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Vol. 71, No. 20 May 24, 2013
Pages 22-23 Page 20
Page 12
Message board INSIDEINSIDE
Soldier Show
Performances are
at 2 and 7 p.m.
Thursday at
McMahon Auditorium.
Doors open one hour
prior to show.
Photo by Spc. Robert Holland
Peppered arrest
Pfc. Richard Gonzalez
attempts to handcuff
fellow military
policeman Staff Sgt.
Joseph Pellegrino,
after being sprayed
with Oleoresin
Capsicum spray,
commonly known as
OC spray or pepper
spray, during an MP
Platoon, Headquarters
and Headquarters
Company, 3rd
Brigade Special
Troops Battalion,
3rd Armored Brigade
Combat Team, 4th
Infantry Division,
certification class,
May 10. Certification
to carry the spray
requires the Soldiers
to perform various
tasks associated
with their jobs while
suffering from the
effects of the spray.
See story on Page 14.
SMA visits Carson troopsBy Sgt. William Smith
4th Infantry Division Public Affairs Office
Remaining ready and resilient while adapting to
budget cuts was the constant theme Sgt. Maj. of the
Army Raymond F. Chandler III shared with members
of the Fort Carson community May 15-16.
“We have programs for Families to help them
with the resiliency challenges that they might face,”
Chandler said. “Fort Carson has started a pilot
program for Spouse Master Resiliency Trainers,
which began a few months ago. It trains spouses
how to deliver master resilience training; that is
really powerful.”
The Army’s top enlisted adviser visited units,
held town hall meetings addressing topics ranging
from hazing to sexual assault, and spoke one-on-one
with Soldiers about their personal career paths.
Chandler’s visit began at Stack Dining Facility,
where he spoke with Soldiers from various units,
addressing their concerns and asking them about
different topics that affect Soldiers’ everyday
readiness. Following his DFAC visit, he spent the
day with Fort Carson leaders and toured 4th
Combat Aviation Brigade facilities.
“I appreciated the time that the sergeant major
of the Army took to come down to see what we do,
and personally talk to the Soldiers, and present
coins for all of the hard work that Soldiers do,” said
Sgt. Mike Tiller, Company D, 2nd General Support
Aviation Battalion, 4th Aviation Regiment, 4th
CAB, 4th Infantry Division.
The second day, along with visits to various
locations across Fort Carson, Chandler addressed
See Chandler on Page 4
2 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
This commercial enterprise newspaper is
an authorized publication for members of the
Department of Defense. Contents of the
Mountaineer are not necessarily the official
view of, or endorsed by, the U.S. Government or
the Department of the Army. Printed circulation
is 12,000 copies.
The editorial content of the
Mountaineer is the responsibility of the Public
Affairs Office, Fort Carson, CO 80913-5119,
Tel.: 526-4144. The e-mail address is
fcmountaineer@hotmail.com.
The Mountaineer is posted on the
Internet at http://csmng.com.
The Mountaineer is an unofficial
publication authorized by AR 360-1. The
Mountaineer is printed by Colorado Springs
Military Newspaper Group, a private firm in
no way connected with the Department of the
Army, under exclusive written contract with
Fort Carson. It is published 49 times per year.
The appearance of advertising in this
publication, including inserts or supplements,
does not constitute endorsement by the
Department of the Army or Colorado Springs
Military Newspaper Group, of the products or
services advertised. The printer reserves the
right to reject advertisements.
Everything advertised in this publication
shall be made available for purchase, use or
patronage without regard to race, color, religion,
sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical
handicap, political affiliation or any other
nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user or patron.
If a violation or rejection of this equal
opportunity policy by an advertiser is confirmed,
the printer shall refuse to print advertising
from that source until the violation is corrected.
For display advertising call 634-5905.
All correspondence or queries regarding
advertising and subscriptions should be directed
to Colorado Springs Military Newspaper
Group, 31 E. Platte Avenue, Suite 300,
Colorado Springs, CO 80903, phone 634-5905.
The Mountaineer’s editorial content is
edited, prepared and provided by the Public
Affairs Office, building 1430, room 265, Fort
Carson, CO 80913-5119, phone 526-4144.
Releases from outside sources are so
indicated. The deadline for submissions to the
Mountaineer is close of business the week
before the next issue is published. The
Mountaineer staff reserves the right to edit
submissions for newspaper style, clarity and
typographical errors.
Policies and statements reflected in the
news and editorial columns represent views
of the individual writers and under no
circumstances are to be considered those of
the Department of the Army.
Reproduction of editorial material is
authorized. Please credit accordingly.
MOUNTAINEER
Commanding General:
Maj. Gen. Paul J. LaCamera
Garrison Commander:
Col. David L. Grosso
Fort Carson Public Affairs Officer:
Dee McNutt
Chief, Print and Web Communications:
Rick Emert
Editor: Devin Fisher
Staff writer: Andrea Sutherland
Happenings: Nel Lampe
Sports writer: Walt Johnson
Layout/graphics: Jeanne Mazerall
Classified advertising
329-5236
Display advertising
634-5905
Mountaineer editor
526-4144
Post information
526-5811
Post weather hotline
526-0096
Dog Bite Prevention Week
Tips help reduce risk
of becoming a victimCommentary by Capt. Heather Weaver
Fort Carson Veterinary Clinic,
Public Health Command District Fort Carson
Each year, 4.7 million people in the
United States are bitten by dogs; the
majority of bite victims are children.
As a pet owner, it is your
responsibility to help prevent
dog bites from happening.
Proper socialization and
proper veterinary care are
essential in this process.
All dogs should be
vaccinated against rabies and
other transmissible viruses.
Puppies should be
exposed to a wide variety
of situations and people,
including children of
various ages. Dogs should
be taught simple commands
such as sit, stay and heal. This
will help the dog to understand
what type of behavior is expected
and may be a deterrent in unfamiliar
situations. Furthermore, dogs should always be on a leash in
public and well-populated areas.
The following tips can help prevent a potential bite:
þ Never approach strange dogs without permission
from the owner and never try to pet an unattended
dog through a fence
þ Never tease a dog with food or toys since this can
lead to an accidental bite
þ Never harm a dog
þ Never disturb a dog while it is sleeping
þAvoid dogs that appear nervous or aggressive
In the event of a dog bite, the wound should be washed
with soap and water immediately. If the dog’s owner is
present, ask them for proof of rabies vaccination. Be sure
to get both the owner’s and the veterinarian’s contact
information. If the owner can’t provide proof of vaccination,
contact the veterinarian. If the owner is not present and the
dog has tags on the collar, try to obtain information,
but only if the dog will let you and isn’t
showing any signs of fearful or aggressive
behavior. If the dog does not have a collar
and the owner is not present, call
animal control. If the bite has
broken the skin, consult with
a primary care physician
immediately or go to a local
emergency care facility.
The No. 1 concern
when an animal bites a
human is the risk of rabies
exposure. Rabies is a
potentially lethal virus
that affects the central
nervous system and is
most often transmitted
through the animal’s
saliva when it bites.
About 55,000 people
worldwide die each
year from rabies.
A physician can administer lifesaving post-exposure
prophylaxis if medical care is sought immediately. Thanks
to current legislation and a strict animal vaccination
protocol in the United States, rabies is quite rare.
However, people in high-risk professions, such as
veterinarians and dog handlers, should receive a
prophylactic vaccination series and have their antibody
titers checked at least every three years.
The most effective way to prevent dog bites is through
proper education and through direct supervision of pets and
children. For more information on canine body language
and when to avoid a potentially threatened or aggressive dog,
visit http://www.aspca.org/Pet-care/virtual-pet-behaviorist/
dog-articles/canine-body-language.
Freedom of Information and
Privacy Act Office
Take a few moments and
check your understanding of the
Privacy Act.
Answer true or false to the
following questions:
u Every directorate and
battalion-sized military unit
or higher is required to have
a Privacy Act coordinator
on appointment orders?
v Yearly mandatory training is
required by the Department
of Defense?
w All government employees
and contractors have a lawful
duty to protect personal
identifiable information?
x All breaches of information
are required to be reported to
the Privacy Act officer within
one hour?
y Depending on the job, a person
could require four different
levels of Privacy Act training?
Every one of these is a true
statement concerning the Privacy Act.
So, does your directorate or
military unit have the requirements
met? Contact Daniel C. Smith,
Freedom of Information and Privacy
Act officer, at daniel.c.smith8.civ@
mail.mil to arrange training, which
typically takes 45-60 minutes.
Privacy Act
Is your unit in compliance?
WWW.TWITTER.COM/@4THINFDIVWWW.YOUTUBE.COM/USER/THE4ID
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3May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
Carson athletes
capture 6 medalsMountaineer staff
Fort Carson’s Spc. Elizabeth Wasil
swept gold medals in all three women’s
wheelchair races on her way to five
podium appearances at the 2013 Warrior
Games, held May 11-16.
In addition to top finishes in the 100-,
200- and 1,500-meter wheelchair races,
Wasil added bronze medals in the
women’s wheelchair shotput and hand-
cycle and recumbent cycle events. The
World Class Athlete Program swimmer
also placed sixth in the wheelchair discus.
Staff Sgt. Spencer Anderson, Fort
Carson Warrior Transition Battalion,
earned a bronze medal in the men’s
bicycle open event.
The fourth annual Warrior Games
kicked off May 11 with three-time
Paralympic medalist Navy Lt. Brad
Snyder, five-time Olympic medalist
Missy Franklin and Prince Harry lighting
the cauldron and concluded May 16
with the crowning of the Chairman’s
Cup and Ultimate Champion.
The Marine team continued its
dominance, capturing its fourth consecutive
Chairman’s Cup, a team award based on
each team’s top finishes in individual
events as well as sitting volleyball and
wheelchair basketball, the two team sports
contested at the Warrior Games. The
Marines finished with 100 points (34 gold,
33 silver and 26 bronze medals), holding
off the Army, which finished with 85
points (34, 26, 21). The Navy finished
third, Air Force fourth and Special
Operations took fifth, according to the
U.S. Paralympics Warrior Games website.
Air Force Capt. Mitchell Kieffer
earned the title of Ultimate Champion
— a pentathlon style event that pits
warriors against each other in a variety
of disciplines — with eight points,
holding off Marines Jorge Toledo and
Brian Riley, with seven and six points,
respectively. Fort Carson’s Staff Sgt.
Name/Issue featured Finishes
Spc. Elizabeth Wasil
World Class Athlete Program
May 10, Page 6
1st - 100-, 200- and 1500- meter wheelchair race
3rd - wheelchair shotput and handcycle and
recumbent cycle
6th - wheelchair discus
Staff Sgt. Spencer Anderson
Warrior Transition Battalion
May 3, Page 11
3rd - men’s bicycle open
Staff Sgt. Krissel
Creager-Lumpkins
Warrior Transition Battalion
April 19, Page 9
4th - Ultimate Champion, shooting prone
5th - 100-meters, shotput open
6th - women’s bicycle open
Sgt. 1st Class Keoki Smythe
Warrior Transition Battalion
April 26, Page 13
5th - men’s bicycle open
Army Archery Team
May 17, Page 6
3rd - team event
Capt. Frank Barroquerio 1st - archery compound
2nd - shooting pistol
18th - shooting prone
Sgt. Edward Patton 1st - archery recurve
4th - shooting standing
Sgt. Lance Thorton 4th - shooting prone
5th - shooting standing
The chart below reflects finishes for Fort Carson participants and
the Army archery team, of whom were featured in the Mountaineer
leading up to the Warrior Games. Features on the participants are
available online at http://www.csmng.com/Mountaineer.
See Warriors on Page 4
4 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
about 400 Soldiers and Family members
at McMahon Auditorium, discussing
topics affecting the future of all
Soldiers and Families, and answering
questions about any concerns they had.
“Be engaged leaders, which means
you have to know your Soldiers,”
Chandler said. “You have to establish a
bond of trust between you and that
Soldier, and know what is going on in
their life beyond the scope of the Army.
“Don’t worry about the budget; we
will get through it as we have done
before,” he said. “Train to the best
ability possible. Sustain and maintain
your equipment. Continue to build the
team, so you will be ready for whatever
comes, and maintain that esprit de corps.”
Chandler also spoke with Warrior
Leader Course attendees, and the
noncommissioned officers charged
with training the leaders of tomorrow,
handed out coins, and chaired a question-
and-answer session.
Soldiers and noncommissioned
officers competing in the combatives
portion of the Fort Carson Soldier and
NCO of the year competition were
excited when Chandler congratulated
and awarded them a coin for their
performances.
“It is exciting to have the sergeant
major of the Army take the time to
show that he cares about Soldiers at
all levels of the Army,” said Pfc.
Heather Scogin, health care specialist,
Headquarters and Headquarters
Company, 3rd Special Troops
Battalion, 3rd Armored Brigade
Combat Team, 4th Inf. Div.
The sergeant major of the Army’s
wife, Jeanne Chandler, spent her time
at Fort Carson visiting various Family
Readiness Groups, reading to children
at Patriot Elementary School and
had lunch with attendees of the
SMRT pilot program at the Family
Readiness Center.
“A year and a half ago, I went to
the University of Pennsylvania and sat
in on a full day of the Master
Resiliency Training for Soldiers,”
Jeanne Chandler said. “It was an ‘aha’
moment for me, because I was raised
with ‘quitters never win and winners
never quit.’
“My approach to a bad situation
was to steel myself, toughen up, and
close off my emotions,” Jeanne
Chandler said. “The MRT for spouses
to teach spouses is terrific. Military
spouses will be able to empathize
better with another military spouse
much better than other people.”
While in Colorado, the Chandlers
also attended the 2013 Warrior Games,
a Paralympic-style competition held at
the U.S. Olympic Training Center and
the U.S. Air Force Academy, where
wounded warriors from the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard, Air Force,
Marines and the United Kingdom
represented their services.
“I think that the Warrior Games
exemplify resilience,” the sergeant
major of the Army said. “When you
have a Soldier who has visible or
invisible wounds, their ability to bounce
back from some very horrific injuries
and wounds of war and compete
against others, that is amazing.”
The trip marked the Chandlers’
second visit to Joint Task Force Carson
since he became the 14th Sergeant
Major of the Army, March 1.
from Page 1
Chandler
Photo by Sgt. William Smith
Sgt. Maj. of the Army Raymond F. Chandler III talks to about 400 Soldiers and Family members at McMahon Auditorium, May 15.
Chandler and his wife, Jeanne Chandler, talked about important issues currently affecting the Army, and answered questions.
Luncheon honors
top enlisted membersStory and photo by
Sgt. William Smith
4th Infantry Division Public Affairs Office
COLORADO SPRINGS — Three Joint
Task Force Carson Soldiers were among 15
nominees recognized during the 2013
Outstanding Enlisted Military Representatives
awards ceremony at the annual Armed Forces
Week Luncheon at The Broadmoor, May 17.
Judged by a panel, the winners were
selected for their military awards and achieve-
ments, educational accomplishments, and
community service.
Air Force Gen. William Shelton, com-
mander, Air Force Space Command, Peterson
Air Force Base, and the luncheon’s featured
speaker, congratulated all 15 finalists for their
outstanding service.
“It makes me proud to serve alongside you
in the finest military in the world,” Shelton said.
Sgt. Sergio Toscano-Jara, petroleum
supply specialist, 59th Quartermaster
Company, 43rd Sustainment Brigade, 4th
Infantry Division, a finalist in the noncommis-
sioned officer category, attended the luncheon
with Family and friends and said he was
honored to be a finalist.
“I’m just happy and proud to serve,” he said.
“A lot of kids need a role model to look up to.”
Toscano-Jara has coached soccer for
Child, Youth and School Services since 2004,
and recently started reading to children at his
daughter’s school.
The other two Joint Task Force Carson
nominees were Spc. Tyler M. Walker, medical
laboratory technician, Medical Department
Activity, junior enlisted category; and Sgt. 1st
Class Shannon Morgan, noncommissioned
officer in charge, DiRaimondo Family
Medicine Clinics, senior noncommissioned
officer category.
The 25th annual luncheon and awards
were hosted by the Colorado Springs Regional
Business Alliance and Business Alliance
Military Affairs Council.
Sgt. Sergio Toscano-Jara, right, 59th Quartermaster Company, 43rd
Sustainment Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, receives an award from Air
Force Gen. William Shelton, commander, Air Force Space Command,
Peterson Air Force Base, for being a finalist in the noncommissioned
officer category, during the annual Armed Forces Week Luncheon at
the Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, May 17.
Krisell Creager-Lumpkins, Warrior Transition
Battalion, finished tied for fourth.
More than 260 wounded, ill and injured service-
members and veterans participated in the Warrior
Games held at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in
Colorado Springs and the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Athletes representing the Army, Marine Corps, Navy
and Coast Guard, Air Force and Special Operations as
well as the British Armed Forces competed in seven
sports —archery, cycling, shooting, sitting volleyball,
swimming, track and field and wheelchair basketball.
A unique partnership between the Department
of Defense and U.S. Olympic Committee
Paralympic Military Program, Warrior Games
showcases the resilient spirit of today’s wounded, ill
and injured servicemembers from all branches of
the military. After overcoming significant physical
and behavioral injuries, these men and women
demonstrate the power of ability over disability and
the spirit of competition, according to the U.S.
Army Warrior Transition Command website.
from Page 3
Warriors
5May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
Story and photos by
Andrea Sutherland
Mountaineer staff
Echoes from the rounds of the M242 Bushmaster
and 240C machine gun ricocheted off the canyon
walls on Range 145, May 15, as crews aimed for targets
up to three football fields in the distance.
With each round, the acrid smell of gunpowder
filled the air.
“I love that smell,” said Staff Sgt. Andrew Rose,
taking in a breath.
Rose watched the Bradley as it retreated to its
defensive position. A moment later, when a target
popped up hundreds of yards down the canyon, the
50,000-pound vehicle sprang forward, firing three-
round bursts and releasing more fumes.
“They should make a candle with that scent. A
‘dude’ candle,” said Staff Sgt. Christian Adams.
“A ‘mandle,’” Rose said, laughing.
“It smells like war,” said Staff Sgt. Matthew Hood.
Rose, range safety officer and member of 4th
Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Armored
Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division; Adams,
noncommissioned officer in charge of the exercise, 1st
Battalion, 67thArmor Regiment, 2ndArmored Brigade
Combat Team, 4th Inf. Div.; and Hood, master gunner
with 4th Sqdn., 10th Cav., Reg.; observed as the tank
backed off the platform and began its offensive
operations, honing in on the pop-up targets down range.
Inside the cramped quarters of the Bradley, two
4th Inf. Div. Soldiers and master gunner hopefuls
focused on the targets. From the observation tower,
master training team evaluators from Fort Benning,
Ga., confirmed hits and observed the crew’s tactics.
For more than three months, nearly 30 “Ivy”
Division Soldiers endured weeks of classroom and
hands-on training in hopes of earning the “master
gunner” title. In June, they’ll find out if they passed.
“A master gunner is the commander’s subject
matter expert on everything gunnery,” said Staff Sgt.
Chad Hepler, master gunnery instructor, 1st Battalion,
29th Infantry Regiment, 197th Infantry Brigade, Fort
Benning. “They’re sort of a jack-of-all-trades.”
Master gunners start at the platoon level and
advance to the company, battalion and brigade levels
throughout their careers, helping to coordinate field
trainings for their unit, Hepler said.
First, however, they must complete the rig-
orous 14-week Bradley Master Gunner course.
Open to sergeants, staff sergeants and
sergeants first class, the master gunner
course is split into two phases — mainte-
nance and gunnery. During the maintenance
phase, Soldiers learn the ins and outs of their
equipment, including the weapon and fire
control systems. They study capabilities,
ballistics and turret functions. In the second
phase, Soldiers cover six core areas required to
earn the certification, including stabilized and
unstabalized platforms, collective gunnery,
combined arms live-fire exercises, ammunition
forecasting and training management.
Soldiers study hundreds of pages of
material in hopes of passing a series of tests.
“It’s very challenging,” said Staff Sgt.
Jeromy Taylor, 4th Sqdn., 10th Cav. Reg., 3rd
ABCT. “All the material, I have to soak it up
like a sponge.”
In their downtime, Soldiers spread out on
their cots sifting through a binder packed with
information and studying their homemade
flash cards and other study materials.
“This is the ‘right way’to do things,”Taylor
said, flipping through the hundreds of pages of
course documents. “The standards are the basis.”
Staff Sgt. Shelton Stansbury, 1st Bn., 67th Armor
Reg., 2nd ABCT, said he hopes that after completing
and passing the certification, he would be able to
bring more realistic scenarios to his Soldiers.
“The more realistic the training is, the more it
keeps them interested,” he said. “They get more into
(the training) and then they get something out of it.”
Stansbury said he and the other master gunner hope-
fuls formed study groups to learn all of the material.
“We help each other,” he said. “If one of us fails,
it will be like we all fail.”
Barry Reynolds, a retired sergeant first class
and master gunner, said he remembers how these
Soldiers feel.
“It’s a bunch of knowledge,” said Reynolds,
who completed the master gunner course in 1988.
In 2004, he retired from the military and became an
instructor with BAE Systems, a contracting company
based at Fort Benning that helps teach new master
gunners. Reynolds, along with two civilian instructors
and two Soldier instructors, traveled to Fort Carson
for the training.
“I like watching them learn,” he said. “At times
it can be overwhelming for them, but they each
get it eventually.”
After completing the live-fire exercises and
written tests, Soldiers complete the culminating
challenge of the course — drafting and briefing a
unit training plan to course evaluators.
