(Left to right) Lieutenant Amy Malinowski, operations chief, Capt. Charles E. MacNeil II, operations officer, and Lt. Justin Witcher, accident investigator supervisor, for the Marine Corps Police Department on Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow, discuss the pending shift rotation for the month of March, Jan. 29. The shift rotation happens every six months to afford each officer schedule flexibility. - (Left to right) Lieutenant Amy Malinowski, operations chief, Capt. Charles E. MacNeil II, operations officer, and Lt. Justin Witcher, accident investigator supervisor, for the Marine Corps Police Department on Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow, discuss the pending shift rotation for the month of March, Jan. 29. The shift rotation happens every six months to afford each officer schedule flexibility.
Robert Hoskin, a welder at Production Plant Barstow, Marine Depot Maintenance Command lances a pin on an LAV frame, Jan. 11. Hoskin travels across PPB performing multiple welding jobs. - Robert Hoskin, a welder at Production Plant Barstow, Marine Depot Maintenance Command lances a pin on an LAV frame, Jan. 11. Hoskin travels across PPB performing multiple welding jobs.
Marines with Maintenance Battalion, 1st Marine Logistics Group, Camp Pendleton, Calif., work inside a MATV, an all-terrain version of the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected tactical vehicle at Marine Depot Maintenance Command's Production Plant Barstow at Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow, Jan. 14. During their stay at MCLB Barstow, the Marines with Maintenance Battalion are training by tearing down and rebuilding tactical vehicles to better understand how they work. - Marines with Maintenance Battalion, 1st Marine Logistics Group, Camp Pendleton, Calif., work inside a MATV, an all-terrain version of the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected tactical vehicle at Marine Depot Maintenance Command's Production Plant Barstow at Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow, Jan. 14. During their stay at MCLB Barstow, the Marines with Maintenance Battalion are training by tearing down and rebuilding tactical vehicles to better understand how they work.
Private First Class Folson Fairley-Baker, a supply clerk aboard Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow uses a virtual driving simulator offered at Headquarters Battalion's 'back in the saddle training' held January 7 at the Maj. General James L. Day Conference Center aboard the base. During the class, volunteers were given the chance to drive using the program to simulate the effects of driving under the influence or while being distracted. - Private First Class Folson Fairley-Baker, a supply clerk aboard Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow uses a virtual driving simulator offered at Headquarters Battalion's 'back in the saddle training' held January 7 at the Maj. General James L. Day Conference Center aboard the base. During the class, volunteers were given the chance to drive using the program to simulate the effects of driving under the influence or while being distracted.
Courtesy photo from blogspot.com - Courtesy photo from blogspot.com
Shop smart at the thrift mart - Shop smart at the thrift mart