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         Washington Military Schools:     more books (36)
  1. Student papers by Charles L Coleman, 1974
  2. Occupational structure in the military and civilian sectors of the economy by Sheldon E Haber, 1974
  3. Military airlift and its relationship to the commercial air cargo industry, by Stanley H Brewer, 1967
  4. Compensation and non-compensation inducements and the supply of military manpower by Sheldon E Haber, 1973
  5. Military threats and threat assessment in Russia's new defense doctrine and security concept (The Donald W. Treadgold papers in Russian, East European, and Central Asian studies) by Stephen Blank, 2001
  6. A Clausewitzian victory-- the 1973 Ramadan War by Alvin Washington, 1988
  7. Tsunami curriculum: Grades 7-12 by Laurie Dent-Cleveland, 2000
  8. How the Smart family survived a tsunami by Laurie Dent-Cleveland, 2002

41. Washington Square News
schools aim at military Anonymous group files suit by Greg Fein ISSN 15499375Copyright © 2004, washington Square News, all rights reserved.
http://www.nyunews.com/news/campus/5796.html
NYU's Daily Student Newspaper
NEWS
CAMPUS CITY NEWS FEATURES ... LINKS
Issue date: 09.30.2003
Schools aim at military
Anonymous group files suit
by Greg Fein
Contributing Writer
related stories
Disabled student expelled

When disabled graduate student Mike Donnelly’s medical condition worsened last semester, he asked two of his professors for help in completing course requirements.
Waxing 'prof'-itably
An NYU professor ran face-first into a cash settlement last week after colliding with a glass wall and breaking his nose at Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum on 42nd Street two years ago. Students protest during last year’s military recruitment efforts. PHOTO: File /WSN A group representing several undisclosed law schools has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Defense and five other federal agencies to contest the department's policy of cutting off funds from schools that prohibit military recruiters on campus. The suit was filed on Sept. 19 by the Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights (FAIR) and the Society of American Law Teachers, which claim that the policy, based on a congressional mandate known as the Solomon amendment, is a violation of the First Amendment. The coalition cited fear of possible legal retribution from the government as the reason for not disclosing the names of the schools involved in the suit. Though it is unknown whether NYU is involved directly in the suit, the university's law school has been denied government funding in the past on the grounds that it showed resistance to allowing military representatives on campus.

42. Stanley Dunbar Embick, Lieutenant General, United States Army
schools after graduation from the United States military Academy in 1899 Embick died in 1957 at age 80 at Walter Reed Army Hospital in washington, DC.
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/sdembick.htm
Stanley Dunbar Embick
Lieutenant General, United States Army
USMA Photo Stanley D. Embick was born on January 22, 1877, in Greencastle, Pennsylvania. Upon graduation from the U.S. Military Academy in 1899, he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Artillery and served with the 2nd Artillery in Cuba during the Spanish American War. 2LT Embick arrived at Fort McPherson with Battery B, of the 2nd Artillery, which he commanded from his arrival until his departure on 31 January 1900. During this brief period, he also served as the Post Adjutant since there was a shortage of officers on post. From 1902 to 1903 he was assigned to the Coast Artillery School in Fort Montroe, Virginia. From 1905 to 1911 he served as Assistant to the Chief of Artillery in Washington, D.C. From 1912 to 1914 he was assigned to Fort Hamilton, New York. In January 1918 he went to France as a Colonel in the Signal Corps and served as Chief of Staff of the American Section of the Supreme War Council. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal for solving many complex problems that came before the council during the war. He also served on the American Peace Commission. In December 1919 he was assigned to the War Plans Division, War Dept. General Staff in Washington, D.C.

43. "G.I. Woe" By Nicholas Confessore
The washington Monthly \ But between his deployment, exercises, training,and time spent at battle schools, military life was becoming grueling.
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2003/0303.confessore.html
Respond to this Article March 2003
G.I. Woe
Three years ago, George W. Bush charged that U.S. troops were being intolerably overburdened. Today, our men and women in uniform are stretched even thinnerand it is about to get much worse. By Nicholas Confessore During the fall of 1999, George W. Bush, then the governor of Texas and a leading candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, introduced what would become a staple of his stump speech over the following year. Appearing at The Citadel military academy, Bush painted a grim picture of the U.S. armed forces under Bill Clinton. "Not since the years before Pearl Harbor has our investment in national defense been so low as a percentage of GNP," Bush told the crowd that day. "Yet rarely has our military been so freely used." Bush accused the Clinton administration not only of underfunding the militarya perennial conservative complaintbut also of overburdening it with unnecessary deployments. "Resources are over-stretched," he charged. "Frustration is up, as families are separated and strained. Morale is down. Recruitment is more difficult. And many of our best people in the military are headed for civilian life." There was an element of truth to his charge. By the late 1990s, the number of active-duty men and women under arms had decreased from more than 2 million during the Gulf War to just under 1.4 million, much of it due to planned post-Cold War drawdowns begun under Bush's father. Yet during the same period, the military had faced a major new deployment roughly every six monthsmost of them operations, like Haiti or Somalia, that were layered on top of the post-Cold-War requirement that the Pentagon be able to fight two major regional wars at once.

