pointerview - West Point

tHe
aPril 2, 2015
Vol. 72, no. 12
duty, Honor, Country
PointerView
serVinG
tHe
u.s. military aCademy
and tHe Community oF
west Point
aPril 2, 2015
®
®
Army Rugby
torpedos Navy
Army Rugby’s second-half onslaught helped the Black Knights defeat rival
Navy, 41-24, March 28 at Anderson Rugby Complex. See page 16 for story and
photos from the rugby match.
Photo by sgt. 1st Class JereMy bunkley/usMa Pao
INSIDE
&
ONLINE
w w w . P o i n t e rV i e w . C o m
www.usma.edu
Honoring Laura Walker
at Memorial Tournament
eriC s. bartelt/Pv
SEE PAGES 6-7
1
News & Features
2 April 2, 2015
Pointer View
Emergency Preparedness Exercise to test West Point’s readiness
Submitted by Christopher G. Hennen
DPTMS
Although West Point has served as an
impregnable bastion of Army values for more
than 200 years, it is not similarly invincible from
the acts of a determined adversary.
As members of this community, we all must
be prepared—through education and action—to
respond rapidly and capably to a full range
of potential natural and manmade hazards;
readiness is our most potent defense against any
threat. The question is, “Are we ready?”
West Point authorities are committed to
ensuring the health, safety and welfare of
community members; the protection of property;
and the sustainment of essential installation
operations should an emergency occur. Normal day-to-day procedures usually are
not sufficient for assessing effective emergency
responses, as extraordinary emergency measures
must be implemented quickly if loss of life,
Eliminate Sexual Assault—
Know Your Part. Do Your Part.
April is Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention
Month, which is an opportunity to emphasize our
ongoing commitment to eliminate sexual harassment
and assault in the Army. This year’s theme is: Eliminate
Sexual Assault—Know Your Part. Do Your Part.
Eliminating sexual assault and sexual harassment
is my number one priority as superintendent. Every
member of the West Point community—Soldier,
civilian and family member—deserves to work and
live in an environment where they feel safe, both
physically and emotionally. Sexual assault and sexual
harassment go against our core values and have no
place in the West Point community—on or off post.
Each of us has a role in preventing and responding
to sexual assault and harassment … and each of us has
the responsibility to act.
If we see unprofessional or inappropriate behavior, we need to step in to prevent it.
I encourage everyone to participate in the events and activities taking place throughout
the West Point community to support sexual assault awareness and prevention. And
remember—sexual assault awareness and prevention is an “all the time” effort – not
just during the month of April.
If you have any questions about sexual assault awareness and prevention, contact
your Sexual Assault Response Coordinator (numbers are listed below).
Know your part. Do your part. Let’s work together to eliminate sexual assault.
Thank you.
—Lt. Gen. Robert L. Caslen Jr.
property, utilities and operations are to be kept
to a minimum. To assess our response and
capabilities to an emergency in real-time and
within a real-world environment, we implement
an annual full-scale emergency preparedness
exercise that allows all of us to gain the indepth learning that only a special experience
can provide.
After almost six months of planning, a
community-wide readiness exercise will occur
between April 20-24, incorporating elements
of an active shooter and hazardous materials
response, the Installation’s Emergency Alert
System (EAS) and the ability of our responders
to apply mass casualty care. In addition, this
exercise will enable West Point officials;
emergency first-responders and managers; host
and tenant organizations; the Corps of Cadets;
West Point Schools and Child Development
Centers; and community members to participate
in an assessment of emergency preparedness
procedures and capabilities.
“Active shooter incidents are among the
most dynamic acts of violence that we might
encounter. This year’s week of active shooter
preparedness and response activities will be
a great assessment of our capabilities. Each
aspect of our emergency preparedness exercise
is designed to look at the seams or gaps that
exist in our standard operating procedures and
to address them,” Joe Colombo, Chief of Plans
and Operations, DPTMS, said.
Participants will respond to an orchestrated,
“attack” focused in the Central Area’s academic
buildings: On April 20-21, specific Random
Antiterrorism Measures (RAMs) for the
month of April will be assessed throughout the
installation. On April 22, the West Point Schools
and Lee Road Child Development Center will
USMA Superintendent
SHARP Community Resources
• West Point SHARP Helpline 24/7 (call or
text)—845-659-7467;
• USMA SARC, Kerry Dunham (call or
text)—845-938-3532 or 585-319-8936;
•USCC SARC, Maj. Mark
Moretti—845-938-7479 or 910-322-2529;
• Keller Army Community Hospital SARC, Dr.
Scotti Veale—845-938-4150 or 845-476-4712;
• Garrison SARC/Installation Victim Advocate,
Dan Toohey—845-938-5657 or 914-382-8180;
• U S M A P S S A R C , D r. S t e p h a n i e
Marsh—938-1950 or 732-567-3663.
Pointer View
®
The Army civilian enterprise newspaper, the Pointer View, is an authorized publication for members
of the Department of Defense. Contents of the Pointer View are not necessarily the official views of, or
endorsed by, the U.S. Government, the Department of the Army or West Point.
The Pointer View ® is an unofficial publication authorized by AR 360-1. The editorial content of the
Pointer View is the responsibility of the West Point Public Affairs Office, Bldg. 600, West Point, New York
10996, (845) 938-2015.
The Pointer View is printed weekly by the Times Herald-Record, a private firm in no way connected
with the Department of the Army, under exclusive contract with West Point. The Times Herald-Record is
responsible for all commercial advertising.
Tax Center has limited availability
By West Point Office of the Staff
Judge Advocate
The West Point Tax Center has limited
availability for tax preparation appointments
from now through the end of the tax season
April 15. Appointments for active duty
military may be made by calling the Tax
Center at 938-5920.
Retirees desiring tax preparation may
be placed on a cancellation waiting list by
calling the same line.
Unfortunately, due to the increased
40 Mulberry Street, Middletown, NY 10940
To subscribe to the Pointer View or
if you have delivery problems, call 845-346-3214.
Lt. Gen. Robert L. Caslen, Jr.
Superintendent
Lt. Col. Webster Wright
Public Affairs Officer
conduct intruder response lockdown drills.
On April 23, a “bang” occurs when a
simulated active shooter attack causes chaos
and mass casualties in Central Area to include
an evacuation/lockdown. Meanwhile, USMAPS
will conduct a similar “attack” requiring the
use of HAZMAT teams to assess hazardous
material incident response procedures, a
USMAPS parking lot will be used to treat
and decontaminate victims before they are
transported to KACH for further treatment..
The exercise concludes on April 24 with the
activation of the emergency operations center
and Emergency Family Assistance Center to
address the consequences of the previous day’s
incident.
While the exercise scenario, extent of
damage, and level of threat are based on a
hypothetical situation and are not intended as a
forecast of future harmful events, they do reflect
the potential threat to personnel, our Armed
Forces and college campuses across the country.
This exercise—the last of several emergency
preparedness exercises conducted this year, and
among the most comprehensive undertaken at
West Point—is part of West Point’s continuing
commitment to obtaining valuable insights to
guide future preparedness and response efforts.
