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Graduates of the Naval Academy are commissioned officers. They are assigned to ships and units. They will be deployed as part of the unit.
That is the status of all graduates of the Naval Academy. They graduated with the Bachelor of Science degree. All graduates receive a Bachelor of Science Degree.
Absolutely not - there are far more planes in the Navy than there will ever be Academy graduates who are on a flight career path.
75%
The Naval Academy was organized in 1845 by Secretary of the Navy George Bancroft. It was first known as the Naval School but that was changed to the current Naval Academy. In 1930 the curriculum was accredited by The Association of American Universities. In 1933, an act of Congress enabled the graduates to receive a Bachelor of Science degree. In 1937 Congress enacted legislation to award the Bachelor of Science degree to all living graduates.
About 6,600 US officers were killed in Vietnam; of which about 278 were graduates from West Point, 205 were graduates from the US Air Force Academy (mostly pilots or aircrewmen), about 130 men were from the US Naval Academy at Annapolis (again, mostly airmen), and the remainder were from Texas A&M, the Citadel, VMI, Virginia Poly Institute, Norwich, state military OCS or federal military OCS (Officer Candidate Schools).
There are approximately 1,000-1,100 graduates each year. Hope this is what you are looking for.
They are referred to as "Plebes" or officially, Midshipmen 4th class
No - there are a lot more Navy aircraft than there are Academy graduates. Though Annapolis graduates tend to get better assignments, any college graduate with the proper degree (typically aeronautical engineering) can be a Naval Aviator.
No way. When a person graduates from a U.S. Service Academy they promise to serve at least 5 years in the branch of their school.
A naval academy is a college level school designed to produce officers for the naval service. In the US, the Naval Academy is located in Annapolis, Maryland.