Latest ""
Soldier dies in transit to National Training Center
The private had served in the Army for nearly three years.
By Staff Report
Seeking the Military Suicide Solution Podcast, Episode 18: Psych Hub’s Keita Franklin
Keita Franklin is the chief clinical officer for Psych Hub, the world's largest online platform for digital education on mental health issues.
Op-ed: FDR’s Fireside Chat is a model for calm amid coronavirus pandemic
The author thinks Trump's address to the nation about COVID-19 flopped.
By Michael J. Socolow, University of Maine
Franklin Armory unveils .350 Legend pistols and carbines
While the .350 Legend has plenty of great features, it wouldn’t mean anything if companies declined to manufacturing rifles chambered in it. Thankfully for fans of the round, Franklin Armory has just announced a few firearms in the caliber.
By Jim Grant
New Aura muzzle devices from Franklin Armory
Franklin Armory releases their new line of muzzle devices – The Aura and Aura XTD.
By Industry Press Release
Marine deserter added to FBI’s wanted list as Facebook group supporting him hits 1,050 members
Some group comments question the official version of events, but most want to see the 22-year-old Marine continue his run or at least to avoid a tragic ending.
By Todd South
The GI Bill should’ve been race neutral, politicos made sure it wasn’t
While white veterans got into college with relative ease, black service members faced limited options and outright denial in their pursuit for educational advancement.
By Joseph Thompson, Mississippi State University
How Dorie Miller’s bravery helped fight Navy racism
The first American hero of World War II helped clear the way for others by doing what he was not allowed to do.
By Thomas W. Cutrer and T. Michael Parrish, World War II Magazine
Frozen in time, US Embassy a monument to Iran hostage crisis
What initially began as a sit-in devolved into 444 days of captivity for 52 Americans seized in the embassy.
WWII’s Sullivan brothers remembered at Mayport
All five brothers died when a Japanese torpedo struck their ship, the light cruiser Juneau, on Nov. 13, 1942.
By Matt Soergel, The Florida Times-Union