Robby Toledano, USMC Recruiter


Posted November 28, 2014 by pzmediainc1

Robby Toledano has served this country with distinction for the last eighteen years.

 
Robby Toledano is a veteran of the United States Marines Corps that is still actively serving. He served in Iraq, and has continued his service, and has risen through the ranks where he now serves as a Senior Recruiting Liaison, helping candidates volunteer and become US Marines. Robby Toledano grew up in suburban Chicago, Illinois. He graduated from high school in 1990, then enrolled at the University of Illinois at Chicago. There, he studied graphic design, a lifelong passion of his that embraced his inherited skill of art. Robby Toledano left college during his junior year to join the United States Marine Corps. He later returned after four years of active duty but remained in the Military Reserves as he completed his education. He graduated with honors and maintained a 3.8 grade point average in earning his Bachelors of Fine Arts degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago. He later served in Iraq for eleven months with the 2nd Battalion, 24th Marines. Today, Sergeant Toledano is currently on active duty in the field of military recruiting and a Senior Officer Selection Assistant. Robby Toledano is currently working toward a Master of Legal Studies at American Military University and expects to graduate in May 2015.

Toledano is also a talented artist with strong illustrative skills. He often uses his art skills recreationally in computer graphics or the old fashioned way.

As a recruiter, Toledano knows how big a component the Marine Corps history of pride and tradition can be to a candidate. The Corps has an interesting history of distinction. Even the imagery of the Marines is unique and distinguished. Take the history of the Marine Corps emblem. Its story related to the history of the Corps itself and traces its roots to the designs and ornaments of early Continental Marines. The emblem took its present form in 1868 when Brigadier General Commandant Jacob Zeilin appointed a board to design different elements of the uniform, including the emblem. Later in 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower approved the design of an official seal for the United States Marine Corps. The new seal consisted of the traditional Marine Corps emblem in bronze, with the placement of an American bald depicted with wings displayed and standing upon the western hemisphere of the terrestrial globe and in its beak holding a scroll inscribed with the Marine Corps motto "Semper Fidelis" (Ever Faithful).
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Last Updated November 28, 2014