thedrifter
04-04-06, 01:24 PM
April 10, 2006
Marine News Briefs
Pop a pill, stop PTSD?
Scientists are testing a pill that, when given after a traumatic event, may make the resulting memories less painful and intense, the Associated Press reported.
Scientists think post-traumatic stress disorder happens because the brain goes haywire during and immediately after a strongly emotional event, pouring out stress hormones that help store these memories in a different way than normal ones are preserved.
Taking a drug to tamp down these chemicals might blunt memory formation and prevent PTSD, they theorize.
Propranolol is in a class of drugs called beta blockers and is the one most able to cross the blood-brain barrier and get to where stress hormones wreak havoc. It is widely used to treat high blood pressure and is being tested for stage fright.
Who is your hero?
Marine Corps Times is looking for heroes. Not the type who make headlines for combat exploits, but rather the quiet, everyday heroes whose dedication, professionalism and concern for their fellow Marines and community set a standard for us all.
They are unsung heroes who lead by example — giving their time, sharing their knowledge and inspiring others — without drawing much attention to themselves.
Through April 7, we are accepting nominations for the Marine Corps Times’ Marine of the Year. The only way someone can be nominated is by our readers.
To nominate someone, send us:
• Your name, address, commercial phone number and e-mail address.
• The name, address and commercial phone number of your nominee and his or her unit commander.
• An explanation in 300 words or less of why your nominee deserves this award.
• Names and contact information for three people who can verify the nominee’s achievements that took place in 2005.
You can submit nominations in one of four ways:
• Online at www.marinecorpstimes.com/marine.
• By e-mail at marine@marinecorpstimes.com.
• By fax to Marine Corps Times’ Marine of the Year award at (703) 642-7325.
• By mail to Marine Corps Times’ Marine of the Year award, 6883 Commercial Drive, Springfield, VA 22159.
The awards presentation will take place July 13 on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
Scholarships doled out
Nearly $3.5 million in scholarships has been awarded to 697 veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in the inaugural year of the Horatio Alger Military Veterans Scholarship program.
“Helping a veteran obtain an education is one of the best possible ways you could thank him,” said Peter McCollough, who left the Marine Corps in 2004 as a sergeant and received one of the $5,000 scholarships.
McCollough, 23, is one of 70 California residents who received scholarships. Recipients came from every state but Delaware and Wyoming, and all branches of service. Nearly half, 339, were soldiers; 157 were Marines, according to the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans Inc., a nonprofit educational association that sponsors the scholarships.
McCollough said he is grateful to the association members, including former U.S. Ambassador to Spain George Argyros and his wife, Julia, who donated $5 million in seed money for the program after making frequent visits to wounded soldiers at Rota Naval Air Station, Spain.
Veterans of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom can apply for the next round of scholarships through July 1 at www.horatioalger.org.
Miramar eyed for airport
Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., is back in the sights of regional airport officials as a deadline looms to select an alternative site to San Diego’s Lindbergh Field.
San Diego city councilman Tony Young proposed joint use of bases at Miramar, North Island and Camp Pendleton during a planning meeting March 27.
The military has no interest in a joint-use airport at Miramar, but Young said officials should consider a stand-alone operation there.
“Let’s find ways in which we can come up with a solution together,” Young said. “Let’s make a deal.”
But Marine and Navy leaders have said the current Miramar/North Island/Camp Pendleton base combination offers an ideal configuration of strength and readiness that can’t be duplicated anywhere else in the world.
Career management online
Marines now have more flexibility to manage their careers after an Internet-based program at Marine Online became effective April 1.
According to a March 30 Marine Corps release, the Automated Career Retention System is a Web-basedtool that assists Marines submitting re-enlistments, tour extensions and lateral move requests.
The ACRS allows Marines, career retention specialists and commanding officers to interact with one another. Marines can schedule interviews, while the career retention specialist and commanding officer can conduct the interviews via the new program.
By January, the ACRS will allow Marines to research and submit re-enlistment packages, make a dream list of future assignments and submit requests for tour extensions and special-duty assignments, the release said.
Not all of the ACRS functions are available yet, but the interview management system currently allows Marines, career retention specialists and commanding officers to help advance a Marine’s career by researching both re-enlistment and career information, said Staff Sgt. Jason Steadman, the assistant operations chief for enlisted retention and counseling.
Reebok recalls bracelets
Customers who received one of 300,000 Reebok “Heart-Shaped Metal Charm Bracelets” as a gift with the purchase of children’s shoes should take the charm bracelet away from children immediately and dispose of it, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission and Reebok International Ltd., which has launched a voluntary recall.
The bracelet contains high levels of lead, and Reebok has received a report of the lead-poisoning death of a 4-year-old in Minneapolis who reportedly swallowed a piece from one of the bracelets, according to an alert issued March 28 by the Army and Air Force Exchange Service.
AAFES and other major shoe retailers nationwide provided the charm bracelet as a gift with the purchase of various styles of children’s footwear.
Navy exchanges also participated. Spokeswoman Kristine Sturkie said all bracelets in stock have been pulled from shoe boxes and destroyed, and recall notices are being posted in stores.
Marine Corps Exchange Service officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
The 8-inch-long bracelet has a heart-shaped charm with “Reebok” engraved on one side.
For more information, contact Reebok at (800) 994-6260 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern time, Monday through Friday, or go online to www.reebok.com.
