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Sunday September 5th 2010

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Sisters in the service

Sisters in arms, Tech. Sgt. Miranda Minshew, 506th Expeditionary Medical Squadron, and Spc. Julie Boggs, 263rd Quartermaster Company, recently reunited at Kirkuk Air Base after not seeing each other for more than three years. Minshew is deployed from the 377th Aerospace Medical Squadron, Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M. and Boggs is deployed from the 1013th Quartermaster Company, North Platte, Neb. Photo by Staff Sgt. Joshua Breckon

Sis­ters in arms, Tech. Sgt. Miranda Min­shew, 506th Expe­di­tionary Med­ical Squadron, and Spc. Julie Boggs, 263rd Quar­ter­mas­ter Com­pany, recently reunited at Kirkuk Air Base after not see­ing each other for more than three years. Min­shew is deployed from the 377th Aero­space Med­ical Squadron, Kirt­land Air Force Base, N.M. and Boggs is deployed from the 1013th Quar­ter­mas­ter Com­pany, North Platte, Neb. Photo by Staff Sgt. Joshua Breckon

Spc. Julie Boggs said she was sur­prised her deploy­ment allowed her to cross paths with her sis­ter, Tech. Sgt. Miranda Minshew.

"It is kind of a long shot chance with her being in the Air Force," said the sol­dier assigned to the 263rd Quar­ter­mas­ter Com­pany. "The chance wasn't very big that we were going to be deployed at the same time and actu­ally see each other with all the dif­fer­ent bases and our jobs being com­pletely different."

Min­shew, a pub­lic health tech­ni­cian assigned to the 506th Expe­di­tionary Med­ical Squadron, shared her sister's sur­prise and enthu­si­asm for the unlikely reunion.

"It's nice to have a famil­iar face here while you're away from your fam­ily," Min­shew said. "It's like a part of home is here."

When able, the sis­ters spent time catch­ing up over cof­fee, watch­ing movies and eat­ing at the din­ing facility.

"We did a lot of just hang­ing out together," the sergeant said. "We spent time work­ing out together as well. It was pretty much my daily rou­tine with her tag­ging along. It was great."

Min­shew and Boggs, born 19 months apart, grew up in the small town of Arthur, Neb. They attribute the close bond they devel­oped to the dense pop­u­la­tion of their home­town where they often social­ized in the same cir­cle of friends.

"We grew up in a really small town and a really small com­mu­nity so we did a lot of stuff together," Min­shew said. "Every mem­ory I have, she's in it. She was always there."

Even though they chose dif­fer­ent branches of ser­vice, they insist there is no friendly inter­ser­vice rivalry between them. How­ever, Min­shew made light of the dif­fer­ent career paths they chose.

"She knows the Air Force is bet­ter," Min­shew said with both sis­ters laughing.

She then added, "I think the Army was a per­fect fit for her and the Air Force was a per­fect fit for me."

Min­shew enlisted in March of 1998. Her job in pre­ven­tive med­i­cine includes per­form­ing food inspec­tions and set­ting up mos­quito traps to help find and pre­vent the spread of dis­eases. Boggs joined the Army a year after her sis­ter where her pri­mary duties take her out­side the wire set­ting up laun­dry and bath equip­ment for fel­low Soldiers.

Boggs was told her unit would be reas­signed to a dif­fer­ent base in Iraq. Despite that, the sis­ters both said they were happy to have time to catch up with one another.

"I'm only here for a week so it's a really short visit," Boggs said. "[But] it's def­i­nitely nice hav­ing some­one here that I know."

DVIDS
Story by Staff Sgt. Daniel Martinez

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