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Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War, Fort Hoodâs Clear Creek Exchange and Clear Creek Commissary teamed up Monday to pay tribute to the men and women who served the nation during the Vietnam War with a pinning ceremony.
âThese are Soldiers, Air Force, Marine and Navy personnel who fought the war and didnât get the welcome they should have gotten when they came home,â Col. Jason Wesbrock, commander of U.S. Army Garrison â Fort Hood, said about the commemoration.
In 2012, the United States began a 13-year commemoration of the Vietnam War, remembering more than 58,000 Vietnam veterans who paid the ultimate sacrifice, as well as honoring nearly 500,000 troops who served in South Vietnam. In 2017, President Donald Trump designated March 29 as National Vietnam War Veterans Day.
VietnamRepublic-ofUnited-statesSouth-vietnamVietnam-generalPete-tristanHerbert-perezDonald-trumpJason-wesbrockChris-haefnerFort-hood-clear-creek-exchangeNational-vietnam-war-veterans-dayCOVID: Short on ICU nurses, Germany looks abroad
Amid a nursing staff shortage, German hospitals have had to take matters into their own hands. When the coronavirus pandemic hit, a new arrival from Mexico proved very valuable at Berlin's well-known Charite Hospital.
Nurse Herbert Perez works in Berlin Charite's intensive care unit
The story of German Health Minister Jens Spahn and Judith Heepe, the nursing director at Berlin's Charite Hospital, is a little like the tale of the hare and the hedgehog. Heepe, like the wily hedgehog, is somehow always faster.
In September 2019, Spahn was in Mexico signing a contract to speed up the process for Mexican nursing staff to receive work permits in Germany. Heepe had already been there. A month before that, Spahn had sent his state secretary to the Philippines on a recruitment mission. Heepe had been there, too.
GermanyMexicoPhilippinesUnited-statesBrazilMexico-cityDistrito-federalAlbaniaBerlinAmericaMexicansMexicanCOVID: Short on ICU nurses, Germany looks abroad dw.com 12/19/2020 dw.com
Amid a nursing staff shortage, German hospitals have had to take matters into their own hands. When the coronavirus pandemic hit, a new arrival from Mexico proved very valuable at Berlin's well-known Charite Hospital. © privat Nurse Herbert Perez works in Berlin Charite's intensive care unit
The story of German Health Minister Jens Spahn and Judith Heepe, the nursing director at Berlin's Charite Hospital, is a little like the tale of the hare and the hedgehog. Heepe, like the wily hedgehog, is somehow always faster.
In September 2019, Spahn was in Mexico signing a contract to speed up the process for Mexican nursing staff to receive work permits in Germany. Heepe had already been there. A month before that, Spahn had sent his state secretary to the Philippines on a recruitment mission. Heepe had been there, too.
GermanyMexicoPhilippinesUnited-statesBrazilMexico-cityDistrito-federalAlbaniaBerlinAmericaMexicansMexican