“They have four days to do the UTP,” Hepler said,
adding that the Soldiers will get, on average, about
two hours of sleep per night.
Hepler said in past courses, a third of Soldiers do
not pass. Since the beginning of the training, three of
the 29 Soldiers dropped out.
“The job is tough,” Hepler said. “But it’s all about
training Soldiers. It’s worth it.”
A Bradley crew of master gunner hopefuls
fires rounds from an M242 Bushmaster at
pop-up targets on Range 145, May 15.
Staff Sgt. Geoffrey Davis, 1st Special Troops Battalion, 1st Armored
Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, and Staff Sgt. Sean
Leytham, 4th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd ABCT, 4th Inf.
Div., watch as a Bradley crew fires at pop-up targets on Range 145
during a live-fire exercise, May 15. Nearly 30 “Ivy” Division Soldiers
participated in the 14-week Bradley Master Gunner course.
Dozens strive
to become
master gunners
MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
Miscellaneous
Self-help weed control program — Department of
Defense regulations require training for people
applying pesticides on military installations. Units
interested in participating in the program must send
Soldiers for training on the proper handling,
transportation and application of herbicides. Once
individuals are properly trained by the Directorate of
Public Works base operations contractor, Fort Carson
Support Services, Soldiers can be issued the
appropriate products and equipment so units can treat
weeds in rocked areas around their unit. Weed control
training sessions for Soldiers are available the first
and third Monday of the month through September
from 10 a.m. to noon in building 3711. Products and
equipment will be available for Soldiers on a hand
receipt. Each unit may send up to five people for
training. For more information about the DPW
Self-Help Weed Control Program, call 492-0166.
Finance travel processing — All inbound and
outbound Temporary Lodging Expense, “Do it
Yourself ” Moves, servicemember and Family
member travel, travel advance pay and travel pay
inquiries will be handled in building 1218, room 231.
Call 526-4454 or 524-2594 for more information.
First Sergeants’Barracks Program 2020 — is located
in building 1454 on Nelson Boulevard. The hours
of operation are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. The
office assists Soldiers with room assignments and
terminations. For more information call 526-9707.
Recycle incentive program — The Directorate of
Public Works has an incentive program to
prevent recyclable waste from going to the landfill.
Participating battalions can earn monetary rewards
for turning recyclable materials in to the Fort Carson
Recycle Center, building 155. Points are assigned for
the pounds of recyclable goods turned in and every
participating battalion receives money quarterly. Call
526-5898 for more information about the program.
Sergeant Audie Murphy Club — The Fort Carson
SergeantAudie Murphy Club meets the thirdTuesday
of each month at the Family Connection Center from
11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The SAMC is open to all
active members and those interested in becoming
future SAMC members. The club was originally a
U.S. Forces Command organization of elite noncom-
missioned officers but is now an Armywide program
for those who meet the criteria and have proven
themselves to be outstanding NCOs through a board/
leadership process. Contact SAMC president Sgt. 1st
Class Dawna Brown at 526-3983 for information.
Directorate of Public Works services — DPW is
responsible for a wide variety of services on Fort
Carson. Services range from repair and maintenance
of facilities to equipping units with a sweeper and
cleaning motor pools. Listed below are phone
numbers and points of contact for services:
• Facility repair/service orders — Fort
Carson Support Services service order desk can be
reached at 526-5345. Use this number for emergen-
cies or routine tasks and for reporting wind damage,
damaged traffic signs or other facility damage.
• Refuse/trash and recycling — Call Eric
Bailey at 719-491-0218 or email eric.e.bailey4.
civ@mail.mil when needing trash containers, trash
is overflowing or emergency service is required.
• Facility custodial services — Call Bryan
Dorcey at 526-6670 or email bryan.s.dorcey.civ@
mail.mil for service needs or to report complaints.
• Elevator maintenance — Call Bryan
Dorcey at 526-6670 or email bryan.s.dorcey.
civ@mail.mil.
• Motor pool sludge removal/disposal —
Call Dennis Frost at 526-6997 or email
dennis.j.frost.civ@mail.mil.
• Repair and utility/self-help — Call Gary
Grant at 526-5844 or email gerald.l.grant2.civ
@mail.mil. Use this number to obtain self-help
tools and equipment or a motorized sweeper.
• Base operations contracting officer
representative — Call Terry Hagen at 526-9262
or email terry.j.hagen.civ@mail.mil for questions
on snow removal, grounds maintenance and
contractor response to service orders.
• Portable latrines — Call Jerald Just at
524-0786 or email jerald.j.just.civ@mail.mil to
request latrines, for service or to report damaged
or overturned latrines.
• Signs — Call Jim Diorio, Fort Carson
Support Services, at 896-0797 or 524-2924 or
email jdiorio@kira.com to request a facility,
parking or regulatory traffic sign.
The Fort Carson Trial Defense Service office — is
able to help Soldiers 24/7 and is located at building
1430, room 233. During duty hours, Soldiers
should call 526-4563. The 24-hour phone number
for after hours, holidays and weekends is 526-0051.
Briefings
75th Ranger Regiment briefings — are held Tuesdays
in building 1430, room 150, from noon to 1 p.m.
Soldiers must be private to sergeant first class with a
minimum General Technical Score of 105; be a U.S.
citizen; score 240 or higher on the Army Physical
Fitness Test; and pass a Ranger physical. Call 524-
2691 or visit http://www.goarmy.com/ranger.html.
Casualty Notification/Assistance Officer training —
is held June 19-21 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Veterans
Chapel. Class is limited to the first 50 people.
Call 526-5613/5614 for details.
Retirement briefings — are held from 8 a.m. to
noon the second and third Wednesday of each
month at the Freedom Performing Arts Center,
building 1129 at the corner of Specker Avenue
and Ellis Street. The Retirement Services Office
recommends spouses accompany Soldiers to the
briefing. Call 526-2840 for more information.
ETS briefings — for enlisted personnel are held the
first and third Wednesday of each month. Briefing
sign in begins at 7 a.m. at the Soldier Readiness
Building, building 1042, room 244, on a first-
come, first-served basis. Soldiers must be within
120 days of their expiration term of service, but
must attend no later than 30 days prior to their
ETS or start of transition leave. Call 526-
2240/8458 for more information.
Disposition Services — Defense Logistics Agency
Disposition Services Colorado Springs, located in
building 381, conducts orientations Fridays from
12:30-3:30 p.m. The orientations discuss DLA
processes to include turning in excess property,
reutilizing government property, web-based tools
available, special handling of property and environ-
mental needs. To schedule an orientation, contact
Arnaldo Borrerorivera at arnaldo.borrerorivera@
dla.mil for receiving/turn in; Mike Welsh at
mike.welsh@dla.mil for reutilization/web tools; or
Rufus Guillory at rufus.guillory@dla.mil.
Reassignment briefings — are held Tuesdays in
building 1129, Freedom Performing Arts Center.
Sign-in for Soldiers heading overseas is at 7 a.m.
and the briefing starts at 7:30 a.m. Sign-in for
personnel being reassigned stateside is at 1 p.m.,
with the briefing starting at 1:30 p.m. Soldiers are
required to bring Department of the Army Form
5118, signed by their physician and battalion
commander, and a pen to complete forms. Call
526-4730/4583 for details.
Army ROTC Green-to-Gold briefings — are held
the first and third Tuesday of each month at noon
at the education center, building 1117, room 120.
Call University of Colorado-Colorado Springs
Army ROTC at 262-3475 for more information.
Hours of Operation
Central Issue Facility
• In-processing — Monday-Thursday from
7:30-10:30 a.m.
• Initial and partial issues — Monday-
Friday from 12:30-3:30 p.m.
• Cash sales/report of survey — Monday-
Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
• Direct exchange and partial turn ins —
Monday-Friday from 7:30-11:30 a.m.
• Full turn ins — by appointment only; call
526-3321.
• Unit issues and turn ins — require
approval, call 526-5512/6477.
Education Center hours of operation — The
Mountain Post Training and Education Center,
building 1117, 526-2124, hours are as follows:
• Counselor Support Center — Monday-
Thursday 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Fridays 11
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
• Army Learning Center — Monday-
Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
• Defense Activity for Nontraditional
Education Support andArmy PersonnelTesting —
Monday-Friday 7:30-11:30 a.m. and 12:30-4:30 p.m.
Repair and Utility self-help — has moved to building
217 and is open Monday-Friday 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Medical Activity Correspondence Department
office hours — The Correspondence (Release of
Information) Office in the Patient Administration
Division hours are Monday-Wednesday and
Friday 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and closed
Thursday and federal holidays. Call 526-7322 or
526-7284 for details.
Work Management Branch — The DPW Work
Management Branch, responsible for processing
work orders — Facilities Engineering Work
Requests, DA Form 4283 — is open for processing
work orders and other in-person support from
7-11:30 a.m. Monday-Friday. Afternoon customer
support is by appointment only, call 526-2900.
The Work Management Branch is located in
building 1219.
Claims Office hours — are Monday-Friday from 9
a.m. to noon and 1-4 p.m., located on the first floor
of building 6222, 1633 Mekong Street. Shipment
under Full Replacement Value claimants must
submit Department of Defense Form 1840R or
After Delivery Form 1851 for additionally dis-
covered items to the carrier within 75 days online.
Claimants must log into Defense Personal
Property System at http://www.move.mil and
submit the claim within nine months directly to
the carrier to receive full replacement value for
missing or destroyed items. All other claims
should be submitted to the Claims Office within
two years of the date of delivery or date of
incident. Call the Fort Carson Claims Office at
526-1355 for more information.
Legal services — provided at the Soldier Readiness
Processing site are for Soldiers undergoing the
SRP process. The SRP Legal Office will only
provide powers of attorney or notary services to
Soldiers processing through the SRP. Retirees,
Family members and Soldiers not in the SRP
process can receive legal assistance and powers
of attorney at the main legal office located at
1633 Mekong St., building 6222, next to the
Family Readiness Center. Legal assistance
prepares powers of attorney and performs notary
services on a walk-in basis from 8:30 a.m. to 4
p.m. Mondays-Wednesdays and Fridays, and
from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursdays.
BOSS meetings are held the first
and third Thursday of each month
from 2-3:30 p.m. at The Foxhole.
Contact Cpl. Rachael Robertson at
524-2677 or visit the BOSS office in room 106 of The
Hub for more information. Text “follow CarsonBOSS”
to 40404 to receive updates and event information.
Fort Carson dining facilities hours of operation
DFAC Friday-Monday (DONSA/weekend) Tuesday-Thursday
Stack Closed Breakfast: 7-9 a.m.
Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Dinner: 5-6:30 p.m.
Wolf Breakfast: 7-9 a.m.
Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Dinner: 5-6:30 p.m.
Breakfast: 6:45-9 a.m.
Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Dinner: 5-6:30 p.m.
Warfighter
(Wilderness Road
Complex)
Closed Breakfast: 7-9 a.m.
Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Dinner: Closed
LaRochelle
10th SFG(A)
Closed Breakfast: 7-9 a.m.
Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Dinner: Closed
6
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Join us for our main presentation (3:00-4:00 p.m.) featuring:
An update on Fort Carson from senior leadership.
A community update from Dennis Hisey, Chair, El Paso County
Board of County Commissioners & Chair, Pikes Peak Area
Council of Governments Board of Directors
A Question and Answer Panel follows (4:00-5:00 p.m.) with:
HMajor General Paul J. LaCamera, Commanding General,
4th Infantry Division & Fort Carson,
HCommissioner Hisey,
HMajor General G. Wesley Clark (ret, USAF), Chair, Peak
Military Care Network,
HTerrance McWilliams, Director of Military & Veterans
H
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Open House/Social Hour: 5:00-6:00 p.m.
Carson, the Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments, and
community leaders; and learn more by visiting informational
booths.
Moderator: Jennifer Horbelt, Anchor/Journalist, KOAA, News 5
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8 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
Inhonor
of
ourfallen
Photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch
Names of 12 fallen heroes were added to the
Mountain Post Warrior Memorial during a ceremony Thursday at
Kit Carson Park near Gate 1. The memorial now contains
the names of 380 Fort Carson servicemembers who paid
the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq and Afghanistan since Sept. 11, 2001.
The heroes, listed in alphabetical order, are:
1st Lt. Michael R. Adams
Spc. Ronald D. Allen
Capt. Eric L. Allton
Spc. Mabry J. Anders
Pfc. Charlie C. Antonio
Pfc. Elden D. Arcand
Spc. Michael A. Arciola
Staff Sgt. Daniel A. Bader
Sgt. Ronald W. Baker
Pfc. Michael Christopher Balsley
Pfc. Mark A. Barbret
Staff Sgt. Chad A. Barrett
Spc. Matthew E. Baylis
Spc. Bradley S. Beard
Pfc. Stephen C. Benish
Sgt. Carlos A. Benitez
Staff Sgt. Stephen A. Bertolino
Pfc. Tramaine J. Billingsley
Sgt. Christopher J. Birdwell
Spc. Justin R. Blackwell
Pvt. Jeremy S. Bohannon
Pfc. Kyle G. Bohrnsen
Staff Sgt. Andrew L. Bossert
Sgt. Kenneth E. Bostic
Pfc. Brian A. Botello
Spc. Brian R. Bowman
Staff Sgt. Hensley Box
Sgt. Timothy R. Boyce
Spc. Hoby F. Bradfield
Staff Sgt. Stacey C. Brandon
Spc. Joshua T. Brazee
Staff Sgt. Scottie L. Bright
Sgt. Tomas F. Broomhead
Staff Sgt. Christopher L. Brown
Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Brown
Staff Sgt. Jeremy A. Brown
1st Lt. Tyler H. Brown
Sgt. William E. Brown
Sgt. Ernest G. Bucklew
Spc. Brock L. Bucklin
Pfc. Travis W. Buford
Cpl. Jimmy D. Buie
Capt. Joshua T. Byers
Staff Sgt. Marshall H. Caddy
Cpl. Lyle J. Cambridge
Spc. Raymond E. Cammel
Staff Sgt. Michael D.P. Cardenaz
Sgt. Richard P. Carl
Sgt. Robert Michael Carr
Sgt. Tyrone L. Chisholm
Sgt. Michael K. Clark
Pfc. Chad D. Clements
Cpl. Gary B. Coleman
Sgt. Russell L. Collier
Sgt. 1st Class Daniel B. Crabtree
Staff Sgt. Alexander B. Crackel
Sgt. James E. Craig
Spc. Ernest W. Dallas Jr.
Spc. Grant A. Dampier
Pfc. Steven A. Davis
Sgt. David A. Davis
Spc. Armando A. De La Paz
Sgt. Felix M. Delgreco
1st Lt. Joseph D. deMoors
Spc. Sergio R. Diaz-Varela
Spc. Kevin R. Dickson
Pfc. John P. Dion
Spc. Michael A. Diraimondo
Spc. Robert Donevski
Sgt. Michael E. Dooley
Pfc. Stephen P. Downing
Pvt. Steven T. Drees
Staff Sgt. Eric T. Duckworth
Sgt. Sean M. Durkin
Sgt. 1st Class Donald W. Eacho
Spc. Phillip C. Edmundson
Staff Sgt. Kyle A. Eggers
Spc. Elias Elias
Staff Sgt. Michael Elledge
Sgt. Justin L. Eyerly
Sgt. 1st Class Lawrence D. Ezell
Sgt. 1st Class Jason J. Fabrizi
Capt. Brian R. Faunce
Capt. Arthur L. Felder
Spc. Rian C. Ferguson
Master Sgt. Richard L. Ferguson
Sgt. Darrell L. Fernandez
Spc. Eric M. Finniginam
Pfc. Patrick S. Fitzgibbon
Spc. Steven J. Fitzmorris
Staff Sgt. Marion Flint Jr.
Spc. Jesus O. Flores Jr.
Pfc. Jesus Fonseca
Staff Sgt. Jarred S. Fontenot
Sgt. Edward W. Forrest Jr.
Sgt. Maurice K. Fortune
Spc. Christopher T. Fox
Spc. Michael W. Franklin
Pvt. Benjamin L. Freeman
Staff Sgt. Brian L. Freeman
Pfc. Walter Freeman Jr.
Pfc. Nathan J. Frigo
Sgt. Alexander Henry Fuller
Sgt. Alexander J. Funcheon
Sgt. Dennis J. Gallardo
Staff Sgt. Justin T. Gallegos
Spc. Zakary A. Gansert
Staff Sgt. Juan De Dios Garcia-Arana
Staff Sgt. Frank J. Gasper
Pvt. Bryce E. Gautier
Pfc. George R. Geer
Sgt. 1st Class Todd C. Gibbs
Pfc. Derek A. Gibson
Pfc. Jesse A. Givens
Chap. (Capt.) Dale A. Goetz
Spc. Christopher A. Golby
Spc. David J. Goldberg
Pvt. Brian K. Grant
Air Force Maj. Walter D. Gray
Spc. Christopher T. Griffin
Command Sgt. Maj. Kevin J. Griffin
Capt. Sean Grimes
Staff Sgt. Casey J. Grochowiak
Spc. Daniel F. Guastaferro
Chief Warrant Officer 2
Hans N. Gukeisen
Pfc. Zachary R. Gullett
Staff Sgt. Joshua R. Hager
Staff Sgt. Bryan E. Hall
Chief Warrant Officer 3
Robert C. Hammett
Spc. Kimble A. Han
Sgt. Randy M. Haney
Sgt. Joshua M. Hardt
Staff Sgt. Ryan Eugene Haupt
Staff Sgt. Omer T. Hawkins ll
Chief Warrant Officer 2 Dennis P. Hay
Staff Sgt. Jason R. Hendrix
Spc. Chassan S. Henry
Sgt. Ken K. Hermogino
Spc. Kevin Olsen Hill
Pfc. Cory F. Hiltz
Pfc. Brian L. Holden
Sgt. Ryan J. Hopkins
Master Sgt. Kelly L. Hornbeck
Spc. Christopher L. Hoskins
Staff Sgt. Curtis T. Howard II
Cpl. Walter B. Howard ll
Spc. Robert W. Hoyt
Staff Sgt. Sean P. Huey
Spc. Nicholas R. Idalski
Staff Sgt. Jesse Infante
Sgt. Thor H. Ingraham
Sgt. Matthew L. Ingram
Cpl. Michael Keith Ingram Jr.
Sgt. Benjamin W. Isenberg
Pfc. Kenneth J. Iwasinski
Pfc. Allen Brenton Jaynes
Sgt. Edmund J. Jeffers
Staff Sgt. Gary W. Jeffries
Pfc. Darius T. Jennings
Sgt. David W. Johnson
Spc. Timothy L. Johnson
Chief Warrant Officer 2
Philip A. Johnson Jr.
Pfc. Richard K. Jones
Pfc. Roy L. Jones III
Sgt. Giann Carolo Joya-Mendoza
Spc. Dustin L. Kendall
Sgt. Nathan P. Kennedy
Maj. Thomas E. Kennedy
Staff Sgt. Kevin J. Kessler
Pvt. Jeungjin Kim
Sgt. Shin Woo Kim
Spc. Anthony D. Kinslow
Sgt. Joshua J. Kirk
Pvt. Joseph L. Knott
Chief Warrant Officer 4
Patrick W. Kordsmeier
Lt. Col. Eric John Kruger
Cpl. Jared W. Kubasak
Pfc. Christopher D. Kube
Sgt. Larry R. Kuhns
Staff Sgt. Patrick F. Kutschbach
Sgt. 1st Class William W. Labadie Jr.
Maj. Douglas A. LaBouff
Chief Warrant Officer 2
Matthew C. Laskowski
Staff Sgt. William T. Latham
Capt. Joshua S. Lawrence
Spc. Daniel C. Lawson
Sgt. Carl W. Lee
Pfc. Samuel S. Lee
Spc. Ken W. Leisten
Spc. Eric N. Lembke
Sgt. Joshua A. Lengstorf
Staff Sgt. Lex L. Lewis
Spc. Eric A. Lill
Spc. Justin W. Linden
Sgt. Youvert Loney
Sgt. Angelo L. Lozada
Spc. Stephan L. Mace
Pfc. Vorn J. Mack
Pfc. Nicholas A. Madaras
Chief Warrant Officer 2
Ian D. Manuel
Sgt Joshua S. Marcum
Spc. Evan A. Marshall
Staff Sgt. Vernon W. Martin
Staff Sgt. Jay E. Martin
Spc. Francisco G. Martinez
Spc. Joseph L. Martinez
Sgt. Michael J. Martinez
Maj. Michael R. Martinez
Spc. Rafael Martinez Jr.
Spc. Charles P. McClure
Pfc. Clinton Tyler McCormick
1st Lt. Erik S. McCrae
Cpl. Stephen M. McGowan
Spc. Jeremy W. McHalffey
Sgt. Allen R. McKenna
Sgt. Jason A. Mcleod
Spc. Kenneth A. Melton
Spc. Christopher L. Mendonca
Pfc. William L. Meredith
Spc. Christopher A. Merville
Spc. Nicolas E. Messmer
Pfc. Brandon A. Meyer
Pfc. Harrison J. Meyer
Pfc. Devin J. Michel
Spc. James H. Miller
Sgt. Mikeal Miller
Pfc. Dennis J. Miller Jr.
Staff Sgt. Frederick L. Miller Jr.
Spc. Pedro Millet Meletiche
Sgt. 1st Class Troy Miranda
Sgt. Gordon F. Misner
Spc. Gregory J. Missman
Sgt. Keman L. Mitchell
Sgt. 1st Class Sean K. Mitchell
Staff Sgt. Jason W. Montefering
Staff Sgt. Thaddeus S. Montgomery
Sgt. Milton M. Monzon Jr.
