, this Columbia University industrial engineering professor (now emeritus) has been researching, writing and speaking about the massive overspending on the military portion of the federal budget and how this waste is de-industrializing America, costing millions of jobs and starving the investment in public works repairing the crucial physical capital of America. Recently, he prepared a memorandum called "The Pentagon Connection" where he recounted the massive redundancy and costliness of various weapons systems such as the next wave of fighter planes, missiles, submarines and aircraft carriers and the opportunity cost so adverse to the domestic needs of our country. Remember, the U.S. no longer has a major opponent that used to justify huge military budgets. Both Russia and China are converting quickly to the state capitalistic-oligarchic model and the Soviet Union is no more. First, Professor Melman cites the
Welcome To ResistDiscrimination.Net Our law schools should not be strongarmed into sacrificing deeply held new york UniversityStraights Yale Student/Faculty Alliance for military Equality (SAME http://www.resistdiscrimination.net/
Extractions: For decades, America's law schools and top law firms have banned discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. Since 1990, the American Association of Law Schools (AALS) has required that in order to maintain their accreditation, all law schools ban recruiters who discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. The administrations, faculties, and student bodies of these law schools believe that such discrimination is immoral and stands in the way of academic learning, professional fulfillment, and social progress. The JAG corps discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. This practice is an extension of discriminatory military policy including "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" that prohibits gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered people from serving openly in the military. The military's policy places it under the rubric of employers in violation of law school non-discrimination policies and, as such, military recruiters have been denied access to law school placement services. When the federal government forces law schools and universities to balance billions of dollars in federal funding against upholding non-discrimination policies protecting the rights of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered students, it compromises our longstanding conception of academic freedom, forces us into complicity with policies that unjustly degrade members of our communities, and sacrifices the integrity of our universities, our communities, and our nation. Our law schools should not be strong-armed into sacrificing deeply held principles that are central to our legal community. We call on law students nationally to stand up for academic freedom and civil rights, and to resist the federal government's coercive tactics.
Extractions: NEWS Tools for Schools Access for Under-Prepared High School Students will be broadcast on March 12, 2003 from 3-4:00 p.m. on public broadcasting stations in New York State. Many students enter high school without the proper background high school work requires, whether through frequent moves during their elementary years, a shortage of academic support systems in school or at home, or recent immigration into the U.S. Whatever the reason, under-prepared students need access to the curriculum in a manner that will best enable them to meet the Learning Standards and graduation requirements. See how some high schools in both large urban settings and smaller cities are serving this special student population. Tools for Schools Access through Early Literacy will be broadcast on February 12, 2003 from 3-4:00 p.m. on public broadcasting stations in New York State. "Tools for Schools" continues its look into the importance good early literacy programs play in the future academic success of children. This program focuses on professional development programs for those individuals who teach young children to read, through visits to training sessions and classrooms exhibiting the best research-based reading education.
Anti-War Leftists Find Few Supporters their defeated foes by the Israelis, the schools, colleges and When the Soviet Unionposed a military threat, the the 3/24/2003 edition of The new york Observer http://www.observer.com/pages/observer.asp
Extractions: When it comes to war leadership, George W. Bush shows the calm of an incoming tide, or a lava flow. My friend is only eight years younger than I am, but for memory of public events, the difference is crucial. I can just remember the middle and end of the Vietnam War; he cant. Why, he asked, has the public reaction to this war been different than the reaction to Vietnam? In one sense, it hasnt been different at all. The anti-war left has been as bitter in its opposition now as it was then. The signage at demonstrations; the call-ins on TV and radio talk shows; the comments of crazy professors; the letters to the editor in upstate hippie-land newspapers are as filled with hatred of America (ignorant, blundering), the military (killers), the war (for oil) and the President (idiot) as they were then. The New York Times today is further to the left than it was then. Yet it all has no effect. What has changed? The second most important factor, surely, is the volunteer military. No beating the bushes to fill draft quotas; no shaming tragicomedy of deferments; no melodrama of waiting for lottery numbers. There is no draft, therefore the colleges are calm (so much for the "idealism" of the baby boomers). There is no draft, and therefore the military is better. It sells itself as an avenue of opportunity, and it has had to make good on its offer. We think of our high-tech weaponry and flexible tactics as innovations trickling down from the top, from laboratories and military theorists. Havent they also rippled up from the bottomnot from the enlisted men themselves, but from a change of mind-set that the new realities of enlistment induced?
Boston.com / Latest News / Washington, D.C. in Iraq after a video conference with military commanders in WASHINGTON As a newwar began, schools broadened class Copyright 2003 The new york Times Company. http://www.boston.com/news/washington/
Extractions: Boston.com home Boston Globe Online Search SERVICES Apartments Careers Cars MarketBasket Personals Real Estate Weddings Yellow Pages SECTIONS Business digitalMASS Dining Education Health Movies MP3 Music Music Nation Northeast Personal Finance Sports Stock Quotes Traffic Travel Washington Weather World YourTown WHAT'S NEW
PoughkeepsieJournal.com - Ulster County Schools HIGHER EDUCATION State University of new york at new Paltz 75 S. Manheim Blvd.,new Paltz; 257 United States military Academy at West Point West http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/community/ulster_schools.shtml
Newsday.com Miranda Share A Story Previous Stories Send a Note to the military. MORE new YORKCITY HEADLINES Protest Arrests Cap Day 1 Of War Parents, schools Prep For http://www.newsday.com/
Wired News: Students Can't Get No Privacy to the new requirements is the new york City chapter is inadequate and that schoolsshould be the excellent educational opportunities the military affords, as http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,56665,00.html
Extractions: 11:41 AM Dec. 02, 2002 PT BOSTON A little-noticed provision in a new federal education law is requiring high schools to hand over to military recruiters some key information about its juniors and seniors: name, address and phone number. The Pentagon says the information will help it recruit young people to defend their country. But the new law disturbs parents and administrators in some liberal communities that aren't exactly gung-ho about the armed forces. Some say the law violates students' privacy and creates a moral dilemma over the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy on gays. "I find it appalling that the school is sending out letters to do the job of the military," said Amy Lang, the parent of a student at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School, where Coke was once banned in a protest against the soda giant's investments in apartheid South Africa. "It's clearly an invasion of my daughter's privacy."
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Archdiocese Of New York REGISTER NOW to view your Old High School Class List at new york military ACADEMY. Find Old Friends and Old Flames. How have they changed? Subscribe and reconnect today. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11020a.htm
Extractions: Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... N > New York, Archdiocese of A B C D ... Z ARCHDIOCESE OF NEW YORK (NEO-EBORACENSIS). See erected 8 April, 1808; made archiepiscopal 19 July, 1850; comprises the Boroughs of Manhattan, Bronx, and Richmond in the City of New York, and the Counties of Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, York; also the Bahama Islands (British Possessions); an area of 4717 square miles in New York and 4466 in the Bahama Islands. The latter territory was placed in 1886 under this jurisdiction by the Holy See because the facilities of access were best from New York; it formerly belonged to the Diocese of Charleston. The suffragans of New York are the Dioceses of Albany, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Ogdensburg, Rochester, and Syracuse in the State of New York, and Newark and Trenton in New Jersey. All these, in 1808, made up the territory of the original diocese. The first division took place 23 April, 1847, when the creation of the Diocese of Albany and Buffalo cut off the northern and western sections of the State; and the second, in 1853, when Brooklyn and Newark were erected into separate sees. New York is now the largest see in population, and the most important in influence and material prosperity of all the ecclesiastical divisions of the Church in Continental United States.