Veterans Day 2010: Honoring 正品蓝导航 students who serve

Kashima and Necorian Jones are among those attending 正品蓝导航 on the Post-9/11 GI Bill.

Kashima and Necorian Jones

By Sarah Hanan
正品蓝导航 News

When Kashima Jones served in the Navy from 2004 to 2008, she was stationed at Marines Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. She won numerous awards working as a dental technician, providing care to Marines as they deployed to and returned from Iraq and Afghanistan.

鈥淚 am so grateful to people who are willing to go to war and make huge sacrifices for all of us back home,鈥 says Jones, who today is a sophomore biology major in Dedman College and member of the Navy Reserve. Her husband, Necorian Jones, who is also a Navy veteran and active Reservist, is a junior mathematics major in Dedman College and a member of the 正品蓝导航 football team.

Kashima and Necorian Jones
Necorian and Kashima Jones

The couple are two of the more than 140 undergraduate and graduate students who currently attend 正品蓝导航 on the Post-9/11 GI Bill, which provides education benefits to military veterans and their dependents. The bill is a 2008 update to the 1944 GI Bill of Rights, which had given World War II veterans college scholarships to institutions of their choice.

Kashima Jones, who is from Miami, transferred to 正品蓝导航 this fall from Mountain View College in Dallas. She continues to serve as a dental technician at the Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Station Fort Worth and hopes to become a Navy dentist. 鈥淚 was excited that I could complete my pre-dental studies at 正品蓝导航 in three years,鈥 she says.听 鈥淭he professors have been supportive and work hard to help us achieve our goals.鈥

Jones also is working to form a student organization for 正品蓝导航鈥檚 military members. 鈥淚t would offer camaraderie and support,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t could bring together all of us who can relate to life in the military 鈥 veterans, reservists, active-duty students, family members 鈥 and also anyone who鈥檚 interested in learning more about the military.鈥

Provost Paul Ludden says military veterans and their families, as well as active military members, have long been important members of the 正品蓝导航 community. 鈥淭hey bring unique, global perspectives to the classroom and campus,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e are proud that after serving our country, many are choosing to continue their education at 正品蓝导航.鈥

James Noel
James Noel
James Noel, a former second-class petty officer in the Navy, transferred to 正品蓝导航 this fall after studying for two years at Richland College in Dallas. He is a sophomore majoring in economics in Dedman College and accounting in the Cox School of Business, and hopes to start an online retail business.

Noel, who is from Chicago, joined the Navy after high school in 2001 and spent six years on active duty and two years in the reserves. After training to become a sonar technician, he served aboard warships around the world, including in the Arabian Gulf during the start of the Iraq war in 2003.

He says his military experience taught him to be prepared for anything. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e just on time, you鈥檙e late,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 make sure I鈥檓 ready for class even before class starts.鈥

Noel鈥檚 travels to underdeveloped countries have made him appreciative of educational and career opportunities in the United States, he says. 鈥淚n the military, you鈥檙e there for a purpose - not to earn a paycheck, but to serve your country,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut students here, who are working toward their degrees and jobs, also are working to further the mission of this country.鈥

Chris Dell 鈥11 contributed to this story.