At a recent planning meeting, Colombo
counseled those in attendance: “The safety and
security of West Point is our most sacred duty.”
The Command Channel will run an
informative video entitled “Surviving an Active
Shooter—LA County Sheriffs,” between April
13-17. Additional information can be obtained
by contacting Joseph Colombo at 938-2516 or
[email protected] or Dr. Christopher
Hennen at 938-7092 or Christopher.hennen@
usma.edu.
Eric S. Bartelt
PV Managing Editor, 938-2015
Kathy Eastwood
PV Staff Writer, 938-3684
demand for tax preparation services,
appointments for retirees are subject to
availability by cancellation.
Cadets may have their taxes prepared
via a drop-off service located in the Legal
Assistance Office, Office of the Staff Judge
Advocate (Bldg. 606).
The Tax Center, located in Bldg. 626,
will see clients on an appointment basis
from 8 a.m.-noon and 1:15-5 p.m. MondayFriday.
There is no change to the offering of
other Legal Assistance services.
The appearance of advertising in this publication, including inserts or supplements,
does not constitute endorsement of the products or services advertised by the U.S. Army
or the Times Herald-Record.
Everything advertised in this publication shall be made available for purchase, use,
or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status,
physical handicap, political affiliation, or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user,
or patron.
A confirmed violation or rejection of this policy of equal opportunity by an advertiser
will result in the refusal to print advertising from that source.
Pointer View
April 2, 2015
3
West Point, Villanova discuss Ethics of War
Story and photos by Kathy Eastwood
Staff Writer
The Department of English and Philosophy,
in collaboration with Villanova University,
initiated the second annual conference on the
Ethics of War March 27-28 at Jefferson Hall
and Cullum Hall at West Point.
The conference included a diverse selection
of experts to discuss the ethics of war with
faculty and cadets and experts in the field
speaking on various subjects surrounding the
issue.
The conference began with West Point
cadets and Villanova students in various plenary
and breakout sessions discussing such topics
as death squads, targeted killing as opposed to
assassinations, drone warfare, cyber warfare and
the moral worth of patriotism.
Class of 2015 Cadet Bradley Hodgkins
spoke about the problems with drone warfare.
“Animals may commit territorial violence,
but humans are the only ones who create
instruments to commit violence,” Hodgkins
said.
Drones represent a stark departure in
fighting wars, one that is relatively new due to
the war on terror. Are drones ethical?
Hodgkins gave the scenario of a drone
operator who is tracking, then locking on
to a target. It is a confirmed target and the
commander orders to execute target. Some may
feel confident and that they have done their duty,
but then you have to witness an excruciating
death of someone you have followed for some
time.
“With any war, there is a prudent risk.
Drones can remove that risk,” Hodgkins said.
Brent Sacks, senior at Villanova University,
spoke about targeted killing or assassination and
the need for clarity.
Sacks asked the question; “Why is it
permissible to kill Bin Laden and not OK to
assassinate Franz Ferdinand?”
Sacks explored the differences between
targeted killing and assassination and the legal
Michael Walzer, professor Emeritus of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, spoke
at the Department of English and Philosophy’s second annual Ethics of War Conference March 27 at Cullum Hall. Walzer
is the author of the book "Just and Unjust Wars,” which has been required reading at West Point for nearly 30 years.
implications of both.
“The U.S. initially opposed targeted killing
when Israel used it in 2000, but changed their
minds after 2001,” Sacks said.
Class of 2015 Cadet Bradley Hodgkins presents his presentation on the
problematized ontology of drone warfare at a breakout session March 27 of the
Ethics of War Conference. The conference is a project of Villanova University
and West Point and is the second iteration of the event. Villanova hosted the
conference last year.
Keynote speaker, Michael Walzer, professor
Emeritus of Social Science at the Institute for
Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, spoke
about the ethics of war.
Walzer deals with the fundamental question
of the morality of war.
Under what circumstances should one wage
war, what is permissible to do or not do in a war
and what are the principles of responsibility of
wrongdoing in war.
“According to standard theory,” Walzer
said, “aggressive war is indeed a crime, but a
different crime than the ordinary soldiers who
are fighting it. The criminals are the men and
women, mostly men, political and military
leaders who consult the governor and decided
who to attack.
“The Nuremburg tribunal got it right when
they invited the heads of the Nazi party state
Army to allow ordinary German soldiers to go
home,” Walzer added.
Walzer is considered one of the most
renowned political theorists alive. His book,
“Just and Unjust Wars,” has been required
reading at West Point for the last 30 years.
The Ethics of War Conference attempts to
bring undergraduates, experts and interested
civilians together with officers and future
officers to create a forum for all.
“The conference incorporates so many
different constituencies that no one walks away
without being challenged,” Graham Parsons,
assistant professor in the Department of English
and Philosophy said. “If the conference (at
Villanova) last year is any indication, cadets
benefit the most from these events. At Villanova,
it was so rewarding to see our cadets present
their work in a professional setting and to
directly challenge renowned scholars.”
Mark Wilson, assistant professor of the
ethics program at Villanova University, said
“This conference is singular, as it is international
and scholarly in content and yet focused
specifically on facilitating conversations and
relationships between civilians and military,
especially at the undergraduate level.
“I cannot speak highly enough of the
profound impact that this conference has had
on our students and how deeply it has been
embraced at Villanova,” Wilson added. “Our
students not only report colloquially that the
conference is ‘the coolest thing ever,’ but they
have forged friendships with cadets that we hope
will be as permanent as they are transforming.”
Pointer View
4 April 2, 2015
Reducing residential energy costs at West Point
By Maj. Patrick Sullivan
Department of Mathematics
Several faculty members and cadets at
West Point have set out to reduce residential
energy costs while also improving the quality
of military quarters. Using West Point historic
homes as a case study, faculty and cadets from
the Departments of Mathematics, Systems
Engineering and Civil and Mechanical
Engineering have partnered with West Point’s
Garrison leadership to tackle this problem.
Faculty and cadets are conducting testing
in these local homes to determine the most
economic energy upgrades and determine how
the Army could better create housing quality
standards for its residential homes.
Results of this study are also expected to
support an assessment of the fairness of the
current residential utility billing program.
The genesis for residential energy analysis
is simple—West Point and nearly every other
military installation need better assessment
methods for residential building energy
efficiency. The payback period for energy upgrades
on these older buildings can be short. After
the savings outweigh the cost of construction,
the monthly savings from energy upgrades
supplements West Point’s construction fund
to finance other residential building projects.
Historically, residential buildings have reduced
their energy usage by 20-30 percent after the
completion of energy upgrades, so the savings
across all of the buildings on post could be
significant. While the energy upgrades will pay for
themselves, these upgrades will also improve
the comfort level of the homes due to less air
movement and a more constant temperature
throughout the home.
About 300 of the more than 800 homes on
post are historic, and these homes tend to be
the least energy efficient. This project will use
approximately 100 homes in the Wilson, Lusk,
and Old Lee Double areas as a case study for
a system that will later expand to other homes.
