Air Force Academy makes list of sober schools, not as sober as other service academies
August 1st, 2011 | Flightlines | Posted by Brian Everstine
The Princeton Review has released its annual list of top party schools and sober schools, based on a survey of 122,000 students. The Air Force Academy makes the sober list coming in at No. 13. However, the Academy is the lowest of the service academies: The Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn., comes it at No. 4; the U.S. Military Academy in West Point at No. 5; the Naval Academy in Annapolis at No. 6; and the Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point, N.Y., at No. 12. The top sober school is Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.
If you are curious, the top 5 party schools in order are Ohio University, the University of Georgia, the University of Mississippi, the University of Iowa and the University of California Santa Barbara.
Read on for more details on the rankings:
Tags: academy, university
10th Security Forces Squadron holding memorial for an airman’s best friend
June 17th, 2011 | Flightlines | Posted by Brian Everstine
The 10th Security Forces Squadron at the Air Force Academy will gather today to say to say goodbye to one of their own – Aghbar, a German shepherd and the Air Force’s most decorated military working dog.
Man’s best friend in many ways has become an airman’s best friend, with hundreds of dogs accompanying airmen, soldiers and marines on patrols in Iraq and Afghanistan, along with working base security and law enforcement back home. Experts estimate that one dog is responsible for saving the lives of 150 service members, according to a call for legislation to improve the adoption process for retired war dogs.
The 10th Security Forces Squadron has seven of these pups currently working with them, but is planning a service for today to honor two they lost, Aghbar and Odys, a recently retired Belgian malinois.
Aghbar, who joined the Squadron in 2002 at two years old after training at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, served thousands of hours on walking patrols, deployed to Afghanistan, worked with Secret Service dignitary missions and won several awards at police dog competitions across the country.
Aghbar retired in March but had to be put down in May for health reasons.
In 2007, Police K-9 Magazine profiled Aghbar and his handler, Staff Sgt. Kristopher Evers on their first mission outside the wire, on a patrol tracking down IED makers in the area. The two worked together, searching a suspected Taliban compound. They ate and slept together during their deployment.
“I didn’t sleep very good,” Evers is quoted in the magazine as saying about the night before a patrol. “The ground was hard, and I was worried about (stray) dogs. Also, Aghbar snored.”
War dogs have gotten more attention as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan progressed, with about 600 dogs serving according to The New York Times. One dog in particular, a Belgian malinois named Cairo, captured the public’s interest after it took part in the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden last month.
Lackland is the hub of military dog training, with the 341st Training Squadron holding an average population of 800 dogs working in 90 training areas in 400 acres. The dogs are trained for the Air Force, Army, Navy, Marine Corps and civilian agencies such as the Department of Transportation.



