Officials at Goodfellow AFB, Tex., on Friday will dedicate two buildings for housing visiting officers to retired Col. Bud Day and retired Col. Leo Thorsness, two of the five living Air Force Medal of Honor recipients. Day was assigned to Goodfellow in 1951 as the operations officer of the base’s flying training wing. In August 1967, his F-100F was shot down over North Vietnam and he spent more than five years as a POW. He received the MOH in March 1976 for personal bravery while held captive. Thorsness attended primary flight training at Goodfellow in 1953. Enemy fire brought down his F-105F in North Vietnam in April 1967; he spent six years as a POW. He received the MOH in October 1973 for his heroism in 1967. (Goodfellow report by Robert D. Martinez) (For more on Thorsness, read Full Day; for more on Day, see The Strength of Bud Day.)
The Air Force conducted its first successful test of the Air-launched Rapid Response Weapon, or ARRW, on May 14, snapping a streak of three consecutive failed tests and giving the beleaguered hypersonics program a much needed boost. Off the coast of Southern California, the AGM-183A ARRW separated from the wing…