Sgt. Jae Sik Moon
Spc. Jose L. Mora
Staff Sgt. Brian L. Morris
Chief Warrant Officer 1
Judson E. Mount
Sgt. James P. Muldoon
Pfc. Robert W. Murray Jr.
Sgt. Dimitri Muscat
Spc. Nathan W. Nakis
Spc. Brynn J. Naylor
Spc. Randy LJ Neff Jr.
Sgt. Julio E. Negron
Pfc. Albert M. Nelson
Sgt. Kenneth R. Nichols
Spc. Louis E. Niedermeier
Staff Sgt. David P. Nowaczyk
1st Lt. Mark A. Noziska
Spc. Stephen M. Okray
Staff Sgt. Billy J. Orton
Spc. Bobby J. Pagan
Capt. Eric T. Paliwoda
Staff Sgt. Dale A. Panchot
1st Lt. Tyler Edward Parten
Cpl. Jason G. Pautsch
Sgt. 1st Class Eric P. Pearrow
Spc. Brian H. Penisten
Sgt. 1st Class Christopher W. Phelps
Staff Sgt. Robert R. Pirelli
Spc. Eric J. Poelman
Staff Sgt. Andrew R. Pokorny
Spc. Justin W. Pollard
Sgt. Joe Polo
Spc. Robert C. Pope ll
Staff Sgt. Christopher Potts
Pfc. James E. Prevete
Master Sgt. Charles L. Price III
Sgt. 1st Class Neil A. Prince
Staff Sgt. Michael B. Quinn
Spc. Tamarra J. Ramos
Sgt. Elijah J. Rao
Spc. Omead Hossein Razani
Pfc. Dylan T. Reid
Staff Sgt. John A. Reiners
Pfc. Mario A. Reyes
Sgt. Luis R. Reyes
Sgt. Joshua J. Rimer
Spc. Lizbeth Robles
Spc. Ricky W. Rockholt Jr.
Staff Sgt. Robb L. Rolfing
Spc. Edwin W. Roodhouse
Spc. Kyle R. Rookey
Maj. Mark E. Rosenberg
Sgt. David Roustum
2nd Lt. Charles R. Rubado
Pfc. Aaron J. Rusin
Capt. Drew E. Russell
Spc. Lyle Rymer
Sgt. Yevegeniy Ryndych
Pfc. JR Salvacion
Staff Sgt. Alberto V. Sanchez
Spc. Trinidad Santiago Jr.
Cpl. Luis D. Santos
Sgt. Stephen P. Saxton
Pfc. Collin Ryan Schockmel
Sgt. Mark H. Schoonhoven
Maj. Matthew E. Schram
Spc. Stephen M. Scott
Sgt. Michael P. Scusa
Staff Sgt. Michael B. Shackelford
Sgt. Daniel J. Shaw
Sgt. Jacob M. Simpson
Sgt. Christopher C. Simpson
Sgt. Robert C. Sisson
Air Force Senior Airman
Bradley R. Smith
Staff Sgt. Christopher G. Smith
1st Lt. Justin S. Smith
Spc. Michael J. Smith
Sgt. Michael A. Smith
Sgt. Eric L. Snell
Cpl. Ismael G. Solorio
Pfc. Armando Soriano
Pfc. Eric D. Soufrine
Pfc. Jason L. Sparks
Spc. Randy L. Stevens
Staff Sgt. Glen H. Stivison Jr.
Pfc. Brandon M. Styer
Pfc. Roger Alfonso
Suarez-Gonzalez
Sgt. John Michael Sullivan
Pfc. Ming Sun
Sgt. Timothy J. Sutton
Spc. Robert A. Swaney
Spc. Tofiga J. Tautolo
Sgt. Norman R. Taylor III
1st Lt. Alejo R. Thompson
Pfc. Kevin C. Thomson
Sgt. 1st Class Duane A. Thornsbury
Pfc. Joshua K. Titcomb
Maj. Jeffery P. Toczylowski
Sgt. Tromaine K. Toy
Staff Sgt. Marvin L. Trost lll
Sgt. John B. Trotter
Spc. Wade M. Twyman
Pfc. Brian S. Ulbrich
Spc. Robert O. Unruh
Staff Sgt. Gary A. Vaillant
Sgt. Melissa Valles
Chief Warrant Officer 3
Brian K. Van Dusen
Spc. Robert D. Varga
Staff Sgt. Justin L. Vasquez
Spc. Brian A. Vaughn
Pfc. Jerimiah J. Veitch
Pfc. Justin Abel Verdeja
Pfc. Ramon A. Villatoro Jr.
Staff Sgt. Thomas E. Vitagliano
Chief Warrant Officer 2
Douglas M. Vose III
Sgt. Antwan L. Walker
Staff Sgt. Timothy H. Walker
Sgt. Jonathan M. Walls
Pfc. Rowan D. Walter
Pvt. Brett A. Walton
Pfc. Andrew M. Ward
Sgt. Bennie J. Washington
Staff Sgt. David Weisenburg
Chief Warrant Officer 2
Stephen M. Wells
Staff Sgt. Matthew J. West
Spc. Grant A. Wichmann
Pfc. Matthew E. Wildes
Sgt. Charles T. Wilkerson
Spc. Jeffery A. Williams
Spc. Ronnie D. Williams
Staff Sgt. Taft V. Williams
Staff Sgt. Arthur C. Williams lV
Spc. Nicholas E. Wilson
Spc. Thomas J. Wilwerth
Sgt. Jeremiah T. Wittman
Spc. James R. Wolf
Sgt. Eduviges G. Wolf
Pfc. Eric P. Woods
Staff Sgt. Gary L. Woods Jr.
Spc. Dustin L. Workman II
Sgt. James R. Worster
Capt. Luke C. Wullenwaber
Pvt. Joshua A.R. Young
Spc. Stephen G. Zapasnik
9May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
10 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
To volunteer, call 877-427-9626 or visit StepUpALA.org.
I proudly volunteer for those who
have sacrificed so much for us.
A wonderful thing happens when you step up and volunteer
with the American Legion Auxiliary: you make a difference
in the lives of our veterans, military and their families—both
at home and abroad. It doesn’t take much of your time, there
are lots of activities to choose from, and you’ll meet some new
friends. So step up Colorado Springs, like Amber did.
call 87teer,nuloo vTTo -9626 or visi-4277call 87 t StepUpALA.org.-9626 or visi
Photo by Sgt. William Smith
Army test site
Two AH-64E Guardian Apaches arrive at Butts Army Airfield on Fort Carson,
Monday. The 1st Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment, 25th Infantry Division, is the
second unit to test the new Apache model, said Capt. Christopher Curran, assistant
operations officer in charge, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Bn.,
25th Avn. Reg. The new model provides improvements to crew survivability in
the event of a crash and improved drivetrain increasing payload capacity without
sacrificing power. It also has the capability to download video to troops on the
ground to help determine friend from foe. Fort Carson provides the
optimal testing site with its terrain features, four brigade combat teams and
10th Special Forces Group (Airborne).
11May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
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Sgt. Bryan
Fox, 663rd
Ordnance
Company,
242nd
Explosive
Ordnance
Disposal
Battalion, 71st
Ordnance Group
(EOD), scans the
ground with a
VMC-1 Gizmo
metal detector,
May 14.
EOD cognizant of changing enemy tacticsStory and photo by
Andrea Sutherland
Mountaineer staff
The TALON robot zoomed across the
dried earth toward the C4 charge and
secondary improvised explosive device.
From the Humvee parked hundreds of feet
away, Spc. Matthew Beatty maneuvered the
robot’s arm, delicately plucking the charge
from the ground via a thin wire.
“That’s one good thing about the
‘X-Box generation,’ they’re good with
the robots,” said Dave Cooley, evaluator
and contractor with Joint Asymmetric
Threat Awareness and Counter IED
training program.
The team of explosive ordnance dis-
posal technicians from 663rd Ordnance
Company, 242nd EOD Battalion, 71st
Ordnance Group (EOD), had already
disposed of one IED. As they swept the
area with the robot, they came across a
secondary device.
Beatty guided the robot back to the
Humvee as Sgt. Matthew Bagley and Sgt.
Bryan Fox prepped a water bottle charge
to eliminate the second threat.
“What’s the plan, Bryan?” Cooley asked.
“We got another water bottle. We’re
going to go back because of that second
pressure plate you put out there,” Fox said.
“I didn’t put it out there,” Cooley
said. “The ‘Taliban’ did.”
From May 13-17, EOD technicians
completed complex scenarios near
Camp Red Devil as part of a training
exercise to prepare for an upcoming
deployment to Afghanistan. Cooley and
other contractors prepared the exercises
based on real situations servicemembers
experience in theater.
“We’re duplicating tactics seen in
Afghanistan,” said Cooley, who recently
returned from Afghanistan after a six-
month tour. “As (enemy forces) learn how
we do things, they change their tactics.”
As a result, Cooley said, EOD units
also need to change and adapt.
“I come here and pass along that
information to these guys,” he said.
Throughout the week, as teams rotated
through various scenarios, team leaders
briefed each other on the location and
number of IEDs found as well as
other pertinent information discovered
while patrolling.
“I’m feeling confident,” Fox said.
“This training helps us build confidence
and gets us ready for Afghanistan.”
13May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
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MPs get pepper sprayedStory and photo by
Spc. Robert Holland
3rd Armored Brigade Combat
Team Public Affairs Office,
4th Infantry Division
Spc. Andrew Detwiler said he just
wanted his first time to be over.
“Close your eyes,” said 1st Lt.
Gregory Barslou. “Are you ready?”
Detwiler did as he was told, body
tensed and said he was ready. Barslou,
with a smile on his face, aimed the
small canister, gave the verbal warning
and squeezed the trigger. Immediately
a stream of pale yellow fluid hit
Detwiler right on the forehead — a
perfect hit.
Detwiler, along with the rest of the
military policemen assigned to the MP
Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters
Company, 3rd Brigade Special Troops
Battalion, 3rd Armored Brigade Combat
Team, 4th Infantry Division, participated
in a one-day oleoresin capsicum spray
— commonly known as OC spray or
pepper spray — training and certifica-
tion course May 10.
The course teaches Soldiers how to
properly use the nonlethal weapon.
“Personally, I think my Soldiers are
scared,” Barslou said. “It’s a scary thing
to go through.”
Staff Sgt. Joseph Pellegrino said he
agreed with Barslou, noting it was one
of the worst things he has experienced.
“I would rather be Tasered any day
of the week than be sprayed,” Pellegrino
said. “Every time it sucks, and I have
been through it about five times.”
Barslou said training like this is
invaluable to his Soldiers because OC
spray could very well save their lives
down the road. The Soldiers, through
a mix of classroom and hands-on
training, familiarize themselves with
the spray, helping remove the psycho-
logical element of the weapon. This
allows the Soldiers to maintain their
composure if they are accidentally, or
purposely, exposed to OC spray in
real-world situations, Barslou said.
“(OC spray training) is beneficial
because it gives our Soldiers another
level of force to use before they have to
go to lethal or deadly force,” Barslou
said. “The training teaches the Soldiers
that they can fight through anything.
It makes them stronger and more
effective Soldiers.”
MPs must recertify with the spray
every three years to carry it. To be
certified as level 1, Pellegrino said
the Soldiers must be directly exposed
to the OC spray and then complete
various tasks such as calling for
backup, combatives and handcuffing
an aggressive individual. Level 2
certification consists of indirect
exposures for those who have already
completed level 1 training.
“It did not burn my eyes as bad as
I expected it to,” said Detwiler. “But
the burning sensation on my face was
a hundred times worse than I thought
it would be.”
Detwiler, who successfully completed
his initial level 1 certification, said he
learned a lot about OC spray and is glad
he was able to experience it, but, if he had
his choice, one time would be enough.
“It’s not something I would choose
on my own or would want to go
through ever again,” Detwiler said.
“But it is part of being an MP. You just
got to do it and move on.”
Spc. Andrew Detwiler, military policeman, MP Platoon, Headquarters and
Headquarters Company, 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Armored Brigade
Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, has his eye flushed with water by a medic after
being sprayed with oleoresin capsicum spray, commonly known as OC spray or
pepper spray, during a training class May 10.
15May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
Story and photo by
Sgt. Jonathan C. Thibault
4th Combat Aviation Brigade
Public Affairs Office, 4th Infantry
Division
Air traffic control specialists
trained on the Air Traffic Navigation,
Integration and Coordination System
at Butts Army Airfield, May 14.
The ATNAVIC system is a tactical
radar system that provides a rapid air
traffic control response for conditions —
such as radio failure at the tower and
inclement weather with no visibility,
which affect pilots’ability to land without
equipment — that prevent the air traffic
control tower from working effectively.
The Soldiers from Company F, 2nd
General Support Aviation Battalion,
4th Aviation Regiment, 4th Combat
Aviation Brigade, 4th Infantry
Division, find the equipment useful.
“In situations in which aircraft
have low visibility due to weather, and
the tower has bad radio reception, we
can get the aircraft on a safe approach
using the ATNAVIC system,” said Staff
Sgt. Samuel Siegar, radar management
supervisor, Company F, 2nd GSAB.
The Soldiers also appreciate the
system’s portable nature.
“The ATNAVIC system is very
mobile, perfect for tactical environments
and can be set up anywhere.All you need
to set it up is a runway and a tower,”
said Spc. Anthony Willis, air traffic
controller, Company F, 2nd GSAB.
The system is also easy to set up,
with appropriate training.
“The system can be set up by four
highly-trained people in one hour,” said
Rahn McCullough, product manage-
ment air traffic controller net trainer.
“Although I haven’t seen it done in that
time, it is still a rapid assembly and
effective piece of equipment that can be
used by air traffic controllers.”
Company F had seven air traffic
controllers go through this training
for the first time, and one that was
already certified.
Siegar was the only ATNAVICS
certified air traffic controller to go
through the training.
“I have been certified for six years
on this type of radar system,” said Siegar.
“There (have) been three software
version updates in the last two years. I
needed this training to keep me up to
date on all the changes in the system.”
The Company F first-time
ATNAVICS trainees also found this
training useful to their job.
“Getting certified on the ATNAVIC
system allows air traffic controllers
to become rated on radar systems,”
said Willis. “We become more
well-rounded air traffic controllers. We
can use this knowledge when we get
out of the Army and want (to do air
traffic control) as civilians.”
Spc. Nathaniel Harden, air traffic controller specialist, Company F, 2nd General
Support Aviation Battalion, 4th Aviation Regiment, 4th Combat Aviation Brigade, 4th
Infantry Division, calibrates a scope to get the line of sight on the radar system’s
antenna at Butts Army Airfield, May 14.
Controllers use radar to direct air traffic
16 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
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Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Troth
Briefing the surgeon general
Maj. Matthew
Angelidis, Evans Army
Community Hospital
Emergency
Department chief,
briefs Lt. Gen.
Patricia Horoho, Army
surgeon general and
commanding general
of the U.S. Army
Medical Command, on
his department’s
capabilities, May 15.
The ED was one of
several stops Horoho
made during her
hospital tour, which
she said brought
back memories of
when she started her
Army nursing career
here as a second
lieutenant. Horoho
briefed the hospital’s
senior staff on Army
Medicine’s new
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initiatives that focus
on maintaining,
restoring and
improving
beneficiaries’ health.
17May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
VeterankeepsMemorialDayclosetoheartBy Andrea Sutherland
Mountaineer staff
In the past, Charles Watkins has
spent Memorial Day visiting with
veterans, speaking to groups about
his military service and decorating
the graves of the men and women
who made the ultimate sacrifice
for their country.
The day is important to him.
It’s symbolic. But, he fears many
Americans have forgotten its meaning
and the sobering reminder it carries.
“It’s changed from what it used
to be,” Watkins said, quietly. “It used
to be a day to honor and remember
the fallen. Now, it’s just another
three-day holiday for most
Americans.”
The recipient of the Colorado
2011 Veteran of the Year award,
Watkins said it’s important for
Americans to recognize and
remember the servicemembers
who gave their lives for the country.
“If we don’t stand up for
ourselves, we risk oppression from
dictators and tyrannical governments,”
he said. “This country needs a
wake-up call.”
Vietnam
Watkins never intended to join the military.
After completing a semester of college, the
Colorado native dropped out in order to earn money
to pay for school. Instead, in 1966, he was drafted.
For his tour in Vietnam, Watkins served as a
helicopter pilot with the 11th Armored Cavalry
Regiment, flying then Col. George Smith Patton IV.
“He was not a traditional commander,”
Watkins said of Patton. “When we flew, we were
down in the fight, not flying thousands of
feet above. If there wasn’t a fight going on,
we went looking for one.”
When another pilot flew Patton and got lost,
Watkins said Patton made it clear only he would
fly the commander.
“He said, ‘Charlie’s my pilot,’” Watkins said.
“I flew every single day. The most a pilot could fly
was 100 hours per month. I flew between 240 and
260 hours because Patton only wanted one pilot.”
Throughout his tour, there were good times
and bad.
Watkins said he remembers the day in April
1969 when he and Patton picked up two dying
men from the battlefield.
“One of them told Col. Patton, ‘Don’t let people
forget who we are. Don’t forget our kids,’” he said.
“Combat is a high tempo game. You just do what
needs to be done. …You go to your comrades’ needs.
“There’s a saying that goes, ‘We go to war
as kids and we come home as men, and only
God knows what we went through.”
On the homefront
From her home in Colorado Springs,
Donna Watkins tracked her husband’s movements
in Vietnam through television reports.
“The reporters were bird-dogging Col.
Patton and following him so I could kind of
track Charlie’s movements,” she said.
When he first arrived in country, Charles Watkins
was issued a white helmet that he was supposed
to spray paint green. Instead, Donna Watkins said,
a friend painted the words, “Chargin’ Charlie”
on the back of the helmet in red paint.
“I would watch the reports on television,
which were already two or three days old, and I
would see the vibration of his white helmet in
the background with those words so I would see
what action he had,” she said.
Returning home
When he came back from Vietnam, Charles
Watkins said he, like many veterans, did not receive
a warm welcome from the community.
“The public didn’t appreciate us,” he said.
“So we crawled into a bottle and started drinking.”
He added that he and his comrades drank too
much. Some never stopped.
“My buddy, he couldn’t come back from all that,
and he ended up in a nursing home,” he said. “I saw
that it wasn’t good for me. I knew I couldn’t jeopardize
my life. I had a wife and two kids to care for.”
“It took him quite a while before he started
expressing what it was like,” Donna
Watkins said.
When the two moved to Germany for a
new assignment, Donna Watkins said being
around other pilots allowed her husband to
open up about his experiences. But after
a deadly helicopter crash in 1972 during a
training exercise, she said her husband
retreated back into isolation.
“He changed again,” she said. “He was
directing the exercise and he felt as the
most experienced pilot he should fly with
the least experienced. He was reading maps
and by the time he felt the aircraft shudder,
it was too late.”
Reconnecting with the past
After Vietnam, Charles Watkins remained
close to Patton, who retired from the military
as a major general. When Patton became sick
with a form of Parkinson’s disease, Charles
Watkins continued to visit him. At his funeral
in 2004, Watkins delivered one of his eulogies.
“He always said he wanted to die from
the last bullet fired during the last war,”
Charles Watkins said.
Retiring from the military as a lieutenant
colonel, Charles Watkins served 23 years in
the Army. He said he later reconnected with
some of his crewmembers. One of his battle
buddies retired to Oregon, another became
an attorney. One of his crew chiefs, he said,
committed suicide.
“It’s a very permanent solution to a
short-term problem,” he said, looking down.
“You touch a lot of different people in a lot
of different ways.”
Still, he said, there are happy stories.
“At one reunion, this guy saw me
and came running up to me. He said,
‘You saved my life. I was dying. You
pulled me out of a hot (landing
zone).’ It makes you feel good to
know you were there when they
needed help.”
After 9/11, Charles Watkins
said he tried to get back on active
duty, but found a different calling as
a volunteer at Fort Carson.
“It bothered me seeing all these
guys come back and committing
suicide,” he said. “I wanted to help.”
Charles and Donna Watkins
attended homecoming ceremonies,
greeting every Soldier with a
handshake and a welcome home coin.
“We started doing the coins
a few years ago,” he said. “We’ve
given out more than 40,000 so far.”
Charles Watkins said he also offers
rides to any Soldiers that may need a
lift after arriving home from war.
“I’ll take them wherever they
need to go. They should not have
to pay to take a taxi,” he said. “We
didn’t get welcomed. They need
somebody there to shake their hand
and say, ‘Well done.’”
Watkins also spends two days
each week at the Soldier and Family Assistance
Center, helping with odd jobs and talking to Soldiers
that need someone to listen.
“So many want to hold it inside, but if you open
up and talk to other people, you can get rid of some
of those horrors of war,” he said. “They trust another
veteran. The key thing is talking. It helps them.”
Keeping the memories
This Memorial Day, Charles Watkins has no
speaking engagements, no reunions. Instead, he
Charles Watkins, right, poses next to a helicopter with Col. George S. Patton IV in this
undated photograph. Watkins served as Patton's pilot in Vietnam in 1969.
Charles Watkins, a retired lieutenant colonel, prepares to greet
Fort Carson Soldiers during a welcome home ceremony.
See Charles Watkins on Page 24
18 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
Claims to the estate
Spc.Trinidad Santiago — With deepest regret to
the Family of the deceased. Anyone having
claims against or indebtedness to his estate
should contact 1st Lt. Jason Borque at 503-1051.
