In 1954, at age 17, Don obtained an appointment to the West Point Military Academy. Don will be missed by his many friends in Waco and other family members and friends across the country, who we thank for their love and support in recent days. Don will be memorialized as a great father, coach, mentor, and role model to his sons. His grandchildren are Alec and Sara Edwards and Amelia Boddy. Don is survived by his wife of sixty-three years, Mary Aileen Faurot Edwards his sons, Jeffrey and wife, Lori, of Laguna Hills, California and Charles and wife, Melissa, of Canton, Georgia. His younger sister, Sharon Drake, currently lives in Kansas City, Missouri. He was born in Columbia, Missouri to Hope and Harold Edwards on September 7, 1936. Don Edwards, 85, passed away at Wesley Woods Care and Rehab Center after a long battle with dementia. He will be buried beside his parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents. The Burial Service will be at the Nashville Baptist Church Cemetery outside Columbia, Missouri, on July 22. The visitation will be Saturday, May 21, from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. He volunteered at Parkdale Elementary School, Waco ISD, the Historic Waco Foundation, St. He was on the Athletic Committee and won the Moon Mullins Award for contributions to the Athletic Department. He chaired the committee that guided the regulations for Baylor to enter the Big XII Conference. His career as a Baylor professor and chair of the Management Department in the business school spanned twenty years. In 1976, he rejoined the faculty at the Air Force Institute of Technology at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio. in systems management from Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona. He developed flight plans to avoid antiaircraft weapons and all his many missions arrived home safely. He obtained a master's degree in engineering management from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, in 1965 and then served two tours in a combat zone in Vietnam in a C-130 (1966-67) and in a C-13 gunship (1972-73). He served as a navigator in the Strategic Air Command from 1960 to 1964, during the height of the Cold War. His pilot hopes didn’t work out when he measured too tall for the cockpit at that time. After graduating, he was commissioned a first lieutenant in 1958.
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