The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 02.11.1984, Síða 7

The White Falcon - 02.11.1984, Síða 7
Dependent's Scholarship Program Are you having difficulty finding funds to finance the college education of you son or daughter? Your task may be made easier through the Dependents' Scholarship Program. Coordinated by the Naval Military Personnel Command, the program encompasses 26 scholarships sponsored by Navy-oriented organizations. Schol- arships are awarded on the basis of scholastic merit, character and financial need for educa- tional purposes beyond the high school level. A key advantage to the program is that the scholarships are generally awarded exclusively to dependent children, including adopted and step- children, of present and former members of the Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard. To qualify as a dependent child, the individual must be un- married and under the age of 21 (or 23 if enroll- ed full time at an approved institution of high- er learning.) Requests for the Dependents' Scholarship Pro- gram materials packet may be submitted after September 1, 1984, and until March 15, 1985, to Commander, Naval Military Personnel Command, NMPC-121D, Navy Department, Washington, D.C., 20370. Included in the packet is the Scholarship Pamphlet (NAVPERS 15003-L) which contains a list- ing of available scholarships, eligibility re- quirements, the closing date for applications and additional information needed to apply. In addition to requesting this packet, appli- cants should also contact their area or state agencies, high school guidance counselors, prin- cipals or financial aid officers of the college university under consideration for additional financial aid source information. There is scholarhsip money available for Navy children pursuing a college education. Give the Dependents' Scholarship Program a try -- you may be pleasently surprised! Community College of the Air Force Graduation Colonel Dallas R. Hanna, AFI Commander, addressed the graduates of the Community College of the Air Force at a ceremony recently. According to Staff Sergeant Andre Patterson, Education Service Of- ficer, the Community College of the Air Force was established in 1972. It confers associate degrees for programs of study relating to an Air Force specialty. "An integration of military instruc- tion and voluntary education provides this oppor- tunity for prof essional and personal development," he said. The graduates were: TSGT Jerry Bird, TSGT Kelly Ross, SGT Stephen Cochran, TSGT George E. Draper, Sf!GT John Pundsack, MSGT Russel Prese- ley, TSGT Charles Ralph,MSGT Joseph Spiteri, MSGT Ernest Nichols, MSGT Harold Malloy, SSGT Marsha Barnhart,SSGT Russel Freeman,MSGT Forest Wolfred, Jr., MSGT Donald Drost and SSGT Ray Howell. Help comes to Air Force PCS movers Photo by J03 Gregory Belmore WASHINGTON -- Air Force members who exceed weight allowances on moves involving more than one shipment will see a drop in excess weight charges. Brig. Gen. J. E. Griffith, the Air Force's Di- rector of Transportation, directed a change in the method used to compute excess weight charges ef- fective October 1. The general explained that previously the ser- vice computed the member's cost on the last ship- ment handled, normally unaccompanied baggage moved by aircraft. Shipment by air is up to 50 percent more expensive than surface transporta- tion. Linder the new rules, members will pay for ex- cess weight based upon the cheapest rate used to complete the member's move, usually the shipment from storage. Shipments include household goods, unaccompanied baggage and storage. More than 14,000 people paid $7.3 million for overweight shipments last year. The general said airmen first class were charged the most for excess weight, averaging $290 per bill. In the officer ranks, captains and majors were hit the hardest with average bills of about $550. General Griffith made the move after the Air Force General Counsel determined that nothing precluded the Air Force from changing its policy to relieve some of the financial burden placed on Air Force people who exceed property weight limitations. The general was quoted as saying, "We have long advocated increases in weight allowances. While we have been unsuccessful in obtaining in- creased authorization, we discovered that we could at least take this small step." The White Falcon November 2, 1984 7

x

The White Falcon

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: The White Falcon
https://timarit.is/publication/382

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.