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The Israeli military designated Masafer Yatta in the southern West Bank as a live-fire training zone in the 1980s and ordered residents, mostly Arab Bedouin, to be expelled. Around 1,000 residents ...
The “Ides of March” specifically refers to March 15 in the Roman calendar. It is a date that Shakespeare immortalized with the phrase “Beware the Ides of March.” It, however, became ...
The Army Food Management Information System is ... with other systems without disrupting current operations. For example, AFMIS has developed APIs to support automated ordering from the Defense ...
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Army has released its Army Unified Network Plan 2.0. While the first AUNP, published in 2021, focused mainly on the first phase of the plan – to unifying the network ...
The Army is wholeheartedly embracing the idea that artificial intelligence will play a role on the battlefield—but don’t expect robots to replace soldiers everywhere. What service leaders ...
No, we're not talking about St. Patrick's Day, March Madness or Lent. We're talking about the Ides of March, the day that falls midway through March that's come to boast quite the sinister reputation.
San Diego Unified teachers protest pink slips before a school board meeting last year. The district plans to issue 30 preliminary layoff notices this year. (San Diego Education Association via ...
Earlier this week, the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), a rebel separatist outfit fighting for the separation of Balochistan from Pakistan, hijacked the Jaffar Express which was heading to Quetta ...
The Ides of March refers to the 15th of March in the ancient Roman calendar. Originally, it was simply a way to mark the middle of the month, with ‘Ides signifying the 15th in March, May, July and ...
A Roman superstition that Idus Martiae was something of a doomsday was thus confirmed with its insistence appearance in the William Shakespeare play – “Beware the Ides of March ... in late 2020 among ...
It also comes with an ominous warning: "Beware the Ides of March." The phrase comes from William Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar," in which a soothsayer delivers the infamous warning to the Roman ...