Navy is everything about higher education – literal and metaphorical.
The military branch won the MH-60s Knighthawk helicopter at the Bibul Stadium at Benjamin N School. Cardoso High School in Paiside on Friday, in front of hundreds of students who confuse and students.
The demonstration – part of the fleet week – was a dream for the reserve officer training legion at the Queens Secondary School (NJROTC) for a period of four years in making the first time that such an event is conducted on the property of the city's schools at least a decade.
“Last year, we went to the fleet week. This year, they brought the fleet week,” said Reddhi Chauhan, 16, a senior officer next year.
The publication was given a view of the eye for the birds for the amazing ride, which started at Titroro Airport in New Jersey, via Central Park and along the Queens until it reaches amazing high school.
Hundreds of students chanted while the Bahris officers of the EOD munition unit (EOD) performed a quick rope demonstration – this means that they slipped into the baseball field while the helicopter was hovering a few dozen of the ground.
The energy remained high throughout the event, as high school students met the officers and discovered a glimpse of what their future might seem.
“It is a huge thing. Just seeing everyone meets to attend such an event, this means that the world must know that we are all here for each other … we are one big family,” said Chanel Kelly, 18, who is one of the elderly, a military school in Vermont.
Watching the helicopter and interviewing maritime officers has become “very excited” to achieve her dreams in working with the Naval War Unit, which she chose because she knows that it will be difficult.
Cardozo was strongly competing for a helicopter and a quick rope demonstration for four years – as long as Njrotc existed.
The program includes approximately 300 students-approximately 23 % of the total student residents-which makes it one of the fastest growth in the country, according to director Meagan Colby, adding that not all students will continue to join the army, but most of them have aspirations to serve the country in some way.
For Chauhan – the head of the incoming program – she only realized her dream of becoming a naval nuclear engineer once she joined the Njrotc program last year.
She joined Njrotc because she looks like a pleasant experience and will be a great biography, until she opened her eyes in the form of a naval profession.
“Once you really join your point of view, all branches are very unique and are completely different from a 9 to 5 job experience,” she said.
Haswi Singh, 17, leaves her predecessor to study before the law at the American University in the fall with future plans to join the navy after graduation.
“I want to get that moment in my career, where I work my country and return,” said Bilrrouz's citizen.
“Today is particularly important to me. It gives respect and awareness about students in the program, and what many warriors do, and how they serve the country, whether it is navy, the marine, and the army … and there is a helicopter, he does not like it. There is music!”
As for the service, the opportunity was equally valuable – and some of them presented the opportunity to dispel some of the misconceptions that the navy is purely related to the sea operations.
“Their notes were really rewarding – to see how enthusiastically they come. I think we sometimes forget how important this people are? So it was a really good chance for me to be able to appreciate this,” said Eric Larson, a member of EOD soldiers on the helicopter.
The partition deals with threats and explosive risks, whether it is chemical, biological or nuclear and whether it is on the ground or underwater-a unit that relies heavily on science was particularly curious for students in Cardoso, which includes a variety of science programs.