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141 - 160 of 162 results
Guatemala trip leaves Guardsmen ‘awestruck’
Airman 1st Class Jasmine Diaz, 163d Medical Group medical technician, checks a Guatemalan girl's blood pressure at a school in Santa Rosa. More than 5,700 Guatemalan citizens from three of Santa Rosa's poorest communities flocked to see members of the 163d medical group who traveled to Guatemala Aug. 16-30 to provide medical care. (U.S. Air Force photo by Capt Al Bosco, 163RW/PA)
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Guatemala trip leaves Guardsmen ‘awestruck’
Tech. Sgt. Shirley Morales, 163d Reconnaissance Wing force development technician, reviews a script with U.S. and Guatemelan military members prior to an opening ceremony welcoming the 163d Medical Group to the country to provide medical care to the local citizens. (U.S. Air Force photo by Capt Al Bosco, 163RW/PA)
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Guatemala trip leaves Guardsmen ‘awestruck’
A line of Guatemalan citizens waits outside a school near Santa Rosa to be seen by members of the 163d Medical Group. Thirty-one members of the group traveled to Guatemala Aug. 16-30 to participate in a U.S. Air Forces South-sponsored Medical Readiness Training Exercise where they provided medical care for more than 5,700 people in three of the poorest communities in Santa Rosa. (U.S. Air Force photo by Capt Al Bosco, 163RW/PA)
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Guatemala trip leaves Guardsmen ‘awestruck’
Staff Sgt. Paige Whitworth, 163d Medical Group medical technician, listens to a Guatemalan woman's heart. Sergeant Whitworth and 30 other members of the 163d Medical Group traveled to Guatemala Aug. 16-30 where they provided treatment for more than 5,700 people while visitng three of Santa Rosa's poorest communities. (U.S. Air Force photo by Capt Al Bosco, 163RW/PA)
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AES takes pride in caring for wounded
Senior Airman Ty Treece, an aeromedical evacuation technician with the 452nd AES, performs pre-flight preparations for a training mission to St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff. Sgt. Joe Davidson)
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AES takes pride in caring for wounded
Senior Airman Bill Ortega helps a team member secure a weighted litter during pre-flight operations for a training mission in St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands last week. A KC-135 from the 336th Air Refueling Squadron provided support for the mission. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff. Sgt. Joe Davidson)
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Sub rescue system returns from Norway via March ARB
Crews unload the U.S. Navy’s next generation Submarine Rescue System, the Submarine Rescue Diving and Recompression System (SRDRS), onto the March Air Reserve Base flight line, June 18, 2008, after it returned home from a NATO submarine search-and-rescue exercise in the North Sea, May 26 to June 6. The operation, Exercise Bold Monarch, took place off the coast of Kristiansand, Norway, and involved over 14 countries, making it the largest-ever exercise of its kind. The aim of the exercise was to train and demonstrate that NATO, in participation with other submarine operating nations, can perform life-saving operations at extreme ocean depth in support of a distressed submarine, including all medical aspects involved in a submarine disaster. SRDRS is stationed at Deep Submergence Unit (DSU), Naval Air Station North Island, San Diego, California. (U.S. Navy photo by Paul Lampley)
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Patriot Hook brings academic training to life
U.S. Air Force Reserve members and County of Los Angeles Search and Rescue (FEMA) members take their seats aboard a C-17 Globemaster III, right, just before takeoff at March ARB, as flight crew members secure baggage and make last minute checks during Patriot Hook 2008. Patriot Hook, a large-scale air mobility and contingency response exercise, took place in mid May for five days. An exercise that tests the viability of coordinated security, disaster and medical response operations, it involved some 300 people who moved approximately one and one-half million pounds of cargo from separate operating locations. Patriot Hook is a yearly largescale air mobility exercise involving Air Force Reserve Command airlift control flights, flying units and aerial port. The exercise provides a fully integrated combined joint task force and air mobility training in conjunction with individual training requirements. Participating affiliates this year included: U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, FBI, FEMA, U.S. Border Patrol and U.S. Navy San Clemente staff. (U.S. Air Force photos by Senior Airman Erica J. Knight)
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Patriot Hook brings academic training to life
A Coast Guard patrol boat unloaded from a Travis AFB C-5 during the Patriot Hook exercise is on patrol duty. Patriot Hook, a large-scale air mobility and contingency response exercise, took place in mid May for five days. An exercise that tests the viability of coordinated security, disaster and medical response operations, it involved some 300 people who moved approximately one and one-half million pounds of cargo from separate operating locations. Patriot Hook is a yearly largescale air mobility exercise involving Air Force Reserve Command airlift control flights, flying units and aerial port. The exercise provides a fully integrated combined joint task force and air mobility training in conjunction with individual training requirements. Participating affiliates this year included: U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, FBI, FEMA, U.S. Border Patrol and U.S. Navy San Clemente staff. (U.S. Air Force photos by Senior Airman Erica J. Knight)