Spc. Charles McClure — With deepest regret to
the Family of the deceased. Anyone having
claims against or indebtedness to his estate
should contact 1st Lt. Jason Borque at 503-1051.
Upcoming events
Summer food service — The Fountain-Fort Carson
School District offers meals to children without
charge at Aragon Elementary School, located at
211 South Main St. in Fountain, and Abrams
Elementary School, located at 600 Chiles Ave.
on Fort Carson. From June 17 through July 19,
breakfast and lunch will be offered Monday-Friday
from 7:15-8:15 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
General announcements
Exceptional Family Member Program hours
change — Evans Army Community Hospital's
EFMP office is increasing its hours of operation to
better accommodate the needs of servicemembers
and Families. Effective Tuesday, the new hours are:
Monday-Thursday 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Friday
7:30 a.m. to noon. The EFMP office is located in
the hospital’s Woods Soldier Family Care Center,
room 2124 on the second floor near the central
stairs. Contact the EFMP Nurse Administrator at
503-7442 for more information.
Donated annual leave for Fort Carson civilian
employees — is currently being accepted for the
following civilians under the Voluntary Leave
Transfer Program. The employees who have
exhausted all available leave because of medical
emergencies and are currently accepting leave
donations are Brad Hanerkratt, Dental Activity;
Michele Bower, Space and Missile Defense
Command; Vincent Lupercio and Tracy Paul,
Directorate of Emergency Services; Luz
“Susie” Molina, Civilian Personnel Advisory
Center; Jacqueline Woodward, Directorate
of Contracting; Teresa Miller, Directorate of
Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation.
Government civilian employees who wish to
donate annual leave may complete form
OPM-630A, “Request to Donate Annual Leave.”
Nonappropriated Fund employees who wish to
donate complete form OPM-630B “Out of
Agency.” For more information contact Jennifer
Hagemeier-Robles at 526-4270 or email
jennifer.m.hagemeierrobles.civ@mail.mil.
TRICARE challenges — UnitedHealthcare Military
& Veterans assumed management of the TRICARE
program for the western region April 1. There are
no changes to supported benefits for TRICARE
beneficiaries and all existing referrals for covered
benefits will be honored by UMV. Questions about
covered benefits or TRICARE coverage should be
directed to the TRICARE Service Center inside
Evans Army Community Hospital or UMV at
888-874-9378. For more information, visit
https://www.uhcmilitarywest. com.
Changes to dining facility — Beginning June 1 the
Evans Army Community Hospital DFAC will
reduce menu options on weekends and holidays.
Weekends and federal holiday hours are:
breakfast, 6:30-8:30 a.m.; lunch, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.;
and dinner, 4-5:30 p.m. The DFAC offers an
assortment of nutritious grab-n-go items during
these meal hours: breakfast — assorted beverages,
cold cereal, assorted pastries, hard-boiled eggs,
breakfast burritos, scones, muffins, fresh fruit and
yogurt; lunch and dinner — assorted beverages,
assorted pre-made sandwiches, assorted pre-made
salads, fresh fruit, yogurt and assorted desserts.
Call 526-7968 or 7973 for more information.
Library program — Tutor.com for military Families
offers homework and studying help from a
professional tutor, any time of day or night, free
for K-12 students in military Families. Expert tutors
are available online 24/7 to help students in more
than 16 subjects, including math, science, English
and social studies. Tutor.com can also help with
standardized test prep, Advance Placement exams
and with college essays. Visit http://www.tutor.
com/military for more information.
Army Provider Level Satisfaction Survey —
Patients may fill out and return the APLSS to
help minimize the impact of budget cuts on
medical care. Evans Army Community Hospital
receives funding based on patients seen and
customer satisfaction. Positive surveys returned
can bring in up to $800. Help keep providers
and departments and clinics fully functional.
Call 526-7256 for more information.
New health care system — UnitedHealthcare
Military & Veterans became the prime TRICARE
contractor this month. As with any large scale
transition, there are inevitable challenges to work
through. If a patient is experiencing any unusual
occurrences or has questions about primary care
manager changes, network referrals, authorized
providers, or these type issues, contact the
UnitedHealthcare Military & Veterans call
center at 877-988-WEST(9378).
Adult immunizations — Adult patients can visit
their Family Medicine Clinics for all immunizations.
The Allergy Clinic will no longer provide adult
immunizations. Contact your primary medical
provider or clinic for more information
Seeking volunteers — Cub Scout Pack 264
needs volunteers for den leaders and committee
members. No experience is needed. Training
will be provided by Boy Scouts of America staff.
There is always a need for new volunteers to
fill positions or just help out at various activities.
Contact the Committee Chair, Johnathon Jobson
at sgtjobson@gmail.com or the Cub Master,
Robert Jepsen, robert.jepsen@us.army.mil
and put Scout Volunteer in the subject line.
Triple Threat expands — The Southeast Family
Center and Armed Services YMCA hosts Triple
Threat meetings for Family members of military
personnel dealing with post-traumatic stress
disorder. Groups meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday
evenings at the YMCA located at 2190 Jet Wing
Drive in Colorado Springs. Contact Larry Palma at
559-376-5389 or longlinelarry@aol.com for details.
Medications self-care program suspended — Due to
fiscal constraints, Evans Army Community Hospital
is suspending the over-the-counter medication
self-care program. All self-care classes have been
cancelled pending further information, and training
information will be removed from the Evans
Preventive Medicine Web page. Contact Preventive
Medicine at 526-8201 for more information.
Operation Mentor — Big Brothers Big Sisters
seeks children ages 9-16 from military Families
to participate in the military mentoring program,
which matches children with adult volunteers who
serve as positive role models. Visit http://www.
biglittlecolorado.org/ for more information.
Inclement weather procedures for Gate 19 —
The Directorate of Emergency Services operates
Gate 19 Monday-Friday from 5 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
regardless of inclement weather or road
conditions along Essayons Road, which is an
unimproved road. Essayons Road is also used to
access several ranges and training areas, so the
road remains open during all conditions. In
order to notify the motorists of the actual road
conditions, two “Downrange Road Conditions”
status signs are now located along Butts and
Essayons roads showing whether road conditions
are green, amber or red. One sign is at the
intersection of Butts Road and Airfield Road,
facing north, and the other is on Essayons
Road just inside Gate 19, facing inbound traffic.
Clinic name changes — Two of the Family medicine
clinics are in the process of changing names. Iron
Horse Family Medicine Clinic (located on the
second floor of Evans Army Community Hospital)
is changing its name to Warrior Family Medicine
Clinic. Evans Family Medicine Clinic (located on
the second floor of the Woods Soldier Family Care
Clinic) is changing its name to Iron Horse Family
Medicine Clinic. These are only name changes.
Beneficiaries will continue to see assigned primary
care manager/team in their regular clinic location.
Automated medical referral — A new automated
reminder system is now in place for medical
referrals. Beneficiaries who are referred to a
civilian specialist in the network will receive
a phone call from the Colorado Springs Military
Health System. The call will remind patients to
make an appointment. If a patient has already made
an appointment, an option will allow him to report
that information. There is also an option to cancel
the referral. Unless acted upon, these reminders
will recur at 20, 60 and 120 days. Call 524-2637
for more information on the automated call system.
Thrift shop accepts credit cards — The Fort
Carson Thrift Shop is now accepting debit and
credit cards. The shop, located in building 305, is
open Tuesday-Thursday from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Contact Gail Olson at 526-5966 or email
thriftshop@gmail.com for more information
or to learn about volunteer opportunities.
Donations may be dropped off at the store
during normal business hours or at the recycling
center located near the main exchange.
IMCOM recruits — Installation Management
Command is recruiting junior and mid-level
employees to participate in a Developmental
Assignment Program. DAP is designed to support
functional and leadership training, which is one of
the essential pillars of the HQ, IMCOM Campaign
Plan LOE 3. Eligible applicants are IMCOM
appropriated-fund employees (GS7-GS13) and
nonappropriated fund employees (NAF-5 and below,
in positions comparable to GS7-GS13). The DAP is
based on a systematic plan specializing in develop-
mental assignments through various functional
areas for a period of up to 60 days. The program
provides multifunctional training and assignments
to strengthen the experience of employees and
prepare them for broader responsibilities, improve
organizational communication, and develop well-
rounded personnel. Applications can be obtained by
contacting your organization’s training coordinator
or the Workforce Development Program.
Ambulance service — Fort Carson officials urge
community members to contact emergency
personnel by calling 911 instead of driving personal
vehicles to the emergency room. In the event of a
life- or limb-threatening emergency, skilled para-
medics and ambulance crew will be able to adminis-
ter critical care and aid. Contact the Emergency
Department at 526-7111 for more information.
Prescription policy — All handwritten prescriptions
from a TRICARE network provider will be filled
at the Soldier and Family Care Center located
adjacent to and east of Evans Army Community
Hospital. When calling in for refills on those
prescriptions, beneficiaries will continue to
use the SFCC. A dedicated refill window in
this facility will reduce wait time. The SFCC
pharmacy is open Monday through Friday from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The pharmacy is located on the
first floor near the east entrance of the facility;
park in the “G” lot, east of the building. Call
503-7067 or 503-7068 for more information.
19May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
Every year, thousands of people in the Pikes Peak Region give back and get
involved with local nonprofits through a fun, effective program with a simple motto:
Live Here. Give Here. To learn how you can help raise $1 million for the organizations
that make our community a better place, visit www.indygive.com. It’s the Give!
Campaign, powered by The Independent — and you!
We’re proud to introduce 60 dynamic local nonprofits, selected
from the most competitive group of applicants EVER, to form the Give! Class of 2013.
Since 2009, Give! has put $2.3 million into the hands of local charities.
This year, we’re going to make it $3.3 million — and we’re counting on YOU!
We are now seeking business and foundation partners for
this year’s campaign. Contact us at give@csindy.com for
an invite to our June preview event for friends of Give!
LIVE HERE. GIVE HERE.
Animals
All Breed Rescue & Training
Happy Cats Haven
Humane Society of the
Pikes Peak Region
Indigo Mountain Nature Center
Safe Place for Pets
Arts & Culture
Business of Art Center
Colorado Springs Youth
Symphony Association
Imagination Celebration
Independent Film Society
of Colorado
The Millibo Art Theatre
ModboCo
UCCS’ Galleries of
Contemporary Art
Big Ideas
Blue Star Recyclers
Citizens Project
Colorado Springs
Community Centers
Concrete Couch
Pikes Peak Urban Gardens
Public Market Project
Venetucci Farm
Families
Colorado Springs Therapeutic
Riding Center
Community Partnership Family
Resource Center
Community Partnership for
Child Development
Court Care for the
Pikes Peak Region
Fostering Hope Foundation
Ronald McDonald House
Charities of Southern Colorado
Special Kids Special Families
Great Outdoors
Catamount Institute
Friends of Cheyenne Cañon
Friends of Monument Valley Park
Medicine Wheel Trail Advocates
Rocky Mountain Field Institute
Trails and Open Space Coalition
Play Together
Incline Friends
Kids on Bikes
Sk8-Strong
StarFit Kids
Teller County Search and Rescue
UpaDowna
Helping Hands
Dream Centers of
Colorado Springs
Energy Resource Center
One Nation Walking Together
Partners in Housing
PlayDate Behavioral Interventions
Silver Key Senior Services
Springs Rescue Mission
TESSA
Wellness
Mission Medical Clinic
National Alliance on
Mental Illness - Colorado Springs
Pikes Peak Suicide Prevention
Pikes Peak Therapeutic
Riding Center
Project Angel Heart
Southern Colorado AIDS Project
Youth
Atlas Preparatory School
CASA of the Pikes Peak Region
Safe Passage
Colorado Springs Teen Court
The Dale House Project
Kidpower of Colorado
Peak Education
Urban Peak Colorado Springs
Give! Class of 2013
Coming november 1, 2013
EVER WONDERED WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO GIVE AWAY
A MILLION BUCKS?
LIVE
HERE
GIVE+
/IndyGive @indygive
GET INVOLVED!
IndyGive! is under the charitable umbrella of
The Pikes Peak Community Foundation
20 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013
Honoring heroes
Story and photo by
Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch
2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team
Public Affairs Office, 4th Infantry
Division
PUEBLO — “This medal is not for
me, it is for the Soldiers that did not come
back,” reads the quote under the portrait of
Staff Sgt. Leroy Petry, recent Medal of Honor
recipient, and the latest servicemember to
have his portrait unveiled in Pueblo.
Soldiers of Fort Carson and local
residents who attended the May 9 ceremony
at the Center for American Values interacted
with Medal of Honor recipients, toured the
facility that features more than 140 portraits
of servicemembers awarded the MOH and
witnessed the unveiling of the newest portrait.
Petry distinguished himself when he
engaged an armed enemy in the vicinity of
the Paktia Province, Afghanistan, May 26,
2008. While wounded from enemy fire,
Petry, with complete disregard for his own
safety, picked up an enemy grenade that
landed feet from him and his Soldiers. As he
released the grenade it detonated, amputating
his right hand at the wrist. Despite the
severity of his wounds, he placed a tourniquet
on his wrist and continued to communicate
for support via radio.
Petry, who was not able to attend the
unveiling due to back surgery, is currently
stationed in Fort Lewis, Wash., and has
taken on the task of helping wounded
warriors and their Families.
Capt. Adam Fullerton, Rear Detachment
commander, 3rd Battalion, 16th Field
Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Brigade
Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, said
he felt honored to attend the event.
“It was a pretty emotional event with
three Medal of Honor recipients there,” he
said. “You could just tell what it meant to
those guys and what it meant to the commu-
nity. I was fortunate to be a part of it.”
Drew Dix, Medal of Honor recipient,
spoke of the importance of the center.
“When (children) leave here, we
know that a few of them are going to take
something away from this,” said Dix.
“They are going to help carry the message
that we’re trying to create here.”
Capt. Matt Anderson, Fort Carson
Warrior Transition Battalion, said he
appreciates the support of the community.
“It’s awesome,” he said. “It depends (on)
where you live, but it’s not always as prevalent
as you would like it to be. It’s always awesome
to have the local community on your side.”
To learn more about the 140 Medal of
Honor recipients, visit the Center for
American Values at 101 S. Main Street,
Suite 100 in Pueblo.
Pueblo unveils Petry portrait
Medal of Honor recipients Drew Dix, left, and Jim Taylor unveil a
portrait of Staff Sgt. Leroy Petry, recent Medal of Honor recipient,
at the Center for American Values located at the Historic
Arkansas Riverwalk of Pueblo, May 9. The walls inside the
building are lined with more than 140 portraits of servicemembers
who have received the Medal of Honor.
EventlinksSoldiers,
MOHrecipientsStory and photo by
Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch
2nd Armored Brigade Combat
Team Public Affairs Office,
4th Infantry Division
PUEBLO — Patriotic banners
and the colors red, white and blue lined
the Pueblo Country Club as the city of
Pueblo hosted the third annual “Home
of Heroes” Golf Scramble May 10.
Pueblo, known as the Home of
Heroes because four living Medal
of Honor recipients have called the
city home, hosted more than 60 Fort
Carson Soldiers for the event.
The Soldiers interacted with
residents, community leaders and
MOH recipients Drew Dix, Jim
Taylor and Salvatore Giunta.
“It’s good to know there are people
out there who would pay good money
just to play a round of golf with
Soldiers,” said Sgt. Justin Banner,
Headquarters and Headquarters Troop,
2nd Special Troops Battalion, 2nd
Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th
Infantry Division.
Soldiers not only played a round
of golf, but also received tips from
a golf pro.
“Dave Stockton, a professional
golfer, gave a little clinic here for all
the Soldiers, free of cost which makes
it better,” said Capt. Adam Fullerton,
Rear Detachment commander, 3rd
Battalion, 16th Field Artillery Regiment,
2nd ABCT. “We are fortunate to
have him out here.”
Stockton gave tips on stance,
grip, lining up on the ball, what to
look at while on the green and how
the green lies.
“I don’t usually like to learn things
before I go out and play a round, but
it was good information,” said Banner.
Fullerton said he appreciated the
warm welcome they received.
“We do have quite a few Soldiers
who live down here, but you can tell it
is a military town,” he said. “They are
doing a great job of supporting us.”
Capt. Adam Fullerton, Rear Detachment
commander, 3rd Battalion, 16th Field
Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Brigade
Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, works
on his putting skills before competing in
the “Home of Heroes” Golf Scramble at
Pueblo Country Club, May 10.
