foohy
'Enlisted navy officer' is not a designation. If you are enlisted, you are not an officer. An officer can apply for Medical school, whether they can remain on active duty or not will depend on the program they can get accepted to.
Yes, it is more difficult for an officer to become a SEAL than an enlisted person to do so.
Depends on your command, your job, and whether you are enlisted or an officer.
A Navy SEAL can become a sniper, then an officer if he has an education.
You have to be at least 16 or 18 to become a Royal Navy Officer
No, they just have different jobs.
They were the thirteen former Navy enlisted men who became the first African American Navy commissioined at warrant Officers in the US Navy in March of 1944. When they received their commissions there were about 100,000 African Americans in the US Navy. (That works out to 7,692 enlisted for each officer.)
The SEAL teams include both naval officers and enlisted men.
Most senior enlisted adviser to the Chief of Naval Operations on all maters that effect enlisted members.
They were the thirteen former Navy enlisted men who became the first African American Navy commissioined at warrant Officers in the US Navy in March of 1944. When they received their commissions there were about 100,000 African Americans in the US Navy. (That works out to 7,692 enlisted for each officer.)
The generic term for individuals in the Navy is sailor. As of the end of August, 2007, the approximate total of Navy personnel (officer and enlisted) was around 338,000.
It's possible, yes.