Ellie
Marine News Briefs
Pop a pill, stop PTSD?
Scientists are testing a pill that, when given after a traumatic event, may make the resulting memories less painful and intense, the Associated Press reported.
Scientists think post-traumatic stress disorder happens because the brain goes haywire during and immediately after a strongly emotional event, pouring out stress hormones that help store these memories in a different way than normal ones are preserved.
Taking a drug to tamp down these chemicals might blunt memory formation and prevent PTSD, they theorize.
Propranolol is in a class of drugs called beta blockers and is the one most able to cross the blood-brain barrier and get to where stress hormones wreak havoc. It is widely used to treat high blood pressure and is being tested for stage fright.
Who is your hero?
Marine Corps Times is looking for heroes. Not the type who make headlines for combat exploits, but rather the quiet, everyday heroes whose dedication, professionalism and concern for their fellow Marines and community set a standard for us all.
They are unsung heroes who lead by example — giving their time, sharing their knowledge and inspiring others — without drawing much attention to themselves.
Through April 7, we are accepting nominations for the Marine Corps Times’ Marine of the Year. The only way someone can be nominated is by our readers.
To nominate someone, send us:
• Your name, address, commercial phone number and e-mail address.
• The name, address and commercial phone number of your nominee and his or her unit commander.
• An explanation in 300 words or less of why your nominee deserves this award.
• Names and contact information for three people who can verify the nominee’s achievements that took place in 2005.
You can submit nominations in one of four ways:
• Online at www.marinecorpstimes.com/marine.
• By e-mail at marine@marinecorpstimes.com.
• By fax to Marine Corps Times’ Marine of the Year award at (703) 642-7325.
• By mail to Marine Corps Times’ Marine of the Year award, 6883 Commercial Drive, Springfield, VA 22159.
The awards presentation will take place July 13 on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
Scholarships doled out
Nearly $3.5 million in scholarships has been awarded to 697 veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in the inaugural year of the Horatio Alger Military Veterans Scholarship program.
“Helping a veteran obtain an education is one of the best possible ways you could thank him,” said Peter McCollough, who left the Marine Corps in 2004 as a sergeant and received one of the $5,000 scholarships.
McCollough, 23, is one of 70 California residents who received scholarships. Recipients came from every state but Delaware and Wyoming, and all branches of service. Nearly half, 339, were soldiers; 157 were Marines, according to the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans Inc., a nonprofit educational association that sponsors the scholarships.
McCollough said he is grateful to the association members, including former U.S. Ambassador to Spain George Argyros and his wife, Julia, who donated $5 million in seed money for the program after making frequent visits to wounded soldiers at Rota Naval Air Station, Spain.
Veterans of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom can apply for the next round of scholarships through July 1 at www.horatioalger.org.
Miramar eyed for airport
Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., is back in the sights of regional airport officials as a deadline looms to select an alternative site to San Diego’s Lindbergh Field.
San Diego city councilman Tony Young proposed joint use of bases at Miramar, North Island and Camp Pendleton during a planning meeting March 27.
The military has no interest in a joint-use airport at Miramar, but Young said officials should consider a stand-alone operation there.
“Let’s find ways in which we can come up with a solution together,” Young said. “Let’s make a deal.”
But Marine and Navy leaders have said the current Miramar/North Island/Camp Pendleton base combination offers an ideal configuration of strength and readiness that can’t be duplicated anywhere else in the world.
Career management online
Marines now have more flexibility to manage their careers after an Internet-based program at Marine Online became effective April 1.
According to a March 30 Marine Corps release, the Automated Career Retention System is a Web-basedtool that assists Marines submitting re-enlistments, tour extensions and lateral move requests.
The ACRS allows Marines, career retention specialists and commanding officers to interact with one another. Marines can schedule interviews, while the career retention specialist and commanding officer can conduct the interviews via the new program.
By January, the ACRS will allow Marines to research and submit re-enlistment packages, make a dream list of future assignments and submit requests for tour extensions and special-duty assignments, the release said.
Not all of the ACRS functions are available yet, but the interview management system currently allows Marines, career retention specialists and commanding officers to help advance a Marine’s career by researching both re-enlistment and career information, said Staff Sgt. Jason Steadman, the assistant operations chief for enlisted retention and counseling.
Reebok recalls bracelets
Customers who received one of 300,000 Reebok “Heart-Shaped Metal Charm Bracelets” as a gift with the purchase of children’s shoes should take the charm bracelet away from children immediately and dispose of it, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission and Reebok International Ltd., which has launched a voluntary recall.
The bracelet contains high levels of lead, and Reebok has received a report of the lead-poisoning death of a 4-year-old in Minneapolis who reportedly swallowed a piece from one of the bracelets, according to an alert issued March 28 by the Army and Air Force Exchange Service.
AAFES and other major shoe retailers nationwide provided the charm bracelet as a gift with the purchase of various styles of children’s footwear.
Navy exchanges also participated. Spokeswoman Kristine Sturkie said all bracelets in stock have been pulled from shoe boxes and destroyed, and recall notices are being posted in stores.
Marine Corps Exchange Service officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
The 8-inch-long bracelet has a heart-shaped charm with “Reebok” engraved on one side.
For more information, contact Reebok at (800) 994-6260 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern time, Monday through Friday, or go online to www.reebok.com.
Ellie