Sunday, November 2, 2008

Some Pictures





Update - 02 Nov

Hello from USAFA!

I have a nice three day weekend coming up, so I thought that I’d take some time to let everybody back home know how I’m doing and what’s happening around here.

As kind of an overview, school is going alright - I’m really busy, but am mostly able to stay on top. (With the help of the weekends) Athletics – well, Ultimate Frisbee is over. And, for the third part of our three “pillars”, military, it got worse, but its still liveable. Due to the fact that the upperclassmen felt that our class as a whole was slacking on discipline, they moved us back to square one. Now, we have to do 30 pushups whenever we leave or enter the squad (where we live), we still have to walk on the right side of the hallway, can only turn right (yep, to turn left – 3 rights), and have to walk all the way down to the end of the hallway before crossing it. But, it is a game, and I do know that the upperclassmen are, for the most part, proud of us.

We’ve had a couple of interesting weeks the past month. I’ll start with the first snow of the school year. Two weeks ago, we got about an inch and a half of snow. Along with the “first snow” comes the tradition of “first shirt, first snow.” This involves the freshmen somehow getting their first sergeant out into the snow, and getting them in as much snow as possible. So, of course, to follow in tradition, we attempted it. There were a couple problems though. One – our 1st Sgt is a judo black belt. Two – almost ALL the upperclassmen were waiting for us out in the hallway, ready to defend their classmate. Three – our football ICs (intercollegiate athletes) weren’t back from practice yet. But, we did it anyway. Needless to say, it degenerated into a hall brawl. After about 15 -20 minutes of fighting/wrestling, we still hadn’t even gotten in McGuiness’s (our 1st Sgt) room. So, he finally came out, so that the tradition could be continued. It took another 10 minutes to get him outside and into the snow, but it was worth it. (Or was it… my neck was sore for days. Their favorite tactic? Chokeholds from behind )

Next up was Commandants Challenge Training. This gave us Friday off school, but consumed both Friday and Saturday, leaving us only Sunday for a weekend. It was pretty fun. You knew it had to be good when they start off with a shooter drill, and everyone goes in their room, locks the doors, and waits for the all clear. We waited for two hours. Some people were able to get some quality nap time in. (here, you take naps when they come… doesn’t matter what time. Just woke up? Oh, that doesn’t matter – we can take naps anytime. ) Over the rest of the “weekend,” we got training in convoy procedures and what to do if you come under fire in a convoy, tactical movement techniques, tent set-up (big tent – metal frame, doors),land navigation (map and compass), using NBC suits (Nuclear, biological, chemical), procedures for IEDs, marching, and battlefield first aid (SABC). I enjoyed it, and I believe that our squadron was ranked as 2nd in the Wing for the exercise. We do it again for real right before Thanksgiving Break.

Lastly and most recently, this week. The AF vs Army game is tomorrow, (Sat) so this week was “Army Week.” During “Army Week,” the Army exchange students do all sorts of spirit missions – little operations designed to *try* to prove Army superiority. These included: painting the Ranger crest onto the big back windows of Fairchild Hall, hanging up banners with the names of several famous AF generals and their graduation year from WEST POINT, building a model of an airplane crashing into the ground in the middle of the terrazzo, and capturing the cadet wing commander during noon meal formation. (they drove up in a Ford excursion on the tzo, jumped out, grabbed him while he was marching, and drove off!)Those were conducted with all the army guys working together.

However, the west point cadet in our squadron mounted some local spirit missions. It started with us stealing his uniforms last Friday afternoon. Saturday (after a long day of Comms Challenge training) we came back to find ALL our uniforms taken from our closets, our nameplates missing from our doors, and pink shirts on our beds – obviously for us, and decorated with “UAV Pride / Desk Jockey / M-16? Never heard of it… and other references to UAVs, desk jobs, and paper cuts. In retaliation, that afternoon we dismantled his bed and desk, and took them with his chairs out onto the basketball courts way down by the gym, where we put them back together. When he came back to his room the next day, he could look out his window and see his room down on the basketball courts.

Next, he hid our nameplates all over the place, and then gave us a scavenger-hunt type map to find them. He hid them in statues, at the barber shop, in books at the library (about army leaders), with the security guy down at the gate, and two were even taped to a tree up on top of Eagle’s Peak. That last one was particularly good. To try to remedy the problem, a group of us went up Eagle’s Peak, retrieved the name tags, and cut down a tree. We then brought it back and put it in his room! It’s still there too.

I’ll finish up with some stats that we found out recently. Our entering GPA was the highest of any class, and after Prog (midterms) , our grades were the second highest achieved by any class in the past 20 years. Our squadron has(I believe) the highest GPA in the wing, and are 2nd in the wing on our physical fitness test scores (1.5 mile run, pushups, pull-ups, sit-ups, standing long jump, 600m dash).

Well, I’ll wrap up now. Hopefully you get a little bit of an idea of what goes on here, and that there are some fun spots too.

Lord bless, and thank you for all your prayers.

-Alex