In the late 1970’s Bill Crawford was
a janitor at the U.S. Air Force Academy.* While the cadets’ days were filled
with academics and athletics, morning parades, room inspections, and leadership
classes, Bill Crawford was cleaning toilets, buffing floors, and emptying trash
cans.
He was
shy and unassuming , a gray-haired older man who looked like somebody’s
grandfather. No wonder the cadets didn't take much notice.
But then one
afternoon one of the cadets was reading a book about World War II, and the
Allied ground campaign in Italy. It told the story of a Private William
Crawford, assigned to the 36th Infantry Division, who had been
involved in some bloody fighting in Italy. Private Crawford had, on his own,
taken out three machine gun nests to prepare the way for the advance of his
unit.