For each of these home types, the team
surveys one home in great detail by collecting
window attributes, measurements of the exterior
walls above and below the ground, thickness
of insulation in the walls and attic, number
and size of exterior doors, area and volume of
the conditioned space, efficiency of the HVAC
systems and water heater, orientation of the
building, amount of direct sunlight and leakiness
of the home.
With all of these factors recorded, the team
will be able to rate the energy fitness level of
individual homes by using a proven software
program that uses the laws of thermodynamics
to calculate the energy usage of a home in a
typical year at the location of West Point.
Next, all other homes that have the same
layout are tested, but because the layout and
construction of the homes are very similar to
the first home tested, the team only has to test
the parameters that will likely not be the same
in every home, like efficiency of the HVAC
systems and water heater, orientation of the
building, amount of direct sunlight and leakiness
of the home.
This process is then repeated for all of
the homes in these three groups. Ideally, the
systematic process prototyped in this case study
will be used on the remaining homes on West
Point and by installations around the military,
resulting in a significant amount of savings.
Currently, the team has completed its testing
in nearly all of the homes in the Old Lee Doubles
and has conducted blower door tests on all of
the homes in Wilson and Lusk.
Civil and Mechanical Engineering instructor Maj. Scott Katalenich attaches a
fan to the blower door for the blower door test. This fan blows air outside of
the home in order to get a pressure difference from inside to outside.
Balfour Beatty Communities quickly learned
from the initial testing that a weatherization
project would be greatly beneficial both in
economic value and in the improved comfort for
the resident, so they contracted a local company
to weatherize the leakiest of the historic homes.
This contract has already improved the
homes in Wilson and Lusk and will be moving
to the Band area homes next.
The Garrison has also seen the advantage
of this type of testing, so they have a newly
trained team of civilians that is just starting to
conduct these tests on the rest of the historic
homes on post.
If the current progress continues, West Point
will be well on its way to improving the energy
efficiency and the comfort levels across all
homes on the installation.
For details on this project, contact Patrick
Sullivan at [email protected].
A complete set up for the blower door test. The blower door test shows the air
leakiness of a home. Courtesy Photos
Pointer View
CADET ACTIVITIES UPDATE
competed.
Overall, the conference
served as both a developmental
experience in public speaking
and an exercise in global civilmilitary relations.
Model UN/Debate Team: The Army Debate team
competed in the Cross Examination Debate Association National
Tournament last weekend at Wichita State University in Wichita,
Kansas.
Class of 2016 Cadet Michael Barlow and Class of 2017
Cadet Quanzy Caston became the first Army team in eight years
to advance to the round of 32 (out of 116 teams).
Additionally, Class of 2015 Cadets Ryan McGovern and
Aaron Spikol in their final debate tournament of their careers
were selected as Academic All-American debaters (two of the
top 20 selected in the country this year) for their excellence at
debate and in the classroom.
The USMA Model United Nations team (pictured above)
returned from Seoul, South Korea, the site of this year’s world
conference where they took second place for small delegation,
marking the academy’s continued position at the top of the
world rankings and excellent competitive ability on the Model
UN Circuit.
The team had their best performance this year with five
of eight cadets earning gavels (Class of 2016 Cadet Megan
McNulty, Class of 2016 Cadet Jesse Nelson, Class of 2017 Cadet
Jack Bagdadi, Class of 2017 Cadet Sneha Singh, Class of 2018
Cadet Brittany Scofield).
Helping with the win were Class of 2015 Cadet Patrick
Beauregard, Class of 2017 Cadet Ezra Engel and Class of 2018
Cadet Christine Sidhu.
This conference brings together students from more than
100 countries around the world to compete in more than 30
committees ranging from the World Health Organization to the
Special Summit on the Stability of South Sudan.
Throughout the week, cadets from the team were able to
engage in fierce debate as well as experience both the culture
of South Korea and that of those students with whom they
Pistol Team: The Pistol
team won the Scholastic
Pistol Program National
Intercollegiate Pistol
Championships held at Ft.
Benning, Georgia, March 21.
Army dominated the
competition from the beginning
winning all four categories:
top individual–rimfire, top
team–rimfire, top individual
–centerfire, and top team–
centerfire.
Class of 2017 Cadet Jeffrey Schanz won the gold medal as
the top individual in the rimfire division.
Schanz, along with teammates Class of 2016 Cadet Jack
Fagerland, Class of 2018 Cadet Dillon Schaaf and Class of 2017
Cadet Travis Moody won the rimfire team gold medal.
Class of 2016 Cadet Anthony Veith won the individual gold
medal in the centerfire division.
Veith, along with teammates Class of 2017 Cadet Mark
Lister, Class of 2017 Cadet Dashiel Andrews and Class of 2018
Cadet Mitchell Booth won the centerfire team gold medal.
Competitors may compete for only two years in the rimfire
April 2, 2015
5
division and then must move to the centerfire division.
Army defeated teams from eight other colleges, including
Texas A&M, last year’s national champion.
The youth of Army’s team bodes well for the future.
Climbing Team: The West Point Climbing team traveled
north to Halfmoon, New York, to compete in the Collegiate
Climbing Series’ Northeast Regional Championships.
Four straight hours of dominant climbing in all disciplines
(Bouldering, Top Roping and Speed Climbing) earned the team
first place in the largest, most competitive region in the nation.
Other schools that competed included Yale, Princeton,
Dartmouth, Columbia, Cornell, RIT and Rutgers.
Top performers were Class of 2016 Cadet Zhaina
Myrzkhanova, who placed first in Speed and third in Ropes;
Class of 2015 Cadet Marcie Jhong, who placed second in
Bouldering; and Class of 2016 Cadet Julian Barker, who took
second in both Bouldering and Ropes.
This marks the Climbing team’s third straight Regional
Championship—the team now looks forward to the National
Championships in San Diego April 17-18.
National Society of Black Engineers: The National
Society of Black Engineers attended the annual NSBE
Convention in Anaheim, California, March 23.
While there, West Point NSBE help support the West
Point Society of Los Angeles’ first ever Leadership, Ethics
and Diversity in STEM Conference. West Point NSBE also
conducted an offsite visit at NBC Universal Studios where cadets
were given a first-class tour of their production facility and also
a walk through of one of their premier attraction’s design.
6 April 2, 2015
IN FOCUS: LAURA WALKER
Pointer View
West Point Black finishes second at
Laura Walker Memorial Tourament
Story and photos by Eric S. Bartelt
Managing Editor
In the championship game of the 1st Lt. Laura Walker
Memorial Team Handball Tournament, the West Point Black
squad cut a four-goal deficit to one in the final five minutes
against the New York City Team Handball Club, however, the
team’s valiant effort came up short in a 12-11 loss in the final
game Sunday at Arvin Cadet Physical Development Center.
It was within the loss that team co-captain, senior back Ashton
Wolf was most proud of her teammates and the composure they
showed in not giving up.
“Losing is never fun, but great lessons are gained from
failure,” Wolf said. “We played hard and I think we will emerge
as a stronger team because of it.”
The WP Black Team finished the weekend with a 4-2 record
and a pair of 18-4 victories over the West Point Gold team
(0-4-1 on the weekend) and D.C. squad Sunday. They started
the two-day tournament March 28 by defeating Boston 12-8,
trouncing North Carolina 16-4 and then a close 17-16 loss to
NYC to finish day one.