21May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
Military personnel receive
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Mountaineer 2013 05-24
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Mountaineer 2013 05-24

  • 1. Vol. 71, No. 20 May 24, 2013 Pages 22-23 Page 20 Page 12 Message board INSIDEINSIDE Soldier Show Performances are at 2 and 7 p.m. Thursday at McMahon Auditorium. Doors open one hour prior to show. Photo by Spc. Robert Holland Peppered arrest Pfc. Richard Gonzalez attempts to handcuff fellow military policeman Staff Sgt. Joseph Pellegrino, after being sprayed with Oleoresin Capsicum spray, commonly known as OC spray or pepper spray, during an MP Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, certification class, May 10. Certification to carry the spray requires the Soldiers to perform various tasks associated with their jobs while suffering from the effects of the spray. See story on Page 14. SMA visits Carson troopsBy Sgt. William Smith 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs Office Remaining ready and resilient while adapting to budget cuts was the constant theme Sgt. Maj. of the Army Raymond F. Chandler III shared with members of the Fort Carson community May 15-16. “We have programs for Families to help them with the resiliency challenges that they might face,” Chandler said. “Fort Carson has started a pilot program for Spouse Master Resiliency Trainers, which began a few months ago. It trains spouses how to deliver master resilience training; that is really powerful.” The Army’s top enlisted adviser visited units, held town hall meetings addressing topics ranging from hazing to sexual assault, and spoke one-on-one with Soldiers about their personal career paths. Chandler’s visit began at Stack Dining Facility, where he spoke with Soldiers from various units, addressing their concerns and asking them about different topics that affect Soldiers’ everyday readiness. Following his DFAC visit, he spent the day with Fort Carson leaders and toured 4th Combat Aviation Brigade facilities. “I appreciated the time that the sergeant major of the Army took to come down to see what we do, and personally talk to the Soldiers, and present coins for all of the hard work that Soldiers do,” said Sgt. Mike Tiller, Company D, 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 4th Aviation Regiment, 4th CAB, 4th Infantry Division. The second day, along with visits to various locations across Fort Carson, Chandler addressed See Chandler on Page 4
  • 2. 2 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 This commercial enterprise newspaper is an authorized publication for members of the Department of Defense. Contents of the Mountaineer are not necessarily the official view of, or endorsed by, the U.S. Government or the Department of the Army. Printed circulation is 12,000 copies. The editorial content of the Mountaineer is the responsibility of the Public Affairs Office, Fort Carson, CO 80913-5119, Tel.: 526-4144. The e-mail address is fcmountaineer@hotmail.com. The Mountaineer is posted on the Internet at http://csmng.com. The Mountaineer is an unofficial publication authorized by AR 360-1. The Mountaineer is printed by Colorado Springs Military Newspaper Group, a private firm in no way connected with the Department of the Army, under exclusive written contract with Fort Carson. It is published 49 times per year. The appearance of advertising in this publication, including inserts or supplements, does not constitute endorsement by the Department of the Army or Colorado Springs Military Newspaper Group, of the products or services advertised. The printer reserves the right to reject advertisements. Everything advertised in this publication shall be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap, political affiliation or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user or patron. If a violation or rejection of this equal opportunity policy by an advertiser is confirmed, the printer shall refuse to print advertising from that source until the violation is corrected. For display advertising call 634-5905. All correspondence or queries regarding advertising and subscriptions should be directed to Colorado Springs Military Newspaper Group, 31 E. Platte Avenue, Suite 300, Colorado Springs, CO 80903, phone 634-5905. The Mountaineer’s editorial content is edited, prepared and provided by the Public Affairs Office, building 1430, room 265, Fort Carson, CO 80913-5119, phone 526-4144. Releases from outside sources are so indicated. The deadline for submissions to the Mountaineer is close of business the week before the next issue is published. The Mountaineer staff reserves the right to edit submissions for newspaper style, clarity and typographical errors. Policies and statements reflected in the news and editorial columns represent views of the individual writers and under no circumstances are to be considered those of the Department of the Army. Reproduction of editorial material is authorized. Please credit accordingly. MOUNTAINEER Commanding General: Maj. Gen. Paul J. LaCamera Garrison Commander: Col. David L. Grosso Fort Carson Public Affairs Officer: Dee McNutt Chief, Print and Web Communications: Rick Emert Editor: Devin Fisher Staff writer: Andrea Sutherland Happenings: Nel Lampe Sports writer: Walt Johnson Layout/graphics: Jeanne Mazerall Classified advertising 329-5236 Display advertising 634-5905 Mountaineer editor 526-4144 Post information 526-5811 Post weather hotline 526-0096 Dog Bite Prevention Week Tips help reduce risk of becoming a victimCommentary by Capt. Heather Weaver Fort Carson Veterinary Clinic, Public Health Command District Fort Carson Each year, 4.7 million people in the United States are bitten by dogs; the majority of bite victims are children. As a pet owner, it is your responsibility to help prevent dog bites from happening. Proper socialization and proper veterinary care are essential in this process. All dogs should be vaccinated against rabies and other transmissible viruses. Puppies should be exposed to a wide variety of situations and people, including children of various ages. Dogs should be taught simple commands such as sit, stay and heal. This will help the dog to understand what type of behavior is expected and may be a deterrent in unfamiliar situations. Furthermore, dogs should always be on a leash in public and well-populated areas. The following tips can help prevent a potential bite: þ Never approach strange dogs without permission from the owner and never try to pet an unattended dog through a fence þ Never tease a dog with food or toys since this can lead to an accidental bite þ Never harm a dog þ Never disturb a dog while it is sleeping þAvoid dogs that appear nervous or aggressive In the event of a dog bite, the wound should be washed with soap and water immediately. If the dog’s owner is present, ask them for proof of rabies vaccination. Be sure to get both the owner’s and the veterinarian’s contact information. If the owner can’t provide proof of vaccination, contact the veterinarian. If the owner is not present and the dog has tags on the collar, try to obtain information, but only if the dog will let you and isn’t showing any signs of fearful or aggressive behavior. If the dog does not have a collar and the owner is not present, call animal control. If the bite has broken the skin, consult with a primary care physician immediately or go to a local emergency care facility. The No. 1 concern when an animal bites a human is the risk of rabies exposure. Rabies is a potentially lethal virus that affects the central nervous system and is most often transmitted through the animal’s saliva when it bites. About 55,000 people worldwide die each year from rabies. A physician can administer lifesaving post-exposure prophylaxis if medical care is sought immediately. Thanks to current legislation and a strict animal vaccination protocol in the United States, rabies is quite rare. However, people in high-risk professions, such as veterinarians and dog handlers, should receive a prophylactic vaccination series and have their antibody titers checked at least every three years. The most effective way to prevent dog bites is through proper education and through direct supervision of pets and children. For more information on canine body language and when to avoid a potentially threatened or aggressive dog, visit http://www.aspca.org/Pet-care/virtual-pet-behaviorist/ dog-articles/canine-body-language. Freedom of Information and Privacy Act Office Take a few moments and check your understanding of the Privacy Act. Answer true or false to the following questions: u Every directorate and battalion-sized military unit or higher is required to have a Privacy Act coordinator on appointment orders? v Yearly mandatory training is required by the Department of Defense? w All government employees and contractors have a lawful duty to protect personal identifiable information? x All breaches of information are required to be reported to the Privacy Act officer within one hour? y Depending on the job, a person could require four different levels of Privacy Act training? Every one of these is a true statement concerning the Privacy Act. So, does your directorate or military unit have the requirements met? Contact Daniel C. Smith, Freedom of Information and Privacy Act officer, at daniel.c.smith8.civ@ mail.mil to arrange training, which typically takes 45-60 minutes. Privacy Act Is your unit in compliance? WWW.TWITTER.COM/@4THINFDIVWWW.YOUTUBE.COM/USER/THE4ID WWW.SLIDESHARE.NET/THE4ID WWW.FLICKR.COM/PHOTOS/THE4IDWWW.FACEBOOK.COM/4THID
  • 3. 3May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER Carson athletes capture 6 medalsMountaineer staff Fort Carson’s Spc. Elizabeth Wasil swept gold medals in all three women’s wheelchair races on her way to five podium appearances at the 2013 Warrior Games, held May 11-16. In addition to top finishes in the 100-, 200- and 1,500-meter wheelchair races, Wasil added bronze medals in the women’s wheelchair shotput and hand- cycle and recumbent cycle events. The World Class Athlete Program swimmer also placed sixth in the wheelchair discus. Staff Sgt. Spencer Anderson, Fort Carson Warrior Transition Battalion, earned a bronze medal in the men’s bicycle open event. The fourth annual Warrior Games kicked off May 11 with three-time Paralympic medalist Navy Lt. Brad Snyder, five-time Olympic medalist Missy Franklin and Prince Harry lighting the cauldron and concluded May 16 with the crowning of the Chairman’s Cup and Ultimate Champion. The Marine team continued its dominance, capturing its fourth consecutive Chairman’s Cup, a team award based on each team’s top finishes in individual events as well as sitting volleyball and wheelchair basketball, the two team sports contested at the Warrior Games. The Marines finished with 100 points (34 gold, 33 silver and 26 bronze medals), holding off the Army, which finished with 85 points (34, 26, 21). The Navy finished third, Air Force fourth and Special Operations took fifth, according to the U.S. Paralympics Warrior Games website. Air Force Capt. Mitchell Kieffer earned the title of Ultimate Champion — a pentathlon style event that pits warriors against each other in a variety of disciplines — with eight points, holding off Marines Jorge Toledo and Brian Riley, with seven and six points, respectively. Fort Carson’s Staff Sgt. Name/Issue featured Finishes Spc. Elizabeth Wasil World Class Athlete Program May 10, Page 6 1st - 100-, 200- and 1500- meter wheelchair race 3rd - wheelchair shotput and handcycle and recumbent cycle 6th - wheelchair discus Staff Sgt. Spencer Anderson Warrior Transition Battalion May 3, Page 11 3rd - men’s bicycle open Staff Sgt. Krissel Creager-Lumpkins Warrior Transition Battalion April 19, Page 9 4th - Ultimate Champion, shooting prone 5th - 100-meters, shotput open 6th - women’s bicycle open Sgt. 1st Class Keoki Smythe Warrior Transition Battalion April 26, Page 13 5th - men’s bicycle open Army Archery Team May 17, Page 6 3rd - team event Capt. Frank Barroquerio 1st - archery compound 2nd - shooting pistol 18th - shooting prone Sgt. Edward Patton 1st - archery recurve 4th - shooting standing Sgt. Lance Thorton 4th - shooting prone 5th - shooting standing The chart below reflects finishes for Fort Carson participants and the Army archery team, of whom were featured in the Mountaineer leading up to the Warrior Games. Features on the participants are available online at http://www.csmng.com/Mountaineer. See Warriors on Page 4
  • 4. 4 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 about 400 Soldiers and Family members at McMahon Auditorium, discussing topics affecting the future of all Soldiers and Families, and answering questions about any concerns they had. “Be engaged leaders, which means you have to know your Soldiers,” Chandler said. “You have to establish a bond of trust between you and that Soldier, and know what is going on in their life beyond the scope of the Army. “Don’t worry about the budget; we will get through it as we have done before,” he said. “Train to the best ability possible. Sustain and maintain your equipment. Continue to build the team, so you will be ready for whatever comes, and maintain that esprit de corps.” Chandler also spoke with Warrior Leader Course attendees, and the noncommissioned officers charged with training the leaders of tomorrow, handed out coins, and chaired a question- and-answer session. Soldiers and noncommissioned officers competing in the combatives portion of the Fort Carson Soldier and NCO of the year competition were excited when Chandler congratulated and awarded them a coin for their performances. “It is exciting to have the sergeant major of the Army take the time to show that he cares about Soldiers at all levels of the Army,” said Pfc. Heather Scogin, health care specialist, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Inf. Div. The sergeant major of the Army’s wife, Jeanne Chandler, spent her time at Fort Carson visiting various Family Readiness Groups, reading to children at Patriot Elementary School and had lunch with attendees of the SMRT pilot program at the Family Readiness Center. “A year and a half ago, I went to the University of Pennsylvania and sat in on a full day of the Master Resiliency Training for Soldiers,” Jeanne Chandler said. “It was an ‘aha’ moment for me, because I was raised with ‘quitters never win and winners never quit.’ “My approach to a bad situation was to steel myself, toughen up, and close off my emotions,” Jeanne Chandler said. “The MRT for spouses to teach spouses is terrific. Military spouses will be able to empathize better with another military spouse much better than other people.” While in Colorado, the Chandlers also attended the 2013 Warrior Games, a Paralympic-style competition held at the U.S. Olympic Training Center and the U.S. Air Force Academy, where wounded warriors from the Army, Navy and Coast Guard, Air Force, Marines and the United Kingdom represented their services. “I think that the Warrior Games exemplify resilience,” the sergeant major of the Army said. “When you have a Soldier who has visible or invisible wounds, their ability to bounce back from some very horrific injuries and wounds of war and compete against others, that is amazing.” The trip marked the Chandlers’ second visit to Joint Task Force Carson since he became the 14th Sergeant Major of the Army, March 1. from Page 1 Chandler Photo by Sgt. William Smith Sgt. Maj. of the Army Raymond F. Chandler III talks to about 400 Soldiers and Family members at McMahon Auditorium, May 15. Chandler and his wife, Jeanne Chandler, talked about important issues currently affecting the Army, and answered questions. Luncheon honors top enlisted membersStory and photo by Sgt. William Smith 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs Office COLORADO SPRINGS — Three Joint Task Force Carson Soldiers were among 15 nominees recognized during the 2013 Outstanding Enlisted Military Representatives awards ceremony at the annual Armed Forces Week Luncheon at The Broadmoor, May 17. Judged by a panel, the winners were selected for their military awards and achieve- ments, educational accomplishments, and community service. Air Force Gen. William Shelton, com- mander, Air Force Space Command, Peterson Air Force Base, and the luncheon’s featured speaker, congratulated all 15 finalists for their outstanding service. “It makes me proud to serve alongside you in the finest military in the world,” Shelton said. Sgt. Sergio Toscano-Jara, petroleum supply specialist, 59th Quartermaster Company, 43rd Sustainment Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, a finalist in the noncommis- sioned officer category, attended the luncheon with Family and friends and said he was honored to be a finalist. “I’m just happy and proud to serve,” he said. “A lot of kids need a role model to look up to.” Toscano-Jara has coached soccer for Child, Youth and School Services since 2004, and recently started reading to children at his daughter’s school. The other two Joint Task Force Carson nominees were Spc. Tyler M. Walker, medical laboratory technician, Medical Department Activity, junior enlisted category; and Sgt. 1st Class Shannon Morgan, noncommissioned officer in charge, DiRaimondo Family Medicine Clinics, senior noncommissioned officer category. The 25th annual luncheon and awards were hosted by the Colorado Springs Regional Business Alliance and Business Alliance Military Affairs Council. Sgt. Sergio Toscano-Jara, right, 59th Quartermaster Company, 43rd Sustainment Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, receives an award from Air Force Gen. William Shelton, commander, Air Force Space Command, Peterson Air Force Base, for being a finalist in the noncommissioned officer category, during the annual Armed Forces Week Luncheon at the Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, May 17. Krisell Creager-Lumpkins, Warrior Transition Battalion, finished tied for fourth. More than 260 wounded, ill and injured service- members and veterans participated in the Warrior Games held at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs and the U.S. Air Force Academy. Athletes representing the Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Coast Guard, Air Force and Special Operations as well as the British Armed Forces competed in seven sports —archery, cycling, shooting, sitting volleyball, swimming, track and field and wheelchair basketball. A unique partnership between the Department of Defense and U.S. Olympic Committee Paralympic Military Program, Warrior Games showcases the resilient spirit of today’s wounded, ill and injured servicemembers from all branches of the military. After overcoming significant physical and behavioral injuries, these men and women demonstrate the power of ability over disability and the spirit of competition, according to the U.S. Army Warrior Transition Command website. from Page 3 Warriors
  • 5. 5May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER Story and photos by Andrea Sutherland Mountaineer staff Echoes from the rounds of the M242 Bushmaster and 240C machine gun ricocheted off the canyon walls on Range 145, May 15, as crews aimed for targets up to three football fields in the distance. With each round, the acrid smell of gunpowder filled the air. “I love that smell,” said Staff Sgt. Andrew Rose, taking in a breath. Rose watched the Bradley as it retreated to its defensive position. A moment later, when a target popped up hundreds of yards down the canyon, the 50,000-pound vehicle sprang forward, firing three- round bursts and releasing more fumes. “They should make a candle with that scent. A ‘dude’ candle,” said Staff Sgt. Christian Adams. “A ‘mandle,’” Rose said, laughing. “It smells like war,” said Staff Sgt. Matthew Hood. Rose, range safety officer and member of 4th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division; Adams, noncommissioned officer in charge of the exercise, 1st Battalion, 67thArmor Regiment, 2ndArmored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Inf. Div.; and Hood, master gunner with 4th Sqdn., 10th Cav., Reg.; observed as the tank backed off the platform and began its offensive operations, honing in on the pop-up targets down range. Inside the cramped quarters of the Bradley, two 4th Inf. Div. Soldiers and master gunner hopefuls focused on the targets. From the observation tower, master training team evaluators from Fort Benning, Ga., confirmed hits and observed the crew’s tactics. For more than three months, nearly 30 “Ivy” Division Soldiers endured weeks of classroom and hands-on training in hopes of earning the “master gunner” title. In June, they’ll find out if they passed. “A master gunner is the commander’s subject matter expert on everything gunnery,” said Staff Sgt. Chad Hepler, master gunnery instructor, 1st Battalion, 29th Infantry Regiment, 197th Infantry Brigade, Fort Benning. “They’re sort of a jack-of-all-trades.” Master gunners start at the platoon level and advance to the company, battalion and brigade levels throughout their careers, helping to coordinate field trainings for their unit, Hepler said. First, however, they must complete the rig- orous 14-week Bradley Master Gunner course. Open to sergeants, staff sergeants and sergeants first class, the master gunner course is split into two phases — mainte- nance and gunnery. During the maintenance phase, Soldiers learn the ins and outs of their equipment, including the weapon and fire control systems. They study capabilities, ballistics and turret functions. In the second phase, Soldiers cover six core areas required to earn the certification, including stabilized and unstabalized platforms, collective gunnery, combined arms live-fire exercises, ammunition forecasting and training management. Soldiers study hundreds of pages of material in hopes of passing a series of tests. “It’s very challenging,” said Staff Sgt. Jeromy Taylor, 4th Sqdn., 10th Cav. Reg., 3rd ABCT. “All the material, I have to soak it up like a sponge.” In their downtime, Soldiers spread out on their cots sifting through a binder packed with information and studying their homemade flash cards and other study materials. “This is the ‘right way’to do things,”Taylor said, flipping through the hundreds of pages of course documents. “The standards are the basis.” Staff Sgt. Shelton Stansbury, 1st Bn., 67th Armor Reg., 2nd ABCT, said he hopes that after completing and passing the certification, he would be able to bring more realistic scenarios to his Soldiers. “The more realistic the training is, the more it keeps them interested,” he said. “They get more into (the training) and then they get something out of it.” Stansbury said he and the other master gunner hope- fuls formed study groups to learn all of the material. “We help each other,” he said. “If one of us fails, it will be like we all fail.” Barry Reynolds, a retired sergeant first class and master gunner, said he remembers how these Soldiers feel. “It’s a bunch of knowledge,” said Reynolds, who completed the master gunner course in 1988. In 2004, he retired from the military and became an instructor with BAE Systems, a contracting company based at Fort Benning that helps teach new master gunners. Reynolds, along with two civilian instructors and two Soldier instructors, traveled to Fort Carson for the training. “I like watching them learn,” he said. “At times it can be overwhelming for them, but they each get it eventually.” After completing the live-fire exercises and written tests, Soldiers complete the culminating challenge of the course — drafting and briefing a unit training plan to course evaluators. “They have four days to do the UTP,” Hepler said, adding that the Soldiers will get, on average, about two hours of sleep per night. Hepler said in past courses, a third of Soldiers do not pass. Since the beginning of the training, three of the 29 Soldiers dropped out. “The job is tough,” Hepler said. “But it’s all about training Soldiers. It’s worth it.” A Bradley crew of master gunner hopefuls fires rounds from an M242 Bushmaster at pop-up targets on Range 145, May 15. Staff Sgt. Geoffrey Davis, 1st Special Troops Battalion, 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, and Staff Sgt. Sean Leytham, 4th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd ABCT, 4th Inf. Div., watch as a Bradley crew fires at pop-up targets on Range 145 during a live-fire exercise, May 15. Nearly 30 “Ivy” Division Soldiers participated in the 14-week Bradley Master Gunner course. Dozens strive to become master gunners
