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Re: Abaddon post# 47576

Saturday, 10/24/2015 10:05:49 AM

Saturday, October 24, 2015 10:05:49 AM

Post# of 97373
A link to an news article and a wikipedia page about something Nathan Hall may or may not have actually done are hardly "Citations." For example:

Mr. Hall came out of active duty at his last duty station of Presidio of Monterrey/Defense Language Institute (DLI)/Foreign Language Center (FLC), CA

Citations:
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1999-01-05/news/9901051077_1_language-training-24-languages-arabic
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_Language_Institute


citation |si'taSH?n|(abbr.: cit. )
noun
1 a quotation from or reference to a book, paper, or author, esp. in a scholarly work: there were dozens of citations from the works of Byron | recognition through citation is one of the principal rewards in science.
• a mention of a praiseworthy act or achievement in an official report, esp. that of a member of the armed forces in wartime.
• a note accompanying an award, describing the reasons for it: the Nobel citation noted that his discovery would be useful for energy conversion technology.
• Law a reference to a former tried case, used as guidance in the trying of comparable cases or in support of an argument.

Until such time as Nathan Hall adds his actual military service to his Linkedin resume and not just vague references to his military "education," I think I'll just go with his military record as documented in his felony trial, which is available to the public through PACER and is a real "Citation."