A month ago, Ava Tamosuinas of Wayzata faced a tough choice. The 18-year-old senior at Providence Academy, a private Catholic prep school in Plymouth, had won a full Naval ROTC scholarship to the University of Southern California. Aside from being located in a place where it's 70 sunny degrees most of the year, USC is the alma mater of her father, Darrell.
But Ava also had received an appointment to the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo., which offered its own enticements, including state-of-the-art facilities, the stunning Rocky Mountains and the chance to follow the path of Amanda and Alexis, Ava's older sisters.
Ava chose the academy.
Amanda, 23, graduated from the academy in 2008 and is stationed in New Mexico working in logistics. Alexis, who will spend part of the summer at Aviano Air Base in Italy, will graduate from the academy in 2011, which means that she and Ava will overlap for two years. Ava heads to boot camp on June 25.
"There's always a natural curiosity about this," said Darrell, an independent consultant and crisis manager. "People wonder, 'Is one daughter just following the next?' I thought about that, too. But there is such a fundamental leadership component at the academy. Still, I'm hoping for a USC Trojan in graduate school."
Women have been accepted to the Air Force Academy since 1976, but their ranks remain small. Only 16 percent or so of all applicants are chosen; of that number, about 20 percent are female.
And while an Air Force Academy spokesperson calls the Tamosuinas ("Tam-o-shoe-nus") sisters' story "amazing," they are in fact not the first female siblings to share the honor. Eight families have had three or more female siblings at the academy, including two families that have sent four sisters there.
Few people have been more surprised to see all three of the Tamosuinas sisters wind up at the academy than their parents. Darrell and Linda moved to Minnesota from California 18 years ago and have no military background.