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A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day....05-27-05 thru 05-30-05...Remembering Them Then ~ Honoring Them
DollyCali | May 27, 2005 | DollyCali

Posted on 05/27/2005 2:04:43 AM PDT by DollyCali



A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day
Free Republic made its debut in September, 1996, and the forum was added in early 1997.   Over 100,000 people have registered for posting privileges on Free Republic, and the forum is read daily by tens of thousands of concerned citizens and patriots from all around the country and the world.
A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day was introduced on June 24, 2002. It's only a small room in JimRob's house where we can get to know one another a little better; salute and support our military and our leaders; pray for those in need; and congratulate those deserving. We strive to keep our threads entertaining, fun, and pleasing to look at, and often have guest writers contribute an essay, or a profile of another FReeper.
On Mondays please visit us to see photos of A FEW OF FR'S VETERANS AND ACTIVE MILITARY
If you have a suggestion, or an idea, or if there's a FReeper you would like to see featured, please drop one of us a note in FR mail.
We're having fun and hope you are!

~ Billie, Mama_Bear, dutchess, Aquamarine, DollyCali ~








Memorial Day is set apart to remember those now departed who served in the armed forces. This four day weekend at the Finest we shall remember the countless fathers, sons, husbands, brothers, sisters, mothers, daughters and wives who paid the ultimate sacrifice while on active duty as well as our veterans who returned home alive but are no longer with us.

We are also going to honor and remember the men and women currently serving our country and present a very special Marine as a representative of all the members of our armed forces.

Please feel free to share on this thread the stories and pictures of your loved ones in the military currently serving in the Military, retired, deceased…



"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." -- Thomas Jefferson



We come, not to mourn our dead soldiers, but to praise them. ~Francis A. Walker




Although no sculptured marble should rise to their memory, nor engraved stone bear record of their deeds, yet will their remembrance be as lasting as the land they honored. ~Daniel Webster




On thy grave the rain shall fall from the eyes of a mighty nation! ~Thomas William Parsons






Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.(Psalm 23:4)













To fully understand why strangers across the country are sending well wishes to "Nick Popaditch, a true American hero" they've never met, one must rewind to Operation Iraqi Freedom and the liberation of Baghdad. In a famous event that truly symbolized the liberation, 1st Tank Battalion Marines pulled down a statue of Saddam Hussein. An Associated Press photographer captured then-Staff Sgt. Nick Popaditch grinning, smoking a stogie with the statue falling in the background.

This photo, which ended up on the front page of nearly every major paper in the United States, earned him the title of "the Cigar Marine."



Now fast forward to April 7 2004 -. Popaditch, still a tank commander with 1st Tank Battalion, volunteered to redeploy to Iraq with another company when he found out his own company wasn't slated to go back yet.

One month ago, I was in Iraq, and I assumed I'd watch his first baseball season on video tape after I got home," he said from his red, white and blue canvas chair next to the dugout. "This is a real treat, being here for these games."

A real treat. Those three simple words provide a small preview of Popaditch's endlessly positive all-Marine attitude.

For the 36-year-old father of two, that fateful day in Fallujah was just another day at the office — or in the tank, if you ask him.

"We'd been in constant contact with the enemy for 36 hours," he started, absentmindedly tracing a scar above his right eyebrow. "We were on a street so narrow there wasn't even room to turn my turret."

With the enemy somewhere in front of them, Popaditch and his crew, which included a second tank, his wingman-slowly traversed the narrow streets.

"We passed an alley no wider than those two poles, and I looked down the alley and saw anti-coalition forces fire (a rocket-propelled grenade) straight at us," he continued.

"That RPG hit the side of my turret and it didn't penetrate, but I ordered my driver to stop and as I turned to engage them with my .50 caliber, another RPG was launched from a rooftop in front of us, and I guess that sucker had better aim," he laughed. "I'm not sure if he was aiming at my head, or at the hatch. The best I can figure is he split the difference."

Splitting the difference from a rooftop cost Popaditch his right eye — a fact he refuses to dwell on. Rather he speaks of the heroic actions of his 26-year-old gunner, Cpl. Ryan Chambers, a San Luis Obispo, Calif., native.

"When I got hit, I saw a flash of light and then everything went black. All I could hear was fuzz and static," he recalled, pausing to clap as his son's team brought in another runner, putting them ahead by five runs. "The force of the blast knocked me down into the tank, and I sat up and reached for my radio to start telling the driver we needed to get out of there. But my helmet was gone, so I had no radio."

Blinded, momentarily deaf and not yet feeling pain, Popaditch groped his way around the inside of his tank until he located Chambers.

