Good advice from the above comments. In addition, I might suggest something that my son did last year when he went to his PMS interview. He took along a notebook that he left with the PMS that included color copies of the following items: professional photo of himself with his name, Eagle Scout certificate, Texas Boys State certificate, West Point Leaders Experience certificate, NHS Certificate, recommendation letters from his high school teachers, transcript from the local junior college where he took dual credit classes, high school transcript, SAT score report, early acceptance letter from The Citadel, etc. The idea was to do something extra to allow himself to stand out from the crowd of other interviewees. Perhaps this was an overkill, but as it turned out, the PMS delayed loading his interview on the ROTC scholarship application website for a few weeks (during which time we called a couple to times to remind), so this allowed the PMS to hopefully to better remember him when later uploading his interview results. The PMS' secretary told us that we were not the only interviewee from which prodding calls were received. You never know what might happen, or how organized (or how busy/disorganized) the PMS might be. My son ended up receiving a 4-year Army ROTC scholarship and is now a Rat at VMI, so I think it helped.