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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fort_DixFort Dix - Wikipedia

    Dix ended its active U.S. Army training mission in 1991 due to Base Realignment and Closure Commission recommendations, which ended its command by a two-star general. Presently, it serves as a joint training site for all military components and all services.

  3. Aug 13, 2017 · For the last century, more than 6 million soldiers have lived, trained or passed through the Burlington County military installation known first as Camp Dix, then Fort Dix and now Joint Base...

  4. In February 1976, several soldiers at Fort Dix fell ill with a previously unrecognised swine flu. None had been in contact with pigs, so human transmission was assumed.

  5. In the global rush to head off a possible new pandemic of H1N1 swine flu from Fort Dix through research and vaccination, accidents could have happened anywhere. Of course, biocontainment facilities and policies have improved dramatically over the past half-century.

  6. Mar 30, 1979 · The 150 surviving Russians were almost on a ship headed home in 1946 when President Harry S. Truman intervened and ordered them returned to Dix. What happened to the Russians after that has...

  7. Operation Keelhaul was a forced repatriation of Soviet Citizens, carried out in Northern Italy by British and American forces between August 14, 1946, and May 9, 1947.

  8. Jul 16, 2018 · The original was taken to a foundry near Princeton in 1988, where molds were made for recasting the statue in bronze. The statue was then taken to a temporary home in the center of the then Fort Dix Reception Station (today the USAF’s Air Mobility Warfare Center) and is now at Sharpe Field.

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