"That guy, man, he was injured too, and he'd already climbed right up into the cupola — the same cupola I'd just been blown out of — and was assessing the situation," said Popaditch, stopping to laugh. "This is the funny part of the story. I grabbed him and screamed, 'Chambers, we have to get the tanks out of here,' and 'Chambers, you're going to have to call for a medevac.' He didn't answer me, so I shook him and screamed it three or four more times, until I realized he'd probably answered me but I couldn't hear him."

As the tank started moving he could faintly hear Chambers on the radio, he said. "I heard him hollering at both drivers, just doing what tank commanders do naturally," he said, admiration in his voice. "We were blocks and blocks deep into the city, and Chambers simply took control. That was comforting to me, to know that he had taken charge of the situation."

With Chambers in charge, Popaditch focused on himself for a moment and said he suddenly felt very tired."I wanted to lie down right there and go to sleep for a while, but I knew from first aid training that I had to stay awake," he laughed, shaking his head sheepishly. "I stood up, held on, and forced myself to stay awake. I don't remember anything about the trip back to the center of command, but there is a berm near the trestle we were based near, and when I felt the tank cross that berm, I knew we were home."

Popaditch said when his Marines and the medical crew pulled him out of the tank; he knew everything was going to be OK. He said he's still not sure if they were Army medics or Navy corpsmen, and laughingly apologizes for not knowing, saying, "Hey, I'd just been hit in the face with a grenade."

"When they started treating me, I knew I was safe, and I knew my family would never see a picture of me hanging from a train trestle somewhere," he said. "It was such an emotionally charged feeling, such a sense of relief."

He remembers very little about being treated in Fallujah, or being medevaced to Germany, but what he does remember amazes him.

"I was on a cot, and they were working on me. I was very heavily medicated," he recalled, taking off the patch covering his right eye and rubbing his hand across his shaved head.

"All of a sudden, they said, 'Gunny, we're being mortared, so we're going to pile these flak jackets on you,' like it was no big deal."

In Germany, he spoke to his wife and parents on the telephone, and after surgery, the doctors told him his right eye had been unsalvageable.



"I'm sure I left this guy on the floor of that tank," he smiled, gesturing to his swollen and closed right eyelid, surrounded with fresh pink scars and some small scabs peppered across his cheeks, mouth and forehead, "But it was nice of them to tell me I'd lost it. This other one is getting better every day though, and I expect to regain 100 percent of my vision in this eye."

When asked how he would sum up the whole experience, Popaditch thought for a minute and smiled.

"This has been the most motivating experience of my life, and it has restored my faith in the youth of America," he said enthusiastically. "The people I've met along the way are amazing. Corporal Chambers saved my life that day, the doctors are working to give me the best quality of life possible, and people across America are coming forward to support not only me, but all of the guys fighting over there right now."

Along with his eye, Popaditch lost his sense of smell, suffered permanent hearing loss in his right ear, broke his nose and has undergone several surgeries to remove shrapnel from his head, eye and face.

His sense of humor escaped unscathed, as did his love of God, Corps and country.



"My friends and my Marines are still there, still fighting," he said softly. "Any Marine in their right mind would want to be right there with them. All I've really lost is about 10 degrees of peripheral vision, and I'll be OK without that. I'm ready to be with my Marines again."

Nick Popaditch continues to see things in a positive light. Not soon after returning home attended his son's first baseball game of the season

.More treatments along with many special activities have kept him busy. Most recently Nick was awarded a Marine Corps Scholarship by Congresswomen Mary Bono 4/22/05. There is also a story of it in the Desert Sun on Sunday April 24th 2005. The story is ' Labor of love' for Marines.



Nick AKA Ceegar Guy and his wife April are now both FReepers and will join us on this thread over the week-end. TexKat is the FReeper who made the initial contacts with them. Thank you KAT!!! You can address any comments to them directly

Nick – Cee-gar Man US Marine
April -- USMC wife AKA Cee-gar wife








DOLLY,

THANK YOU! MY FAMILY AND I APPRECIATE ALL THAT YOU AND ALL OF YOUR FRIENDS AT FREE REPUBLIC HAVE DONE TO KEEP US MOTIVATED AND IN GOOD SPIRITS DURING THE LAST TWO YEARS.

I AM RETIRING FROM THE MARINE CORPS DUE TO MY LIMITED VISION IN MY REMAINING EYE. I HAVE A 92% LOSS OF MY FIELD OF VISION IN MY LEFT EYE AND THE REMAINING 8% IS CONSIDERED LEGALLY BLIND.

