They are among the smartest, toughest, and most disciplined college freshmen in the nation. They share dreams and ambitions rarely found among their peers. Over the next year, they will be subject to a battery of unbreakable rules, personal privations, and numbing routines that would send most college students racing back home. Everything they know and believe about themselves will be challenged, shaken, broken, and reassembled. All of this will occur as the elite institution they attend, the United States Air Force Academy, struggles to restore an image and reinvent policies that have been shattered by successive scandals and controversies.
In Skies to Conquer, former New York Times reporter Diana Jean Schemo follows a group of freshmen, the Bulldawgs of Squadron 13, as they make their way through their first year at the Air Force Academy. From the moment of their arrival, with no cell phones, radios, TVs, iPods, tiny refrigerators, or furniture, and no luggage other than a backpack full of white underwear, they are in for the toughest year of their lives.
The cadets?who boast an average GPA of 3.9 and SAT scores that rival the Ivies, as well as, in most cases, at least one varsity letter?include a recruited athlete from Georgia, who openly doubts his decision to attend the academy; a young woman who took Junior ROTC in high school and figures the Air Force Academy offers her the best chance of seeing combat; another young woman from California whose sights are set on outer space; and the son of a rocket scientist, who was homeschooled along with his nine siblings and looks forward to having only one or two roommates.
Weeks out of high school, these cadets, and more than 1,300 others, begin their careers in an explosion of criticism and punishment that strips their identities raw and demolishes their defenses with the precision of a laser-guided bomb. They will learn to fight with mud soaking through their clothes and covering their ears, to shower in thirty seconds, to drop for fifty push-ups or more on demand, and to sound off, shouting an answer to somebody inches from their face, usually in one of three ways: "Yes, sir!", "No, sir!", or "No excuses, sir!" Those who succeed?and some won't?will emerge stronger, their self-discipline and drive sharpened in the crucible of academy life.
Skies to Conquer comes complete with profiles of the upperclassmen who have the power of personal gods for these cadets and a running account of the academy's struggle to put sexual abuse scandals and a controversy over religious proselytizing behind it, while adapting its strongest traditions to the realities of the modern world. It combines powerful and intense real-life drama with a fascinating portrait of a major American military institution in flux.
Diana Jean Schemo, a veteran journalist and foreign bureau chief at the Baltimore Sun and the New York Times, has covered poverty and child abuse, culture, religion, and education. Her reports have tracked rebels in Colombia, counterfeiting in Paraguay, and indentured servitude in Brazil. She has written from more than twenty-five countries and regions, including Somalia, Iraq, Israel, and the Amazon. For more, visit www.skiestoconquer.com. Introduction. Part One ON THE HILL. 1 Light Travelers. 2 Th e Ordeal of a Meal. 3 In the Running. 4 A New Road Map. 5 Broken but Still Standing. 6 Th e Meaning of Knowledge. 7 Th e Long Jump. 8 Th e Seesaw. Part Two SECOND BEAST. 9 Into the Beast. 10 Of Love and Demons. 11 The Family Line. Part Three JOINING THE FOLD. 12 Surviving Second Beast. 13 Parting the River. 14 Bernard?s Knock. 15 Meeker?s Fall. 16 Back from the Pit. 17 Barrett?s Roar. 18 Wars Distant and Near. 19 (Almost) All Roads Lead to Jesus. 20 No Excuses. Part Four THE DARK AGES. 21 Flyboy. 22 Reaching High and Scaling Back. 23 Running Man. 24 Taylor?s Walk. 25 The Four-Dig Slide. 26 Of Love and Pain. Part Five INTO THE LIGHT. 27 On the Runway. 28 Doolies Rising. 29 Harrison?s Moment. 30 Closing the Circle. 31 Th e Beast Rears Again. 32 Urban's Honor. 33 Human Once More. 34 Hearing the Silence. 35 Taking Off. Epilogue. Index.