On day two, WP Black stormed out with back-to-back 18-4
wins before losing in the championship game. Before the final
game, the young women were confident in their abilities to come
up with the victory which is strongly interconnected to their
team motto, which is inspired by a poem by Edgar Albert Guest.
“Our team motto is ‘See It Through.’ We like to correlate
that with Laura Walker in the fact that she was an individual
who never gave up and never did less than her best nor expected
anything less from anyone around her,” Wolf said. “(The poem)
is really inspiring and it’s what we use to help explain to our girls
Members of the West Point Black Women’s Team Handball squad pose with the 1st Lt. Laura Walker
Memorial Team Handball Tournament poster before the championship game Sunday.
Sophomore back Dana Robertson finished tied
for third with 23 goals at the 1st Lt. Laura Walker
Memorial Team Handball Tournament. In an 18-4
victory over the D.C. Squad Sunday, Robertson
(above) scored seven goals to lead the team. She
was tied in tournament goals with teammate, senior
Ashton Wolf.
why it’s important to us to have that winning spirit.”
Wolf and sophomore back Dana Robertson finished the
tournament tied for third in goals with 23. Fellow teammates,
sophomore back Cora Moody and senior circle Dajah Davis,
each potted 12 into the net to finish tied for ninth.
Wolf and Robertson had their own take on their success on
the court.
“Dana uses her footwork … for me, it was the fact that I was
a step and a half faster than my defender,” Wolf said following
the win versus D.C. “Many of my goals were on fast breaks,
which also helps.”
Robertson added, “That’s our team strength, we are a fast
team. We’re usually running the other team down, so we just
took advantage of that. When we saw (Wolf) had the ball, we
don’t think twice and we run—we just keep going at it and don’t
give up.”
Senior goaltender Melissa Wells is impressed by the team
because of its stellar, multi-option offense.
“This is the first year we’ve had a balanced (scoring) threat
where in past years we’ve had only one or two people, and when
a defense shuts them down they shut down our offense,” Wells
said. “This year has been a team effort and that’s what we’ve
been trying to build all year.”
However, the weekend comes back to reflecting on the life
and honoring a former member of the Women’s Team Handball
squad, Walker, a Class of 2003 graduate who was killed in action
Aug. 18, 2005, in Afghanistan.
“It’s the idea of legacy … we started a tradition of once every
two weeks, (head coach) Maj. Renee Ramsey would post pictures
on Facebook and tell a story because (Laura and her) were
classmates, they were best friends and they were co-captains,”
Wolf said. “It’s really cool to see because Melissa and I are really
good friends and we’re also co-captains.
“I think it comes down to Laura wasn’t just a handball player,
she was an amazing person overall,” Wolf added. “She really
built this idea of team … and strongly encouraged subordinates
in the real Army.”
Wells conversed about living up to being the kind of leader
Walker was and that is hers and her teammates’ ultimate goal.
Wells also talked about Laura’s parents, who were unable to make
this year’s tournament but have multiple times in the past, who
spoke to the plebe class during the summer when Beast I was
named Task Force Walker in Laura’s honor.
“They addressed the entire class, so it wasn’t just the handball
girls who have an idea of her legacy, but now it’s the entire Class
of 2018,” Wells said.
Wolf said there are eight plebes on the team right now and
she asked them what Laura Walker meant to them.
“They said handball and Laura Walker are kind of combined
with their West Point experience,” Wolf said. “It’s one of the
first things they ever did. It was sitting down and learning about
Laura and her legacy and what she left behind.
“It was really cool to understand and see it because I wasn’t
actually a part of Beast this summer,” Wolf added. “When our
plebes stood up and said that, it was really neat because Laura
and handball are synonymous to them now.”
The West Point Women’s Team Handball heads to Collegiate
Nationals in Auburn, Alabama, next weekend.
(Editor’s note: See the next page for quotes from coach
Maj. Renee Ramsey.)
Pointer View
April 2, 2015
7
LAURA WALKER, cont’d from Page 6
Quotes from West Point Black Team Handball Coach Maj. Renee Ramsey:
• (Ref: Strategy in final five minutes down four)
“Our goalkeeper, Melissa Wells, suggested a press defense to steal the ball in the final
minute. The strategy was effective and we got the ball back with less than 20 seconds on the
clock, but were unable to put it in the net—the comeback fell one goal short. No story book
ending this time.”
• (Ref: Team’s talent and ability to come back)
“Multiple times this season, players and coaches from other teams remarked that this is
the best team from West Point they’ve faced in recent memory. The talent, athleticism and
tenacity of this team is incredible—anchored by our outstanding firstie players like Dajah
Davis, who battled down in the pivot position for nearly all six games without a substitute.
“Although everyone wanted the win, I couldn’t be prouder of the play on both of our
teams (including West Point Gold team) this weekend.”
• (Ref: The team going forward)
“I am excited for this talented team to show its true potential in the next eight weeks. We
travel to the College National Championships down in Auburn later this week, Los Angeles
for a elite tourney in April and finish with the Club National Championships in May. We will
undoubtedly face NYC again at that final competition.”
• (Ref: As a Class of 2003 graduate and classmate/close friend of Laura Walker, talk
about how special it is to honor her with this event and how much it means to you to keep
this tradition going for future cadets/generations)
“I joined the team one year ago to the day. Upon that first meeting, I was pleased to see
that Laura’s legacy of service was still remembered by the team even 10 years removed. Since
joining the team, I’ve made an effort to deepen that legacy by sharing Laura’s story with them
via her impact on former Soldiers, classmates, friends and teammates.
“It’s amazing to witness how her service and sacrifice serve as a touchstone for these cadets
as they negotiate daily cadet life in preparation for their own service to our nation. Although
the cadets never had the opportunity to know Laura, she remains central to their team identity
and a source of their inspiration to serve.
“It’s amazing to see her legacy remain so strong here. Laura also remains an inspiration to
me personally. I hope to make a positive difference in the lives of these cadets in some small
way as a tribute to the immeasurable impact Laura had in mine.”
Senior back Ashton Wolf breaks the grasp of a D.C. team defender to score
one of her 23 goals during the 1st Lt. Laura Walker Memorial Team Handball
Tournament.
Local Gymnastics Champion
West Point’s Eli Osuna competed in the New York State Boys Gymnastics
Championship, Level 4, with Kennett Gymnastics team March 21. Eli took first place
in the state in all six events that includes parallel bars, vault, floor, pommel horse,
rings and high bar events. Eli placed first in the All Around, becoming the New York
State Champion. Eli’s win helped Kennett Gymnastics team capture the team state
title for Level 4. He is the son of Lt. Col. Jim and Laura Osuna. Photos by Cordell Hoffer
8 April 2, 2015
FEATURED ITEM
Post-wide Easter Sunrise Service
A Post-wide Easter Sunrise Service is scheduled for
Sunday with a 6:30 a.m. breakfast and a 7 a.m. service at
the West Point Club Grand Ballroom.