I AM GRATEFUL FOR THAT MUCH. IN THE FIRST DAYS OF HOSPITALIZATION THERE WAS A POSSIBILITY OF HAVING NO SIGHT AT ALL, SO AS YOU COULD IMAGINE I AM GRATEFUL FOR WHAT I DO HAVE AND BLESSED TO MAKE IT BACK HOME TO MY FAMILY. I AM DOING FINE AND LOOKING FORWARD TO NEW GOALS AND DREAMS IN MY LIFE. I AM BY NO MEANS OUT OF THE GAME AND I WILL NOT BE SITTING ON THE SIDELINES OF LIFE, I SHALL FINISH THE GAME.

I AM PROUD OF MY SERVICE TO THIS COUNTRY. I ACCEPTED ALL THAT WAS A POSSIBILITY IN A WAR, EVEN THE POSSIBILITY OF NEVER COMING HOME. MY FAMILY STAYED STRONG FOR ME DURING ALL OF THIS AND ALWAYS UNDERSTOOD THAT SACRIFICE AND HONOR WOULD NOT ALWAYS BE EASY BUT WORTH IT.

MY WISH NOW IS TO BE A HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER, I JOKE AND TELL PEOPLE,” I WILL JUST BE GETTING THEM (THE KIDS)A FEW YEARS EARLIER”.

BACK SOME MONTHS AGO I ATTENDED THE BLIND REHABILITATION PROGRAM IN THE PALO ALTO VA HOSPITAL. THERE I LEARNED TO USE AN ADAPTIVE COMPUTER, LOW VISION AIDES SUCH AS MAGNIFIERS, TELESCOPES AND SPECIAL READING DEVICES. I READ MY FIRST BOOK WHILE I WAS THERE, IT WAS NEARLY 9 MONTHS WHEN I LAST WAS ABLE TO READ, IT FELT GOOD AGAIN.

I HOPE TO ENTER COLLEGE ON THE SAME LEVEL AS THE OTHER STUDENTS WITH MY NEW QUIPMENT.

MY FAMILY AND I ARE NOW LIVING IN THE MONTEREY PENINSULA AREA OF CALIFORNIA. IT IS BEAUTIFUL HERE. MY WIFE AND MY SON ARE ANIMAL LOVERS AND LOVE ALL THE SEA CREATURES THAT SHARE THE SHORES WITH US. I HAVE STARTED KAYAKING AND LOVE IT.

THE SMALLER COMMUNITY WILL BE JUST MY SPEED WHILE I ATTEND COLLEGE HERE, NOT TOO BIG, CROWDED OR COMPLICATED FOR ME TO GET AROUND. I CAN’T COMPLAIN ABOUT A THING.

I FEEL BLESSED, THIS INJURY TOOK ME THROUGH ANOTHER DOOR AND CHAPTER IN MY LIFE WHERE PEOPLE AND EXPERIENCES WERE WAITING FOR ME ON THE OTHER SIDE, I WAS REDIRECTED. I LEARNED THINGS I WOULD HAVE NEVER KNOWN HAD I NOT BEEN WOUNDED. IT TOOK ME ON A JOURNEY THROUGH OTHER LIVES OF GREAT PEOPLE AND MADE ME THE RECEIVER OF SO MUCH GOODNESS IN THEM. YES, SOMETHING WAS TAKEN, BUT SOMETHING WAS ALSO GIVEN. I HAVE ALSO SEEN THE COURAGE AND BRAVERY IN THE OTHER MEN WHO SERVED ALONG SIDE OF ME AND WHO HAVE ALSO BEEN WOUNDED. I AM PROUD TO CALL THEM MY BROTHER.

I AM FOREVER PROUD AND PRIVILEGED TO HAVE HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO SERVE MY COUNTRY AND WOULD DO IT ALL AGAIN.

HAVE A BLESSED MEMORIAL DAY

GYSGT. NICK POPADITCH USMC






03-29-05 ~ Hall of Fame #11

THIS WEEK'S THREADS

05-23-05 Military Monday

05-24-05 Still Fontastic!

05-25-05 Doggie Tails ~ River Rendezvous

05-26-05 Facing the Nuclear Option, Dems release 3 hostages

Opinions by our own 'King of Ping'
Every Thursday at the Finest
The guy's good, folks!

http://domania.us/DollyCali/Memorial05/remeberingthersacrifice.gif


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: april; ceegarguy; fun; graphics; marine; memorialday; veterans; war
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To: TexKat
thanks so very much for posting that Kat.. I am embarrassed to say I have never heard one of the addresses on Sat morning. Not sure if any of our radio stations cover it. I love listening to him speak & need to make it a priority to find our if I can access (no can't stream, with SLOW dial up..yuk)

appreciate you being with us today. Anyone who has never been to Tex's daily thread, it is loaded with current news from the front and a lot of other pertinent material. Lots of pix, which I love.. here is link to TODAYS THREAD

101 posted on 05/28/2005 12:44:53 PM PDT by DollyCali ("Thank you for your ANSWERS". POTUS to press at end of Presser 28April05)
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To: null and void

Wow,that was some military career...spanning three big wars. Is your dad still living? Thanks for use of the War thread ping list..some "old friends" have stopped by.


