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In the United States Army, the 'morning report' was a document produced every morning for every basic unit of the Army, by the unit clerk, detailing personnel changes for the previous day. [1] [2] The morning report supported strength accountability from before World War II until the introduction of SIDPERS during the 1970s. [1]
The protesters were placed in the Fort Hood stockade for failing to report for morning reveille. [4] The protesting soldiers became known as the "Fort Hood 43"; their refusal to deploy to Chicago for riot-control duties was one of the largest acts of dissent in United States military history. [5]
Military installations closed in 1968 (28 P) Military units and formations disestablished in 1968 (4 C, 68 P) Military units and formations established in 1968 (114 P)
TV 672 – Your Army Reports; TV 673 – M-60: King of Armor; TV 674 – Why Vietnam; TV 675 – Your Military Neighbor (B&W – 1966) How US Armed Forces achieve good community relations by promoting the public welfare here and abroad, under normal and emergency conditions. TV 676 – Your Army Reports; TV 677 – Your Army Reports
All times correspond to U.S. Eastern and Pacific Time scheduling (except for some live sports or events). Except where affiliates slot certain programs outside their network-dictated timeslots, subtract one hour for Central, Mountain, Alaska, and Hawaii-Aleutian times.
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The 1968–69 daytime network television schedule for the three major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the weekday and weekend daytime hours from September 1968 to August 1969.
Middle Tennessee had first-and-goal from the two-yard line with 45 seconds left in the half and two timeouts, and somehow did not get any points.