It is free with special music provided by the West Point
Combined Protestant Choir.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Holy Week schedule at Most Holy Trinity Catholic
Chapel
• Holy Thursday Mass, 7 p.m. today;
• Good Friday Service, 7 p.m. Friday;
• Easter Vigil Mass on Holy Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Saturday;
• Easter Sunday Masses at 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 5:15
p.m. Sunday.
Confessions are available by appointment before Holy
Saturday.
Commissary closure
The West Point Commissary will be closed on Easter Sunday.
Night of the Arts
The inaugural “John Calabro Night of the Arts,” celebrating
cadet artistic achievement, is scheduled 6 p.m. April 10 in the
Haig Room, Jefferson Hall.
See cadet original submissions in the following categories:
film, studio arts, photography, prose, poetry and music.
eJihad: Extremism and the Internet
The Lower Hudson Valley Chapter of the Military Officers
Association of America will have Dr. Luke Gerdes address
this important and timely topic of “eJihad: Extremism and the
Internet,” noon-2:30 p.m. April 19 in Cullum Hall’s Memorial
Room.
He will speak and then the lecture will be followed by food
and fellowship. The event is catered and there will be a fee for
all who attend.
RSVP by sending a check for the food no later than April 10.
If you have questions, contact the Chapter President, retired CW3
Doug Little, at 914-954-2827 or at lowerhudsonvalleymoaa@
gmail.com.
Send checks/money orders to:
Lower Hudson Valley Chapter MOAA
P.O. Box 1607
White Plains, NY 10602-1607
WPSC’s Cookbook and Gift Shoppe hours
The West Point Spouses’ Club’s newest cookbook, “Eat,
Drink & Beat Navy” is available in the West Point Spouses’
Club Gift Shoppe.
The Gift Shoppe is open from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. on Wednesdays
in April.
The Gift Shoppe is located inside Bldg. 695, the white
building in the parking lot behind the Cemetery off Washington
Road.
WPSC Scholarship Application
Each year, the West Point Spouses’ Club offers scholarships
to individuals continuing their education. To be eligible to receive
a WPSC Scholarship, an applicant must be a WPSC member
or high school senior who is a child of a WPSC member who
has joined by Jan. 6, or within 30 days of arrival of West Point,
whichever is later.
Academic scholarships must be used for payment of tuition
and fees associated with an accredited college-level program,
continuing education, or training.
This is a one-time scholarship opportunity, for both member
and high school senior.
Community
To download a copy of the scholarship application, visit
http://westpointspousesclub.com/Scholarships.html.
Pointer View
EDUCATION and WORKSHOPS
Personnel Testing (APT) programs such as the AFCT, DLAB,
DLPT, SIFT through the DA and DLI.
Tests are free of charge to Soldiers. Call the Testing Center
at 938-3360 or email [email protected] for details or
an appointment.
FAST Class in April
Raise your GT score. The Army Education Center, 683
Buckner Loop (next to Subway), is offering a Functional
Academic Skills Training (FAST) from April 20-May 12. The
class meets 12:30-4:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday.
Contact Nancy Judd at 938-3464 or Neil Sakumoto at 9385389 for an enrollment form. Commander approval is required
prior to April 13.
DANTES testing
The Army Education Center at West Point offers academic
testing programs through the Defense Activity for NonTraditional Education Support (DANTES) such as the SAT and
ACT.
Pearson VUE offers licensing and certification exams. Most
tests are free of charge to Soldiers.
Call the Testing Center at 938-3360 or email gwenn.
[email protected] for details or an appointment.
Upcoming West Point Soldier For Life—TAP
Transition Workshops
Transition Workshops are designed to assist separating or
retiring service members and their family members in preparing
for a smooth transition to civilian life.
The workshops provide information on entitlements and
services available, including the Department of Veterans Affairs
Veterans’ Benefits Briefings.
The Department of Labor also conducts an extensive
employment workshop. Service members are required to begin
the SFL-TAP no later than 12 months before transition.
Upcoming schedule dates are:
• April 27-May 1 (Waiting List);
• May 11-15;
• June 1-5;
• June 13-17;
• June 22-26 (Executive/Retirement Level);
• July 27-31 (Executive/Retirement Level).
Registration is required.
Contact the SFL-TAP Office at 845-938-0634 to register or
for more details.
IETD Computer Training Program
The Information Education and Technology Division is
offering computer courses that include Word, Excel, PowerPoint,
Outlook, computer skills, keyboard typing skills lab, Dell XT3
Tablet, Lenovo Tablet and Apple iPad information system.
Most courses are held over three days, 1-4 p.m. TuesdayThursday.
Courses are offered to O/Dean Staff and Faculty, and if
space permits, to other departments and USMA affiliates (tenant
organizations, USMA spouses and volunteers.)
Courses are held in Jefferson Memorial Library (Bldg. 758),
4th Floor, Room 414 (IETD Classroom).
For details, contact Thomas A. Gorman at 938-1186 or email
[email protected].
Army Education Center
College courses are offered through the Army Education
Center at West Point.
Undergraduate classes:
• Mount Saint Mary College—Call Shari Seidule at 845-4460535 or email [email protected];
• Saint Thomas Aquinas—Call Erica Rodriguez at 845-4462555 or email [email protected].
Graduate studies:
• John Jay College of Criminal Justice–Master’s Degree in
Public Administration—Call Jennifer Heiney at 845-446-5959
or email [email protected];
• Long Island University–Master’s Degrees in School
Counseling, Mental Health Counseling and Marriage and Family
Counseling—Call Mary Beth Leggett at 845-446-3818 or email
marybeth.leggett @liu.edu.
The Army Education Center is located at 683 Buckner Loop
(between Starbucks and Subway).
Army Personnel Testing programs
The Army Education Center at West Point offers Army
OUTSIDE THE GATES
Storm King Mountain Hike
Join the Hudson Highlands Nature Museum at Storm King
Mountain for a rigorous hike up the mountain from noon-4
p.m. April 11.
The hike, led by environmental educator Lisa Mechaley, is
geared for adults and children 12 and older who would like to
learn about the history of Storm King Mountain and want to
enjoy the extraordinary views of the Hudson.
Meet at the Trailhead off route 218. Complete directions
will be emailed. Wear sturdy shoes and dress in layers; bring
water and a snack. Prepaid registration is required.
For details and to register, visit hhnm.org or call 845-5345506, ext. 204.
2nd Infantry Division Veterans
The Mid-Atlantic Branch of the Second Indianhead
Division Association will host its annual reunion May 1-3 at
the Continental Inn in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
All veterans of the Army’s 2nd Infantry Division are invited.
For details, call Harry Roye at 804-526-0828 or send an
email to [email protected].
Cornwall-on-Hudson RiverFest
The Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson will host its 18th annual
RiverFest from 11 a.m.-6 p.m. June 6 at Donahue Park on the
shores of the Hudson River.
The RiverFest will feature a full day of music and
entertainment, children’s activities and a large craft and food
fair. The day’s events will include live bands, river activities,
food stands and non-profit groups and contributors.
Vendor spaces are still available. RiverFest will accept
vendor applications until all spaces have been filled.
There is no charge for RiverFest. Visitors are invited to
bring a blanket or lawn chair. Visit www.river-fest.com for
up to date information.
