Duty and Honor

  • Lowcountry events commemorate 10-year anniversary of Sept. 11
    Lowcountry residents will never forget 9/11 and are planning a variety events to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks. To remember the heroes of that day and those who continue to serve, events including concerts, special prayers, moments of silence and a military flyover are planned. Upcoming events include:
  • Military to upgrade base schools
    On orders from Congress, the Department of Defense is deciding how to spend a first-ever appropriation -- $250 million -- to upgrade a set of public schools that are in disrepair or disturbingly overcrowded.
  • Rising to shield commissaries from the budget knife
    Jerry Ensminger, a retired Marine Corps master sergeant who has fought for years to win government-funded health care for families exposed to contaminated water at Camp Lejeune, doesn't want the measure passed if, to pay for it, Congress would gut the military's prized commissary benefit.
  • Remembering Sept. 11
    What do you remember most about the day the towers fell? It's been nearly 10 years since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Special tributes are planned throughout the county and nationwide. How will you remember that day? What have you learned -- about yourself, the country, the world -- in the past decade?
  • Fear 'redux bonus' not scary headlines
    Military careerists have been spun up this month by sensational headlines and news bulletins about a plan to "slash" their retirement, citing a "Pentagon study."
  • Care on the battlefield
    When Army Ranger Leroy Petry's hand was blown off by a grenade as he was saving his comrades in battle, he knew just what to do. He used his remaining hand to twist a tourniquet around his arm to avoid bleeding to death.