102 posted on 05/28/2005 12:56:57 PM PDT by DollyCali ("Thank you for your ANSWERS". POTUS to press at end of Presser 28April05)
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To: Texagirl4W

Thanks for stopping by Texagirl4W. This holiday is a very special one for you I am sure. How long has he been gone?


103 posted on 05/28/2005 1:00:00 PM PDT by DollyCali ("Thank you for your ANSWERS". POTUS to press at end of Presser 28April05)
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To: AFPhys; Billie

Thanks for the links AFPhys..I owe you email..appreicate yours. Taking a shrt break now. Family will be flying out Tuesday..going to be quick stops here the next few days.

Billie.. will respond to yours also.. thanks for the tips. Didn't know I could do that. geeeze.. is there a light at the end of the HTML tunnel?


104 posted on 05/28/2005 1:03:12 PM PDT by DollyCali ("Thank you for your ANSWERS". POTUS to press at end of Presser 28April05)
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To: All

A thankful welcome from those who served

By Ralph Lauer
Star-Telegram Staff Writer

D/FW AIRPORT - First thing every morning, Herman Amidon makes a call, then another, and another. He checks the arrival time for the Army's R&R, or rest and recuperation, flight, then calls members of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5074 in Roanoke to arrange rides to Dallas/Fort Worth Airport.

A post member follows the routine every day of every week, regardless of weather or holidays or any other interruption.

A remote area of D/FW's Terminal B is where about 60,000 U.S. service members have stepped onto American soil for the first time since being deployed overseas.

Since July 5, every one of those returning troops has seen the thankful face of a member of VFW Post 5074.

VFW member Roger Kammerer started the program after reading about the Army's rest and recuperation program in the Keller Citizen. He thought it would be uplifting for the troops to be greeted by former military personnel.

The flights leave Kuwait daily and bring soldiers, plus a few Marines and Air Force personnel, back to the United States for leave.

Each mission begins at D/FW, when a charter flight under contract to the Army takes soldiers to Atlanta and then on to Kuwait, with a refueling stop in Europe. The flight returns the next day with a group of soldiers beginning its 15-day leave.

The post members have vowed that they will greet every arriving soldier until they are all home.

"We know what they are going through," said retired Air Force Col. Helen Ross, the only female member of the 140-person post. "I thoroughly enjoy going out there. It makes my day."

The flights arrive at Gate 39 in Terminal B. Anyone who would like to join the airport greeters can check the arrival time each day at (972) 574-0392.

STORY AND PHOTOS BY RALPH LAUER | STAR-TELEGRAM


105 posted on 05/28/2005 1:28:50 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: DollyCali
Yeah. He's a slow learner.

I just got off the phone with him. He's doing pretty well all things considered.

There's an annoying bubble in his eye from the shot yesterday, and his vision may or may not stabilize, but he's in good enough spirits...
106 posted on 05/28/2005 1:36:39 PM PDT by null and void (I am my own alter ego...)
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To: All

Above, troops arriving on a rest and recuperation flight from Kuwait receive welcomes from retired Air Force Col. Helen Ross and Roger Kammerer, right, members of VFW Post 5074 in Roanoke. Since July 5, the group has been dedicated to greeting each soldier who passes through Gate 39 in Terminal B at D/FW Airport.

107 posted on 05/28/2005 1:44:06 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All

Helen Ross tries to give a hug to every soldier who passes through the terminal.

108 posted on 05/28/2005 1:46:31 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All

Ross salutes a soldier. Ross spent 24 years as a navigator on SAC B-36s and B-52s.

109 posted on 05/28/2005 1:49:14 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: DollyCali; All

Jessica Cawvey and her daughter, Sierra, in a photo taken at Cawvey’s graduation from boot camp at Fort Jackson, S.C., in May 2002. Jessica’s father, Kevin Cawvey, said, “She tried as best as she could to hide from us the fact that she was scared all of the time (in Iraq).” (FAMILY PHOTO )

A military mother’s sacrifice

By Mary Delach Leonard Of the Post-Dispatch 05/29/2005 CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - For 6-year-old Sierra Cawvey, there have been many memorial days since her mom, Sgt. Jessica Cawvey of the Illinois Army National Guard, was killed in Iraq last October.