For more details, call Wynn Gold at 845-534-7622.
His Promised Covenant Ministry
Church services for His Promised Covenant Ministry are
scheduled 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Saturdays at 44 Balmville Road,
Newburgh, New York, in the Union Presbyterian Church.
For details, contact Tammy L. Beard at choco662000@
yahoo.com or call 254-371-3125.
The West Point ID Card Operations Office will
conduct business on an appointment-only basis for
all DEERS and ID Card operations.
Hours of Operation: 8-11:30 a.m. and
1-3:30 p.m.
To make an appointment, visit https://rapidsappointments.dmdc.osd.mil
Time Slots are now available. Call 938-2607 to
reserve a slot. For details, call 938-8483.
Pointer View
aPril 2, 2015
WEST POINT MWR CALENDAR
FEATURED EVENT
Mother-Son Dance at the West Point Club
The West Point Club presents its first Mother-Son Dance
scheduled 6-9 p.m. April 10 for an evening of dinner, dessert
and dancing.
Dress in your Sunday best. There will be a professional
photographer on site, too.
There is a minimal cost per couple and an additional cost
for each additional son.
For details and to make reservations, call 938-5120.
JUST ANNOUNCED
Cash and Carry Sale
Come to the West Point Club between 9 a.m.-1 p.m. April 12
for a Cash and Carry Sale to include burgundy gasser stacking
chairs and various china and flatware.
Items must be paid for and picked up during the sale time.
The Club accepts cash, Visa or MasterCard.
No personal checks accepted. For details, call 938-5506.
Earth Day Open House
Celebrate Mother Earth at the Recycling Center (located
across from Round Pond, Route 293) from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. April
24. There are T-shirts, giveaways and food available.
Donate your old cell phone for Soldiers and shred those
unwanted papers. Don’t forget to join the Earth Day Poster
Contest, visit www.westpointmwr.com for contest rules.
For details, call 938-8229.
Month of the Military Child Carnival
Join Child, Youth and School Services as it celebrates West
Point’s Military children from 12:30-3:30 p.m. April 25 at the
Middle School Teen Center, Bldg. 500.
This will be an afternoon filled with carnival games, face
painting, prizes and more. This event is free and will happen
rain or shine.
For details, call 938-3696.
La Casa Nostra with Vinny Mozzarella and Friends
Join the West Point Club from 6-9 p.m. May 1 for a night
filled with Italian music and authentic Italian food prepared right
in front of you by the Club’s culinary experts.
Come and watch “Vinny Mozzarella” prepare homemade
mozzarella cheese surrounded by the Club’s Antipasto Bar. See
Chef Brandon stuff homemade cannolis at the Cannoli Dipping
Bar.
Chef Steve prepares the Club’s famous Rissoto Bar with all
the fixings.
Enjoy a night filled with wonderful music by Carmelo Liardi.
For details and reservations, call 938-5120.
Mother’s Day Contest
Do you have a great mom? Tell us about her in the West Point
Club’s Mother’s Day Contest. The Club’s panel of judges will
review all entries and choose a winner on May 1.
The winner will receive a “Day at the Spa,” plus complimentary
Mother’s Day Brunch at the Club for four.
Visit www.westpointmwr.com for contest rules.
Submission deadline is April 24. For details, call 938-5120.
West Point Golf Course Sales Office Relocation
Due to the West Point Golf Course club house renovations,
the Golf Course Sales Office will be operating out of the West
Point Ski Lodge for the 2015 season.
The Ski Lodge is located approximately one mile north on
Route 218 (at the U.S. Mint and Ski entrance).
Call 938-2435 for updated office relocation information.
FOR THE ADULTS
AER Bake Sale
Take a break from Easter baking and come out to support
your 2015 Army Emergency Relief Campaign 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
Saturday at the Exchange and Commissary complexes.
A variety of baked goods will be available from sweet to
savory, breakfast items, breads and more. All proceeds go directly
to the 2015 AER Campaign.
For details, contact 938-0636 or [email protected].
Volunteer Recognition Ceremony
All West Point community volunteers are invited to attend
the annual Volunteer Recognition Ceremony 10:30-11:15 a.m.
Wednesday, a reception will follow the official ceremony.
The event will be held in the U.S. Military Academy Prep
School Auditorium, located near the Washington Gate on 950
Reynolds Road.
Call Army Community Service’s Jen Partridge at 938-3655
or email [email protected] to RSVP.
Murder Mystery Dinner Theater
Reality TV and murder comes to the West Point Club as it
presents “The Real Housewives of Murder” at 7 p.m. April 17.
Enjoy cocktail hour, dinner, cash bar, dessert and dancing.
Join the club for a new comedy murder mystery dinner show
by New York’s leading comedy murder mystery dinner theater
group, “The Killing Kompany.”
During this interactive evening, you will sit among
professional Broadway, TV and film actors and will have a chance
to be part of the show.
For details and to make reservations, call 938-5120.
Hunter’s Education Course
Outdoor Recreation is hosting a New York State Hunter’s
Education Course from 6-10 p.m. April 17 and 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
April 18 at Bonneville Cabin, Round Pond.
Hunters must attend both classes to receive credit. Bring a
bagged lunch on April 18. Registration is ongoing, call 938-2503.
Edible Office Grams
Do you know an admin professional who has gone above
and beyond to help you? Why not start the week off by saying
“Thank You.”
Choose from Breakfast Grams or Chocoholic’s Delight
Grams. Both will be delivered April 20.
Call 446-5506/5504 to order your platters. Deadline for
ordering is April 18.
Friday Night Jam
Join the MWR Fitness Center for Friday Night Jam Belly
Dancing 5:30-6:30 p.m. April 24 and May 29. For details, call
938-6490.
Hired! Workforce Preparation Workshop
All interested youth must have a current CYSS Membership
on file to attend the Hired! workforce preparation workshop at
the Youth Center, Bldg. 500, Washington Road.
Workshops are free and for youth, grades 6-12.
15.
•
9
www.westpointmwr.com
Who is the Internal Revenue Service?—4-5 p.m. April
Completing six workshops is a prerequisite for the Hired!
Program. To learn more about the program, call Marion
DeClemente at 938-8889.
30-minute Beginner Boot Camp
The MWR Fitness Center Beginner Boot Camp is back, so
get out of the house and join us. Need to lose some winter weight
or suffering from an injury?
The Fitness Center is pleased to offer something a little slower
with more modifications available. The camp is scheduled at 8:45
a.m. Tuesdays at Gillis Field House through April.
There is a small fee for this class, and children are welcome
to play on the side. For details, call 938-6490.
FOR THE FAMILIES
EFMP Family Event/PAWS for KIDS
As the weather gets warmer and calendars get fuller,
remember your fun Exceptional Family Member Program events.
Come by to have some fun or meet other families with special
needs you might have in common.
All our events are free and held at ACS, Bldg. 622 unless
otherwise noted.
• April 14, 21 and 28—PAWS for KIDS, 3:30-5 p.m.
For details, contact EFMP Program Manager Josephine
Toohey at 938-5655, [email protected] or the program
assistant Anne Marshall at 938-0232 or anne.marshall@usma.
edu.