  • 6. MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 Miscellaneous Self-help weed control program — Department of Defense regulations require training for people applying pesticides on military installations. Units interested in participating in the program must send Soldiers for training on the proper handling, transportation and application of herbicides. Once individuals are properly trained by the Directorate of Public Works base operations contractor, Fort Carson Support Services, Soldiers can be issued the appropriate products and equipment so units can treat weeds in rocked areas around their unit. Weed control training sessions for Soldiers are available the first and third Monday of the month through September from 10 a.m. to noon in building 3711. Products and equipment will be available for Soldiers on a hand receipt. Each unit may send up to five people for training. For more information about the DPW Self-Help Weed Control Program, call 492-0166. Finance travel processing — All inbound and outbound Temporary Lodging Expense, “Do it Yourself ” Moves, servicemember and Family member travel, travel advance pay and travel pay inquiries will be handled in building 1218, room 231. Call 526-4454 or 524-2594 for more information. First Sergeants’Barracks Program 2020 — is located in building 1454 on Nelson Boulevard. The hours of operation are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. The office assists Soldiers with room assignments and terminations. For more information call 526-9707. Recycle incentive program — The Directorate of Public Works has an incentive program to prevent recyclable waste from going to the landfill. Participating battalions can earn monetary rewards for turning recyclable materials in to the Fort Carson Recycle Center, building 155. Points are assigned for the pounds of recyclable goods turned in and every participating battalion receives money quarterly. Call 526-5898 for more information about the program. Sergeant Audie Murphy Club — The Fort Carson SergeantAudie Murphy Club meets the thirdTuesday of each month at the Family Connection Center from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The SAMC is open to all active members and those interested in becoming future SAMC members. The club was originally a U.S. Forces Command organization of elite noncom- missioned officers but is now an Armywide program for those who meet the criteria and have proven themselves to be outstanding NCOs through a board/ leadership process. Contact SAMC president Sgt. 1st Class Dawna Brown at 526-3983 for information. Directorate of Public Works services — DPW is responsible for a wide variety of services on Fort Carson. Services range from repair and maintenance of facilities to equipping units with a sweeper and cleaning motor pools. Listed below are phone numbers and points of contact for services: • Facility repair/service orders — Fort Carson Support Services service order desk can be reached at 526-5345. Use this number for emergen- cies or routine tasks and for reporting wind damage, damaged traffic signs or other facility damage. • Refuse/trash and recycling — Call Eric Bailey at 719-491-0218 or email eric.e.bailey4. civ@mail.mil when needing trash containers, trash is overflowing or emergency service is required. • Facility custodial services — Call Bryan Dorcey at 526-6670 or email bryan.s.dorcey.civ@ mail.mil for service needs or to report complaints. • Elevator maintenance — Call Bryan Dorcey at 526-6670 or email bryan.s.dorcey. civ@mail.mil. • Motor pool sludge removal/disposal — Call Dennis Frost at 526-6997 or email dennis.j.frost.civ@mail.mil. • Repair and utility/self-help — Call Gary Grant at 526-5844 or email gerald.l.grant2.civ @mail.mil. Use this number to obtain self-help tools and equipment or a motorized sweeper. • Base operations contracting officer representative — Call Terry Hagen at 526-9262 or email terry.j.hagen.civ@mail.mil for questions on snow removal, grounds maintenance and contractor response to service orders. • Portable latrines — Call Jerald Just at 524-0786 or email jerald.j.just.civ@mail.mil to request latrines, for service or to report damaged or overturned latrines. • Signs — Call Jim Diorio, Fort Carson Support Services, at 896-0797 or 524-2924 or email jdiorio@kira.com to request a facility, parking or regulatory traffic sign. The Fort Carson Trial Defense Service office — is able to help Soldiers 24/7 and is located at building 1430, room 233. During duty hours, Soldiers should call 526-4563. The 24-hour phone number for after hours, holidays and weekends is 526-0051. Briefings 75th Ranger Regiment briefings — are held Tuesdays in building 1430, room 150, from noon to 1 p.m. Soldiers must be private to sergeant first class with a minimum General Technical Score of 105; be a U.S. citizen; score 240 or higher on the Army Physical Fitness Test; and pass a Ranger physical. Call 524- 2691 or visit http://www.goarmy.com/ranger.html. Casualty Notification/Assistance Officer training — is held June 19-21 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Veterans Chapel. Class is limited to the first 50 people. Call 526-5613/5614 for details. Retirement briefings — are held from 8 a.m. to noon the second and third Wednesday of each month at the Freedom Performing Arts Center, building 1129 at the corner of Specker Avenue and Ellis Street. The Retirement Services Office recommends spouses accompany Soldiers to the briefing. Call 526-2840 for more information. ETS briefings — for enlisted personnel are held the first and third Wednesday of each month. Briefing sign in begins at 7 a.m. at the Soldier Readiness Building, building 1042, room 244, on a first- come, first-served basis. Soldiers must be within 120 days of their expiration term of service, but must attend no later than 30 days prior to their ETS or start of transition leave. Call 526- 2240/8458 for more information. Disposition Services — Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services Colorado Springs, located in building 381, conducts orientations Fridays from 12:30-3:30 p.m. The orientations discuss DLA processes to include turning in excess property, reutilizing government property, web-based tools available, special handling of property and environ- mental needs. To schedule an orientation, contact Arnaldo Borrerorivera at arnaldo.borrerorivera@ dla.mil for receiving/turn in; Mike Welsh at mike.welsh@dla.mil for reutilization/web tools; or Rufus Guillory at rufus.guillory@dla.mil. Reassignment briefings — are held Tuesdays in building 1129, Freedom Performing Arts Center. Sign-in for Soldiers heading overseas is at 7 a.m. and the briefing starts at 7:30 a.m. Sign-in for personnel being reassigned stateside is at 1 p.m., with the briefing starting at 1:30 p.m. Soldiers are required to bring Department of the Army Form 5118, signed by their physician and battalion commander, and a pen to complete forms. Call 526-4730/4583 for details. Army ROTC Green-to-Gold briefings — are held the first and third Tuesday of each month at noon at the education center, building 1117, room 120. Call University of Colorado-Colorado Springs Army ROTC at 262-3475 for more information. Hours of Operation Central Issue Facility • In-processing — Monday-Thursday from 7:30-10:30 a.m. • Initial and partial issues — Monday- Friday from 12:30-3:30 p.m. • Cash sales/report of survey — Monday- Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. • Direct exchange and partial turn ins — Monday-Friday from 7:30-11:30 a.m. • Full turn ins — by appointment only; call 526-3321. • Unit issues and turn ins — require approval, call 526-5512/6477. Education Center hours of operation — The Mountain Post Training and Education Center, building 1117, 526-2124, hours are as follows: • Counselor Support Center — Monday- Thursday 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Fridays 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. • Army Learning Center — Monday- Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support andArmy PersonnelTesting — Monday-Friday 7:30-11:30 a.m. and 12:30-4:30 p.m. Repair and Utility self-help — has moved to building 217 and is open Monday-Friday 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Medical Activity Correspondence Department office hours — The Correspondence (Release of Information) Office in the Patient Administration Division hours are Monday-Wednesday and Friday 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and closed Thursday and federal holidays. Call 526-7322 or 526-7284 for details. Work Management Branch — The DPW Work Management Branch, responsible for processing work orders — Facilities Engineering Work Requests, DA Form 4283 — is open for processing work orders and other in-person support from 7-11:30 a.m. Monday-Friday. Afternoon customer support is by appointment only, call 526-2900. The Work Management Branch is located in building 1219. Claims Office hours — are Monday-Friday from 9 a.m. to noon and 1-4 p.m., located on the first floor of building 6222, 1633 Mekong Street. Shipment under Full Replacement Value claimants must submit Department of Defense Form 1840R or After Delivery Form 1851 for additionally dis- covered items to the carrier within 75 days online. Claimants must log into Defense Personal Property System at http://www.move.mil and submit the claim within nine months directly to the carrier to receive full replacement value for missing or destroyed items. All other claims should be submitted to the Claims Office within two years of the date of delivery or date of incident. Call the Fort Carson Claims Office at 526-1355 for more information. Legal services — provided at the Soldier Readiness Processing site are for Soldiers undergoing the SRP process. The SRP Legal Office will only provide powers of attorney or notary services to Soldiers processing through the SRP. Retirees, Family members and Soldiers not in the SRP process can receive legal assistance and powers of attorney at the main legal office located at 1633 Mekong St., building 6222, next to the Family Readiness Center. Legal assistance prepares powers of attorney and performs notary services on a walk-in basis from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays-Wednesdays and Fridays, and from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursdays. BOSS meetings are held the first and third Thursday of each month from 2-3:30 p.m. at The Foxhole. Contact Cpl. Rachael Robertson at 524-2677 or visit the BOSS office in room 106 of The Hub for more information. Text “follow CarsonBOSS” to 40404 to receive updates and event information. Fort Carson dining facilities hours of operation DFAC Friday-Monday (DONSA/weekend) Tuesday-Thursday Stack Closed Breakfast: 7-9 a.m. Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dinner: 5-6:30 p.m. Wolf Breakfast: 7-9 a.m. Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dinner: 5-6:30 p.m. Breakfast: 6:45-9 a.m. Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dinner: 5-6:30 p.m. Warfighter (Wilderness Road Complex) Closed Breakfast: 7-9 a.m. Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dinner: Closed LaRochelle 10th SFG(A) Closed Breakfast: 7-9 a.m. Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dinner: Closed 6
  • 7. 7May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER Experience a Warmer and More Personal Approach to Your Cosmetic Surgical Needs MEMBER AMERICAN SOCIETY OF PLASTIC SURGEONS, INC. MILITARY DISCOUNTS Conveniently located Downtown Colorado Springs FREE COSMETIC CONSULTATION Dr. Raskin specializes in DouglasJ.Raskin,M.D.,D.M.D Harvard,StanfordandBaylorTrained BoardCertifiedbytheAmericanBoardofPlasticSurgery ActiveMemberAmericanSocietyofPlasticSurgeons 578-9988 559 E. Pikes Peak Ave., Suite 209 home.pcisys.net/~djr email: mddmd@pcisys.net Contact Al Chromy achromy@corpuschristicos.org 719-632-5092 ext 103 www.corpuschristicos.org 2410 N Cascade Ave Pre-school through 8th Grade Financial Aid Available Military Appreciation Discount Free Application and Testing Fee $150 Value 2013 Iowa Tests of Basic Skills Corpus Christi students average 2 grade levels above their current grade level !!! THURSDAY, MAY 30 3:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m. Doubletree by Hilton 1775 E. Cheyenne Mtn. Blvd. , Colorado Springs For more information, call 471-7080, ext. 140, or e-mail swhite@ppacg.org Join us for our main presentation (3:00-4:00 p.m.) featuring: An update on Fort Carson from senior leadership. A community update from Dennis Hisey, Chair, El Paso County Board of County Commissioners & Chair, Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments Board of Directors A Question and Answer Panel follows (4:00-5:00 p.m.) with: HMajor General Paul J. LaCamera, Commanding General, 4th Infantry Division & Fort Carson, HCommissioner Hisey, HMajor General G. Wesley Clark (ret, USAF), Chair, Peak Military Care Network, HTerrance McWilliams, Director of Military & Veterans H AspenPointe Open House/Social Hour: 5:00-6:00 p.m. Carson, the Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments, and community leaders; and learn more by visiting informational booths. Moderator: Jennifer Horbelt, Anchor/Journalist, KOAA, News 5 *Somerestrictionsmayapply. RegulatedbytheDivisionofRealEstate. © 2013 Cobalt Mortgage, Inc., 11255 Kirkland Way, Suite 100, Kirkland, WA 98033. Toll Free: (877) 220-4663; Fax: (425) 605-3199. NMLS Unique Identifier: 35653. Arizona Mortgage Banker License #0909801. Licensed by the Department of Corporations under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act #4130455. Licensed bytheColoradoDepartmentofRegulatoryAgenciesinColoradostate. IdahoMortgage Broker/LenderLicense#MBL-5220.IndianaMortgage Lending License #17900. Louisiana Residential Mortgage Lending License #35653. Montana Mortgage Lender License #35653. Nebraska Mortgage Banker License #35653. Nevada Mort- gage Banker #3723, Nevada Mortgage Broker #3725. New Mexico Mortgage Loan Company License #03587. Ohio Mortgage Broker Act Mortgage Banker Exemption MBMB.850154.000.OklahomaMortgageBrokerLicense#MB002202.OregonMortgageLenderLicense#ML-2991.TexasSMLMortgageBankerRegistration.Utah-DRE #8220471.Washington Consumer Loan License #520-CL-48866.Wyoming Mortgage Lender/Broker License #2315.Ticket#2013041610001875 The person pictured isnotan actualservice member. www.cobaltmortgage.com/coloradosprings Welcome Home! Proud sponsor ofThe BootCampaign www.bootcampaign.com WeareyourVAmortgageconsultants. $ 400Military Appreciation closing cost credit.* 8610ExplorerDrive,Suite140 | ColoradoSprings,CO80920 | 719.466.8700 CobaltMortgage, Inc. NMLS-35653 CobaltMortgage proudlydisplays the American flag forall of May in recognition of National Military Appreciation month.
  • 8. 8 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 Inhonor of ourfallen Photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch Names of 12 fallen heroes were added to the Mountain Post Warrior Memorial during a ceremony Thursday at Kit Carson Park near Gate 1. The memorial now contains the names of 380 Fort Carson servicemembers who paid the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq and Afghanistan since Sept. 11, 2001. The heroes, listed in alphabetical order, are: 1st Lt. Michael R. Adams Spc. Ronald D. Allen Capt. Eric L. Allton Spc. Mabry J. Anders Pfc. Charlie C. Antonio Pfc. Elden D. Arcand Spc. Michael A. Arciola Staff Sgt. Daniel A. Bader Sgt. Ronald W. Baker Pfc. Michael Christopher Balsley Pfc. Mark A. Barbret Staff Sgt. Chad A. Barrett Spc. Matthew E. Baylis Spc. Bradley S. Beard Pfc. Stephen C. Benish Sgt. Carlos A. Benitez Staff Sgt. Stephen A. Bertolino Pfc. Tramaine J. Billingsley Sgt. Christopher J. Birdwell Spc. Justin R. Blackwell Pvt. Jeremy S. Bohannon Pfc. Kyle G. Bohrnsen Staff Sgt. Andrew L. Bossert Sgt. Kenneth E. Bostic Pfc. Brian A. Botello Spc. Brian R. Bowman Staff Sgt. Hensley Box Sgt. Timothy R. Boyce Spc. Hoby F. Bradfield Staff Sgt. Stacey C. Brandon Spc. Joshua T. Brazee Staff Sgt. Scottie L. Bright Sgt. Tomas F. Broomhead Staff Sgt. Christopher L. Brown Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Brown Staff Sgt. Jeremy A. Brown 1st Lt. Tyler H. Brown Sgt. William E. Brown Sgt. Ernest G. Bucklew Spc. Brock L. Bucklin Pfc. Travis W. Buford Cpl. Jimmy D. Buie Capt. Joshua T. Byers Staff Sgt. Marshall H. Caddy Cpl. Lyle J. Cambridge Spc. Raymond E. Cammel Staff Sgt. Michael D.P. Cardenaz Sgt. Richard P. Carl Sgt. Robert Michael Carr Sgt. Tyrone L. Chisholm Sgt. Michael K. Clark Pfc. Chad D. Clements Cpl. Gary B. Coleman Sgt. Russell L. Collier Sgt. 1st Class Daniel B. Crabtree Staff Sgt. Alexander B. Crackel Sgt. James E. Craig Spc. Ernest W. Dallas Jr. Spc. Grant A. Dampier Pfc. Steven A. Davis Sgt. David A. Davis Spc. Armando A. De La Paz Sgt. Felix M. Delgreco 1st Lt. Joseph D. deMoors Spc. Sergio R. Diaz-Varela Spc. Kevin R. Dickson Pfc. John P. Dion Spc. Michael A. Diraimondo Spc. Robert Donevski Sgt. Michael E. Dooley Pfc. Stephen P. Downing Pvt. Steven T. Drees Staff Sgt. Eric T. Duckworth Sgt. Sean M. Durkin Sgt. 1st Class Donald W. Eacho Spc. Phillip C. Edmundson Staff Sgt. Kyle A. Eggers Spc. Elias Elias Staff Sgt. Michael Elledge Sgt. Justin L. Eyerly Sgt. 1st Class Lawrence D. Ezell Sgt. 1st Class Jason J. Fabrizi Capt. Brian R. Faunce Capt. Arthur L. Felder Spc. Rian C. Ferguson Master Sgt. Richard L. Ferguson Sgt. Darrell L. Fernandez Spc. Eric M. Finniginam Pfc. Patrick S. Fitzgibbon Spc. Steven J. Fitzmorris Staff Sgt. Marion Flint Jr. Spc. Jesus O. Flores Jr. Pfc. Jesus Fonseca Staff Sgt. Jarred S. Fontenot Sgt. Edward W. Forrest Jr. Sgt. Maurice K. Fortune Spc. Christopher T. Fox Spc. Michael W. Franklin Pvt. Benjamin L. Freeman Staff Sgt. Brian L. Freeman Pfc. Walter Freeman Jr. Pfc. Nathan J. Frigo Sgt. Alexander Henry Fuller Sgt. Alexander J. Funcheon Sgt. Dennis J. Gallardo Staff Sgt. Justin T. Gallegos Spc. Zakary A. Gansert Staff Sgt. Juan De Dios Garcia-Arana Staff Sgt. Frank J. Gasper Pvt. Bryce E. Gautier Pfc. George R. Geer Sgt. 1st Class Todd C. Gibbs Pfc. Derek A. Gibson Pfc. Jesse A. Givens Chap. (Capt.) Dale A. Goetz Spc. Christopher A. Golby Spc. David J. Goldberg Pvt. Brian K. Grant Air Force Maj. Walter D. Gray Spc. Christopher T. Griffin Command Sgt. Maj. Kevin J. Griffin Capt. Sean Grimes Staff Sgt. Casey J. Grochowiak Spc. Daniel F. Guastaferro Chief Warrant Officer 2 Hans N. Gukeisen Pfc. Zachary R. Gullett Staff Sgt. Joshua R. Hager Staff Sgt. Bryan E. Hall Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert C. Hammett Spc. Kimble A. Han Sgt. Randy M. Haney Sgt. Joshua M. Hardt Staff Sgt. Ryan Eugene Haupt Staff Sgt. Omer T. Hawkins ll Chief Warrant Officer 2 Dennis P. Hay Staff Sgt. Jason R. Hendrix Spc. Chassan S. Henry Sgt. Ken K. Hermogino Spc. Kevin Olsen Hill Pfc. Cory F. Hiltz Pfc. Brian L. Holden Sgt. Ryan J. Hopkins Master Sgt. Kelly L. Hornbeck Spc. Christopher L. Hoskins Staff Sgt. Curtis T. Howard II Cpl. Walter B. Howard ll Spc. Robert W. Hoyt Staff Sgt. Sean P. Huey Spc. Nicholas R. Idalski Staff Sgt. Jesse Infante Sgt. Thor H. Ingraham Sgt. Matthew L. Ingram Cpl. Michael Keith Ingram Jr. Sgt. Benjamin W. Isenberg Pfc. Kenneth J. Iwasinski Pfc. Allen Brenton Jaynes Sgt. Edmund J. Jeffers Staff Sgt. Gary W. Jeffries Pfc. Darius T. Jennings Sgt. David W. Johnson Spc. Timothy L. Johnson Chief Warrant Officer 2 Philip A. Johnson Jr. Pfc. Richard K. Jones Pfc. Roy L. Jones III Sgt. Giann Carolo Joya-Mendoza Spc. Dustin L. Kendall Sgt. Nathan P. Kennedy Maj. Thomas E. Kennedy Staff Sgt. Kevin J. Kessler Pvt. Jeungjin Kim Sgt. Shin Woo Kim Spc. Anthony D. Kinslow Sgt. Joshua J. Kirk Pvt. Joseph L. Knott Chief Warrant Officer 4 Patrick W. Kordsmeier Lt. Col. Eric John Kruger Cpl. Jared W. Kubasak Pfc. Christopher D. Kube Sgt. Larry R. Kuhns Staff Sgt. Patrick F. Kutschbach Sgt. 1st Class William W. Labadie Jr. Maj. Douglas A. LaBouff Chief Warrant Officer 2 Matthew C. Laskowski Staff Sgt. William T. Latham Capt. Joshua S. Lawrence Spc. Daniel C. Lawson Sgt. Carl W. Lee Pfc. Samuel S. Lee Spc. Ken W. Leisten Spc. Eric N. Lembke Sgt. Joshua A. Lengstorf Staff Sgt. Lex L. Lewis Spc. Eric A. Lill Spc. Justin W. Linden Sgt. Youvert Loney Sgt. Angelo L. Lozada Spc. Stephan L. Mace Pfc. Vorn J. Mack Pfc. Nicholas A. Madaras Chief Warrant Officer 2 Ian D. Manuel Sgt Joshua S. Marcum Spc. Evan A. Marshall Staff Sgt. Vernon W. Martin Staff Sgt. Jay E. Martin Spc. Francisco G. Martinez Spc. Joseph L. Martinez Sgt. Michael J. Martinez Maj. Michael R. Martinez Spc. Rafael Martinez Jr. Spc. Charles P. McClure Pfc. Clinton Tyler McCormick 1st Lt. Erik S. McCrae Cpl. Stephen M. McGowan Spc. Jeremy W. McHalffey Sgt. Allen R. McKenna Sgt. Jason A. Mcleod Spc. Kenneth A. Melton Spc. Christopher L. Mendonca Pfc. William L. Meredith Spc. Christopher A. Merville Spc. Nicolas E. Messmer Pfc. Brandon A. Meyer Pfc. Harrison J. Meyer Pfc. Devin J. Michel Spc. James H. Miller Sgt. Mikeal Miller Pfc. Dennis J. Miller Jr. Staff Sgt. Frederick L. Miller Jr. Spc. Pedro Millet Meletiche Sgt. 1st Class Troy Miranda Sgt. Gordon F. Misner Spc. Gregory J. Missman Sgt. Keman L. Mitchell Sgt. 1st Class Sean K. Mitchell Staff Sgt. Jason W. Montefering Staff Sgt. Thaddeus S. Montgomery Sgt. Milton M. Monzon Jr. Sgt. Jae Sik Moon Spc. Jose L. Mora Staff Sgt. Brian L. Morris Chief Warrant Officer 1 Judson E. Mount Sgt. James P. Muldoon Pfc. Robert W. Murray Jr. Sgt. Dimitri Muscat Spc. Nathan W. Nakis Spc. Brynn J. Naylor Spc. Randy LJ Neff Jr. Sgt. Julio E. Negron Pfc. Albert M. Nelson Sgt. Kenneth R. Nichols Spc. Louis E. Niedermeier Staff Sgt. David P. Nowaczyk 1st Lt. Mark A. Noziska Spc. Stephen M. Okray Staff Sgt. Billy J. Orton Spc. Bobby J. Pagan Capt. Eric T. Paliwoda Staff Sgt. Dale A. Panchot 1st Lt. Tyler Edward Parten Cpl. Jason G. Pautsch Sgt. 1st Class Eric P. Pearrow Spc. Brian H. Penisten Sgt. 1st Class Christopher W. Phelps Staff Sgt. Robert R. Pirelli Spc. Eric J. Poelman Staff Sgt. Andrew R. Pokorny Spc. Justin W. Pollard Sgt. Joe Polo Spc. Robert C. Pope ll Staff Sgt. Christopher Potts Pfc. James E. Prevete Master Sgt. Charles L. Price III Sgt. 1st Class Neil A. Prince Staff Sgt. Michael B. Quinn Spc. Tamarra J. Ramos Sgt. Elijah J. Rao Spc. Omead Hossein Razani Pfc. Dylan T. Reid Staff Sgt. John A. Reiners Pfc. Mario A. Reyes Sgt. Luis R. Reyes Sgt. Joshua J. Rimer Spc. Lizbeth Robles Spc. Ricky W. Rockholt Jr. Staff Sgt. Robb L. Rolfing Spc. Edwin W. Roodhouse Spc. Kyle R. Rookey Maj. Mark E. Rosenberg Sgt. David Roustum 2nd Lt. Charles R. Rubado Pfc. Aaron J. Rusin Capt. Drew E. Russell Spc. Lyle Rymer Sgt. Yevegeniy Ryndych Pfc. JR Salvacion Staff Sgt. Alberto V. Sanchez Spc. Trinidad Santiago Jr. Cpl. Luis D. Santos Sgt. Stephen P. Saxton Pfc. Collin Ryan Schockmel Sgt. Mark H. Schoonhoven Maj. Matthew E. Schram Spc. Stephen M. Scott Sgt. Michael P. Scusa Staff Sgt. Michael B. Shackelford Sgt. Daniel J. Shaw Sgt. Jacob M. Simpson Sgt. Christopher C. Simpson Sgt. Robert C. Sisson Air Force Senior Airman Bradley R. Smith Staff Sgt. Christopher G. Smith 1st Lt. Justin S. Smith Spc. Michael J. Smith Sgt. Michael A. Smith Sgt. Eric L. Snell Cpl. Ismael G. Solorio Pfc. Armando Soriano Pfc. Eric D. Soufrine Pfc. Jason L. Sparks Spc. Randy L. Stevens Staff Sgt. Glen H. Stivison Jr. Pfc. Brandon M. Styer Pfc. Roger Alfonso Suarez-Gonzalez Sgt. John Michael Sullivan Pfc. Ming Sun Sgt. Timothy J. Sutton Spc. Robert A. Swaney Spc. Tofiga J. Tautolo Sgt. Norman R. Taylor III 1st Lt. Alejo R. Thompson Pfc. Kevin C. Thomson Sgt. 1st Class Duane A. Thornsbury Pfc. Joshua K. Titcomb Maj. Jeffery P. Toczylowski Sgt. Tromaine K. Toy Staff Sgt. Marvin L. Trost lll Sgt. John B. Trotter Spc. Wade M. Twyman Pfc. Brian S. Ulbrich Spc. Robert O. Unruh Staff Sgt. Gary A. Vaillant Sgt. Melissa Valles Chief Warrant Officer 3 Brian K. Van Dusen Spc. Robert D. Varga Staff Sgt. Justin L. Vasquez Spc. Brian A. Vaughn Pfc. Jerimiah J. Veitch Pfc. Justin Abel Verdeja Pfc. Ramon A. Villatoro Jr. Staff Sgt. Thomas E. Vitagliano Chief Warrant Officer 2 Douglas M. Vose III Sgt. Antwan L. Walker Staff Sgt. Timothy H. Walker Sgt. Jonathan M. Walls Pfc. Rowan D. Walter Pvt. Brett A. Walton Pfc. Andrew M. Ward Sgt. Bennie J. Washington Staff Sgt. David Weisenburg Chief Warrant Officer 2 Stephen M. Wells Staff Sgt. Matthew J. West Spc. Grant A. Wichmann Pfc. Matthew E. Wildes Sgt. Charles T. Wilkerson Spc. Jeffery A. Williams Spc. Ronnie D. Williams Staff Sgt. Taft V. Williams Staff Sgt. Arthur C. Williams lV Spc. Nicholas E. Wilson Spc. Thomas J. Wilwerth Sgt. Jeremiah T. Wittman Spc. James R. Wolf Sgt. Eduviges G. Wolf Pfc. Eric P. Woods Staff Sgt. Gary L. Woods Jr. Spc. Dustin L. Workman II Sgt. James R. Worster Capt. Luke C. Wullenwaber Pvt. Joshua A.R. Young Spc. Stephen G. Zapasnik
  • 9. 9May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER
  • 10. 10 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 To volunteer, call 877-427-9626 or visit StepUpALA.org. I proudly volunteer for those who have sacrificed so much for us. A wonderful thing happens when you step up and volunteer with the American Legion Auxiliary: you make a difference in the lives of our veterans, military and their families—both at home and abroad. It doesn’t take much of your time, there are lots of activities to choose from, and you’ll meet some new friends. So step up Colorado Springs, like Amber did. call 87teer,nuloo vTTo -9626 or visi-4277call 87 t StepUpALA.org.-9626 or visi Photo by Sgt. William Smith Army test site Two AH-64E Guardian Apaches arrive at Butts Army Airfield on Fort Carson, Monday. The 1st Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment, 25th Infantry Division, is the second unit to test the new Apache model, said Capt. Christopher Curran, assistant operations officer in charge, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Bn., 25th Avn. Reg. The new model provides improvements to crew survivability in the event of a crash and improved drivetrain increasing payload capacity without sacrificing power. It also has the capability to download video to troops on the ground to help determine friend from foe. Fort Carson provides the optimal testing site with its terrain features, four brigade combat teams and 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne).
