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Military Spouse. Military Spouse is a monthly magazine published in the United States for military dependents. The founder of the magazine, Babette Maxwell, also runs the associated Military Spouse of the Year Awards program. [1] [2] The magazine was first published in September 2004; [3] in 2007, Maxwell sold it to Victory Media, Inc. [4]
On January 26, Military Spouse magazine named Broadway Fort Bragg's 2013 "Military Spouse of the Year". That same day, ABOS invited Broadway to join and announced that its membership was open to "any Spouse of an active duty commissioned or warrant Officer with a valid marriage certificate from any state or district in the United States".
Department of Defense numbers show women as making up 14.5 percent of the active duty military in 2011 -- up from 1.4 percent in 1970. That data showed 46 percent of those 207,000 women as married ...
The Exchange has made U.S. Veterans Magazine's "Best of the Best" list eight years running, as well. The Exchange has also been named a Military Friendly Spouse Employer. Since 2013, the Exchange has hired more than 54,000 veterans and military spouses, with a goal of hiring 75,000 by 2026.
Military Spouse: One Woman's Journey AOL Jobs recently interviewed Royale Scuderi, a military spouse, mother of four, owner of Productive Life Concepts, and founder of the Guard Wife blog, to ...
A military spouse who lives in a not-so-military town is bound to attract the curiosity and intrigue of neighbors. Military families usually love sharing details of their lives with interested ...
For the first time the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs decided to allow the same-sex spouse of a military veteran to be buried in a U.S. national cemetery. VA Secretary Eric Shinseki gave permission for retired Air Force officer Linda Campbell, 66, to bury the ashes of her same-sex spouse Nancy Lynchild at Willamette National Cemetery in ...
Police traced the fax to Albrett using the phone number in the fax header. In October 2019, local authorities charged James Powell, a 43-year-old Arkansas resident, with "first-degree terroristic threatening" after an investigation by U.S. Capitol Police and the FBI. The felony charge carries a maximum six-year prison sentence and $10,000 fine.