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On a day like this 35 years ago INTAKE 20 was Commissioned
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The Rajeewa Jayaweera I Knew
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24 Raw emotions energized the moment as an ample number of shared memories synergized the atmosphere in reflecting on a 39-year military career and 43 years since arriving at the U.S. Military Academy. In honoring an exceptional and genuine person and a unique professional experience, the Corps of Cadets bid farewell and celebrated the Dean of the Academic Board Brig. Gen. Cindy Jebb with a Corps Farewell Banquet April 15 at the Cadet Mess Hall.
The evening was a retrospect of an expansive legacy that began in 1978 as a member of the third class of women accepted to West Point. Her story expounded on a career that included field research in Africa, working at the National Security Agency, study projects in Afghanistan and Iraq, serving as a senior advisor to the Chief of the Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq, the head of the Department of Social Sciences to becoming the first female and 14th Dean of the Academic Board at USMA in June 2016.
One can achieve success through hard work, dedication: Ajit Doval
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This African American Old Grad Delivered a History of Race at West Point
Vietnam veteran and CEO of TAG Holdings, LLC, Joseph Anderson Jr. speaks at the 2021 Henry O. Flipper Awards Dinner at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. (U.S. Military Academy) There are plenty of Black folks who can sit in at counters, Col. Jim Fowler, the fifth African American graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, told Cadet Joe Anderson Jr. Your job is to get through West Point.
There were only 11 Black cadets at West Point when Anderson began his plebe year in 1961. It was the early days of the Civil Rights Movement, and he was struggling with not being out marching in the streets.