  • 11. 11May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER FREE Buy 1, Get Limit 1 Reward Per Transaction FREE Buy 1, Get Limit 1 Reward Per Transaction 5for $ 1 Prices Effective 5/24/13 - 5/28/13 visit www.AlbertsonsMarket.com 4for $ 102for $ 4 Final Price When you Buy 4 with Minimum $25 Purchase Buy 4 • Save $3 • Mix & Match!Buy 4 • Save $3 • Mix & Match! 4FOR988 248 When you Buy 4 Final Price ea. 199 Limit 1 Reward per Transaction When you Buy 4 Final Price ea. MILIT A RY DISCOUNT W EEK Your Grocery Purchase 5/24 - 5/28/13 RAIN CHECK: We strive to have on hand sufficient stock of advertised merchandise. If for any reason we are out of stock, a Rain Check will be issued enabling you to buy the item at the advertised price as soon as it becomes available, Savings may vary. Check price tag for details. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Please, No Sales to Dealers. AVAILABILITY: Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale at or below the advertised price in each Albertsons store except where specifically noted in this ad. © 2013 Albertsons, L.L.C, Albertsons, the Albertsons logo, the Savon Pharmacy logo and the 10 for $10 logo are trademarks of New Albertson’s, Inc or its subsidiaries and is used under license. We reserve the right to correct printed errors. 052413_ROP_CS_M tuy 1, GeB tuy 1, GeBt FRE uy 1, GeB erd ParweLimit 1 R actionansrT EEer t FRE uy 1, GeB erd ParweLimit 1 R actionansrT BBuyuyuyuy 44 •• SSSavSavaveaveveve $$33 •• Eer arweLimit 1 R •• MMMixMixixix && MaMaMaMatttctchh!! actionansrd per Tar 55for $ 1 ,eoksi, CepP at7•Up or Shas z.12 pk., 12 o stiearieelect VS a.9 e4.3e $ale PricS Final e 4 c 4 with Minimum $ 4 ePric FOR uy 4ou Bhen yW echas5 Pur2with Minimum $ 4FOR988 s’ryereD amee CrIc .s2 qt5-71. stiearieelect VS eale PricS a.3 e.23$ 248 uy 4ou Bhen yW eFinal Pric .ea 4 S S $ tle orsNe s’eryeDr seltievNo .-6 ct4 stiearieelect VS eale PricS a.4 e7742.$ 199 uy 4ou Bhen yW eFinal Pric .ea actionansrd per TarweLimit 1 R uy 4ou Bhen yW uy 4ou Bhen yW sy’La $ $ w NationaleHebr s’or Nathan sankrf FeeB z. or14 o11- ectiv s ffs EePric ficient s y’La so ChipattoP z..5 o10.5-9 stiearieelect VS Limit 4 e on hand sufvo hae ttrive sCK: WAIN CHER AILABILITYV. Asalero Des tale, No Seas. Pleslimit quantitie ademarke tror $10 logo ary logo and the 10 fPharmac /13 - 5 2 42/e 5ectiv on w for $ 4 asey ror an. If fechandised mertiserf advock otficient s ed tequirems is red ittisere advsf theach o: EAILABILITY s and is ussidiaries sub, Inc or its’onstw Alberf Nes oademark /13 ons 82//13 - 5 sued enabling y stAlber Purified eratDrinking W z.9 o4 pk., 16.2 4 ain Check will be isock, a Rtf se out oe aron w erw the advale at or beloor sailable fvadily aeo be red t ect printorro ce the right tversee r. Weensed under lics and is us visit www 4 oon as it bec for $ 10 e as sed prictiserem at the advo buy the itou tsued enabling y e specifict wherepcxe eortons sstach Albere in eed prictis .sored errect print onsMark s st.Albervisit www . Check pric ankrf FeeB z. or14 o11- orkw Yf or Neeeark Ball PB at ors or Meankryle FtS sankry FeurkT z.16 o-14 949-$6..2ail $4teeg. RR yary vvings maa, Sailablevs aomeoon as it bec , AlberC, L.L.onsst013 Albered in this ad. © 2tally noe specific om ork c.teonsMark oe the right tversee r. Wailstor deag fe t. Check pric onva, the Sons logost, the Alberonsst, Alber S_MOP_C13_R4205
  • 12. 12 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 www.abbaeyecare.com CONTACTS GLASSES 4430N.NevadaAve. SouthwestCornerofGardenoftheGods&Nevada 635-2020 4319IntegrityCenterPoint NWCornerofPowers&Barnes 634-2020 1813NorthCircleDrive Circle&Constitution 632-2020 1130LakePlazaDrive LakeAve&LakePlaza(nexttoCulvers) 578-2020 Voted #1 Eye Care in Colorado Springs The Independent & The Gazette 25% MILITARY DISCOUNT ON ALL GOODS & SERVICES* QUESADILLAS! TACOS! BURRITOS! FAJITAS! FIESTA PACKS!SALADS! LOCATIONS: 596-3113Schedule an appointment today! New Downtown Location! North www.rangewoodorthodontics.com AFTERBEFORE BethanyHamilton,ProfessionalSurfer The first 10 new starts will receive a Sonicare Toothbrush Non-extraction treatment, less time, fewer appointments Clear and “Hidden” lingual braces 100% Financing 0% Interest Options Most Insurance Accepted 2nd Opinions Welcome *New orthodontic patients only, some restrictions apply. Offer expires 5/31/13 Call Today For A Consultation! Present this ad and receive $ 500 OFF comprehensive treatment* PROVIDINGBEAUTIFULSMILESAND IDEALBITECORRECTIONFORALLAGES ExperiencedTeam State of the ArtTechnology Better Oral Health for your Individual Needs Sgt. Bryan Fox, 663rd Ordnance Company, 242nd Explosive Ordnance Disposal Battalion, 71st Ordnance Group (EOD), scans the ground with a VMC-1 Gizmo metal detector, May 14. EOD cognizant of changing enemy tacticsStory and photo by Andrea Sutherland Mountaineer staff The TALON robot zoomed across the dried earth toward the C4 charge and secondary improvised explosive device. From the Humvee parked hundreds of feet away, Spc. Matthew Beatty maneuvered the robot’s arm, delicately plucking the charge from the ground via a thin wire. “That’s one good thing about the ‘X-Box generation,’ they’re good with the robots,” said Dave Cooley, evaluator and contractor with Joint Asymmetric Threat Awareness and Counter IED training program. The team of explosive ordnance dis- posal technicians from 663rd Ordnance Company, 242nd EOD Battalion, 71st Ordnance Group (EOD), had already disposed of one IED. As they swept the area with the robot, they came across a secondary device. Beatty guided the robot back to the Humvee as Sgt. Matthew Bagley and Sgt. Bryan Fox prepped a water bottle charge to eliminate the second threat. “What’s the plan, Bryan?” Cooley asked. “We got another water bottle. We’re going to go back because of that second pressure plate you put out there,” Fox said. “I didn’t put it out there,” Cooley said. “The ‘Taliban’ did.” From May 13-17, EOD technicians completed complex scenarios near Camp Red Devil as part of a training exercise to prepare for an upcoming deployment to Afghanistan. Cooley and other contractors prepared the exercises based on real situations servicemembers experience in theater. “We’re duplicating tactics seen in Afghanistan,” said Cooley, who recently returned from Afghanistan after a six- month tour. “As (enemy forces) learn how we do things, they change their tactics.” As a result, Cooley said, EOD units also need to change and adapt. “I come here and pass along that information to these guys,” he said. Throughout the week, as teams rotated through various scenarios, team leaders briefed each other on the location and number of IEDs found as well as other pertinent information discovered while patrolling. “I’m feeling confident,” Fox said. “This training helps us build confidence and gets us ready for Afghanistan.”
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  • 14. 14 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 $ * GetGetG $ Get * or call (719) 574-1100! o applyTTo online with our easy-to-use Mor to manage – you can apply and trac olt c) a*054$ 3 a10, 21y 3luJ uor yoy flppA or call (719) 574-1100! tgage.com/Moro apply visit Ent tgage Resource Centeronline with our easy-to-use Mor k your loan applicationto manage – you can apply and trac !gniso eel fasiarppr auod ynufel rl’ed wn3 a y 1 aan Meewten baoe Lgagtrot Mnr Eu tgage .tgage Resource Center k your loan application op tus (e dny 1 a naol ll. Aylpps anoitacifilaut qiderc hcru, pgnicnanifen raoe lgagtrom y 3lud Jna3102,1yan Meewteb ofsnaolegagtron md oilar veffO* ni. Flavorppt aiderl canio ft tcejbue srs an f is oesahcrur ps oemod hnocef ss oesah rebotcOybdesolcerahcihw,3102,1y 3 emohdeipuccorenwofoesahcrupehtr | .odarolon Cs iemon hg onicnan dradnat. Sytreport pnemtsevn nd oilat vor neff. O3102,13r dettimbus snoitacilppahtiwse COLORADO SPRINGS PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY Little People, Big Smiles (719) 522-0123 9480 Briar Village Point, Suite 301 Technology with a Caring Touch Specialized treatment planning for all ages Treatment under conscious sedation and general-anesthesia Digital radiography for pinpoint treatment plans and reduced radiation exposure Parents can stay with children during treatment Most insurance accepted including Military and Medicaid www.cspediatricdentistry.com Jeff Kahl, DDS Derek Kirkham, DDS Zachary Houser, DMD Welcoming New Patients 660SouthPointeCourt, Suite100 719-596-2097 Now accepting appointments in our new location. 719-596-2097 660 South Pointe Court, Suite 100 MPs get pepper sprayedStory and photo by Spc. Robert Holland 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs Office, 4th Infantry Division Spc. Andrew Detwiler said he just wanted his first time to be over. “Close your eyes,” said 1st Lt. Gregory Barslou. “Are you ready?” Detwiler did as he was told, body tensed and said he was ready. Barslou, with a smile on his face, aimed the small canister, gave the verbal warning and squeezed the trigger. Immediately a stream of pale yellow fluid hit Detwiler right on the forehead — a perfect hit. Detwiler, along with the rest of the military policemen assigned to the MP Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, participated in a one-day oleoresin capsicum spray — commonly known as OC spray or pepper spray — training and certifica- tion course May 10. The course teaches Soldiers how to properly use the nonlethal weapon. “Personally, I think my Soldiers are scared,” Barslou said. “It’s a scary thing to go through.” Staff Sgt. Joseph Pellegrino said he agreed with Barslou, noting it was one of the worst things he has experienced. “I would rather be Tasered any day of the week than be sprayed,” Pellegrino said. “Every time it sucks, and I have been through it about five times.” Barslou said training like this is invaluable to his Soldiers because OC spray could very well save their lives down the road. The Soldiers, through a mix of classroom and hands-on training, familiarize themselves with the spray, helping remove the psycho- logical element of the weapon. This allows the Soldiers to maintain their composure if they are accidentally, or purposely, exposed to OC spray in real-world situations, Barslou said. “(OC spray training) is beneficial because it gives our Soldiers another level of force to use before they have to go to lethal or deadly force,” Barslou said. “The training teaches the Soldiers that they can fight through anything. It makes them stronger and more effective Soldiers.” MPs must recertify with the spray every three years to carry it. To be certified as level 1, Pellegrino said the Soldiers must be directly exposed to the OC spray and then complete various tasks such as calling for backup, combatives and handcuffing an aggressive individual. Level 2 certification consists of indirect exposures for those who have already completed level 1 training. “It did not burn my eyes as bad as I expected it to,” said Detwiler. “But the burning sensation on my face was a hundred times worse than I thought it would be.” Detwiler, who successfully completed his initial level 1 certification, said he learned a lot about OC spray and is glad he was able to experience it, but, if he had his choice, one time would be enough. “It’s not something I would choose on my own or would want to go through ever again,” Detwiler said. “But it is part of being an MP. You just got to do it and move on.” Spc. Andrew Detwiler, military policeman, MP Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, has his eye flushed with water by a medic after being sprayed with oleoresin capsicum spray, commonly known as OC spray or pepper spray, during a training class May 10.
  • 15. 15May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER Story and photo by Sgt. Jonathan C. Thibault 4th Combat Aviation Brigade Public Affairs Office, 4th Infantry Division Air traffic control specialists trained on the Air Traffic Navigation, Integration and Coordination System at Butts Army Airfield, May 14. The ATNAVIC system is a tactical radar system that provides a rapid air traffic control response for conditions — such as radio failure at the tower and inclement weather with no visibility, which affect pilots’ability to land without equipment — that prevent the air traffic control tower from working effectively. The Soldiers from Company F, 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 4th Aviation Regiment, 4th Combat Aviation Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, find the equipment useful. “In situations in which aircraft have low visibility due to weather, and the tower has bad radio reception, we can get the aircraft on a safe approach using the ATNAVIC system,” said Staff Sgt. Samuel Siegar, radar management supervisor, Company F, 2nd GSAB. The Soldiers also appreciate the system’s portable nature. “The ATNAVIC system is very mobile, perfect for tactical environments and can be set up anywhere.All you need to set it up is a runway and a tower,” said Spc. Anthony Willis, air traffic controller, Company F, 2nd GSAB. The system is also easy to set up, with appropriate training. “The system can be set up by four highly-trained people in one hour,” said Rahn McCullough, product manage- ment air traffic controller net trainer. “Although I haven’t seen it done in that time, it is still a rapid assembly and effective piece of equipment that can be used by air traffic controllers.” Company F had seven air traffic controllers go through this training for the first time, and one that was already certified. Siegar was the only ATNAVICS certified air traffic controller to go through the training. “I have been certified for six years on this type of radar system,” said Siegar. “There (have) been three software version updates in the last two years. I needed this training to keep me up to date on all the changes in the system.” The Company F first-time ATNAVICS trainees also found this training useful to their job. “Getting certified on the ATNAVIC system allows air traffic controllers to become rated on radar systems,” said Willis. “We become more well-rounded air traffic controllers. We can use this knowledge when we get out of the Army and want (to do air traffic control) as civilians.” Spc. Nathaniel Harden, air traffic controller specialist, Company F, 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 4th Aviation Regiment, 4th Combat Aviation Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, calibrates a scope to get the line of sight on the radar system’s antenna at Butts Army Airfield, May 14. Controllers use radar to direct air traffic
  • 16. 16 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 SAVE YOU MONEY WATCH US High-Speed Internet Digital Cable TV Digital Phone WITH THE MOST INCREDIBLE OFFERS! ON ENTERTAINMENT SERVICES starting at STAND ALONE SERVICES $ 1995PER MONTH BAJABROADBAND.COM 877.422.5282 *Pricing valid for new residential customers in wired, serviceable areas. The $19.95/month starting price applies to Baja’s stand-alone High-Speed Internet service. For complete pricing details for our Cable TV & Phone, and other rates and offers, please contact us today. Offer terms, conditions and features are subject to change at the discretion of Baja Broadband at any time. Additional charges apply for taxes and fees and lease of modem, if required. Free installation, when applicable, does not include custom wiring. Other restrictions may apply. Some services may not be available in all areas. © 2013 Baja Broadband. All rights reserved. Offer expires 5.31.13. LIFEENTERTAINMENTConnect to SAVINGS WATCWAT H USCH USWATSA CWATOU MONEVE YAAV H USCOU MONE H USYOU MONE High-Speed Internet 1$ STAND ALONE SERVICES ting atrtas High-Speed Internet PER MONTH 59 91 NON E INCREDIBLE OFFERS! WITH THE MOST SECIVRRVET SNEMNIAERTTATN INCREDIBLE OFFERS! WITH THE MOST High-Speed Internet Digital Cable TV Digital Phone INCREDIBLE OFFERS! High-Speed Internet Digital Cable TV Digital Phone ff does not include custom wiring. Other restrictions may apply fer terms, conditions and fea. Ofplease contact us today *Pricing valid for new residential customers in wired, serviceable areas. ADBAND.COMJABROAB ENTERTConnect to . Some services may not be available in all areas. © 2013 Baja Broadband.does not include custom wiring. Other restrictions may apply fer terms, conditions and features are subject to change at the discretion of Baja Broadband at any time. s stand-alone High-Speed Internet service. For complete pricing details for our CableThe $19.95/month starting price applies to Baja’*Pricing valid for new residential customers in wired, serviceable areas. 422.5282.877ADBAND.COM AINMENTTERTTA VINGSSAAV fffer expires 5.31.13.All rights reserved. Of. Some services may not be available in all areas. © 2013 Baja Broadband. Additional charges apply for taxes and fees and lease of modem, if required. Free installation, when applicable,fer terms, conditions and features are subject to change at the discretion of Baja Broadband at any time. s stand-alone High-Speed Internet service. For complete pricing details for our Cable 422.5282 FEIL ff Additional charges apply for taxes and fees and lease of modem, if required. Free installation, when applicable, fers,TV & Phone, and other rates and ofs stand-alone High-Speed Internet service. For complete pricing details for our Cable Pyramid Motors Auctions Co. (Pueblo) 719-547-3585 (Fountain) 719-382-5151 PyramidAutoAuction.com PUBLIC & DEALER AUCTION AUTO 200-300unitstochoosefrom everyauction.Cars,Pickups, SUVs,RVs,BankRepos,etc… Consignments welcome! 1stand3rd Saturday 905SantaFeAve. Fountain,CO 2nd Saturday 2751N.PuebloBlvd. Pueblo,CO Hours: Mon-Thurs 11am-9:30pm Friday 11am-10pm Saturday 12 noon -10pm Sunday 4pm -9pm China Doll Restaurant WeDeliverToFt.CarsonandwearejustminutesawayfromthePost! 10% Discount with coupon Mon-Fri (11am-2pm) 579-8822 or 579-8833 3629 Star Ranch Rd. (Delivery, Carryout and Dine-In) *FREE Delivery - 4 Mile Radius (Minimum $15 Order) Open 7 Days a Week All You Can Eat Lunch Buffet HWY115 Ft. Carson Main Gate Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Troth Briefing the surgeon general Maj. Matthew Angelidis, Evans Army Community Hospital Emergency Department chief, briefs Lt. Gen. Patricia Horoho, Army surgeon general and commanding general of the U.S. Army Medical Command, on his department’s capabilities, May 15. The ED was one of several stops Horoho made during her hospital tour, which she said brought back memories of when she started her Army nursing career here as a second lieutenant. Horoho briefed the hospital’s senior staff on Army Medicine’s new System of Health initiatives that focus on maintaining, restoring and improving beneficiaries’ health.
