University of North Georgia

04/29/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/29/2024 14:09

Corps will commission 50 second lieutenants

"It's great getting to work side by side with these amazing and motivated cadets every day," Kinzie said.

Kinzie, a four-year Army ROTC Scholarship recipient, came to UNG expecting to enter the Aviation branch before deciding on Explosive Ordnance Disposal. The senior also recently won the Paul Hutcherson Outstanding Student Award and was a Women of UNG leadership honoree. She said the guidance she received along the way was invaluable. She encourages other cadets to seek out mentors.

"Talk with everybody and network with everyone. There are so many amazing alumni and resources that the school has. If you take advantage of them and really get to learn from everybody, then you can leave here with such a wealth of knowledge and such great connections that you take into the Army and into life," Kinzie said. "There are people everywhere from UNG, and they are more than happy to create more knowledgeable alumni who want to become mentors to others."

Hyunbean Park, a Suwanee, Georgia, resident who is earning a degree in international affairswith a European concentration and a minor in Russian, will branch into the Chemical Corps on a path to eventually joining the Military Intelligence branch. He has been able to practice his language skills through studies in Poland, Romania, Latvia, and the republic of Georgia. He will study in Kyrgyzstan this summer as a Critical Language Scholarship recipient.

"Just like the Army's motto, 'Be all you can be,' cadets coming here can also be all they can be if they give themselves 100%," Park said. "They have the support from the military and also the academic side."

Maddox Rose, a Ringgold, Georgia, native who is earning a degree in political science with a pre-law concentration, served as brigade executive officer for 2023-24. He has received a prestigious education delay from the Army to attend law school at the University of Georgia in preparation to one day join the Judge Advocate General's Corps.

"The Department of Political Science has prepared me in ways I couldn't have imagined. A lot of the classes, particularly the ones taught by Dr. Scott Meachum, were structured in ways very similar to how law school is going to look and were very challenging. That was the most important thing I could have done," Rose said. "As far as the school itself and especially the Corps of Cadets, it's prepared me to lead in ways that I couldn't have achieved anywhere else because of how hands-on it was and how many times I was thrown into the fire and forced to learn on the job."