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Military.Com's Military Legends Archive
for November
11/30/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/29/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/28/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/27/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/26/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/25/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/24/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/23/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/22/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/21/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/20/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/19/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/18/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/17/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/16/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/15/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/14/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/13/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/12/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/11/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/10/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/09/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/08/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/07/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/06/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/05/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/04/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/03/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/02/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/01/2002:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/14/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/13/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/12/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/11/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/10/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/09/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/08/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/07/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/06/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/05/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/03/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/02/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
  More...
11/01/2001:  Lt. Cmdr. Nida Glick, USCGR--Some 10,000 women joined the Coast Guard's SPARs in World War II. Most left the service when wartime needs no longer existed, but high school teacher Nida Glick stayed on, becoming a backbone of the postwar Coast Guard Reserve.
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11/19/2000:  Cook 3rd Class William Pinckney --This Navy cook's selfless heroics during the fierce Guadalcanal campaign of 1942 earned him the Navy Cross and made him the namesake for a guided-missile destroyer that will be commissioned in 2003.
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11/16/2000:  Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman--On Nov. 16, 1864, the Union general began his "march to the sea," an infamous campaign that left a miles-wide swath of scorched earth across Georgia and the Carolinas. But there was more to Sherman than "total war."
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11/15/2000:  Maj. Gen. Benedict Arnold--Everyone knows him as the great traitor of the Revolutionary War. But few people realize that Benedict Arnold's countrymen felt his betrayal so keenly because they had regarded him as a hero.   More...
11/14/2000:  Lt. j.g. Albert L. David--A boarding party led by Lt. j.g. Albert L. David captured the German submarine U-505 in the first hostile high-seas seizure by U.S. sailors since 1815.   More...
11/13/2000:  The Sullivan Brothers--George, Frank, Red, Matt, and Al Sullivan stuck together all of their lives. The bonds between the five brothers were strong enough to help them convince the World War II Navy to let them serve together on the USS Juneau.
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11/12/2000:  Pvt. Billie Gene Kanell--Stephen Mullan, one of many Korean War veterans honored in Saturday's "Nation's Parade," rode in honor of Billie Gene Kannell, a fellow soldier who gave his life to save Mullan's.
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11/11/2000:  Gen. John J. Pershing --When the armistice ending World War I was declared on Nov. 11, 1918, Gen. John J. "Black Jack" Pershing and his American Expeditionary Force prepared to come home from "over there."
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11/09/2000:  Army Col. James 'Nick' Rowe --Green Beret Nick Rowe used the horrors of a Vietnam POW camp to create a new breed of survival training. Eleven years after his assassination in Manila, he still casts a long shadow in the Special Operations community.
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11/08/2000:  Rear Adm. Charles Wilkes--Before the embarassment of the "Trent Affair," Rear Adm. Charles Wilkes charted several hundred miles of the coastline of Antarctica -- much of what is now called "Wilkes Land."   More...
11/07/2000:  Capt. Meriwether Lewis--Many recognize the names "Lewis and Clark," but fewer know that Army Capt. Meriwether Lewis's westward expedition was wholly a military endeavor. As official commander, he helped chart new territory for an expanding nation.
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11/06/2000:  Jefferson Davis--Long before his Nov. 6, 1861, election as president of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis was elected colonel of the First Mississippi Regiment and joined the army of Gen. Zachary Taylor on the Rio Grande.
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11/05/2000:  Seaman 1st Class William B. Tinneny--The story of Seaman 1st Class William B. Tinneny was compelling enough to be made into a radio play for the Philadelphia Fellowship Commission's wartime show "Valor Knows No Creed."   More...
11/04/2000:  2nd Lt. Reba Whittle--In 1944, 2nd Lt. Reba Whittle scrambled out of the burning shell of a C-47 medical evacuation plane and became the only American woman POW in Europe during World War II.   More...
11/03/2000:  Maj. Gen. James Garfield--The Civil War battle of Middle Creek, Ky., has been called "the battle that made a presidency" of James A. Garfield, our nation's 20th chief executive. His leadership on the field during a period of low Union morale launched Garfield's political career.
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11/02/2000:  Warrant Officer Floyd Bennett--Few remember Floyd Bennett, the self-effacing man who piloted his friend, Richard Byrd, on the historic 1926 first flight over the North Pole. But did they really make it to the pole? Historians differ.
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11/01/2000:  Gen. Winfield Scott--Interest in Winfield Scott, whose life resembles a timeline of American history, has revived. Scott retired from the Army on Nov. 1, 1861, after serving 53 years under 14 presidents -- the longest active-duty career of any U.S. general.
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