  • 17. 17May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER VeterankeepsMemorialDayclosetoheartBy Andrea Sutherland Mountaineer staff In the past, Charles Watkins has spent Memorial Day visiting with veterans, speaking to groups about his military service and decorating the graves of the men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country. The day is important to him. It’s symbolic. But, he fears many Americans have forgotten its meaning and the sobering reminder it carries. “It’s changed from what it used to be,” Watkins said, quietly. “It used to be a day to honor and remember the fallen. Now, it’s just another three-day holiday for most Americans.” The recipient of the Colorado 2011 Veteran of the Year award, Watkins said it’s important for Americans to recognize and remember the servicemembers who gave their lives for the country. “If we don’t stand up for ourselves, we risk oppression from dictators and tyrannical governments,” he said. “This country needs a wake-up call.” Vietnam Watkins never intended to join the military. After completing a semester of college, the Colorado native dropped out in order to earn money to pay for school. Instead, in 1966, he was drafted. For his tour in Vietnam, Watkins served as a helicopter pilot with the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, flying then Col. George Smith Patton IV. “He was not a traditional commander,” Watkins said of Patton. “When we flew, we were down in the fight, not flying thousands of feet above. If there wasn’t a fight going on, we went looking for one.” When another pilot flew Patton and got lost, Watkins said Patton made it clear only he would fly the commander. “He said, ‘Charlie’s my pilot,’” Watkins said. “I flew every single day. The most a pilot could fly was 100 hours per month. I flew between 240 and 260 hours because Patton only wanted one pilot.” Throughout his tour, there were good times and bad. Watkins said he remembers the day in April 1969 when he and Patton picked up two dying men from the battlefield. “One of them told Col. Patton, ‘Don’t let people forget who we are. Don’t forget our kids,’” he said. “Combat is a high tempo game. You just do what needs to be done. …You go to your comrades’ needs. “There’s a saying that goes, ‘We go to war as kids and we come home as men, and only God knows what we went through.” On the homefront From her home in Colorado Springs, Donna Watkins tracked her husband’s movements in Vietnam through television reports. “The reporters were bird-dogging Col. Patton and following him so I could kind of track Charlie’s movements,” she said. When he first arrived in country, Charles Watkins was issued a white helmet that he was supposed to spray paint green. Instead, Donna Watkins said, a friend painted the words, “Chargin’ Charlie” on the back of the helmet in red paint. “I would watch the reports on television, which were already two or three days old, and I would see the vibration of his white helmet in the background with those words so I would see what action he had,” she said. Returning home When he came back from Vietnam, Charles Watkins said he, like many veterans, did not receive a warm welcome from the community. “The public didn’t appreciate us,” he said. “So we crawled into a bottle and started drinking.” He added that he and his comrades drank too much. Some never stopped. “My buddy, he couldn’t come back from all that, and he ended up in a nursing home,” he said. “I saw that it wasn’t good for me. I knew I couldn’t jeopardize my life. I had a wife and two kids to care for.” “It took him quite a while before he started expressing what it was like,” Donna Watkins said. When the two moved to Germany for a new assignment, Donna Watkins said being around other pilots allowed her husband to open up about his experiences. But after a deadly helicopter crash in 1972 during a training exercise, she said her husband retreated back into isolation. “He changed again,” she said. “He was directing the exercise and he felt as the most experienced pilot he should fly with the least experienced. He was reading maps and by the time he felt the aircraft shudder, it was too late.” Reconnecting with the past After Vietnam, Charles Watkins remained close to Patton, who retired from the military as a major general. When Patton became sick with a form of Parkinson’s disease, Charles Watkins continued to visit him. At his funeral in 2004, Watkins delivered one of his eulogies. “He always said he wanted to die from the last bullet fired during the last war,” Charles Watkins said. Retiring from the military as a lieutenant colonel, Charles Watkins served 23 years in the Army. He said he later reconnected with some of his crewmembers. One of his battle buddies retired to Oregon, another became an attorney. One of his crew chiefs, he said, committed suicide. “It’s a very permanent solution to a short-term problem,” he said, looking down. “You touch a lot of different people in a lot of different ways.” Still, he said, there are happy stories. “At one reunion, this guy saw me and came running up to me. He said, ‘You saved my life. I was dying. You pulled me out of a hot (landing zone).’ It makes you feel good to know you were there when they needed help.” After 9/11, Charles Watkins said he tried to get back on active duty, but found a different calling as a volunteer at Fort Carson. “It bothered me seeing all these guys come back and committing suicide,” he said. “I wanted to help.” Charles and Donna Watkins attended homecoming ceremonies, greeting every Soldier with a handshake and a welcome home coin. “We started doing the coins a few years ago,” he said. “We’ve given out more than 40,000 so far.” Charles Watkins said he also offers rides to any Soldiers that may need a lift after arriving home from war. “I’ll take them wherever they need to go. They should not have to pay to take a taxi,” he said. “We didn’t get welcomed. They need somebody there to shake their hand and say, ‘Well done.’” Watkins also spends two days each week at the Soldier and Family Assistance Center, helping with odd jobs and talking to Soldiers that need someone to listen. “So many want to hold it inside, but if you open up and talk to other people, you can get rid of some of those horrors of war,” he said. “They trust another veteran. The key thing is talking. It helps them.” Keeping the memories This Memorial Day, Charles Watkins has no speaking engagements, no reunions. Instead, he Charles Watkins, right, poses next to a helicopter with Col. George S. Patton IV in this undated photograph. Watkins served as Patton's pilot in Vietnam in 1969. Charles Watkins, a retired lieutenant colonel, prepares to greet Fort Carson Soldiers during a welcome home ceremony. See Charles Watkins on Page 24
  • 18. 18 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 Claims to the estate Spc.Trinidad Santiago — With deepest regret to the Family of the deceased. Anyone having claims against or indebtedness to his estate should contact 1st Lt. Jason Borque at 503-1051. Spc. Charles McClure — With deepest regret to the Family of the deceased. Anyone having claims against or indebtedness to his estate should contact 1st Lt. Jason Borque at 503-1051. Upcoming events Summer food service — The Fountain-Fort Carson School District offers meals to children without charge at Aragon Elementary School, located at 211 South Main St. in Fountain, and Abrams Elementary School, located at 600 Chiles Ave. on Fort Carson. From June 17 through July 19, breakfast and lunch will be offered Monday-Friday from 7:15-8:15 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. General announcements Exceptional Family Member Program hours change — Evans Army Community Hospital's EFMP office is increasing its hours of operation to better accommodate the needs of servicemembers and Families. Effective Tuesday, the new hours are: Monday-Thursday 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Friday 7:30 a.m. to noon. The EFMP office is located in the hospital’s Woods Soldier Family Care Center, room 2124 on the second floor near the central stairs. Contact the EFMP Nurse Administrator at 503-7442 for more information. Donated annual leave for Fort Carson civilian employees — is currently being accepted for the following civilians under the Voluntary Leave Transfer Program. The employees who have exhausted all available leave because of medical emergencies and are currently accepting leave donations are Brad Hanerkratt, Dental Activity; Michele Bower, Space and Missile Defense Command; Vincent Lupercio and Tracy Paul, Directorate of Emergency Services; Luz “Susie” Molina, Civilian Personnel Advisory Center; Jacqueline Woodward, Directorate of Contracting; Teresa Miller, Directorate of Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation. Government civilian employees who wish to donate annual leave may complete form OPM-630A, “Request to Donate Annual Leave.” Nonappropriated Fund employees who wish to donate complete form OPM-630B “Out of Agency.” For more information contact Jennifer Hagemeier-Robles at 526-4270 or email jennifer.m.hagemeierrobles.civ@mail.mil. TRICARE challenges — UnitedHealthcare Military & Veterans assumed management of the TRICARE program for the western region April 1. There are no changes to supported benefits for TRICARE beneficiaries and all existing referrals for covered benefits will be honored by UMV. Questions about covered benefits or TRICARE coverage should be directed to the TRICARE Service Center inside Evans Army Community Hospital or UMV at 888-874-9378. For more information, visit https://www.uhcmilitarywest. com. Changes to dining facility — Beginning June 1 the Evans Army Community Hospital DFAC will reduce menu options on weekends and holidays. Weekends and federal holiday hours are: breakfast, 6:30-8:30 a.m.; lunch, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; and dinner, 4-5:30 p.m. The DFAC offers an assortment of nutritious grab-n-go items during these meal hours: breakfast — assorted beverages, cold cereal, assorted pastries, hard-boiled eggs, breakfast burritos, scones, muffins, fresh fruit and yogurt; lunch and dinner — assorted beverages, assorted pre-made sandwiches, assorted pre-made salads, fresh fruit, yogurt and assorted desserts. Call 526-7968 or 7973 for more information. Library program — Tutor.com for military Families offers homework and studying help from a professional tutor, any time of day or night, free for K-12 students in military Families. Expert tutors are available online 24/7 to help students in more than 16 subjects, including math, science, English and social studies. Tutor.com can also help with standardized test prep, Advance Placement exams and with college essays. Visit http://www.tutor. com/military for more information. Army Provider Level Satisfaction Survey — Patients may fill out and return the APLSS to help minimize the impact of budget cuts on medical care. Evans Army Community Hospital receives funding based on patients seen and customer satisfaction. Positive surveys returned can bring in up to $800. Help keep providers and departments and clinics fully functional. Call 526-7256 for more information. New health care system — UnitedHealthcare Military & Veterans became the prime TRICARE contractor this month. As with any large scale transition, there are inevitable challenges to work through. If a patient is experiencing any unusual occurrences or has questions about primary care manager changes, network referrals, authorized providers, or these type issues, contact the UnitedHealthcare Military & Veterans call center at 877-988-WEST(9378). Adult immunizations — Adult patients can visit their Family Medicine Clinics for all immunizations. The Allergy Clinic will no longer provide adult immunizations. Contact your primary medical provider or clinic for more information Seeking volunteers — Cub Scout Pack 264 needs volunteers for den leaders and committee members. No experience is needed. Training will be provided by Boy Scouts of America staff. There is always a need for new volunteers to fill positions or just help out at various activities. Contact the Committee Chair, Johnathon Jobson at sgtjobson@gmail.com or the Cub Master, Robert Jepsen, robert.jepsen@us.army.mil and put Scout Volunteer in the subject line. Triple Threat expands — The Southeast Family Center and Armed Services YMCA hosts Triple Threat meetings for Family members of military personnel dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder. Groups meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday evenings at the YMCA located at 2190 Jet Wing Drive in Colorado Springs. Contact Larry Palma at 559-376-5389 or longlinelarry@aol.com for details. Medications self-care program suspended — Due to fiscal constraints, Evans Army Community Hospital is suspending the over-the-counter medication self-care program. All self-care classes have been cancelled pending further information, and training information will be removed from the Evans Preventive Medicine Web page. Contact Preventive Medicine at 526-8201 for more information. Operation Mentor — Big Brothers Big Sisters seeks children ages 9-16 from military Families to participate in the military mentoring program, which matches children with adult volunteers who serve as positive role models. Visit http://www. biglittlecolorado.org/ for more information. Inclement weather procedures for Gate 19 — The Directorate of Emergency Services operates Gate 19 Monday-Friday from 5 a.m. to 6 p.m., regardless of inclement weather or road conditions along Essayons Road, which is an unimproved road. Essayons Road is also used to access several ranges and training areas, so the road remains open during all conditions. In order to notify the motorists of the actual road conditions, two “Downrange Road Conditions” status signs are now located along Butts and Essayons roads showing whether road conditions are green, amber or red. One sign is at the intersection of Butts Road and Airfield Road, facing north, and the other is on Essayons Road just inside Gate 19, facing inbound traffic. Clinic name changes — Two of the Family medicine clinics are in the process of changing names. Iron Horse Family Medicine Clinic (located on the second floor of Evans Army Community Hospital) is changing its name to Warrior Family Medicine Clinic. Evans Family Medicine Clinic (located on the second floor of the Woods Soldier Family Care Clinic) is changing its name to Iron Horse Family Medicine Clinic. These are only name changes. Beneficiaries will continue to see assigned primary care manager/team in their regular clinic location. Automated medical referral — A new automated reminder system is now in place for medical referrals. Beneficiaries who are referred to a civilian specialist in the network will receive a phone call from the Colorado Springs Military Health System. The call will remind patients to make an appointment. If a patient has already made an appointment, an option will allow him to report that information. There is also an option to cancel the referral. Unless acted upon, these reminders will recur at 20, 60 and 120 days. Call 524-2637 for more information on the automated call system. Thrift shop accepts credit cards — The Fort Carson Thrift Shop is now accepting debit and credit cards. The shop, located in building 305, is open Tuesday-Thursday from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Contact Gail Olson at 526-5966 or email thriftshop@gmail.com for more information or to learn about volunteer opportunities. Donations may be dropped off at the store during normal business hours or at the recycling center located near the main exchange. IMCOM recruits — Installation Management Command is recruiting junior and mid-level employees to participate in a Developmental Assignment Program. DAP is designed to support functional and leadership training, which is one of the essential pillars of the HQ, IMCOM Campaign Plan LOE 3. Eligible applicants are IMCOM appropriated-fund employees (GS7-GS13) and nonappropriated fund employees (NAF-5 and below, in positions comparable to GS7-GS13). The DAP is based on a systematic plan specializing in develop- mental assignments through various functional areas for a period of up to 60 days. The program provides multifunctional training and assignments to strengthen the experience of employees and prepare them for broader responsibilities, improve organizational communication, and develop well- rounded personnel. Applications can be obtained by contacting your organization’s training coordinator or the Workforce Development Program. Ambulance service — Fort Carson officials urge community members to contact emergency personnel by calling 911 instead of driving personal vehicles to the emergency room. In the event of a life- or limb-threatening emergency, skilled para- medics and ambulance crew will be able to adminis- ter critical care and aid. Contact the Emergency Department at 526-7111 for more information. Prescription policy — All handwritten prescriptions from a TRICARE network provider will be filled at the Soldier and Family Care Center located adjacent to and east of Evans Army Community Hospital. When calling in for refills on those prescriptions, beneficiaries will continue to use the SFCC. A dedicated refill window in this facility will reduce wait time. The SFCC pharmacy is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The pharmacy is located on the first floor near the east entrance of the facility; park in the “G” lot, east of the building. Call 503-7067 or 503-7068 for more information.
  • 19. 19May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER Every year, thousands of people in the Pikes Peak Region give back and get involved with local nonprofits through a fun, effective program with a simple motto: Live Here. Give Here. To learn how you can help raise $1 million for the organizations that make our community a better place, visit www.indygive.com. It’s the Give! Campaign, powered by The Independent — and you! We’re proud to introduce 60 dynamic local nonprofits, selected from the most competitive group of applicants EVER, to form the Give! Class of 2013. Since 2009, Give! has put $2.3 million into the hands of local charities. This year, we’re going to make it $3.3 million — and we’re counting on YOU! We are now seeking business and foundation partners for this year’s campaign. Contact us at give@csindy.com for an invite to our June preview event for friends of Give! LIVE HERE. GIVE HERE. Animals All Breed Rescue & Training Happy Cats Haven Humane Society of the Pikes Peak Region Indigo Mountain Nature Center Safe Place for Pets Arts & Culture Business of Art Center Colorado Springs Youth Symphony Association Imagination Celebration Independent Film Society of Colorado The Millibo Art Theatre ModboCo UCCS’ Galleries of Contemporary Art Big Ideas Blue Star Recyclers Citizens Project Colorado Springs Community Centers Concrete Couch Pikes Peak Urban Gardens Public Market Project Venetucci Farm Families Colorado Springs Therapeutic Riding Center Community Partnership Family Resource Center Community Partnership for Child Development Court Care for the Pikes Peak Region Fostering Hope Foundation Ronald McDonald House Charities of Southern Colorado Special Kids Special Families Great Outdoors Catamount Institute Friends of Cheyenne Cañon Friends of Monument Valley Park Medicine Wheel Trail Advocates Rocky Mountain Field Institute Trails and Open Space Coalition Play Together Incline Friends Kids on Bikes Sk8-Strong StarFit Kids Teller County Search and Rescue UpaDowna Helping Hands Dream Centers of Colorado Springs Energy Resource Center One Nation Walking Together Partners in Housing PlayDate Behavioral Interventions Silver Key Senior Services Springs Rescue Mission TESSA Wellness Mission Medical Clinic National Alliance on Mental Illness - Colorado Springs Pikes Peak Suicide Prevention Pikes Peak Therapeutic Riding Center Project Angel Heart Southern Colorado AIDS Project Youth Atlas Preparatory School CASA of the Pikes Peak Region Safe Passage Colorado Springs Teen Court The Dale House Project Kidpower of Colorado Peak Education Urban Peak Colorado Springs Give! Class of 2013 Coming november 1, 2013 EVER WONDERED WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO GIVE AWAY A MILLION BUCKS? LIVE HERE GIVE+ /IndyGive @indygive GET INVOLVED! IndyGive! is under the charitable umbrella of The Pikes Peak Community Foundation
  • 20. 20 MOUNTAINEER — May 24, 2013 Honoring heroes Story and photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs Office, 4th Infantry Division PUEBLO — “This medal is not for me, it is for the Soldiers that did not come back,” reads the quote under the portrait of Staff Sgt. Leroy Petry, recent Medal of Honor recipient, and the latest servicemember to have his portrait unveiled in Pueblo. Soldiers of Fort Carson and local residents who attended the May 9 ceremony at the Center for American Values interacted with Medal of Honor recipients, toured the facility that features more than 140 portraits of servicemembers awarded the MOH and witnessed the unveiling of the newest portrait. Petry distinguished himself when he engaged an armed enemy in the vicinity of the Paktia Province, Afghanistan, May 26, 2008. While wounded from enemy fire, Petry, with complete disregard for his own safety, picked up an enemy grenade that landed feet from him and his Soldiers. As he released the grenade it detonated, amputating his right hand at the wrist. Despite the severity of his wounds, he placed a tourniquet on his wrist and continued to communicate for support via radio. Petry, who was not able to attend the unveiling due to back surgery, is currently stationed in Fort Lewis, Wash., and has taken on the task of helping wounded warriors and their Families. Capt. Adam Fullerton, Rear Detachment commander, 3rd Battalion, 16th Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, said he felt honored to attend the event. “It was a pretty emotional event with three Medal of Honor recipients there,” he said. “You could just tell what it meant to those guys and what it meant to the commu- nity. I was fortunate to be a part of it.” Drew Dix, Medal of Honor recipient, spoke of the importance of the center. “When (children) leave here, we know that a few of them are going to take something away from this,” said Dix. “They are going to help carry the message that we’re trying to create here.” Capt. Matt Anderson, Fort Carson Warrior Transition Battalion, said he appreciates the support of the community. “It’s awesome,” he said. “It depends (on) where you live, but it’s not always as prevalent as you would like it to be. It’s always awesome to have the local community on your side.” To learn more about the 140 Medal of Honor recipients, visit the Center for American Values at 101 S. Main Street, Suite 100 in Pueblo. Pueblo unveils Petry portrait Medal of Honor recipients Drew Dix, left, and Jim Taylor unveil a portrait of Staff Sgt. Leroy Petry, recent Medal of Honor recipient, at the Center for American Values located at the Historic Arkansas Riverwalk of Pueblo, May 9. The walls inside the building are lined with more than 140 portraits of servicemembers who have received the Medal of Honor. EventlinksSoldiers, MOHrecipientsStory and photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs Office, 4th Infantry Division PUEBLO — Patriotic banners and the colors red, white and blue lined the Pueblo Country Club as the city of Pueblo hosted the third annual “Home of Heroes” Golf Scramble May 10. Pueblo, known as the Home of Heroes because four living Medal of Honor recipients have called the city home, hosted more than 60 Fort Carson Soldiers for the event. The Soldiers interacted with residents, community leaders and MOH recipients Drew Dix, Jim Taylor and Salvatore Giunta. “It’s good to know there are people out there who would pay good money just to play a round of golf with Soldiers,” said Sgt. Justin Banner, Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 2nd Special Troops Battalion, 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division. Soldiers not only played a round of golf, but also received tips from a golf pro. “Dave Stockton, a professional golfer, gave a little clinic here for all the Soldiers, free of cost which makes it better,” said Capt. Adam Fullerton, Rear Detachment commander, 3rd Battalion, 16th Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd ABCT. “We are fortunate to have him out here.” Stockton gave tips on stance, grip, lining up on the ball, what to look at while on the green and how the green lies. “I don’t usually like to learn things before I go out and play a round, but it was good information,” said Banner. Fullerton said he appreciated the warm welcome they received. “We do have quite a few Soldiers who live down here, but you can tell it is a military town,” he said. “They are doing a great job of supporting us.” Capt. Adam Fullerton, Rear Detachment commander, 3rd Battalion, 16th Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, works on his putting skills before competing in the “Home of Heroes” Golf Scramble at Pueblo Country Club, May 10.
  • 21. 21May 24, 2013 — MOUNTAINEER Military personnel receive 10% OFF food purchases all day, dine-in or to-go. NORTH 7115 Commerce Center Dr. 719.593.7678 DOWNTOWN 118 North Tejon St. 719.634.8812 EAST 4110 N. Academy Blvd. 719.536.0633 SOUTH 3190 New Center Point 719.591.8994 WWW.OLDCHICAGO.COM(Valid for service men and women and their families. Show valid military ID to receive discount.) THE NEW OLD CHICAGO IS HERE TRY OUR CRAVEABLE PIZZA & CRAFT BEVERAGE APPLY TODAY! 1139 Space Center Drive, Colorado Springs, CO The Markets at Mesa Ridge, 6916 Mesa Ridge Parkway, Fountain, CO navyfederal.org 1.888.842.6328 Federally insured by NCUA.1 Ratessubjecttochangeatanytimeandarebasedoncreditworthiness,soyourratemaydiffer.Ratediscountscanbeapplied,butcannotbringtheratebelowthe1.49%APRminimum.1.49%APRavailableon2012,2013,and2014modelyearswith30,000milesorless.Payment example: Loan amount of $20,000 at a rate of 1.49% APR for 36 months would have a monthly payment of $569.00. 2 Existing Navy Federal loans not eligible for this offer. You must make your first scheduled payment in order to receive the offer. $250 will be credited to the primary applicant’s savings account between 61 and 65 days of the loan originationdate.Iftheautorefinanceloaniscanceledinthefirst60days,the$250offerwillbecomeinvalid.Offermayendatanytime.©2013NavyFederalNFCU12562-Col(5-13) To help get you on your way this summer, we’re offering our lowest rate ever. Apply today for a great deal and save hundreds on your next car or refinance your current auto loan from another lender. > Refinance your current auto loan from another lender and get $2502 > Easy application process and fast approvals > Up to 100% financing RATES AS LOW AS 1.49%APR1 FOR UP TO 36 MONTHS ON AUTOS Savings&Deals EXCLUSIVE www.csmng.com/topsecret Receive Top Secret deals to restaurants, retail stores and more exclusive to military and their immediate families from merchants here in town. Sign up for free at