On April 30, 2004, the Department of the Army introduced a Disabled Soldier Support System (DS3) Initiative that provides its severely disabled Soldiers and their families with a system of advocacy and follow-up with personal support to assist them as they transition from military service to the civilian community. To obtain additional information contact:
WASHINGTON (June 20, 2006)- The grave locations of more than three million veterans and dependents buried in national cemeteries can be found more easily now because the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has added maps of burial sections online that can be printed from home computers and at national cemetery kiosks. The gravesite locator http://gravelocator.cem.va.gov , online since April 2004, helps veterans' families, former comrades-in-arms and others find the cemeteries where veterans are buried. With the new online feature, people enter a veteran's name to search, click on the "Buried At" (burial location) link and a map of the national cemetery is displayed, showing the section where the grave is located.
SCOUTING
The idea that sponsorship of scouting by American Military Units is unconstitutional goes beyond absurd, even well past stupidity.
"Is there no one in Washington, D.C., at the highest levels of government that will stand up for scouts, and support this cause that has long been an institution of the highest reputation in America? Where's the President? Where is his Cabinet? Where's the Congress? What are the courts doing? Where is the outrage?"