Memorial Day
Arlington National Cemetery
More than 285,000 people have been laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery. Across its rolling hills stand the unadorned headstones of veterans from the Revolutionary War to the current struggle in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Armed Forces Day
Armed Forces Day is celebrated annually on the third Saturday of May. Armed Forces Week begins on the second Saturday of May and ends on the third Sunday of May, the day after Armed Forces Day.
April Recruiting Statistics
Navy Taking Seaman to Admiral Applications
The Navy has announced that it is taking applications for the Seaman to Admiral 21 commissioning program for 2009.
The STA-21 program is a full-time undergraduate education and commissioning
program open to enlisted personnel of all paygrades and ratings who meet the
eligibility requirements. Selectees are provided a maximum of 36 months of full-time,
year-round study to complete a baccalaureate degree. Participants remain on
active duty while attending college and receive pay, allowances, benefits, and
privileges of their current paygrade. In addition, selectees receive an education
voucher for up to $10,000 per year to cover tuition, fees, and book costs. Upon
graduation, they become commissioned naval officers. For details, see Navy
Administrative Message 127/08.
Marine Corps Calling Up More IRR Members
The Marine Corps is once again calling up Marines from the Individual Ready Reserve, according to a Stars & Stripes article.
The upcoming call-up will mark the fourth time since August 2006 that the Corps has dipped into the IRR to fill shortfalls in the active-duty force. The Corps plans to screen between 1,700 and 1,800 Marines, of which it hopes about 550 will get orders for Iraq. Of the 60,000 Marines in the IRR, about 70 percent have deployed to combat at least once, according to the article.
Who Are These Silent Heroes?
Although the entire world watched their helicopters, aircraft, and cutters streak across their television screens that week, many people know very little about this dedicated group of silent heroes.
43,000 Unfit Troops Sent to War
More than 43,000 U.S. troops listed as medically unfit for combat in the weeks before their scheduled deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan since 2003 were sent anyway, Pentagon records show.
According to an article in the Army Times, the number of troops that doctors found nondeployable but who were still sent to Iraq or Afghanistan fluctuated from 10,854 in 2003, down to 5,397 in 2005, and back up to 9,140 in 2007.
Senate Panel Approves Paternity Leave
The Senate Armed Services Committee has voted to give new military fathers 21 days of paternity leave after their children are born or within 60 days of fathers’ return from deployment, according to a Stars & Stripes article.
If the Senate committee plan becomes law, paternity leave would be granted regardless of marital status, as long as new fathers claim the infants as dependents. As many as 32,000 soldiers, 18,000 sailors, 17,000 Air Force personnel and 9,000 Marines stand to benefit next year alone.

