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A golden opportunity for Domestic Violence Awareness Month outreach
Laura Miller, 436th Comptroller Squadron financial analysis officer, pets Lt. Col. Goldie as he visits Team Dover personnel during Domestic Violence Awareness Month, Oct.19, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. Goldie is a nine-year-old Golden Retriever therapy dog stationed at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Md. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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A golden opportunity for Domestic Violence Awareness Month outreach
Maj. Regina Owen, 436th Medical Operations Squadron psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner, introduces Lt. Col. Goldie, a nine-year-old Golden Retriever therapy dog stationed at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Md., to members of the 436th Comptroller Squadron, Oct. 19, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. As part of Family Advocacy’s outreach during Domestic Violence Awareness Month, Owen escorted Goldie around the base to meet with Team Dover personnel during his temporary duty assignment to Dover. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
Participants in the 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge make their way around the hiking trail Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Participants completed three laps while carrying their rucksack, chains and a punching bag. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
Working in teams, participants in the 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge carried a punching bag while completing three laps on the hiking trail Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Participants completed the laps while carrying their rucksack, chains and a punching bag. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
Brittany Bailey, 436th Logistics Readiness Squadron vehicle mechanic, receives her 2017 GORUCK Light patch from U.S. Army Master Sgt. Todd Fetzer, 1st Special Forces Command (Airborne), Ft. Bragg, N.C., Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Bailey was one of 29 individuals who completed the GORUCK Challenge. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
Autumn Anderson, 436th Maintenance Squadron aerospace maintenance apprentice, holds her 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge patch, Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Anderson was one of 29 individuals who completed the five-hour GORUCK Challenge. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
U.S. Army Master Sgt. Todd Fetzer, 1st Special Forces Command (Airborne), Ft. Bragg, N.C., watches GORUCK participants press their rucksack during warm-up exercises Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Twenty-nine individuals completed the 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
Four GORUCK Light members of team Alpha compete in the wheelbarrow race Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. As a team-building exercise, all six Alpha team members had to be the wheelbarrow and tag every base on the softball field. The Alpha team completed the exercise in five minutes and 47 seconds. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
Each participant in the 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge carried chains while completing three laps on the hiking trail Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Working in teams, participants also had to carry a punching bag, as well as their own rucksack. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
Participants in the 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge begin the first of three laps on the hiking trail Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. The hike was the last challenge of the day. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
U.S. Army Master Sgt. Todd Fetzer, 1st Special Forces Command (Airborne), Ft. Bragg, N.C., tells the history of GORUCK to event participants Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Fetzer, also known by his GORUCK nickname “Fury,” was the cadre for the 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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GORUCK: Not your average day in the park
GORUCK participants help a member up after completing a warm-up exercise Oct. 6, 2017, at Brecknock Park in Camden, Del. Thirty-one individuals participated in the 2017 GORUCK Light Challenge that teaches participants how to overcome adversity by working as a team. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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436th CS team pushing out Windows 10
A laptop computer running Windows 10 Secure Host Baseline version 5.3 sits on the 436th Communications Squadron consolidated work bench waiting to be checked by client service technicians Sept. 21, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. The upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10 and the use of a single operating system across the Department of Defense will help improve cybersecurity and help reduce information technology costs. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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436th CS team pushing out Windows 10
Senior Airman Tyler Scoble, 436th Communications client service technician, left, and Staff Sgt. Eric Rzepa, 436th CS Comm Focal Point NCO in charge, center, work on upgrading a desktop and laptop computer on the consolidated work bench Sept. 21, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. CST and CFP personnel, and unit CSTs with administrative privileges have the capability to rollout up to 250 assets per week with Windows 10 Secure Host Baseline version 5.3. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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436th CS team pushing out Windows 10
Staff Sgt. Eric Rzepa, 436th Communications Squadron Comm Focal Point NCO in charge, right, briefs Col. Randy Boswell, 436th Mission Support Group commander, left, on the process of upgrading computers on the consolidated work bench Sept. 7, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. Personnel upgrading computers have the capability to rollout up to 250 assets per week with Windows 10 to permanent party and some tenant units at Dover. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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436th CS team pushing out Windows 10
A monitor displays the new log in screen of a computer running Windows 10 Secure Host Baseline version 5.3 during the process of upgrading computers Sept. 7, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. The upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10 and the use of a single operating system across the Department of Defense will help improve cybersecurity and help reduce information technology costs. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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National Prisoner of War and Missing in Action Recognition Day
For a moment and hours prior to the National Prisoner of War and Missing in Action Recognition Day ceremony, a pair of boots sit beside a POW/MIA flag Sept. 15, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. A formation of 20 flags symbolized a flight made up of POW/MIA personnel and was placed between two Team Dover 20-man flights. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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Snapshot: Team Dover hosts POW/MIA Recognition Day events
Team Dover members and guests render a salute or place their hand over their heart while the base honor guard lowers the U.S. flag during the National Prisoner of War and Missing in Action Recognition Day ceremony Sept. 15, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. One hundred seventy-eight fallen service members from previous wars and conflicts were repatriated this past year. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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Snapshot: Team Dover hosts POW/MIA Recognition Day events
Members of the Dover Air Force Base Honor Guard prepare to fold the U.S. flag during the National Prisoner of War and Missing in Action Recognition Day ceremony Sept. 15, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. Positioned left to right, Senior Airman Kiara Hammett, 436th Aerospace Medical Squadron; Airman 1st Class Clair Boyles, 436th Logistics Readiness Squadron; Airman 1st Class Jessica Shaffer, 436th Operations Support Squadron; and Senior Airman Edcyril Mallonga, 436th Civil Engineer Squadron; presented the folded flag to Col. Corey Simmons, 436th Airlift Wing vice commander. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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Snapshot: Team Dover hosts POW/MIA Recognition Day events
Four members of Team Dover stand vigilant at the base flag pole as a group of runners jog by them during National Prisoner of War and Missing in Action Recognition Day Sept. 15, 2017, on Dover Air Force Base, Del. Running and standing in shifts, 343 runners participated in a 24-hour run and 236 stood at the flag pole as part of the recognition day events. (U.S. Air Force photo by Roland Balik)
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