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| The funeral of Navy doctor and astronaut Capt. Laurel Blair Salton Clark
unfolds at Arlington National Cemetery March 10, 2003. Clark was one of the seven-member
crew on the last voyage of the space shuttle Columbia, which broke up on atmospheric
reentry Feb. 1, 2003. She is the second of three to be buried at Arlington. The memorial
at bottom left is to the crew of the Challenger, the shuttle that failed as disastrously
17 years earlier. (photo by Tom Mani) |
By JOE EATON
Capital News Service
ARLINGTON, Va. - By all accounts, Army Spc. Jason Ford was more
of a fun-loving comedian than a warrior.
But Ford, the eighth Maryland soldier killed in Operation Iraqi Freedom, got a warrior's
send-off Tuesday on a bright, brisk afternoon at Arlington National Cemetery.
Friends and family of the Bowie resident followed his casket as six soldiers in crisp
dress uniforms carried it from the white hearse to a grave surrounded by the endless rows
of white tombstones at Arlington.
The air cracked three times as seven guns fired in salute. A bugler played
"Taps." Ford was awarded the Purple Heart and Bronze Star, which were presented
to his family.
Soldiers, struggling with the wind, folded the flag from Ford's coffin into a neat
triangle and handed it to his mother, Florence Newell of Washington, D.C. They handed
flags to his father, Joseph Ford of Temple Hills, and his sister, Yolanda Smith-McRae of
Bowie.
The mourners then left Arlington and drove to Paramount Baptist Church in Southeast
Washington to remember the man who was killed March 13 in Tikrit, when the Humvee he was
riding in was demolished by a roadside bomb. Capt. John Kurth of Wisconsin was also killed
in the blast.
As they ate, the group at the church remembered Ford as a religious man who loved to crack
jokes, play the drums and piano and sing his favorite song, "The Lord is My
Shepherd."
"His character did not fit what he did," his father said of Ford's time in the
Army. "He was too much of a gentle individual."
Childhood friends talked about how they played football, baseball and basketball with Ford
when they were growing up.
"He was a comedian. A real funster," said Kevin Graham of Bladensburg.
Although Ford did not graduate from high school, he earned his GED through the Job Corps,
then joined the Army in 2002 as a way to get ahead, said his brother-in-law James McRae
III. Ford lived with McRae in Bowie before leaving for the military.
"He wanted to do something positive for himself. It was a way for him to better
himself in life," McRae said.
Ford was based in Schweinfurt, Germany, where he was a member of the 1st Infantry
Division's 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment.
"He was the type of person that, no matter how mad you were, he would make you
smile," said Staff Sgt. Shawn Jackson, who served with Ford in Germany, and returned
with the body for the funeral.
Ford called his family once every two weeks from Germany, and then from Iraq. He had been
in Iraq for one week when he was killed, and his unit had taken over security in Tikrit
just that day.
Ford's family is "up and down" as they work
through their grief, McRae said.
"They laugh, and then when the laughs end, the cries come," he said.
All they have now are photographs and videos. But Ford's cousin Tarita Ford-Rogers said
the family's Baptist faith is helping them cope with the loss.
"He (Ford) was a soldier for the U.S. Army. Now he is a soldier for God's army. He
won his battle here on Earth," she said.