On this occasion - an Arbor Day tribute on a brisk April morning - Sierra stood beneath a young purple ash tree freshly planted in a memorial grove at Parkland College in honor of her mother, a dean's list student who earned an associate degree in business administration in 2003.

Sierra's grandparents, Kevin and Sandy Cawvey, both 44, watched proudly as her fellow first-graders from the Judah Christian School in Champaign crowded tightly around her in their matching purple T-shirts. All eyes were on Sierra, and although she stumbled a bit over the bigger words, she seemed to have little trouble reading a card promising that from this small start would grow a beautiful tree 50 to 60 feet tall, turning reddish purple in the fall.

The Arbor Day ceremony was an exciting event for Sierra, a blond and bright-eyed whirlwind of energy who had sat as quietly as she could manage while speakers acknowledged her mother's sacrifice. Among the other honorees that day was Parkland graduate Sgt. Shawna Morrison, who had died in Iraq in September.

"These young women believed in freedom and sacrificed themselves for their beliefs," said college president Zelema Harris.

Both soldiers belonged to the 1544th Transportation Company based in Paris, Ill., a unit that served nearly a year in Iraq and suffered the most casualties of any Guard unit of its size - 5 killed in action and 39 injuries, 32 of those caused by enemy action, said Lt. Col. Tim Franklin, a public affairs officer for the Illinois Guard. The company deployed from Paris on Dec. 7, 2003, with 148 soldiers, 34 of them women.

Morrison, 26, of Paris, was the first woman to die in service with the 1544th. Cawvey, 21, was the first military mother from Illinois to be killed in Iraq.

Among the family and friends who attended the tree dedication were two of Jessica Cawvey's Army buddies - Spc. Jodie Rund and Spc. Jolene Wright- who had bunked with her at their base outside Baghdad.

When the 1544th returned in February, the Cawveys took Sierra to the homecoming celebration in Paris, about an hour-and-a-half drive from their home in Mahomet, about 10 miles from Champaign. Along Main Street in Paris, the names of unit members still hang from lampposts, with black ribbons signifying the five who died in Iraq, including Jessica Cawvey.

"I was very happy for that unit to come back," said Sandy Cawvey. "Just the fact that they are safe. We didn't want anyone else to be dying."

They plan to attend an awards ceremony for the 1544th on June 11, even though she expects that it will be "another crying day."

There have been many such days for the Cawveys since their daughter died in a roadside explosion on Oct. 6 in Fallujah.

But on this day, Sandy and Kevin Cawvey said they tried - and nearly succeeded - to hold back their tears. Because Sierra doesn't like it when they cry.

Of the 1,644 U.S. troops who have died in Iraq, 35 were servicewomen. Three of those were from Illinois, none from Missouri. Nearly 300 servicewomen have been wounded.

Although Pentagon policy bars women from being assigned to direct ground combat units - infantry, armor, artillery and special forces - an estimated 10 percent of U.S. forces in Iraq are women, many assigned to support duties like those of the 1544th Transportation Company.

Because of the nature of the insurgency, where enemy forces are as likely to attack supply convoys as infantry, a proportionately larger number of U.S. servicewomen have fallen victim to hostile fire in Iraq than in any previous conflict.

That sparked a recent debate in the House Armed Services Committee and a move, led by chairman Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., to limit the role of women in combat zones. But under pressure from the Pentagon and a bipartisan group of legislators, the plan was dropped in favor of a measure that continues to let the Pentagon decide staffing, as long as Congress is told in advance. Women make up 15 percent of the U.S. Armed Forces.

Kevin Cawvey says he thinks he knows what his daughter would say about the issue: She would want to be able to do her job.

"I, of course, would have liked to see her in a safer job, but I would have supported her in what she wanted to do," he said.

The insurgency was heating up when the 1544th reached Iraq in March 2004. Shortly after arriving, the unit suffered its first casualty, Sgt. Ivory Phipps of Chicago, who was killed by mortar fire. Spc. Jeremy Ridlen of Maroa died in May.

By June, when Jessica came home on leave, the Cawveys had noticed a change in their daughter, who had spent four months driving convoys in Iraq.

Then-Spc. Cawvey (she was promoted posthumously to sergeant) had already survived a close call in which she was thrown from her truck after the driver became impaired, Kevin Cawvey said.

"She sprained both her ankles, and once she hit the ditch they came under enemy fire," he said. "When she came home on leave her ankles were still swollen."

