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Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany

"Committed to having the Courage to practice Honor"

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To celebrate Valentine
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Marine Corps Martial Arts Program student Lance Cpl. Jacob H. Colvinperforms an arm bar from the mount move on Sgt. Dustin L. Williams during MCMAP training at the Headquarters Dojo, Monday.
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Pamela Jackson, community plans liaison officer, Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany, will receive the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal, the nation’s second-highest civilian honor, Friday. Jackson, a native of Albany, Ga., was selected for the award because of her work with childhood obesity. Jackson is the founder and CEO of The Youth Becoming Healthy Project, a nonprofit organization committed to reducing the epidemic of childhood obesity through nutrition, fitness education and physical-activity programs.
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‘Never forget where you came from and always give back’ is the motto of Nathaniel Lowman, commanding officer of the Albany Young Marines, and retired Marine Corps master sergeant.Lowman has lived by these words for the last 35 years and because of his service to the surrounding communities, he was awarded the 2013 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Dream Award during a ceremony held at the Albany James H. Gray Sr. Civic Center, Jan. 21.
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Barrett hosts a discussion with Marine Corps Logistics Command and MCLB?Albany noncommissioned officers during his visit here, Jan. 31.
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Sgt. Maj. Micheal P. Barrett, sergeant major of the Marine Corps, discuses readiness issues with Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany leadership during his visit here, Jan. 31.
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‘Never forget where you came from and always give back’ is the motto of Nathaniel Lowman, commanding officer of the Albany Young Marines, and retired Marine Corps master sergeant.Lowman has lived by these words for the last 35 years and because of his service to the surrounding communities, he was awarded the 2013 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Dream Award during a ceremony held at the Albany James H. Gray Sr. Civic Center, Jan. 21.
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Young Marines visit veterans at Carl Vinson VA Medical Center in Dublin, Ga., recently. ‘Never forget where you came from and always give back’ is the motto of Nathaniel Lowman, commanding officer of the Albany Young Marines, and retired Marine Corps master sergeant.  Lowman has lived by these words for the last 35 years and because of his service to the surrounding communities, he was awarded the 2013 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Dream Award during a ceremony held at the Albany James H. Gray Sr. Civic Center, Jan. 21.
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Young Marines visit veterans at Carl Vinson VA Medical Center in Dublin, Ga., recently.
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A 196-foot communication tower was recently erected aboard Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany to facilitate better first responder radio communication.   Some users include Marine Corps Police Department, Marine Corps Fire Department and the Installation and Environmental Division. In a collaborative effort, MCLB Albany’s Communication and Information Systems Division and Installation and Environmental Division obtained funding to replace the old tower, according to Robbin Lamb, spectrum and land mobile radio manager, Communication and Information Systems Division, Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany.
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A 196-foot communication tower was recently erected aboard Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany to facilitate better first responder radio communication.   Some users include Marine Corps Police Department, Marine Corps Fire Department and the Installation and Environmental Division. In a collaborative effort, MCLB Albany’s Communication and Information Systems Division and Installation and Environmental Division obtained funding to replace the old tower, according to Robbin Lamb, spectrum and land mobile radio manager, Communication and Information Systems Division, Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany.
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Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany’s Natural Resources Section is currently conducting prescribed burning of base timber. Thirty to 40 acres is the average area burned on a typical day. There is about 725 acres of forest scheduled to be burned by the end of March.
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Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany’s Natural Resources Section is currently conducting prescribed burning of base timber. Thirty to 40 acres is the average area burned on a typical day. There is about 725 acres of forest scheduled to be burned by the end of March.
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Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany’s Natural Resources Section is currently conducting prescribed burning of base timber. Thirty to 40 acres is the average area burned on a typical day. There is about 725 acres of forest scheduled to be burned by the end of March.
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Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany’s Natural Resources Section is currently conducting prescribed burning of base timber. Thirty to 40 acres is the average area burned on a typical day. There is about 725 acres of forest scheduled to be burned by the end of March.
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Julie Robbins, natural resource manager, Environmental Branch, Installation and Environment Division, MCLB Albany, sets fire to underbrush during a prescribed burning of base timber. The burning is an integral part of managing forests in southwest Georgia. Burning accomplishes multiple objectives including reducing fuel loads to mitigate wildfires, improves habitat for wildlife, and reduces populations of undesirable plants and insects. Thirty to 40 acres is the average area burned on a typical day. There is about 725 acres of forest scheduled to be burned by the end of March. Periodic fire tends to favor understory wildlife species, such as deer, dove and quail which require a more open habitat.  A mosaic of burned and unburned areas tends to maximize “edge effect” which promotes a large and varied wildlife population. Habitat preferences of several rare, threatened or endangered species, including the gopher tortoise and indigo snake are also enhanced by burning.
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