Only person authorized to sign using red ink is the Commanding Officer. review correspondence manual. I have seen CO's use blue ink. XO is usually green.
Black ink (typed and written) is the official color for ink used in the Navy for several reasons: 1. Blue and Red inks do not copy well (Xerox) when necessary. 2. Pencils are not allowed for official documents. 3. Red ink is used for document security classification and similar uses.
There are approximately 50 Navy and Marine Corps officers (the Navy MOH is awarded to both Navy and Marines Corps members) who have been awarded the Navy MOH since 1861. The most recent Naval officer to receive the MOH was Navy SEAL Lieutenant Michael Murphy, who was killed in action during Operation Red Wings in Afghanistan. He was posthumously awarded the MOH in 2007. The list of all Navy and Marine Corps officers who have been awarded the Medal of Honor is at the link below.
blue ink is blue... not red
The seamen and officers who wear red vests and red helmets deal with ordnance. (Bombs, bullets, missiles, depth charges, and so on). They are also the people that deal with crashes and salvages.
I think that you see through to the underlying problem. To the best of my knowledge there is nothing special about red ink in signing a tribunal document. There is a special use of red ink in producing liturgical books, and in this case it is called "Rubrics" which are the instructions on what to do while you are pronouncing the words in black. They got their name "Rubric" from the red ink with which they were printed. But this has absolutely nothing to do with tribunal documents.
all you have to do is add a tiny bit of black ink into it.
Let me guess...you have a bottle of black ink and you want to do a red tattoo. The ONLY way you can do a red tattoo is to use red ink. No amount of dilution will make black ink red.
RED Ink Records was created in 1997.
No. they have INK in them. eg. blue ink,red ink,
One is ink and one is wine.
only if you use blood red
Print words with it on a piece of paper and get somebody to read it. It will then be read (red)