West Point 5K/10K
Registration is now open for the West Point 5K/10K on May
9. Register online with www.active.com, keyword “West Point.”
For details, call 938-4690.
Horseback Riding Camps registration
Morgan Farm is gearing up for Summer Horseback riding
camps. The camp dates are set and it is now accepting 2015
camp registrations. Three- and five-day sessions will be offered.
Families of deployed service members receive a 10 percent
discount. For details, call 938-3926 or e-mail morganfarm@
westpointmwr.com.
FOR THE YOUTHS
Spring Preschool Story Hour
The West Point Post Library will hold its Spring Preschool
Story Hour through April 28. The story times will be held at 1:30
pm. every Tuesday and is open to all West Point community
children ages 3-5.
Pre-registration is required. Call 938-2974 or stop by the
library in Bldg. 622 to sign up.
Summer Camp Counselor volunteers needed
Come volunteer at the CYS Services School Age Center and
spend your summer gaining valuable work experience while
having fun.
Volunteers must have completed 8th grade and attended the
required training (dates to be determined) to volunteer.
Applicants will be interviewed prior to selection and have
completed a full background check if selected. Background
check information will be required to be submitted by May 15.
All volunteers must be registered with CYSS. Applications
can be picked up at the CYS Services MST Center, Bldg. 500.
For details, call 938-8889/0089.
Pointer View
10 aPril 2, 2015
Balfour Beatty Communities
Foundation scholarships available
to $2,500 with larger amounts granted for
exceptional submissions.
Each year the scholarship applicants
impress us with their academic and community
achievements and we are proud to be able to help
support their education ambitions through our
scholarship program.
For more details regarding scholarship
requirements and to complete an application,
visit the Foundation’s website at www.
bbcommunitiesfoundation.org.
Applications must be postmarked no later
than April 15.
MOVIES at MAHAN
Theatre schedule at Mahan Hall, Bldg. 752.
Friday—Seventh Son, PG-13, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday—The Duff, PG-13, 7:30 p.m.
April 10—Project Almanac, PG-13, 7:30 p.m.
(For movie details and updates schedules, visit www.
shopmyexchange.com/reel-time-theatres/WestPoint-1044343.)
LifeWorks
at Balfour Beatty Communities
• BBC Academic Scholarship
Program: Balfour Beatty Communities
Foundation 2015-16 academic scholarship
program’s deadline is April 15.
The deadline for applying to the Balfour
Beatty Communities Foundation scholarship
program is quickly approaching.
Be sure that your child doesn’t miss the
opportunity to apply for 2015-16 academic
scholarships.
Keller offers Childbirth Education
Classes
Are you expecting a child this summer?
Are you nervous because you’re not sure
what to expect? If so, please join Keller
Army Community Hospital’s Childbirth
Education Class Series.
The course continues every Wednesday
in April.
To register and/or get details, contact
Keller’s Labor & Delivery unit at 938-3210.
members of the West Point community who
sustain new injuries to be able to quickly
receive an evaluation, diagnosis and plan
of care as soon as possible and without the
need for a referral.
The PT will assess the need for X-rays,
other diagnostic studies, or other specialty
care required.
This time is not intended for chronic
conditions that have been ongoing for
weeks or months. For these more chronic
conditions, routine appointments can be
made (also with or without referral) by
calling (845) 938-3324.
PT sick call will be held at 7:30 a.m.
Monday-Friday, except on federal and
training holidays, and periodically as
announced.
Physical Therapy “Sick Call” for Active
Duty and Family Members at KACH
Got new sprains or strains? Did you
wipe out on the ski slope or over-do it
shoveling snow?
Starting this month, active duty
members and their dependents will be able
to see a Physical Therapist (PT), at Keller,
for musculo-skeletal injuries on a walk-in
basis—without an appointment at 7:30 a.m.
The intent of this pilot program is for
TRICARE North and Health Net Mobile
Beneficiaries in the TRICARE North
Region can connect to Health Net’s mobile
site at www.hnfs.com/go/mobile. This
streamlined version of www.hnfs.com can
be accessed on smartphones and tablets with
no download required.
You can locate TRICARE-authorized
providers, Health Net contact information,
mental health resources and answers to
frequently asked TRICARE questions.
Keller information
Get up-to-date Keller Army Community
Hospital information at http://kach.
amedd.army.mil/ or on social media
a t h t t p : / / w w w. f a c e b o o k . c o m /
kellerarmycommunityhospital/.
Submitted by Balfour Beatty
Communities
Balfour Beatty Communities
Foundation is now accepting
applications for 2015-16
scholarships for children of active
duty service members.
The Foundation is accepting
scholarship applications from high
school seniors, undergraduate and
graduate students who are children
of our military family housing
residents.
Scholarship applicants must
be (1) the child of an active duty
service member currently residing
at a Balfour Beatty Communities
military housing property, and
(2) planning to attend or already
attending an accredited college or
university on a full-time basis in
the fall of 2015, or be enrolled in a program of
study designed to transfer directly into a fouryear program.
The Balfour Beatty Communities Foundation
is a non-profit organization committed to
supporting the post-secondary educational
goals of residents who live at a Balfour Beatty
Communities property.
Since the scholarship program’s inception in
2009, Balfour Beatty Communities Foundation
has awarded more than 150 academic
scholarships to active duty service members.
Scholarship awards range from $1,000
Keller Corner
We encourage all high school student
community members to apply.
Vi s i t t h e B a l f o u r B e a t t y
Communities Foundation website at
www.bbcommunitiesfoundation.org/
scholarships.
• Yard Sale: The West Point Spring Yard
Sale is scheduled from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. April 18.
The event takes place rain or shine.
West Point Command Channel Channels 8/23
For the week of April 2-9
Army Newswatch
Thursday, Friday and Monday-April 9
8:30 a.m., 1 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Pointer View
Sports
April 2, 2015 11
Glenn earns trio of ECAC individual titles, NCAAs up next
By Kelly Dumrauf
Army Athletic Communications
Coming off of his second straight all-around
title in day one of the Eastern College Athletic
Conference (ECAC) Championships, junior
Jesse Glenn claimed a trio of individual event
victories in day two March 28, earning the title
on vault, parallel bars and floor exercise.
Glenn claimed a score of 14.900 on vault,
14.500 on parallel bars and 15.000 on high bar
to earn the championship crowns. The win was
his second consecutive ECAC high bar title.
In addition, sophomore Sam Kusnitz tied
for first on floor exercise with a score of 14.450.
Army reeled in a number of postseason
accolades as well with Nathan Goff earning
Rookie of the Year, Doug Van Everen earning
Coach of the Year and Carmine Giglio and Carl
Schrade being recognized as Assistant Coaches
of the Year.
Joining Kusnitz on the winners’ podium on
floor exercise was Seth Cannon who took third
with a score of 14.200.
Connor Venrick earned fourth on pommel
horse (14.200) and still rings (14.350). Andre
Hufnagel took ninth on pommel with a mark of
13.500 Joe Pritts claimed sixth on rings with a
score of 13.900.
