You wouldn't take an acquisition professional from the Army and put them in charge of the F-35 program. So why do we do that for space?" The Air Force could start doing that now, Harrison suggested, and Congress would likely welcome the initiative. Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson said...
A total of 728 US Army ROTC cadets participated in this survey-based study. Overall, individuals reported relatively high levels of involvement from their cadre, need fulfillment, and self-determined motivation. In contrast, they perceived limited autonomy support from their cadre. In sum, further ...
The 11th Hospital Train was officially activated at Camp Ellis, Table Grove, Illinois (Army Service Forces Training Center; acreage 17,503; troop capacity 1,795 Officers & 24,654 Enlisted Men –ed) on 10 December 1943 (per General Orders 85, Headquarters ASFUTC, Camp Ellis, Illinois, 11 ...
On 9 September 1943 the 280th departed Camp Ellis and arrived at Camp Livingston, Alexandria, Louisiana (Army Ground Forces Training Station) two days later. Since there were no Medical Training Schools at the new station, the unit’s Plans and Training Section planned a series of schools to ...
Army. U.S. Army chief of staff Gen. George C. Marshall received a proposal, written by Col. Lucian Truscott, to train U.S. Army personnel with the British, go on Commando operations, and then disperse them among U.S. Army divisions, providing a cadre of battle-experienced personnel. ...
From day one of the Space Age, there has been a military presence in Space. Von Braun, working for the U.S. Army, launched the first U.S. satellite, Explorer 1, on a modified Redstone IRBM three months after Sputnik I (4Oct1957), the start of the Space Age. There were numerous ...
In October, 1925, Jiang Jingguo went to Soviet Union to study abroad, goes study in Moscow Zhongshan University.In 1928 the autumn, he returned to Moscow, held Masurium card Red Army Military academy in Leningrad to study.In 1935, Jiang Jingguo in Soviet and the mine female worker fragrance...
d apostrophe was so handy that sometime around the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries, people began to use it to signal possession. It makes a great deal of sense: does “Drydens harrumphing” refer to the harrumphing of one John Dryden, or to a whole army of John...
(san diego air and space museum) The American nightfighters of the Second World War can largely be broken down into two groups. These were the heavier, twin engine, land based types in use with the Army Air Force, and the lighter carrier-embarked forces of the Navy. The Air Force’s...
Given the education of the men that found themselves there, and the culture of the army officer corps and Political Service, it proved seemingly impossible for British administrators and soldiers to dissociate this space from Alexander’s campaigns. (C.A. Hagerman’s article, “In the ...