I love nobody more than the American G.I., but there are some G.I.'s that are extra-special; the Tuskegee Airman.
For four years I was privileged to be a member of the USAF Presidential Honor Guard at Bolling AFB in DC. Although we performed higher-visibility ceremonies at the White House and Pentagon, our bread and butter were the hundreds of funerals a year we conducted at Arlington National Cemetary. I've buried a wide cross section of this nation's sons and daughters, but the ones that are etched most firmly in my mind's eye are the Tuskegee Airmen.
Everytime we rendered final military honors for one of these gentlemen, (And it didn't matter if he was a fighter pilot or a motor pool guy) there were always DOZENS of distinguished older black men, with gray and white hair, resplendent in their red blazers. These American MEN stood as ramrod straight as their aging spines allowed, to honor their departed comrades. Their consistant presence, military bearing, and obvious love and respect for their fellow servicemen was always head and shoulders above anything else I witnessed in the "garden". I would imagine their numbers are thinning now...what a shame. If anyone ever gets a chance to meet up with any Tuskegee Airman at an airshow, go and talk to them and thank them for their service. You'll walk away privileged to know you shook hands with a REAL man.
Low n Slow, Chief Anderson gave Eleanor Roosevlt a ride in an L-4 Cub once. Neat piece of history there.
Anybody interested in further reading, I HIGHLY recommend the Benjamin O. Davis autobiography: An American Life