44. Central Washington University - Office Of Admissions: Transfer Students
However, after you are admitted to CWU your high school transcript will be used division elective credits for completion of military academic schools as
http://www.cwu.edu/~cwuadmis/transfer.html
CWU Home Admissions Academic Programs Alumni/Friends ... SEARCH
Admissions: Transfer Students
Back to Admissions Requirements Apply to CWU Review Process ... CWU Center Students IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT: Ellensburg Campus: Freshmen, Transfer and Post Baccalaureate admission for Fall 2005 to the Ellensburg campus is now closed. University Centers: Admission applications to the University Centers will continue to be accepted on a space-available basis. You are encouraged to submit your application as soon as possible. Contact your intended CWU Center for more detailed program information. Apply to CWU
Admission Requirements
If you have completed fewer than 40 college-level credits (27 semester credits) at the time of application, you need to submit:
  • Completed paper application or online application (online application is preferred) $50 check, money order or online payment to CWU Official transcripts from all colleges attended Official high school transcript Standardized test scores (ACT or SAT)
If you have completed 40 or more college level credits at the time of application, you need to submit:

45. Prince George's Enlisted In Military School Concept - 2001-07-23
Joining this march into military schools is the Prince George s County Board ofEducation. washington Business Journal email washington@bizjournals.com
http://www.bizjournals.com/washington/stories/2001/07/23/focus3.html
News by Markets bizjournals.com Albany Albuquerque Atlanta Austin Baltimore Birmingham Boston Buffalo Charlotte Cincinnati Columbus Dallas Dayton Denver East Bay Greensboro Honolulu Houston Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Milwaukee Mpls./St. Paul Nashville Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Raleigh/Durham Sacramento St. Louis San Antonio San Francisco San Jose Seattle South Florida Tampa Bay Washington Wichita News by Industry Industry Journal Home my Industry Page Email Alert Agriculture -Commercial Banking -Insurance -Investing -Investment Banking -Venture Capital Business Services -Accounting/Consult. -Advertising/PR -Employee Benefits -Environ. Services -Human Resources -Legal Services -Marketing -Workplace Reg. Economic View -Bankruptcies -Economic Snapshot Energy -Electric Utilities -Energy Conserv. Health Care -Biotechnology -Health Insurance -Hospitals -Industry Regs -Pharmaceuticals -Physician Prac. High Tech -Computers -E-Commerce -Internet -Networking -Semiconductors -Software -Telecom -Wireless/PDAs Manufacturing Real Estate -Commercial -Construction -Residential -Restaurants -Retailing Sports Business Travel -Airlines/Airports -Lodging/Conven.

46. Policy Guidance - Access To High School Students And Information On Students By
Q. Are private schools subject to the military recruiter requirements? washington, DC 202024605 Telephone (202) 260-3887 Fax (202) 260-9001
http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/fpco/hottopics/ht-10-09-02a.html
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Policy Guidance - Access to High School Students and Information on Students by Military Recruiters
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October 9, 2002 Q. What are the recent changes made by Congress concerning military recruitment of high school students? A. Congress has passed two major pieces of legislation that generally require local educational agencies (LEAs) receiving assistance under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA) to give military recruiters the same access to secondary school students as they provide to postsecondary institutions or to prospective employers. LEAs are also generally required to provide students' names, addresses, and telephone listings to military recruiters, when requested.

