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̫ӳ Army ROTC honors cadet’s memory with endowed scholarship

̫ӳ Army ROTC honors cadet’s memory with endowed scholarship

Contact: Sarah Nicholas

STARKVILLE, Miss.—̫ӳ’s Army Reserve Officer Training Corps program is celebrating the memory of Cadet Colby Marlow through the creation of an endowed scholarship.

Inaugural Colby Marlow Scholarship
Cadet Joseph Adams, center, receives the Colby Marlow Endowed Scholarship at a 2022 ceremony alongside Marlow’s twin brother, Cade, and their mother, Christy. Adams, a senior kinesiology major from Jackson, is the inaugural recipient of the $1,000 scholarship honoring the life of the distinguished soldier and student from Carrollton who died in 2021. (Submitted photo)

Cadet Joseph Adams, a senior kinesiology major from Jackson, received the inaugural $1,000 scholarship, which will be awarded annually to an Army ROTC cadet in honor of Marlow, a distinguished 4.0 student from Carrollton who died in 2021. Marlow, a senior at the time of his death, was a Mississippi Army National Guard staff sergeant; Distinguished Military Graduate in the top 10% in the nation; member of Phi Kappa Phi and Phi Theta Kappa honor societies and Student Veterans Association; and an ROTC co-commander.

“Every time I interacted with Colby, he would always motivate me to be the best I could be,” Adams said. “It didn’t matter if it was fitness or just doing something in the Bulldog Battalion.” 

Adams serves as treasurer of the Cadet’s Military Science Club, leader in the Bulldog Battalion and as part of the Ranger Challenge Team and Bulldog Battery. He received the award at a 2022 ceremony attended by Marlow’s twin brother, Cade, and their mother, Christy. Cade Marlow is a second lieutenant in the Army recently stationed at Ft. Benning, Georgia, where he enrolled in the Army’s Infantry Officer Basic Course.

“This scholarship is a great way to honor Cadet Colby Marlow and is a way for the family to remember his service and the example Colby set for others. It also is a great way to help a cadet stay on path to commission as an officer in the United States Army,” said Lt. Col. Jason R. Posey, head of ̫ӳ’s Army ROTC. “The Marlow brothers understood the why—the end goal of being in the Army ROTC program. They wanted to join, commission and serve in the infantry. Cade is continuing the path they laid out when they first got to ̫ӳ.”

To donate to the Colby Marlow Endowed Scholarship, visit .

Complete details about the College of Arts and Sciences or the AROTC may be found at  or .

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