Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A change of command is a military tradition that represents a formal transfer of authority and responsibility for a unit from one commanding or flag officer to another.
1SG Aaron D. Jagger (9 August 2006) [7] [8] [9] As a part of the United States Army's ongoing transformation to a lighter, more modular force the 1st Battalion, 108th Armor was re-designated as the 1st Squadron, 108th Cavalry (RSTA) in 2007. The unit traded in its M1 Abrams tanks and its M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicles for up-armored HMMWVs.
Gunnery sergeant (GySgt) is the seventh enlisted rank in the United States Marine Corps, above staff sergeant and below master sergeant and first sergeant, and is a senior non-commissioned officer (SNCO). It has a pay grade of E-7. The gunnery sergeant insignia consists of two M1 Garands centered vertically between three chevrons and two rockers.
Approached as a matter of principle, therefore, it is right to attribute to that assumption of responsibility, together with its concomitant reliance, a tortious liability, and then to enquire whether or not that liability is excluded by the contract because the latter is inconsistent with it.
The term frocking dates back to the Age of Sail, when communications between the Department of the Navy and ships at sea could take months. News of the promotion of an officer arrived, usually via letters brought by another ship, and often with orders for the newly promoted officer to report to a new ship or station.
CAIRO (Reuters) -Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz admitted on Monday for the first time publicly to Israel's killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran in July, further risking tensions ...
Swanson told the crowd her late daughter “was on her way to success." “But unfortunately, there were things — deeper thoughts she had — that I never knew about,” Swanson said.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 20:25, 15 November 2007: 93 × 161 (4 KB): Ktims {{Information |Description=US Army First Sergeant rank insignia, in use 1920-1942 |Source=Derived from w:Image:US Army E-8 1SG.svg and w:Image:US Army E-7.svg with colour changes per w:Image:WWII2NDSGT.gif.