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The Army Times Publishing Company later added Air Force Times, Navy Times, and, in 1999, Marine Corps Times. [4] Marine Corps Times writer C. Mark Brinkley was among the first journalists to embed with ground troops in Afghanistan in November 2001 during Operation Swift Freedom, which was the Pentagon's first opportunity to Embed Journalists. [5]
The company's Military Times group publishes four bimonthly newspapers aimed at current and former U.S. military personnel: Army Times (founded 1940), Navy Times (founded 1951), Air Force Times (founded 1947), and Marine Corps Times (founded 1999). It also publishes Defense News (founded 1986), C4ISRNET and Federal Times.
The magazine's name derives from the slang term "leatherneck" for a U.S. Marine, referring to the leather-lined collar or stock of the original Marine uniform. Leatherneck was an official Marine Corps publication until 1972, staffed primarily by active-duty Marines. That year all active-duty positions were eliminated and the magazine returned ...
A directive issued by Marine Corps headquarters on Tuesday "asked the fleet to PAUSE on all [Sexual Assault Prevention and Reporting] training due to recent changes within the White House to ...
(The Center Square) – A U.S. senator is pressing the military to address issues surrounding delays and poor communication concerning military moves ahead of peak moving season. Sen. Mark Warner ...
Several times a week, Washington-based immigration attorney Chun Jong-Joon gets a phone call from yet another flabbergasted Korean American. All have made the same discovery: They or their U.S ...
Terminal Lance is a comic strip and website created in 2010 by Maximilian Uriarte that satirizes United States Marine Corps life. Uriarte publishes the strip in the Marine Corps Times newspaper and on his own website, TerminalLance.com. The name is a slang term for a Marine who finishes an enlistment (i.e. terminates) as a lance corporal (E-3).
I just ran the numbers for military aircraft, and about 88% of the aircraft in the U.S. military inventory today (including Air Force, Army, Navy, and Marine Corps aircraft) were built before ...