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Patriot Hook brings academic training to life
A Coast Guard patrol boat is unloaded from a Travis AFB C-5 during the Patriot Hook exercise. Patriot Hook, a large-scale air mobility and contingency response exercise, took place in mid May for five days. An exercise that tests the viability of coordinated security, disaster and medical response operations, it involved some 300 people who moved approximately one and one-half million pounds of cargo from separate operating locations. Patriot Hook is a yearly largescale air mobility exercise involving Air Force Reserve Command airlift control flights, flying units and aerial port. The exercise provides a fully integrated combined joint task force and air mobility training in conjunction with individual training requirements. Participating affiliates this year included: U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, FBI, FEMA, U.S. Border Patrol and U.S. Navy San Clemente staff. (U.S. Air Force photos by Senior Airman Erica J. Knight)
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Patriot Hook brings academic training to life
Defensive forces secure a site during the Patriot Hook exercise. Patriot Hook, a large-scale air mobility and contingency response exercise, took place in mid May for five days. An exercise that tests the viability of coordinated security, disaster and medical response operations, it involved some 300 people who moved approximately one and one-half million pounds of cargo from separate operating locations. Patriot Hook is a yearly largescale air mobility exercise involving Air Force Reserve Command airlift control flights, flying units and aerial port. The exercise provides a fully integrated combined joint task force and air mobility training in conjunction with individual training requirements. Participating affiliates this year included: U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, FBI, FEMA, U.S. Border Patrol and U.S. Navy San Clemente staff. (U.S. Air Force photos by Senior Airman Erica J. Knight)
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Patriot Hook brings academic training to life
A simulated casualty is treated and ready to be evacuated during the Patriot Hook exercise. Patriot Hook, a large-scale air mobility and contingency response exercise, took place in mid May for five days. An exercise that tests the viability of coordinated security, disaster and medical response operations, it involved some 300 people who moved approximately one and one-half million pounds of cargo from separate operating locations. (U.S. Air Force photos by Senior Airman Erica J. Knight)
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March reservists partner with Egyptian Air Force for valuable training
An F-16 flown by the Egyptian Air Force prepares to make contact with the KC-135 from March Air Reserve Base during in flight refueling training. More than 200 F-16s were purchased from the American government over the years by the Egyptian Air Force. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Amy Abbott)
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March reservists partner with Egyptian Air Force for valuable training
Three F-16s fly alongside the wing of a KC-135 Stratotanker from the 336th ARS, March Air Reserve Base, during in-flight refueling training in Egypt. The aircraft hold at the right observation point until given clearance to move to the tail end and begin individual training. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Amy Abbott)
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March reservists partner with Egyptian Air Force for valuable training
Master Sgt Rich Grainger, crew chief with the 752nd AMXS, March Air Reserve Base, inspects the wing of a KC-135 before takeoff at the Cairo airport in Egypt. Several members of the 752nd AMXS deployed with the 336th ARS as part of a KC-135 business initiative. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Amy Abbott)
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March reservists partner with Egyptian Air Force for valuable training
An F-16 from the Egyptian Air Force prepares to make contact with a KC-135 from the 336th ARS during in-flight refueling training. The training began in Egypt on Nov 20 and the troops will return to March ARB Wednesday. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Amy Abbott)
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Guard engineers on border
Staff Sgt. Ron Henderson, California Air National Guard civil engineer, cuts lighting poles with a civilian contractor while deployed to the San Diego Border. (U.S. Air Force photo by Lt. Col. Mark Moritz, 163 ARW)
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Guard engineers on border
Tech. Sgt. Tom Callahan and Tech. Sgt. Karl Childress, both California Air National Guard civil engineers, cut boards for the silt trap. (U.S. Air Force photo by Lt. Col. Mark Moritz, 163 ARW)
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Guard engineers on border
Heavy Equipment Operator Tech. Sgt. Kevin Maier, California Air National Guard civil engineer, works an excavator at the road raising job site. (U.S. Air Force photo by Lt. Col. Mark Moritz, 163 ARW)
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304th Sustainment Brigade Move to March Air Reserve Base
Trucks and Humvees are off-loaded and marshalled from the C-17 Globemasters III returning from Pt. Mugu Naval Air Station. The five C-17"s airlifted the 304 Sustainment Brigade from Pt Mugu to March ARB, CA. March ARB will be their permanant home. (U.S. Air Force Photo by MSgt Bill Kimble)
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