“Today’s ceremony witnesses the casing of the colors of the U.S. States Army Accessions Command as it begins its move to Fort Knox. The colors of the U.S. Army Accessions Command represent the history, the spirit, and the tradition of the command. Today they are furled and cased in a protective sheath. They will leave the field cased and will be uncased in the transfer of authority ceremony at Fort Knox on 27 May.”
“To commemorate this special occasion, Sgt. 1st Class Kirk Lewis, the Fort Monroe salute battery NCOIC, will now present to Lt. Gen. Freakley, the shell casing representing the last round fired on behalf of the Accessions Command at Fort Monroe.”
“Ladies and gentlemen, please stand for the departure of the official party.”
“Today’s ceremony witnesses the casing of the colors of the U.S. States Army Accessions Command as it begins its move to Fort Knox. The colors of the U.S. Army Accessions Command represent the history, the spirit, and the tradition of the command. Today they are furled and cased in a protective sheath. They will leave the field cased and will be uncased in the transfer of authority ceremony at Fort Knox on 27 May.”
“To commemorate this special occasion, Sgt. 1st Class Kirk Lewis, the Fort Monroe salute battery NCOIC, will now present to Lt. Gen. Freakley, the shell casing representing the last round fired on behalf of the Accessions Command at Fort Monroe.”
“Ladies and gentlemen, please stand for the departure of the official party.”
“Today’s ceremony marks the beginning of the BRAC process set down in law in 2005. To fulfill the elements and intent of that BRAC law, the United States Army Accessions Command is relocating to Fort Knox, KY, collocating with its subordinate units – The U.S. Army Recruiting Command, the U.S. Army Cadet Command, and the U.S. Army Accessions Support Brigade - - And will be joined by the U.S. Army Human Resources Command, to form the Human Resource Center of Excellence.”
“This is the beginning of the execution of the BRAC law which closes Fort Monroe. This is a significant and historic day not only for the U.S. Army Accessions Command but for TRADOC and the greater Hampton Roads area as well.”
“The United States Army Accessions Command was created with General Order No. 1 on 15 February 2002 to provide integrated command, control, and coordination of the Army's officer, warrant officer, and enlisted accessions processes from initial contact through completion of Initial Military Training.…
Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, TRADOC commander, addressed the attendees of the Marshall Army ROTC Award Seminar in Lexington, Va. on Apr. 16. The seminar invites cadets from 274 colleges and universities to participate in discussion on issues ranging from nuclear power to foreign affairs. 2010 marks the second year Dempsey has spoken at the event. To learn more about the Marshall Army ROTC Seminar, please go here: http://marshallarmyrotc.org/history.html
Gen. Martin Dempsey, TRADOC commander, provides remarks for the 5th annual Army Operational Knowledge Management Conference. Dempsey discusses the role of knowledge management in four trends in the operational environment: certainty of uncertainty, increased pace of change, competitiveness and decentralization. Read the full story here: http://www.army.mil/-news/2009/11/12/30308-experts-gather-to-learn-about-knowledge-management/
TRADOC develops the Army's Soldiers and Civilian leaders and designs, develops and integrates capabilities, concepts and doctrine in order to build a campaign-capable, expeditionary Army in support of joint warfighting capability through Army Force Generation (ARFORGEN). Victory Starts Here! (http://www.tradoc.army.mil)
Just think about it… What if you were trapped under something heavy and the mouse was out of your reach? Scary, right? That's exactly why we have these keyboard shortcuts so you can still use Vimeo until the help arrives.