47. AOSHS - Famous Persons
If you have others Famous Overseas schools Alumni military Brats to add EDUCATION Graduated from Cheney High School in Cheney, washington, in 1977.
http://aoshs.wichita.edu/famous.html
Compiled By: Glenn Greenwood—AOSHS/AOSA Communications Director aoshscom@wichita.edu List aoshscom@wichita.edu This list is offered for entertainment purposes only. Where ever possible confirming sources of information have been cited for the listings below. Where corroborating information is not cited I will be working to obtain it and will post the information when it becomes available. I want to thank the 100s of you who have e-mailed me your information regarding the Famous OverSeas Schools Alumni and Military Brats you knew and attended school with over the last 50 years. The military and overseas brats of this country, have made and continue to make contributions to business, literature, education, entertainment, medicine and the security of this country. And it is through your efforts that we both realize and recognize those among us as a group who have and continue to be nationally and internationally recognized for those contributions. Like any number of good editors I have worked with professionally over the past 20 years, I have tried to keep what I felt was accurate and relevant to the list. Some of you will undoubtedly disagree with what I have kept and some of you will disagree with what I have discarded. This will tell me I've done my job properly. Many thanks to Judith Dixon Gabaldon

48. Bill Would Permit Military Academy Prayers - The Washington Times: Nation/Politi
Republicans on Capitol Hill are stepping into a battle over whether militaryschools should be allowed to include prayer as part of meals and other
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20031004-123021-3629r.htm
October 04, 2003 DisplayAds('Top,Position1,Position2,Position3,Position4,Bottom', 'Top', 468, 60 ); Advertise Subscription
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Front Page ... UPI NewsTrack TopNews Bill would permit military academy prayers
By Amy Fagan
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Republicans on Capitol Hill are stepping into a battle over whether military schools should be allowed to include prayer as part of meals and other school-sponsored activities.
House conservatives are pushing a bill designed to ensure that military academies can have policies to include voluntary, nondenominational prayers during authorized activities, such as meals.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. Walter B. Jones, North Carolina Republican, aims to combat the efforts of the American Civil Liberties Union, which successfully sued the Virginia Military Institute because of its prayer-before-meal tradition, and has since notified the U.S. Naval Academy in a letter that its similar prayer policy must be changed.
"I find it incredibly ironic that liberal organizations like the ACLU are attempting to take away the very freedoms that these students are willing to go to war to protect," Mr. Jones said when he introduced his bill last month.
Last week, Rep. Joe Pitts, Pennsylvania Republican, and Sen. Sam Brownback, Kansas Republican, pushed the proposal during their weekly issues briefing for conservative organizations.

49. Islamic Chaplain Is Charged As Spy - The Washington Times: Nation/Politics
THE washington TIMES. An Army Islamic chaplain, who counseled al Qaeda James J.Yee, a 1990 graduate of the US military Academy at West Point, NY,
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20030919-105619-9614r.htm
September 20, 2003 DisplayAds('Top,Position1,Position2,Position3,Position4,Bottom', 'Top', 468, 60 ); Advertise Subscription
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Front Page ... New allegations against Scott Peterson Islamic chaplain is charged as spy
By Rowan Scarborough
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
An Army Islamic chaplain, who counseled al Qaeda prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, naval base, has been charged with espionage, aiding the enemy and spying, The Washington Times has learned.
Capt. James J. Yee, a 1990 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., was arrested earlier this month by the FBI in Jacksonville, Fla., as he arrived on a military charter flight from Guantanamo, according to a law-enforcement source.
Agents confiscated several classified documents in his possession and interrogated him. He was held for two days in Jacksonville and transferred to a Navy brig in Charleston, S.C., where two Army lawyers have been assigned to his defense.
The Army has charged Capt. Yee with five offenses: sedition, aiding the enemy, spying, espionage and failure to obey a general order. The Army may also charge him later with the more serious charge of treason, which under the Uniform Code of Military Justice could be punished by a maximum sentence of life.
It could not be immediately learned what country or organization is suspected of receiving information from Capt. Yee. He had counseled suspected al Qaeda terrorists at Guantanamo for a lengthy period.

