9 442 résultats
2004Q-1592283802Lyons Press 2004-05-01. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Lyons Press paperback
2009Q-1599219093Lyons Press 2009-09-24. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Lyons Press paperback
2008Q-1602393362Skyhorse 2008-11-17. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Skyhorse paperback
9562914968.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2004Q-1592285201Lyons Press 2004. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Lyons Press paperback
1996285841PN. New. 1996. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
19991314060PN. New. 1999. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
6133495633The Globe Pequot Press pp. 432 . Papeback. New. The Globe Pequot Press unknown
2022x-0309274435National Academies Press 2022. Paperback. New. 106 pages. 9.00x5.98x0.27 inches. National Academies Press paperback
1986Q-0803295529University of Nebraska Press 1986-08-01. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! University of Nebraska Press paperback
1969006542Washington D.C.: Department of the Army 1969 Book. Good Plus to Very Good. Soft cover. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Original official trade paperback. Previous owner's name and brief notes. Explanatory Notes Retirements Codes Section 1- United States Army Retired List Section 2 - Army of the United States Retired List Section 3 - Temporary Disability Retired List Section 4 - Emergency Officers Retired List Section 5 - Losses to the Retired Lists. 398 pp. Heavy book will need extra postage. Department of the Army paperback
20049780883636404Used; Very Good. 21-G-01 Universe Publishing 2004 hardcover. No dust jacket as issued. Text is clean and unmarked. Covers have light wear. Book Condition; Very Good . 2004. HARDCOVER. hardcover
2004100-02026Universe Publishing 2004-01-01. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Universe Publishing hardcover
2011DADAX1610042190Brand: Paladin Press 2011-02-01. 2011 ed. paperback. New. 5.51x0.00x8.50. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Brand: Paladin Press paperback
1610042190.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0806510455.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1907521321.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0028811038.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1972ML-9Washington D.C.: American Yearbook Company-Military Division 1972. Ft. Leonard Wood yearbook includes a brief history of the training center messages from the commanding Major General W.T. Bradley and Brigadeer General Edward Greer numerous photographs of the trainees during trainfire recreation armed and hand-to-hand combat training weapons training commencement personnel etc. Approx. 100 pgs. Minor crease on lower pg. corners; front and rear cover corners slightly bumped and rubbed. Minor scuff marks. Gilt embossed front cover. . Buckram Hardcover. Good/ . 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. American Yearbook Company-Military Division hardcover
1968ML-10Washington D.C.: American Yearbook Company-Military Division 1968. Ft. Ord California yearbook includes a brief history of the training center messages from the commanding general Major General Thomas A. Keenan numerous photographs of the trainees during mess academics recreation inspections armed and hand-to-hand combat training weapons training; chemical biological and radiological warfare training; commencement and awards ceremonies personnel etc. Approx. 100 pgs. Illustrated. Embossed front cover with color picture pastedown of Fort Ord. Small minor scuff marks on rear cover. Pictorial endpapers. . Buckram Hardcover. Very Good/ . 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. American Yearbook Company-Military Division hardcover
1996041911National Historical Society 1996 1996-01-01. Paperback. Very Good. 0x0x0. 156 p. immaculate and unmarked anywhere; binding firm; wrapper clean but with slight edge wear. Sticker ghost. National Historical Society, 1996 paperback
44015701Washington D.C.1942 U. S. Dept. of Defense. One old era vintage embroidered shoulder patch of the 10th. U. S. A.A.F. in blue gold and red over cloth 6.5 x 7.3 cm. oval very goodbit of usual soil solid. VERY RARE ORIGINAL EXAMPLE . . . GENUINE SHOULDER PATCH OF 10TH ARMY AIR CORPS . . . "C.B.I." CHINA-BURMA-INDIA THEATER OF WORLD WAR 2 . The U.S. ARMY AIR CORPS established the 10th Air Force in 1942 to fly from India to Kunming. Soon thereafter their name was changed to U.S. Army Air Force. . TENTH AIR FORCE COMMAND: The Tenth Air Force initially provided control of all U.S.A.A.F. combat operations in the China Burma India Theater under theater commander Lt. Gen. Joseph Stillwell. . COMMANDED BY BRIGADIER GENERAL CLAIRE CHENNAULT: Units based in China were controlled by the China Air Task Force of the Tenth Air Force created 4 July 1942 to replace the "A.V.G." "American Volunteer Group and commanded by Brig. Gen. Claire Chennault. . Units based in India were controlled by the India Air Task Force created 8 October 1942 commanded by Brigadier General Caleb V. Haynes. . In March 1943 the China Air Task Force was dissolved and its components made part of the new Fourteenth Air Force 14 U.S.A.A.F. activated in China under Chennault. . The Tenth operated in India and Burma as part of the Allied Eastern Air Command until it moved to China late in July 1945. . CONDITION: This is a very good example with a tiny bit of usual minor soil else solid above average example. . Color photos are posted to our website. NOTE: Our scanner is not picking up the actual color of the wings which gold NOT red ! . . REFERENCE: wikipedia-org/wiki/Tenth_Air_Force . . unknown
29029501Washington D.C. ca. 1941-1943. A.A.F. uniform jacketshirt trousers garrison cap olive drab green pins rank badge pins medals & wings with patches:"FLYING TIGERS" "C.B.I." & A.A.F. patchs. Air Force. unknown