Her parents said she had matured while in Iraq, but they noticed something else, too.

"She tried as best as she could to hide from us the fact that she was scared all of the time over there," said her father, although she confided her fears to her older brother, Kevin, 23. The Cawveys also have a younger son, Josh, 18, who just graduated from high school.

"She was jumping at loud sounds, like fireworks," said her father. "A car backfired once, and she flinched."

"She went to the ground," added Sandy Cawvey.

"But they weren't trying to put her in harm's way," she said. "It's just if you're there, you're in harm's way."

Doing her duty

Those who knew her agree that Jessica Lynn Cawvey was energetic and fun.

"I always thought she was brilliant because it never looked like she did any homework and she always got straight A's," said her mother.

She was a "daddy's girl" who for a time referred to Kevin Cawvey as "Daddy better."

"Meaning 'Daddy better than Mom,'" said Sandy Cawvey. "She just so adored him."

After Jessica was killed, Sandy Cawvey found an unopened letter in Jessica's belongings, written in September after Sgt. Morrison and Spc. Charles Lamb of Martinsville were killed in a mortar attack on their base, Logistical Base Seitz, located west of Baghdad.

"She told us we were the best family ever, and that I was the best mom ever. And that we showed so much love and support and that she really appreciated that. It was a nice thing to get after she died."

The Cawveys have helped rear Sierra since her birth; her father is not in the picture, said Kevin Cawvey.

"Jessica was always a very good mother," said Sandy Cawvey. "She had a goal. She said, 'I'm going to finish school. I'm going to make good money. I'm going to support my daughter.'"

When her unit was deployed, Jessica had just transferred to Illinois State University in Normal; she planned to become a certified public accountant.

Because Jessica was just 17 and had a child when she enlisted in May 2001, the Cawveys had to give their permission.

"We thought, why not? She's being responsible. She was going to school full time and she also had a job," said Sandy Cawvey. "I just thought it was good for her to get a little extra money, and it would help her through college. Nobody ever thought that she would go to Iraq and die."

So in the summer before Sept. 11, Jessica joined the Guard, along with her friend, Jodie Rund, who Jessica met while attending Parkland.

"I don't think she would have enlisted if she knew she would get called to war," said Sandy Cawvey. "But when she got activated, she felt it was her duty. She signed up for it, and it was her responsibility. She didn't try to get out of it."

Rund, 26, who is resuming her education at the University of Illinois, laughed when asked why she and Jessica enlisted. "For the college money - and to get in shape," Rund said.

But after the terrorist attacks, they both became more patriotic and gung-ho about their role in the military, and if their unit was going to Iraq, they wanted to go, too, she said.

"We were excited to go - we'd never been anywhere. And this was something we could do that was fulfilling," Rund said. "You are actually doing something. You were helping people. For Jess and me, this was huge. We could be heroes."

In harm's way

At the homecoming celebration for the 1544th in February, the commanding officer proudly told the throngs of well-wishers that his company had completed more than 1,200 missions and driven more than a half-million miles during deployment in Iraq.

Jessica Cawvey did her share, performing such diverse duties as radio operator, driver and gunner, according to her platoon leader, 1st Lt. Jennifer Fallert.

"Spc. Cawvey had a knack for finding unique ways to stay positive, such as posing for funny pictures with her close friends and platoon members," Fallert wrote in an e-mail interview.

Rund and Wright, who shared quarters with Cawvey, say she was always in good spirits and making light of bad situations.

"I have never known anyone like her," said Rund. "Jessica was hilarious - the funniest person I ever met in my life."

Since returning home, Rund and her husband, Thaddeus, who live in Champaign, sometimes volunteer at Sierra's grade school.

Wright, 22, who also lives in Champaign, remembers Jessica playing recordings of Sierra for her bunkmates and giving them drawings her 6-year-old had made for them.

Sometimes, Sierra would read books like "Clifford" to her mom over the phone.

The friends found ways to pass the time when they weren't on the road, said Wright. They played volleyball, calling their team the "Pink Chicas" and wearing makeshift uniforms they had designed.

"We lost every game, but our outfits were really cute," Wright said.

Sometimes, she and Jessica would play music and weave beaded bracelets and necklaces; Jessica sent one home to Sierra. And when care packages arrived, they'd eat because you never knew when the next one would arrive - Easy Mac and popcorn were their favorites.

Spc. Jessica Cawvey was killed when a large explosive device placed inside a vehicle by the side of the road was detonated as her convoy passed, according to Fallert. Cawvey had volunteered to go as an assistant driver and communications operator because another friend was going on her first mission, and she wanted to lend her support.