50. USMA Bicentennial
Colonel Sylvanus Thayer, the father of the military Academy, served as Following the creation of Army postgraduate command and staff schools,
http://www.usma.edu/bicentennial/history/

51. United States Military Academy: Information From Answers.com
George washington quickly realized the need for a national military academy,however his Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson argued that there was no
http://www.answers.com/topic/united-states-military-academy
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Encyclopedia Wikipedia Best of Web Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping United States Military Academy Encyclopedia United States Military Academy, at West Point , N.Y.; for training young men and women to be officers in the U.S. army; founded and opened in 1802. The original act provided that the Corps of Engineers stationed at West Point should constitute a military academy, but the growing threat of war with England in 1812 resulted in congressional action to increase the corps and to expand the academy's facilities. Changes in curriculum and organization made by Sylvanus Thayer , superintendent from 1817 to 1833, earned him the title Father of the Military Academy. In the 19th cent. the military academy was one of the nation's major sources of civil engineers, and its graduates made excellent records in the Mexican War and especially in the Civil War. After 1866 the academy was no longer formally related to the Corps of Engineers. The academy is now under the general direction and supervision of the Dept. of the Army. Its enrollment has greatly expanded since its founding and at present is about 4,300 cadets. The curriculum, too, has been greatly modernized, notably under Douglas MacArthur, its superintendent from 1919 to 1922. An applicant must obtain a nomination to be considered for an appointment to the academy. The sources of nomination are the President of the United States; the Vice President; U.S. Senators and Representatives; and the representatives of the District of Columbia and the U.S. territories. Special appointment categories include children of deceased and disabled veterans or of career military personnel, foreign students, regular U.S. army, U.S. army reserve, honor graduates of military and naval schools and ROTC, and children of Medal of Honor recipients. Candidates must be between the ages of 17 and 22 and must meet physical and educational qualifications.

52. The Washington Dispatch
reported military academies are a growing trend in American urban school systems . Philadelphia this past summer opened its own military academy.
http://www.washingtondispatch.com/article_10801.shtml
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53. Washington Post Mustering For School At Home
Mustering for School at Home. On military Bases, Parents Increasingly Teach Their The military base near the Potomac River in Southeast washington is
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=metro&contentId=A

54. Intolerance Found At Air Force Academy
A military study of the religious climate at the Air Force Academy in ColoradoSprings washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A02
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062200598.
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Intolerance Found at Air Force Academy
Military Report Criticizes Religious Climate but Does Not Cite Overt Bias
By Josh White Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A02 A military study of the religious climate at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs found several examples of religious intolerance, insensitivity and inappropriate proselytizing on the part of Air Force officers and cadets, but a report issued yesterday at the Pentagon concluded that the school is not overtly discriminatory and has made improvements in recent months. Air Force Lt. Gen. Roger A. Brady announced that his 16-member review team found a "perception of religious bias" in more than 300 interviews with cadets representing all faiths and with faculty members and administrators. Brady also found that there was a failure at the academy "to fully accommodate all members' needs and a lack of awareness over where the line is drawn between permissible and impermissible expression of beliefs."

55. The Assistant Adjutant General, Army
The washington Army National Guard (WAARNG) STARC Headquarters is collocated withthe washington military Department’s headquarters at Camp Murray,
http://www.washingtonarmyguard.com/atag_bio.html
Brigadier General Gordon D. Toney
The Assistant Adjutant General, Army [Home Page] [Search This Site] [Links to Related Sites] [Appointment Ceremony] ... [Return to ATAG's Page] Brigadier General Gordon D. Toney assumed duties as Commander of the Washington Army National Guard and Assistant Adjutant General - Army on 15 September 2002. The Washington Army National Guard (WAARNG) STARC Headquarters is collocated with the Washington Military Department’s headquarters at Camp Murray, Washington, adjacent to Fort Lewis. The WAARNG is organized into four brigade-size commands, the 81st Heavy Separate Brigade Armor, 66th Aviation Brigade (Corps), 96th Troop Command, and the 205th Regiment (Leadership). The more than 6000 Army Guard citizen-soldiers within these brigades are stationed in 37 different communities across the state. General Toney is responsible to the Adjutant General for the coordination of policies, programs, and plans affecting the Washington Army National Guard. He ensures the recruitment and career management of

56. U.S. Military Academy
Established in 1802 by an act of Congress, the US military Academy is located in HOLDS HEARING ON CHINESE military POWER (washington Transcript Service)
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0113520.html
in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
Daily Almanac for
Sep 27, 2005

