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FEATURE
By Courtney A. Kjos, Barnard '99
Randy
Murff '97 met and fell in love with Courtney A. Kjos, Barnard
'99, while both were serving in the military in South Korea
halfway around the world from Morningside Heights. Although Murff
never formally proposed to Kjos, an engagement ring was presented
to her by one of his closest friends shortly after Murff was killed
in a flying accident on June 12. Murff had purchased the ring three
weeks earlier in the United States and was going to propose to Kjos
in Hawaii during a trip the couple had planned to take in October.
When
I first met Randy Murff, it was in a bar in Seoul, South Korea.
He was sitting in a high-backed chair at a low table and I noticed
immediately how broad and muscular his shoulders were. I thought
that they would be so nice to curl up in. I was so right.
Randy
was stationed at Kunsan Air Base, on the west side of the South
Korean peninsula. He was an F-16 fighter pilot with the 35th Fighter
Squadron impressive, but he didn't try to charm me with Top
Gun stories. Instead, he let me know where he went to college: Columbia.
I was amazed. A First Lieutenant in the United States Army myself,
I realized that I had found possibly the only other young military
officer in Korea who had gone to school on Morningside Heights.
We spent the rest of the evening comparing stories about our college
years. We laughed because almost all of our friends were doctors,
lawyers, bankers and consultants from Long Island. We mourned the
loss of Ferris Booth and wondered about the never-explored Lerner
Hall. As the night closed, I took another long stare into his large,
round, star-studded blue eyes and fell in love with him. Right there.
On
the evening of June 12, at 9:35 p.m., Randy Murff's F-16 crashed
into a rice paddy during a routine night training mission, and he
was killed instantly. He was 26 years old. Yet in that short time,
he accomplished more, dreamed more, and lived more than many people
do their entire lives. He followed a simple principle that is oft
forgotten in a world that places high value on money and prestige;
he simply did what he truly wanted to do.
In
his 26 years, Randy Murff had achieved success in almost everything
he tried. He was an outstanding student, athlete and pilot.
Randy
is still remembered on the fields of Bellaire (Texas) High School.
His decision to play football was made his freshman year, a late
start for the average American player, who normally begins in elementary
school, especially in a football-crazy state like Texas. However,
when Randy, weighing over 200 pounds, approached the coach to express
his interest in taking up the sport, he was not met with resistance.
You can never have too many big linemen, the coach probably thought
to himself.


Randy Murff and Courtney Kjos pose in dress mess at the St.
Barbara's Day Ball while in Korea. St. Barbara is the patron
saint of air defense.
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Yet
Randy had more than size on his side. He also had athletic talent
that quickly became apparent. He was voted first team All-District,
and to the Houston Independent School District All-Academic Team
as well. By his senior year, he was co-captain of the football team,
offensive MVP and Male Athlete of the Year. He also lettered in
baseball and track, all while posting grades that earned him a place
on the school's honor roll.
Numerous
prestigious universities recruited Randy, and he chose Columbia
over Princeton and Cornell, among others. At Columbia, he achieved
the same success he had enjoyed in high school. Gracing program
covers with gritted teeth and menacing, outstretched arms, No. 68
was a huge offensive lineman literally. He grew to 6-2, 315
pounds, but despite the robust belly, Randy was a strong, fit powerhouse
on the field. "Big Randy," as he would later call his
football self, lettered all four years at Columbia, twice made the
All-Ivy Second Team and was named to Columbia's "Team of the
'90s." As co-captain his senior year, he stood shoulder-to-shoulder
with such as Marcellus Wiley '97, who now stars for the NFL's San
Diego Chargers, and helped the Lions to an 8-2 record, their best
mark since 1945.
Randy
loved football; he felt a strong loyalty to the team. Yet if he
had been offered an NFL contract, he would have turned it down because
he wanted to fly. Every night he would force his roommate to watch
Wings on the Discovery channel. Although a Dean's List student,
he studied flying far more than he read history. He followed his
ambition right to the Air Force recruiter's office, where he was
shown a fighter plane. But the recruiter was brutally honest with
the would-be pilot; he told "Big Randy" that he simply
wouldn't fit in the cockpit.
Most
people would give up, go home, reopen those history books and change
plans. Not Randy. He embarked on a weight-loss program that consisted
of running and eating one Mama Joy's deli sandwich a day. He felt
so drained from the toll on his body that he slept away every afternoon.
But it produced results in nine months he dropped 100 pounds.
He
weighed 210 when he graduated from Officer Training School in June
1998, a year after his college graduation, still in pursuit of his
dream. Randy had a true, heartfelt passion for flying F-16 fighter
jets, and he was not about to be denied. He displayed the kind of
ambition and drive that made even hard-working fellow Columbians
take notice. "He loved flying and he went after it hard,"
said Gary Kahn '97, his roommate and teammate. "I have never
seen that type of determination from anyone in my life. He was the
5-year-old who wanted to be an astronaut or a fighter pilot and
refused to let his childhood dream die. How many of us get herded
into the jobs that we figured we were supposed to take and didn't
follow our dreams?"
Not
Randy. He was awarded his wings in July 1999 after graduating from
Undergraduate Pilots Training at Laughlin Air Force Base in Texas.
One year later, in July 2000, Lieutenant Murff graduated as a mission-capable
fighter pilot from follow-on fighter training at Luke AFB in Arizona.
He was then assigned to the 35th Fighter Squadron at Kunsan AB,
Republic of Korea.
Randy
was an exceptional fighter pilot with a particular skill for air-to-air
missions. He was one of his squadron's best, logging over 250 flying
hours and being chosen for special schools and missions. He transported
jets from Korea to Moody AFB in Georgia. He conducted over 10 sorties
within certain strategic areas that resulted in him being awarded
the Aerial Achievement Award. He was chosen to attend Fighter Electronic
Combat Officer Course (FECOC) at Nellis AFB, Nevada, and was chosen
as Electronic Combat Pilot for the 8th Fighter Wing, a position
that normally is given to a major. As Wing ECP, he would have been
the Wing expert and trainer on radar and radar warning gear.
He
loved going to work every day. He would call me every evening between
9:30 and 10:30 p.m., and the wonder and excitement on the other
end of the phone was like a child's. "I flew today," he
would say. "I felt just like I was in Star Wars!"
No
words can recreate Randy Murff. He lived every moment of his life
exactly as he wanted. He flew with desire, energy and sheer excitement;
he loved with abandon, devotion and pure adoration. He valued his
friends and celebrated his friendships with bravado and a wild spirit.
He never missed a moment to tell someone close to him what he or
she meant to him. It didn't take me long to realize that I hadn't
been alone when I fell in love that night in Seoul. He had fallen
in love with me as well. Right there. And he never let a breath
slip through his lips without telling me.
Editor's
note: Murff's obituary
also appears in the August 2001 issue.
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