"It was devastating when we found out," Wright said. "It wasn't real to me until they held the memorial service."

Rund said that she went online to read what people were saying about her friend on Web sites.

"There was this radical group that was writing about this mother who was 21 and who didn't know what she was getting into," Rund said. "Because she was 21, female and single they decided the military had taken advantage of her, had lied to her. It wasn't any of those things. Jessica loved her daughter, but she had goals, too, and she wanted her daughter to have a better life, and the veterans benefits would help. Jessica wanted to help out."

The Cawveys keep the medals and ribbons their daughter earned during her military career in a special wooden box. Sierra recognizes many of the ribbons, and as she showed them to a visitor, she called them by name: "Good Conduct . . . Purple Heart . . . Bronze Star . . ."

"Why did she get that one?" asked her grandma, pausing. "Because she died."

"I still cry every day"

Among the pictures the Cawveys attached to posters for their daughter's funeral service are happy scenes from her childhood and teen years: Jessica all dressed up. A school dance. Getting ready for work at Dairy Queen.

There are also photos of Army life and an entire poster devoted to mother and daughter. A photo of Jessica holding a snake when the circus came to town delights Sierra.

"She was really tall, and she was tan," said Sierra when asked about her mom. "She was always fun to play with."

But the most powerful image was taken at Willard Airport in Champaign on July 7, the last day of Jessica's two-week leave that got her home in time for Sierra's birthday, on the Fourth of July.

Dressed in desert tan camouflage, Jessica had bent down to give her daughter a kiss before heading back to Iraq. Sierra was wrapped in a bright blue print blanket that Jessica had made for her birthday. Sierra still sleeps with that blanket and with a pillow her mom used in Iraq.

"This was the last time she ever saw her," said Sandy Cawvey. "It was her last kiss goodbye."

The night before, say the Cawveys, Sierra had pestered her mom to pinkie swear that she would come back home. Jessica was hesitant; they believe she knew she might not return.

Sandy Cawvey, who wears a silver cross that contains some of Jessica's ashes, says she never thought her daughter would die in Iraq.

"We just really thought that God was going to take care of her. She'd had so many close calls, our faith just got stronger."

When the knock came at 6 a.m., Kevin, who works for Aramark uniforms, had already left for work. Sandy, who works as a registered nurse at Provena Covenant Medical Center in Urbana, was still in her pajamas, and Sierra had come into her bedroom to watch cartoons.

"And then I saw them, and I knew," she said.

She paged Kevin, and Sierra hid in the kitchen.

"I didn't cry, but she did," said Sierra, pointing to her grandma.

"I'm just like a water fountain," Sandy Cawvey told her. "I still cry every day, but my doctor said it's normal. I just don't cry around you. I cry when I go to work and I cry when I come home because those are the only two times I'm by myself all day."

The Cawveys say they are grateful for the outpouring of support they received from their community and even from strangers after their daughter died. An organization based in Chicago paid for Sierra's tuition so she could attend the Judah Christian School; a fourth-grade class from Urbana raised donations for her trust fund, at Main Street Bank and Trust in Champaign.

As war continues in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Cawveys say it is important that Americans remember their troops.

"'Support Our Troops' means keeping in mind that they're still there," said Kevin Cawvey. "And they're there for this country, whether you believe in why the president sent them there or not."

110 posted on 05/28/2005 1:50:41 PM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: All

At right, Capt. George Walruff of San Antonio shows Ross a picture of his family.

111 posted on 05/28/2005 1:51:51 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All

By the time the VFW group leaves the terminal, the returning soldiers have moved on, bound for home.

112 posted on 05/28/2005 1:54:10 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All

SEMPER FI VFW Post 5074. You are a great group of American Vets.


113 posted on 05/28/2005 1:59:11 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: DollyCali

He's been gone for 19 years. He was the love of my life. But, I found out then that the world doesn't stop for my loss. Life is part of death and I had to carry on. I have good memories.

Hope everyone has a very happy, blessed holiday.


114 posted on 05/28/2005 2:07:12 PM PDT by Texagirl4W (Word of the day - JESUS. He died 4 you and me!!)
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To: DollyCali

General John A. Logan's Memorial Day Order

115 posted on 05/28/2005 2:49:10 PM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: DollyCali; Billie; LadyX; Aquamarine; dutchess; The Mayor; All
HANKY ALERT!!BEAUTIFUL PICTURES OF OUR TROOPS AND MEMORIAL DAY TRIBUTES!!
God bless our brave troops as they have our backs around the world!

