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Since then, the Arizona Army National Guard has been deployed to Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. Units from Arizona also deployed to Louisiana to assist with the Hurricane Katrina aftermath. The 158th Infantry Regiment was created September 2, 1865, as the First Arizona Volunteer Infantry.
The Arizona National Guard is the National Guard of the American state of Arizona. It consists of the Arizona Army National Guard and the Arizona Air National Guard . Both components are part of the Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs.
The Arizona Air National Guard (AZ ANG) is the aerial militia of the state of Arizona, United States of America. It is, along with the Arizona Army National Guard , an element of the Arizona National Guard .
The Arizona National Guard released a statement confirming guardsmen were in the area on January 27, but did not reveal how many. A spokesperson with the Arizona National Guard confirmed Arizona ...
The 162nd Wing (162 WG) is a unit of the Arizona Air National Guard, stationed at Morris Air National Guard Base, Arizona. If activated to federal service, the wing is gained by the United States Air Force Air Education and Training Command .
The Civil War in Arizona: the story of the California Volunteers, 1861–1865. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-3747-9. pp. 38–39. A history of the First Arizona Volunteer Infantry, 1865–1866 by Lonnie Edward Underhill, The University of Arizona 1979 ; History of Arizona by Thomas Edwin Farish, Arizona Historian. Volume IV Chapters ...
Camp Navajo is an industrial park, munitions storage facility, and regional training site overseen by the Arizona Army National Guard, and managed by the Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs. Units located on base include: Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Camp Navajo; 362nd Ordnance Company (Explosive Ordnance Disposal)
Under Card Check, if more than 50% of workers at a facility sign a card, the government would have to certify the union, and a private ballot election would be prohibited--even if workers want one. By forcing workers to sign a card in public—instead of vote in private—card check opens the door to intimidation and coercion.