Charles Rogers' webpage was removed after being flagged for DEI content, according to the Department of Defense.
The page dedicated to Army Maj. Gen. Charles Calvin Rogers was indeed deleted, but restored soon afterward. The Pentagon said it had been scrubbed during an "auto removal process." Amid the ...
This M109 Howitzer was damaged at Fire Base Rita tyring to hold back a human wave of enemy troops. (U.S. Army/Fort Sill) Charles Rogers was born in 1929 in West Virginia. His father served in the ...
The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) has removed a webpage honoring Charles Calvin Rogers ... historical representation of Black military personnel. The Pentagon has not confirmed whether Rogers' ...
The Pentagon said Monday that internet pages honoring a Black ... A Defense Department webpage honoring Black Medal of Honor ...
The Pentagon says internet pages honoring a Black Medal of Honor winner and Japanese American service members were mistakenly ...
The webpage of a Black Medal of Honor Recipient has been restored by the US Defense Department after it was removed and had the letters "DEI" added to its address.
The Defense Department "has restored the Medal of Honor story about Army Maj. Gen. Charles Calvin Rogers," a spokesperson told NPR in an email, adding, "The story was removed during auto removal ...
The Pentagon has restored some of its webpages ... the Tuskegee Airmen and Vietnam-era Medal of Honor recipient Maj. Gen. Charles Calvin Rogers, as well as the Navajo Code Talkers from World ...