The cemetery website unpublished links to lists of notable graves, walking tours and other material about Black, Hispanic and ...
Many of those interred in Arlington’s more than 600 acres made the ultimate sacrifice for their country. Their legacies ...
U.S. Army Air Forces Staff Sgt. Alvin R. Scarborough and Army Pfc. Joseph R. Travers — are coming for burials with full ...
The remains of a World War II soldier from Mississippi are set to be buried in Carthage.U.S. Army Air Forces Staff Sgt. Alvin ...
Arlington National Cemetery has purged its website of material focused on Black, Hispanic, and female troops buried there.
In all, more than 500,000 tons of chemical gas agents were used in World War I. Some 500,000 troops were injured and some 30,000 died, including 2,000 American troops.
Pentagon leaders have ordered that their websites and social media pages remove articles and images that “promote” DEI.
It added that a section talking about Black soldiers in World War II which originally said they had “served their country and fought for racial justice” was altered to say only that cemetery ...
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