O BILLY CRAYTON P BioBus Operator 1950 T he Universal Military Training and Ser vice Act passed in 1951, led to the induction of more than 1.5 million men into the military during the Korean War. But Billy Cray ton was not one of those men. “1 went in on my own accord,” Crayton said. “I volunteered be cause 1 wanted to go.” As a corporal in the U.S. Army, Crayton served in the Korean War in 1953 by driving an am bulance for the 1st Caval ry, 15th Medical Battalion. He transported wounded soldiers from the front lines of the conflict to aid stations where they would receive vital medical at tention. “It was scary. You had a big red cross on each side, each end and one on top,” Crayton said. “They weren’t supposed to shoot at the ambulance, but that was the biggest target they had, believe me. I was glad to get out of there.” Despite the fear of driv ing from the frontline and back, Crayton knew this job is what his country needed him to do most. Tlie expe- Top: Billy Crayton takes a break from driving the BioBus' West Line Loop Nov. 2. Bill Burpitt lectures during his “Strategic Management” class Nov. 1. PHOTO COURTESY OF BILLY CRAYTON Left: Sitting atop the ambulance he would later drive in Korea, Crayton poses in Okada, Japan, in 1953 before being sent to war. rience changed his life and armed him with skills to be later used in civilian life. “There was a whole lot you could learn,” Crayton said. “And a whole lot you didn’t want to remember.” Crayton has translated those driving skills and is now a BioBus driver for Elon University. G rowing up in a military family, Bill Burpitt enlist ed in the army in 1966 at the age of 20. With the rest of the 1st Avi ation Brigade, Burpitt served in the Mekong Delta region during the Vietnam War from 1967-1968. His service taught him to be more aware of the fragility of peace. “I became very cautious about assumptions regarding the stability of this cocoon of peace we live in,” Burpitt said. “We can lull ourselves into thinking, T’m fine, I’m safe,’ without realizing that chaos is just on the other side of the wire.” During the Tet Offensive of 1968, one of Burpitt’s friends was killed in action. When brought home, Burpitt visited the parents of his fallen comrade and continued to do so through out the years. Only then did he realize the constant pain gold star families carry with them. “Their tours of duty went on for years and years. Parents who have lost children in the service have also served their country. They paid a much more pain ful price and for much longer,” Burpitt said. “When I go home I can drop my gear in the clos et and forget about the war, but the parents of those soldiers that never came home — they can never forget.” Serving in the military later allowed Burpitt to continue his higher education. This even tually led him to Elon Univer sity where he now works as a professor of management and as the head of the Veterans Day Committee. XL:#:-. 1953 1967 1969 ROBERT BUCHHOLZ Dii'L'cliii of I'liysit mI I’l.int (1915-1990) P ost Vietnam, Robert Buchholz knew the military needed men to fill the ranks. After graduating college, he joined the Civil Engineering Corps in 1976 planning to serve for only three years, but he ended up staying in the Nav)' until 2002. Twenty-six years of ser vice took Buchholz all over the world and into the center of the Lebanon Cri sis. Buchholz’s time in Bei rut came less than three weeks after the deadly 1983 Beirut barracks bomb ings, The attacks were caused by two suicide bombers driv ing garbage trucks laden with explosives that killed 241 U.S. Marines and 58 French Peace keepers. Buchholz and the Civil Engineering Corps were ordered to handle the after- math of this attack. “It was something to see, — the destruction that a garbage truck could do," Buchholz said. “Our unit was redeployed to build up defenses and restore power to that part of the area.” After Lebanon, Buchholz was sent to the Philippines to oversee construction of Clark Air Base, which was the United States’ largest overseas air force base at the time. “I’ve worked in all sorts of situations and it’s amazing what people do when they step up and do what has to be done. 1 enjoy working with people like that,” Buchholz said. At Physical Plant, Buchholz says he is surrounded by simi- FH3I0 CFURltSY OF niBERT BuinHOlZ larly hard-working indmduals, “The people that I worked with in the Navy are the same type of people that I work with now in the Physical Plant,” Buchholz said. “They work hard. These guys pull together and do what needs to be done, and I love working with peo ple like that.” Left: Buchholz (third from left) poses in Ciark Air Base in Maniia, Philippines, with other memhers of the Navy Construction Office. ALL PHOTOS BY OLIVER FISCHER | CONTRIBUTOR