Kusnitz placed seventh on vault with a mark
of 14.250 and was followed by Pritts’ eighth
place score of 14.200.
Chris Short took fourth on parallel bars with
a score of 14.150 and was joined by Goff who
earned fifth with a score of 14.100.
Goff also took fifth on high bar with a score
of 14.050 and was joined by Kusnitz who placed
seventh with a score of 13.900.
With the team win March 27, Army
earned an automatic berth into the NCAA
Championships, which are slated for April 9-11
from Norman, Oklahoma.
Junior Jesse Glenn (above, right)
claimed a trio of individual event
victories in day two March 28, earning
the ECAC title on vault, parallel bars
and floor exercise. Glenn claimed a
score of 14.900 on vault, 14.500 on
parallel bars and 15.000 on high bar
to earn the championship crowns.
The win was his second consecutive
ECAC high bar title.
Photos by Cordell Hoffer
Pointer View
12 April 2, 2015
McCravey’s grand slam launches Army to sweep of Holy Cross
By Mady Salvani
Army Athletic Communications
Army’s softball team completed its three-game series sweep
of Holy Cross Sunday as the Black Knights took both ends of
a Patriot League doubleheader from the Crusaders at the Army
Softball Complex in their conference debut.
Kasey McCravey homered, doubled and drove in five runs
going 3-for-4, and Caroline Smith scattered six hits in Army’s
5-2 defeat of Holy Cross in the opening game.
Kristen West went the distance on a three hitter, struck out
three and did not walk a batter, as Army cruised to a 7-1 victory
in the nightcap after jumping out to an early 4-0 lead to close
out the three-game sweep after the Black Knights won the first
game of the series (2-1 in 12 innings) Saturday afternoon.
McCravey smacked a grand slam home run over the fence
in left field in the bottom of the fourth inning in the opener that
snapped a scoreless deadlock for a 4-0 lead after capitalizing
on three hits and a walk in that inning.
Alyssa Strobehn led off with a walk followed by back-toback singles by Alex Gaff and Gladys Esparza-Gallegos to load
that bases in setting the stage for McCravey who took a 1-1
offering from Katy Watson (1-2) in ripping her fifth home run
of the season. McCravey finished the game with three hits to
include a pair of doubles.
Holy Cross, held to just two hits over the first five innings,
collected three off Smith in the top of the sixth that cut Army’s
lead in half as the Crusaders drew to 4-2 on Becky Geddes’
two-run single.
Smith, who hurled Army to its first two wins over Holy
Cross, retired four of the next five batters she faced to put the
game away.
McCravey, who had a hand in all five runs, knocked in SJ
Aversa, who reached on a fielder’s choice, for an insurance run
with her two-out double in the bottom of the sixth inning for a
5-2 lead in closing out the scoring.
Army collected eight hits off Watson led by McCravey’s
three along with a pair by Esparza-Gallegos. Smith, picking up
her fourth win of the week, improved to 5-8.
In the nightcap, Army staked West to an early lead scoring
runs in three of the first four innings to pull out to a 6-0
advantage. Xiomara Perez doubled home Alee Rashenskas,
who led off the second inning with a single and was sacrificed
to second, to put Army up 1-0.
Army stretched its lead to 4-0 following a three-run third
behind run scoring singles by Kristen McPeek, Rashenskas and
Alex Gaff. Esperza-Gallegos keyed a two-run fourth with an
RBI hit knocking in McCravey and crossing herself on Emily
Gray’s run-scoring single as the Black Knights pulled ahead 6-0.
West kept Holy Cross in check scattering one hit over the
first five innings before being touched for her second hit of the
game with one out in the top of the sixth, but retired the next
two batters to nip that rally.
After Army padded its lead to 7-0 on Rashenskas’ runscoring double chasing home McPeek in the home half of the
sixth, the Black Knights lost out on their shutout in the seventh
on an unearned run after the leadoff batter reached on an error.
Junior third baseman Kasey McCravey celebrates rounding the bases as her teammates wait at home plate after hitting a grand slam homer in the fourth inning
of Army’s 5-2 victory over Holy Cross Sunday at the Army Softball Complex. The Black Knights swept the weekend series over the Crusaders.
Photo by Mady Salvani/Army Athletic Communications
16 April 2, 2015
Pointer View
Junior Jake Banarhall recorded three tries for the Black Knights in the second half to help Army defeat Navy, 41-24, March 28 at Anderson Rugby Complex.
Photos by Sgt. 1st Class Jeremy Bunkley/USMA PAO
Banarhall, second half onslaught leads Army past Navy
By Kelly Dumrauf
Army Athletic Communications
Freshman David Huff uses his speed to sprint to the
try zone and solidify Army’s lead versus Navy during
the Black Knights 41-24 win March 28.
Second half dominance and a late-scoring onslaught propelled
the fifth-ranked Black Knights to a 41-24 victory over serviceacademy rival Navy March 28 on the snow covered turf of
Anderson Rugby Complex.
Junior Jake Banarhall recorded three tries for the Black
Knights in the second half to help secure the victory as Army
posted 36 second-half points.
“It was a typical Army-Navy game and they were in every
bit of it,” head coach Mike Mahan said. “In the second half the
guys just decided they were going to put their foot on the gas
and not let up. It was just an awesome second half and they did
a great job.”
Army got on the board first with captain Collum Magee
setting the pace, recording a diving try in the 17th minute to put
the Black Knights up by a score of 5-0.
Navy took the 7-5 advantage in the 30th minute with a try
and successful conversion and the Black Knights headed into the
break with a two-point deficit.
Andy Sullivan swung the momentum back in favor of the
Black Knights when he posted a try in the 41st minute. Dan
Myers connected on the kick to put Army up by a mark of 12-7.
The Midshipmen rattled off back-to-back scores in the 45th
and 53rd minutes to go up by a score of 17-12 before Banarhall
returned the favor.
The junior recorded scores in the 54th and 57th minutes to
earn the 22-17 advantage.
Navy would respond in the 66th minute to regain the twopoint lead. That, however, would be the final points of the
afternoon for the Midshipmen as the Black Knights took control
of the game.
Plebe David Huff used his speed to run in for a try down
the Army sideline as Myers converted the kick to give Army
the 29-24 lead.
With the momentum firmly on the Black Knights’ side,
Banarhall scored his third of the afternoon and Myers added the
conversion as Army went up by a mark of 36-24.
Andrew Fargo sealed the deal for his top-ranked squad as
he earned a score in the waning seconds of regulation to seal
the 41-24 victory.
“Beating Navy is all about the intensity and hard work,”
Banarhall said. “At the half it was 7-5 and then all of a sudden it
got turned up. That’s Army-Navy. It’s just about tight game play
and everything is close. No one is willing to lose. We amplified
our offense. Our defense was strong in the first half but we didn’t
really have the possession and that was our main goal. We could
outplay the Navy team and we did.”
The win improves Army to a mark of 15-1 overall, having
earned seven consecutive wins to open the spring season. They
remain unblemished in regular season action.
The Black Knights will return to action on Saturday when
they host second-ranked St. Mary’s from Anderson Rugby
Complex.
That game is slated to be broadcast live on Knight Vision.