Quote of the day: A journalist’s aside about speaking the Army’s language
Greg Jaffe had this nice aside in a recent article about U.S. Army troops fighting along the Kabul-Kandahar highway: "Horney grew up in Lebanon, Pa., where his father was a recruiter for the Army Reserve. He’s fit, with an open, friendly manner and a slight drawl — an accent best described as career Army." (My ...
Greg Jaffe had this nice aside in a recent article about U.S. Army troops fighting along the Kabul-Kandahar highway: "Horney grew up in Lebanon, Pa., where his father was a recruiter for the Army Reserve. He's fit, with an open, friendly manner and a slight drawl -- an accent best described as career Army." (My italics.)
Greg Jaffe had this nice aside in a recent article about U.S. Army troops fighting along the Kabul-Kandahar highway: "Horney grew up in Lebanon, Pa., where his father was a recruiter for the Army Reserve. He’s fit, with an open, friendly manner and a slight drawl — an accent best described as career Army." (My italics.)
In other journalism news, David Wood, whose terrific war reporting has been saluted here several times, picked up a historic Pulitzer Prize — apparently the first given to an on-line only publication for reporting.
And while we are on the Afghan War, here is a link for the free PDF of that new Marine history of the war in Afghanistan by Robert Cassidy that was reviewed here the other day.
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