Lt. Col. Megan Loges

Lt. Col. Megan Loges

Lt. Col. Megan Loges, pictured at MSU Air Force ROTC headquarters.
Photo by Beth Wynn

Lt. Col. Megan Loges is driven to make a difference by watching students grow, especially when they’re sharing their instilled military service values with the ֱ State campus community and world.

Loges joined the ranks of MSU faculty in July as commander of the university’s AFROTC Detachment 425 and professor of aerospace studies.

The active-duty U.S. Air Force servicewoman said she is “honored to have been selected” to join the land-grant university, taking the helm of the AFROTC program during its 70th anniversary year of celebration.

“It was the best detachment on my list,” said Loges, who applied to be an AFROTC commander at five university locations after a stint teaching strategic leadership to Air Force lieutenant colonels at Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama.

Loges said being a part of something bigger than herself keeps her invested in service to her country. “It’s the fact that my small actions day-to-day—even when I can’t see them—ripple out into the strategic vision of the Air Force.”

Throughout 25 years of military service, Loges has been deployed four times, serving in Turkey and Afghanistan, and twice in Saudi Arabia. She also has been stationed in Arizona, California, Florida, Hawaii, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Texas.

“Happenstance and luck” drew the Washington, D.C., native to the Air Force in 1994, she said.

“I was in college and had a friend who had just left military service. She spoke a lot about how fun it was to fly and be a part of the aircrew family environment,” Loges said. “I enlisted in the Air Force as an aircrew member. I was lucky enough to get an AFROTC scholarship to finish my degree and get my commission.”

Loges holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas at Austin and a master’s degree from Webster University.

Loges said she enjoys sharing the Air Force core values of “integrity, service and excellence” with student cadets, and points them, as well as civilian students, to two programs within the AFROTC umbrella.

The Arnold Air Society Kenneth J. Snedden Squadron is a professional, honorary service organization for current cadets. Qualified cadets compete for admission into the leadership-based organization, performing community service activities during the academic year.

Its sister unit, the Kenneth J. Snedden Chapter of Silver Wings, is a civilian organization open to all college students dedicated to partnering with cadets through community service projects. Both MSU service units have been recognized this year with awards for excellence in community service.

The cadre working daily with Loges at AFROTC include four military and two civilian positions—all women—who Loges said are the “heartbeat of this detachment.” Her staff includes Major Kanesha Webber, director of operations; Captain Rachelle Slade, recruiting and education officer; Technical Sergeant Erica Duran, chief of personnel; Staff Sergeant Sabrina de Vera, chief of administration; Kaitlin Mullins, administrative assistant; and Gina Studley, uniform custodian and Honor Guard coach.

Reflecting on a quarter-century military career—which has taken her from the West Coast to the Middle East, and back to small-town ֱ – Loges said a highlight of her profession is that “it is never boring.”

For more information on AFROTC at MSU, visit .

MSU Air Force ROTC leadership.