My BIL is a '73 Grad of the USAFA, flew C-130's and taught the C-130 simulator.
Beautiful place...lovely chapel.
Visited in in 1986.
USAFA? Been there, done that (’73 grad). ;-)
https://www.afrc.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/2779429/ima-usafa-grad-first-to-play-mlb/
Capt. Griffin Jax, Minnesota Twins pitcher, hugs his wife, Savannah, at his Major League Baseball debut in Kansas City, Missouri, June 5, 2021. Jax, a resource analyst with S9 at Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado, is the first Air Force Academy graduate to play for an MLB team.
Bible in a Year :
Live a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every way.
As I prepared for my momâs celebration of life service, I prayed for the right words to describe her âhyphen yearsââthe years between her birth and death. I reflected on the good and not-so-good times in our relationship. I praised God for the day my mom accepted Jesus as her Savior after she saw Him âchangingâ me. I thanked Him for helping us grow in faith together and for the people who shared how my mom encouraged and prayed for them while showering them with kindness. My imperfect mom enjoyed a meaningful hyphenâa life well-lived for Jesus.
Not one believer in Jesus is perfect. However, the Holy Spirit can enable us to âlive a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every wayâ (Colossians 1:10). According to the apostle Paul, the church of Colossae was known for their faith and love (vv. 3-6). The Holy Spirit gave them âwisdom and understandingâ and empowered them to â[bear] fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of Godâ (vv. 9-10). As Paul prayed for and praised those believers, he proclaimed the name of Jesus, the one âin whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sinsâ (v. 14).
When we surrender to the Holy Spirit, we too can grow in our knowledge of God, love Him and people, spread the gospel, and enjoy a meaningful hyphenâa life well-lived for Jesus.
Reflect & Pray
What qualities characterized a person you know who lived a meaningful life? How can you enjoy living such a life this week?
Holy Spirit, please give me more opportunities to share Jesus with others as I enjoy a meaningful life.
For further study, read A Resilient Life: Strength for Today from the Sermon on the Mount.
Evening, Lauren, Kathy. Army pics so uplifting.
We did an early trip to the lake yesterday and we'll do another one today due to Heat Advisory. Yesterday at Comanche Lake:
How's everyone doing this morning?
We did an early trip to the lake yesterday and we'll do another one today due to Heat Advisory. Yesterday at Comanche Lake:
How's everyone doing this morning?
So the statement on the top picture is what they replaced “BRING ME MEN” with. Not as bad as it could be but it still resembles something one might see on a Heating/AC Repair companies’ adverting brochure.
â72 Best in Blue
Sometimes the story behind the myth is better and the beauty isn’t in the structure.
Perhaps it was the way he carried himself in an unassuming and humble manner, but day after day hundreds of Air Force Academy cadets would pass this janitor in the hall oblivious to the greatness that was among them.
In the mid-1970s, William Crawford might spend one day sweeping the halls and another cleaning the bathrooms, but it was a day approximately 30 years prior that would create for him a special place in the history of United States. In 1943 in Italy, the only thing Private William Crawford was cleaning out was German machine gun nest and bunkers.
Under heavy fire and at great risk to himself, his gallantry was so audacious that it earned him the Medal of Honor and the respect of any man who witnessed his actions. And yet, for the cadets at the Air Force Academy, it would take a studentâs study of the Allied campaign in Italy to realize who it was that walked among them. Once the cadets realized the humble janitor was a recipient of the nationâs highest military honor, they would never be able to look at him the same and the secret was out.
William Crawford was born in 1918 in Pueblo, Colorado. For Crawford, he would always call the state of Colorado home despite serving a long career in the military where he was assigned to various duty stations. It was after retiring from the Army that he returned to Colorado and took up his job as a janitor at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs.
The cadets would report that the shy janitor they only knew as Mr. Crawford simply blended into the background as he did his job without much fanfare. However, when one of the cadets began reading a book detailing the Allied advance through Italy he came upon the story of a medal of honor recipient named William Crawford.
Talking to his roommate, Cadet James Moschgat, Class of â77 made the connection and said: said, âHoly cow, youâre not going to believe this, but I think our janitor is a Medal of Honor [recipient].â The next day, the cadet took the book to Crawford and simply asked if this was him.
Perhaps weighing whether it was worth it to expose his gallantry, Crawford stared at the book for a while then simply said, âThat was a long time ago and one day in my life.â He would then be taken back to that fateful day in Italy and recount the story as only the man who lived it could do. By September 1943, the Allies were pushing through southern Italy slugging it out with a resilient German army. For Crawford and the 36th infantry division, that would place them near Altavilla Silentina with orders to take Hill 424.
On that day, Company I was assaulting enemy positions on the hill when the entire company was pinned down by intense machine-guns fire and mortars. Serving as the squad scout for third platoon, Private Crawford was near the front of this assault and located the first of the gun positions wreaking havoc on the company.
Without orders, he took it upon himself to eliminate the threat single-handedly. Under heavy fire, he crawled forward to within a few yards of the gun and placement and lobbed a grenade directly on top of the three defenders.
Meanwhile, the rest of the company finally made it to the crest of the hill when they were again coming under fire from two more machine gun nests entrenched in a higher ridge. Again on his own initiative, Crawford set out to destroy the threat. Crawling under the storm of bullets, Crawford came upon the first machine gun nest and with perfect accuracy once again landed a grenade right in their lap. Moving on to the second gun, he was able to take it out of action causing the rest of the defenders to flee as they opted not to stick around for a visit from the man they had just watched single-handedly destroy three entrenched positions.
Thanks to Crawfordâs gallant actions, Hill 424 was successfully overtaken and the Allied advance continued. Unfortunately for Crawford, his position at the front of the assault would eventually lead to his capture by the Germans during the chaos of the battle. The rest of the company had believed Crawford was killed in action as reports of his gallantry advanced up the chain of command. And for his actions that day in Italy, William Crawford was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor, but that is not where the story would end.
In 1944, the medal was presented to his father who accepted it on behalf of his son he presumed to have died in combat. But later in 1944 when a group of soldiers was rescued from German captivity, it turned out William Crawford was among them, oblivious to the fact that he was now the recipient of the nationâs highest military honor. Crawford would continue to serve in the military after World War II and retired in 1967 at the rank of Master Sergeant. After his distinguished and yet humble career in the military, this unassuming man would take a job as a janitor at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs.
It was here in 1976 that the truth would come out, and future Air Force officers would get a lesson in both gallantry and incredible humility. As the cadets looked to their janitor with a newfound respect, they would eventually coax the painfully shy man into speaking about his experience to the next generation of leaders. In one exchange, Crawford related the point that he never personally received his Medal of Honor with any ceremony due to his captivity and presumed death. The students and staff of the Air Force Academy would remember this fact and see to it that he had his day.
In 1984 when Pres. Ronald Reagan came to speak at that yearâs graduation ceremony; they had arranged for their gallant janitor to finally stand face-to-face with the President of the United States and receive his due commendation.
William Crawford died at the age of 81 in the year 2000 at his home in Colorado. And although Crawford was a veteran of the Army, he would become the only non-U.S. Air Force enlisted person buried at the United States Air Force Academy Cemetery in Colorado Springs. The cadets regarded him as one of their own and gave him all the respect such a man deserved.
We live in the business with an understanding far beyond the civilian world. And we are all brothers and sisters within it.
wy69