By Jeff Murphy,
                                                									August 11, 2016
                                             
                                             
                                              
                                              
                                             WARRENSBURG, MO – An annual ceremony honoring the men and women who died and those
                                                who responded to terrorist  attacks on the United States Sept. 11, 2001 will be observed
                                                by the University of Central Missouri Friday, Sept. 9. The ceremony begins at noon
                                                near the flagpole at the quadrangle, and is open to members of the campus and local
                                                communities.
This Pre-Patriot Day event is planned two days prior to the 15th year anniversary
                                                date of 9/11, and will feature U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Arnold N. Gordon-Bray (Ret.) as
                                                the keynote speaker. Other individuals representing the city of Warrensburg and the
                                                university will also participate, as well as members of the Johnson County, Warrensburg,
                                                and Whiteman Air Force Base fire departments, and community first responders. A special
                                                tribute will be performed by the Lee’s Summit High School Armed Exhibition Drill Team
                                                led by Col. Rick Milligan, United States Air Force (Ret.). Members of UCM’s Army ROTC
                                                unit and faculty leaders from the Department of Military Science and Leadership also
                                                will join in the activities. The event is being coordinated by the Office of Military
                                                and Veteran Services, and in case of inclement weather, the ceremony will be moved
                                                to Hendricks Hall, located in the Administration Building.
Brig. Gen. Gordon-Bray is a university graduate who was honored in 2012 as a UCM Distinguished
                                                Alumnus. He earned a bachelor’s degree in art from UCM plus master’s degrees from
                                                the U.S. Air War College and the Naval War College. He culminated his career in a
                                                Four-Star Headquarters in the U.S. Africa Command, headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany.
                                                As a military leader, he commanded at every level, ranging from a platoon of 40 men
                                                to a Brigade Combat Team of 4,500 men and women in the famed 101st and 82nd Airborne
                                                Divisions. He held staff positions that included the Joint Special Operations Command
                                                at Fort Bragg, N.C., and the Installation Management Command, headquartered in San
                                                Antonio, for all Army bases worldwide. He is an Airborne Ranger with numerous awards
                                                and badges including the Army Defense Meritorious Service Medal, the Army’s highest
                                                peacetime award; the Defense Superior Service Medal; multiple Legions of Merit and
                                                two Bronze Stars.
The Pre-Patriot Day ceremony is an opportunity for the university and local community
                                                to come together to pay its respects to the nearly 3,000 men and women who perished
                                                and nearly 6,000 individuals who were injured in the tragic events of Sept. 11, 2001.
                                                The worst terrorist attacks on American soil involved two airplanes that were hijacked
                                                and flown into the World Trade Center twin towers in New York City; and one that crashed
                                                into the U.S. Pentagon in Arlington, Va., and a fourth airplane that was being steered
                                                toward Washington, D.C., but crashed near Shanksville, Pa., as passengers tried to
                                                overcome hijackers. More firefighters and law enforcement officers died in these events
                                                than in any other single event in U.S. history.
For more information, contact Delilah Nichols, coordinator of Military and Veteran
                                                Services, at 660-543-8977 or email nichols@ucmo.edu.