116 posted on 05/28/2005 3:33:39 PM PDT by luvie ((Freedom is on the march. Freedom is the birthright and deep desire of every human soul.GWB 3-29-05))
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To: LUV W; Dubya; TexKat
Wow thank you so much for sharing the wonderful info..

And Tex that article on Spc. Cawvey needed a kleenix alert.. what a varied amount of stories from all over to make us give pause and realize the this holiday is not about BBQ's and a day off to do yard work.

GOt an Email from April (think they are still trying to figure out how to post

New Article About Nick in Newspaper

117 posted on 05/28/2005 3:51:56 PM PDT by DollyCali ("Thank you for your ANSWERS". POTUS to press at end of Presser 28April05)
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To: DollyCali
Hi Dolly. Both of my brothers served in the military - one air force, one navy.

I'm watching Sergeant York on TCM right now. Gary Cooper is good for what ails you, suffice it to say. :-)

118 posted on 05/28/2005 4:13:49 PM PDT by ride the whirlwind
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To: DollyCali; All



DJ SUNSHINE!

The Star Spangled Banner by The Mormon Tabernacle Choir

Everyone sing a long!
(Click the flag as well)

 

THE STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER

Lyrics and Music by John Philip Sousa
Lyrics altered and appended by David Wright for ACOUSTIX

Unfurl the banner and raise it to the sky!

Let Eagle cry from mountain high the never ending watch word of our nation.
Now behold this gem of old, the wonder of the Western sky.
The emblem of the brave and true, the flag of our liberty, flag of our destiny.
Red and white and starry blue stream out of the banner so high.

Every heart will sing a part as all across the land we raise our voices.
Far and near, for all to hear, the echo of a chorus grand!
Every heart will swell with pride to sing of our liberty, sing of our destiny.
As with joy we now extol the flag waving over the land.

Let us all hail the flag in one accord, let us cheer it with fervid elation.
It's the flag of the martyrs gone before, it's the flag of flags, the banner of our nation.
It's a beacon for all who share our dream of a new day without domination.
It's the hope of the peoples now oppressed and a symbol of their own emancipation.

Hooray for the flag of the free! May it wave as our standard forever.
The gem of the land and the sea, ever hoist it proud and high.
All nations remember the day when our fathers with mighty endeavor
proclaimed as they marched to the fray that by their might and by their right, it waves forever.

Every time the people hear the bell of freedom calling, (calling) one and all.
Every living patriotic citizen will answer, (answer) freedom's call.
Everywhere the bold and gallant souls come forth to bear the cross of duty.
Rising up as one to fight and die behind the flag of freedom's beauty.
Patriotic hearts will falter never, following the stars and stripes forever.
Marching to the quest, to east or west, they quell distress, the freed oppressed cry out.

Hooray for the flag of the free! May it wave as our standard forever.
The gem of the land and the sea, ever hoist it proud and high.
All nations remember the day when our fathers with might endeavor proclaimed as they marched to the fray,
"Defended by our might, ever standing for the right, it waves forever!"

Hail to the banner that waves the stars and stripes,
we give our lives for Stars and Stripes!

 

Sidenote: Enjoy the music!!
 

119 posted on 05/28/2005 5:15:02 PM PDT by MoJo2001 (Support Our Troops-->It's The Least Any Of Us Can Do...www.proudpatriots.org)
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To: All



DJ SUNSHINE!

The Star Spangled Banner by The Mormon Tabernacle Choir

Everyone sing a long!
(Click the flag as well)

 

Roxie Dean - Soldier's Wife

Breaking News from a desert town
Smoke and rubble on the ground
The names we do not know right now
And it cuts me like a knife

With a tearful goodbye kiss
I sent him off to this
But I've gotta stay strong for our kids
I'm a soldier's wife

I run the house
I sleep alone
I live for e-mails
And the phone calls home
I tell my children he will be all right
And I hope it's not a lie
I'm a soldier's wife

We do the things we used to do
Go to church, go to school
But you could drive a truck right through
The hole that's in our lives

My little boy shoots me a grin
And says he wants to be like him
And I feel my heart start caving in
I'm a soldier's wife

Sometimes I'm angry
Sometimes confused
I live and die by
The evening news
But I tell my babies he will be all right
And I hope it's not a lie
I'm a soldier's wife

I pray for strength
I pray for peace
I pray that he comes home to me
And if you would please pray for me
I'm a soldier's wife.

 

Sidenote: Enjoy the music!!
Kleenex Alert!!
 

120 posted on 05/28/2005 5:19:13 PM PDT by MoJo2001 (Support Our Troops-->It's The Least Any Of Us Can Do...www.proudpatriots.org)
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