APSU to celebrate 50th anniversary of APSU Army ROTC at Military Alumni Chapter Dinner Oct. 8
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. 鈥 Austin Peay State University will host the annual APSU Military Alumni Chapter Dinner at 6 p.m., Friday, Oct. 8, in the Morgan University Center Ballroom. The dinner also will serve as one of the many celebrations for the APSU Army ROTC Governors Guard鈥檚 50th anniversary that are taking place throughout the 2021-2022 academic year. Fortera Credit Union is the presenting sponsor for the event.
鈥淎PSU Army ROTC would like to thank President (Mike) Licari and the University staff for their support of our program and this event,鈥 Lt. Col. Mark Barton, APSU professor of military science, said. 鈥淲e enjoy being part of the APSU team and this great campus. The Department of the Army General Order #4 established ROTC at APSU in 1971, and this fall, we are celebrating 50 years on the APSU campus.
鈥淲e currently have 134 cadets and students participating in the program,鈥 Barton continued. 鈥淲e are an eight-time McArthur Award winner (one of the eight best ROTC programs in the nation out of 274 universities), and our program has commissioned 837 cadets as second lieutenants into the Active Army, Army Reserve and National Guard in the last 50 years. APSU Army ROTC cadets continue a longstanding history of exceeding the standard in leadership, academics, physical fitness, university involvement and community engagement. Let鈥檚 go Peay!鈥
During the dinner, the 2021 APSU Govs Who Lead Through Military Service Award will be presented to Joe Shakeenab (鈥04, 鈥14), APSU Military Alumni Chapter president and APSU National Alumni Association president, by APSU Board of Trustees Chair Billy Atkins. ROTC alumni from various Fort Campbell groups will also be recognized.
Tickets for the dinner are $40 per person. Proceeds will benefit the Margaree King Richard Leader of Character Scholarship Endowment, named after the former APSU faculty member who will also serve as the keynote speaker for the event. John Montgomery and Robert Roof of the JR Group created the endowment. They both worked with Richard in her past role with the APSU Army ROTC Governors Guard.
Richard was born in Jackson, Mississippi, and attended Murrah High School. After graduating, she attended the United States Military Academy at West Point, where she was a member of the Division I Basketball 2006 NCAA Tournament qualifying team. She graduated in 2008 and earned West Point鈥檚 first Patriot League Defensive Player of the Year award.
After being commissioned, she completed Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) school at Eglin Air Force Base and became the first-ever female African American officer bomb technician in the United States Army. Following an assignment to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson and a subsequent deployment, she was assigned to the 52nd EOD Group at Fort Campbell and became the Company Commander of the 723rd EOD Company supporting austere units in theater.
Richard was diagnosed with breast cancer while in command. She opted to continue her command to show fight and resolve, thus embodying the 鈥淣ever Quit鈥 attitude promoted by the Armed Services. She completed extensive chemotherapy over a six-month period and completed her command. After chemotherapy and leading her company on foreign and domestic ground, she was assigned to Austin Peay as an assistant professor of military science. Since completing service, Richard has been an assistant coach at the United States Military Academy at West Point, and she currently serves as the director of basketball operations at Howard University.
As she educated, trained and mentored cadets and students in the Clarksville area, Richard realized that future leaders need opportunities to show their capabilities. Her endowment provides assistance and incentives for cadets to maintain focus in a program filled with historic success. The academic and physical rigor of the Austin Peay ROTC program gives students the skills to apply procedures and techniques learned through critical thinking as army officers. The scholarship is just one of the many ways in which Richard is helping those in need to achieve success.
鈥淲e are honored to have a strong support base who believes in and promotes our mission 鈥 to build scholarship endowments for active duty service members, APSU ROTC cadets, veterans and their families,鈥 Shakeenab said.
Through previous dinners and with the help of generous donors, the APSU Military Alumni Chapter has endowed all four of its existing scholarships, including the Military Alumni Chapter Scholarship Endowment, the CSM (R) Sidney Brown Scholarship Endowment, the Mrs. Joyce Luster Scholarship Endowment and CW3 (R) Scott Schroeder Scholarship Endowment.
鈥淭he APSU Army ROTC Governors Guard is a vital program for our University,鈥 APSU President Mike Licari said. 鈥淚t provides many skills and opportunities for our students and strengthens our ties to Fort Campbell, our military-affiliated students and their families. Over the years, the program has brought much distinction and many awards to this University, and we are excited to honor those accomplishments at this dinner and throughout the year.鈥
To RSVP for the dinner by Oct. 1, visit alumni.apsu.edu/military21.
To support APSU fundraising initiatives, contact the Office of University Advancement at 931-221-7127.
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