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For example, Capt. Jared Polack, with the 442nd Signal Battalion, wrote a program that interfaced the radio to the computer via a Graphic User Interface (GUI) making Station Calling quicker.
In honor of a World War II battalion’s anniversary, a special trailer screening was held Saturday for veterans, families, and ...
Dr. Takashi Manago was a member of “Go For Broke,” a band of Japanese-American soldiers. He served with the 100th Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team.
In April 1945, scouts from the 442nd's artillery battalion near Munich came across barracks buildings surrounded by barbed wire, so they shot open the locks, and entered to find dozens of ...
Though the 442nd broke through and led 211 surviving members of the Lost Battalion to safety, they paid a heavy price. More than 100 soldiers were killed and nearly 1,000 injured.
The 442nd was made up almost ... (AP Photo/U.S. Army Signal Corps) (ASSOCIATED ... Nisei members of the MIS didn’t receive as much publicity as those in the 442nd and 100th Infantry Battalion.
Faced with upgraded equipment and unpracticed personnel, signal Soldiers of the 35th Signal Brigade (Theater Tactical) and cyber Soldiers of the Cyber Protection Team 152 connected for training at ...
The 442nd, whose motto was "Go for broke," was a younger sibling to the 100th Infantry Battalion, which had been formed in 1942 by Japanese Americans already serving in the Hawaiian National Guard.
100th Infantry Battalion veteran Dr. Takashi Manago, who is 100 years old, talked with Shane Kaneshiro, 18, at the Manago home on May 19. Manago has a red, white and blue quilt made by Kaneshiro ...
The original 100th Battalion of the 442nd sustained so many casualties, it became known as “the Purple Heart Battalion.” The current 100th is the only infantry battalion in the U.S. Army Reserve.
The book, “Lucy: Mascot of the 442 Medics” tells the true story of Lucy, a stray dog who became the beloved mascot of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team’s Third Battalion medics.
Bill Wright, whose father was an officer in the 442nd, said the page's removal is just one example of what’s happening across Department of Defense websites reflective of current politics.