232441972. US Army manuals on counterintelligence interrogation and combat. FM 30-17 Counterintelligence Operations FM 30-15 Intelligence Interrogation FM 30-5 Combat Intelligence and the Fort Huachuca subcourse Counterintelligence Investigations trace the Army's printed intelligence doctrine from January 1972 to June 1989. The sequence begins after the Army established Military Intelligence as a distinct professional branch in 1962 and after the Military Intelligence Corps relocated its school to Fort Huachuca in 1971. By 1989 the printed curriculum had shifted from broad field doctrine toward formal professional instruction for Counterintelligence Special Agents at the U.S. Army Intelligence Center and School. FM 30-17 indexes topics including "Rights" "Witness" "Wiretapping" and the "U.S. Army Security Agency"; FM 30-15 appends the 1949 Geneva Conventions and states that coercion is neither acceptable nor effective.<br /> <br /> 1972-1989 Washington D.C. and Fort Huachuca Arizona. Archive of 4 military intelligence training publications: three Headquarters Department of the Army field manuals and one Army Intelligence Center and School correspondence-course subcourse all in original printed wrappers and stapled or punched for binder storage.<br /> 1 United States Department of the Army. FM 30-17 Counterintelligence Operations. Washington D.C.: Headquarters Department of the Army January 1972. Issued under the printed authority of General W. C. Westmoreland and Adjutant General Verne L. Bowers the manual sets out the Army's investigative framework for sworn statements interrogations surveillance audio surveillance surreptitious entry false documentation secret writing and polygraph procedure.<br /> 2 United States Department of the Army. FM 30-15 Intelligence Interrogation. Washington D.C.: Headquarters Department of the Army June 1973. Sets forth doctrine for Army intelligence interrogations of non-U.S. personnel prohibits physical or mental torture coercion and threats and reproduces the 1949 Geneva Conventions in Appendix E.<br /> 3 United States Department of the Army. FM 30-5 Combat Intelligence. Washington D.C.: Headquarters Department of the Army October 1973. Issued the year of final U.S. combat withdrawal from Vietnam the manual expands combat intelligence into "cold war" "limited war" "general war" and "stability operations" with sections on civilian sources insurgent intelligence collection rear-area sabotage and terrorist threats and counterintelligence planning.<br /> 4 United States Army Intelligence Center and School. Counterintelligence Investigations. Subcourse IT 0735 Edition 9. Fort Huachuca Arizona: Army Institute for Professional Development Army Correspondence Course Program June 1989. A six-credit-hour professional course for the Counterintelligence Special Agent covering doctrine for initiating CI cases procedures for selected CI investigations and techniques for handling physical evidence.<br /> The group follows the Army's post-1962 effort to professionalize intelligence as a branch and concentrate its training system at Fort Huachuca after the 1971 move from Fort Holabird. FM 30-15 1973 is the Army's printed official position that torture and coercion are prohibited with the Geneva Conventions reproduced in full. That manual was the governing interrogation doctrine on paper through the early 2000s. It's the document that the post-9/11 interrogation debates the 2002 OLC memos and Abu Ghraib were measured against. Owning the actual printed doctrinal manual that says "coercion is neither acceptable nor effective" is the headline. One booklet is missing its rear cover and one volume contains annotations throughout. Overall good condition. The 1972 and 1973 manuals set out combat collection interrogation surveillance evidence and counterintelligence support in cold war and stability operations; the 1989 Huachuca subcourse narrows that material into school-based instruction for case initiation and judicial-type investigations. unknown
1901219711901. MilitaryNursingWomen in Medicine Military directive establishing the Army Nurse Corps 1901. General Orders No. 113. Headquarters of the Army Adjutant General's Office. Washington August 22 1901. Washington: War Department 1901. First edition. 10 pages. Bound with cloth tape lacking wrappers as issued. A foundational federal directive outlining the regulatory framework for the newly established Army Nurse Corps as authorized by Section 19 of the Act of February 2 1901-legislation intended to increase the efficiency of the U.S. military's permanent establishment. This pamphlet marks a critical milestone in the formal integration of women into the military medical apparatus and reflects early 20th-century gendered labor structures within federal institutions. It defines duties pay appointment qualifications leave policies and uniform standards for female nurses employed by the U.S. Army. Of particular historical note is its stipulation that the superintendent must be a graduate of a hospital training school emphasizing the formal credentialing of women in a field long dominated by informal care roles. The directive further outlines pay rates for chief and reserve nurses entitlements to quarters and medical care and the procedural logistics of leave and illness rendering it an early articulation of professional military nursing policy.<br /> <br /> The text includes sixteen numbered provisions covering areas such as applications for appointment travel reimbursements illness treatment and efficiency reporting. Paragraph 15 specifies the required uniform including "a waist and skirt of suitable white material adjustable white cuffs shoulder collar white apron and cap according to patterns prescribed by the Surgeon General's Office." Such mandates reinforce both the militarization and gendered expectations placed upon early 20th-century women in uniform. A marginal annotation in red ink on the cover notes that this issue was "amended by G.O. 54 W.D. 1908" signaling its eventual revision which adds bibliographic and institutional value for those studying the evolution of military nursing. Light toning. Red pen annotation on page one noting the order's amendment in 1908. Overall very good to near fine condition. A comprehensive government document that institutionalized women's medical labor within the Army. unknown