57. US Army Engineer School
GlobalSecurity.org is the leading source for reliable military news and The Engineer School remained at washington Barracks for the next 19 years,
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/agency/army/eschool.htm
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Military
Units
Facilities
Official Homepage
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US Army Engineer School
The United States Engineer School develops, trains, and supports the engineer force to provide maneuver engineering, force support engineering, and geospatial engineering to Army, Joint, Interagency, and Combined Operations. The Engineer School proper has three major subordinate organizations, the Directorate of Training, the 1st Engineer Brigade, and the office of the TRADOC System Manager Engineer Combat Systems. The Assistant Commandant (AC), USAES directs the operation of the School. The Deputy Assistant Commandant assists the AC and acts in the absence of the AC. The Deputy Assistant Commandant-Army Reserve and the Deputy Assistant Commandant-National Guard advise the AC on matters involving the reserve components and act as total force integrators for USAES. The Chief of Staff acts as the executive officer for the AC, manages the branch staff, acts as the G3, monitors resources in coordination with the Directorate of Resources Management, and facilitates USAES strategic planning. The Museum Curator collects, preserves, documents, exhibits, and interprets objects of historical interest which pertain to the history of US Army engineers. The Historian serves as the proponent for historical activities of the Engineer Regiment.

58. George Washington's Army - The Department Of War
1 George washington already had an army. So, when he became president and startedto put They did not want too much power in the hands of the military,
http://www.edhelper.com/ReadingComprehension_35_221.html
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George Washington's Army - The Department of War
By Sharon Fabian George Washington already had an army. So, when he became president and started to put together the executive branch of the new United States government, one of the first departments that he established, in 1789, was the Department of War.
One of the ideas that George Washington and the other founders of our country believed in was that no one person or group should have too much power. So they spread the power among various parts of the government. They did not want too much power in the hands of the military, so they decided on civilians to represent the army in the executive branch. The Department of War, like the other cabinet departments, had a leader known as the secretary. The Secretary of War was in charge of the army. He was also in charge of advising the president on matters related to the army.
Washington saw the cabinet departments as extensions of the president. The Secretary of War and the other leaders in the cabinet share in the responsibility of the president. That responsibility is to enforce the laws of the United States.

59. Congressman Brian Baird :: Washington's 3rd Congressional District :: Constituen
This is an image of Congressman Baird with 2003 military Academy Nominees. washington DC Page Program. arrow image link to the right to same section.
http://www.house.gov/baird/cs/military.shtml
dqmcodebase = "../../baird/Javascript/" //script folder location Constituent Services Military Academies
Each year my office receives numerous inquiries concerning nominations to the United States Service Academies. I am pleased to provide the following information for constituents who may be interested in a service academy appointment.
The Nomination Process:
To be considered for an appointment to a service academy, an applicant must have a nomination from an authorized nominating source. Title 10 of the U.S. Code authorizes Members of Congress to make nominations.
Members of the United States Senate and House of Representatives may nominate applicants who meet the eligibility requirements established by law. Members of the House of Representatives may nominate only those applicants who reside in their congressional districts, therefore my office can nominate any applicant who resides in Southwest Washington. Applicants may apply for and receive nominations from both their United States senators and from their representative. Applicants may also apply to the Vice President of the United States who can nominate applicants at large. Applicants should apply for all nominations for which they are eligible. Applicants should apply to the service academy of their choice in the spring of their junior year in high school and request a nomination from the appropriate nomination source shortly thereafter.

60. Faleomavaega (AS00) - Washington, D.C.—President Signs Into Law Legislation Fal
washington, DC—PRESIDENT SIGNS INTO LAW LEGISLATION FALEOMAVAEGA INTRODUCED TOINCREASE THE NUMBER OF military ACADEMY APPOINTMENTS FROM AMERICAN SAMOA
http://www.house.gov/apps/list/press/as00_faleomavaega/academyappointments.html
November 24, 2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE WASHINGTON, D.C.— PRESIDENT SIGNS INTO LAW LEGISLATION FALEOMAVAEGA INTRODUCED TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF MILITARY ACADEMY APPOINTMENTS FROM AMERICAN SAMOA Congressman Faleomavaega announced that President Bush signed into law today the National Defense Authorization Act for FY04 which included language Faleomavaega offered to increase the number of military academy appointments from American Samoa “On May 7, 2003 , the House Subcommittee on Total Force unanimously voted in favor of my amendment to increase the number of military academy appointments from America Samoa to the U.S. Military Academy, the United States Naval Academy , and the United States Air Force Academy ,” Congressman Faleomavaega said. “On May 9, 2003 , the Armed Services Committee also agreed to include this language in the National Defense Authorization Act of 2004.” “This legislation passed the House on May 22, 2003 and the Senate and the House agreed to the conference report as of November 12, 2004 I am now pleased that President Bush has signed this historic legislation into law. As a result of this new law

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