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Vets Honored for Duty

2968575773During the annual Veterans Day observance on Nov. 11, Edinboro University Fighting Scots Battalion R.O.T.C. Honor Guard fired off a 21-gun salute by the Reeder Hall flagpole in tribute to the veterans that have served the United States.

“Pride in one’s military service is a bond shared by nearly all who have worn the uniform of their country,” said interim President James D. Moran in his Veterans Day address at the Diebold Center for the Performing Arts.

“Veterans Day is a day of remembrance, a day of recognition, a day of honor for those who have served and sacrificed to protect my family and yours,” Moran said.

Moran said that there are currently 23 million living veterans that span the generations from World War I to the present. Just this year alone, there are 70 new freshman cadets in the Fighting Scots Battalion at Edinboro.

According to Captain Jeremy McCrillis, the students in the Battalion have been working on and practicing the traditional flag-folding and 21-gun salute for about a month.

“They did an awesome job,” he said.

“We want to do it right,” said Lt. Col. James Marshall. Employed at Edinboro University since August 2010, Marshall says that the main goal of the R.O.T.C. is academic success.

“[Academics are] first and foremost. But we also want to prepare them for life,” he said. We want to help them find good career options that will motivate them to do their best.

More than over 100 students, as well as current and retired faculty and staff from the university, are also serving or have served in the U.S. Armed Forces, according to the university’s website.

The audience at the ceremony was made up of men and women from the “Greatest Generation” – those who lived through the Great Depression and World War II – as well as young adults from the latest generation.

They “represent [our] nation during history’s most recent wars,” Moran said. “Our debt to these heroes can never be repaid, but our gratitude and respect must last forever.”

Kahan Sablo, vice president of student affairs, was also in attendance. Describing past Veterans Day tributes that the university organized, he said, “We’ve been doing this for a long time. Last year, I received the flag [since] President Brown was travelling.”

A moment of silence was held during the ceremony in respect for the veterans who had served and are still serving our country.

“This Veterans Day – 10 years after the 9/11 tragedy – is a significant milestone in [our] lives,” Moran said.

Moran went on to explain that Veterans Day was originally called “Armistice Day.”

In 1919, President Wilson designated a day to celebrate the agreement signed in the Palace of Versailles that signaled the end of World War I – the war “to end all wars.”

“Let us never forget that our soldiers have liberated Buchenwald, halted genocide in Kosovo, and fought to end starvation in Somalia,” said Moran. “Let us not forget their sacrifices for the preservation of freedom at Pearl Harbor, Okinawa, Omaha Beach, [and] Pork Chop Hill.”

Moran credited veterans with perserving quality of life in America.

“Through their blood, their service, their courage, and their sacrifice, our veterans have given us freedom, security to live in the greatest nation on earth.” 

– Taken from The Spectator (Vol. 3, Issue 11) on November 17, 2011

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OSD Opportunities Remain Inviting for Students

DSCF8622The reputation of the Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD) has resulted in record numbers of handicapped students this year than Edinboro University has ever seen.

“The reason I chose to come to Edinboro was the OSD program that it offers,” said Kate Fisher, a sophomore majoring in psychology. “(It’s) the only school in this area that offers the 24/7 personal care that OSD offers.”

According to Robert McConnell, director of OSD, the goal is to provide access to all the institution has to offer for students with disabilities.Students pay for each of the services that they are enrolled in and aren’t required to purchase a set number of services.

They are each given the option to enroll in each of the services we provide “which are above and beyond what is required by law,” sad McConnell.One of the services that the university offers is the personal care attendants, who are available to help students 24 hours a day.

The personal care attendant service has been going well this semester, according to Vickie Trnavsky, coordinator of attendant care.

“Our main goal is to make sure kids are getting up (in time) for classes… and we strive for independence,” Trnavsky said.

Attendant care aims to teach students to self-direct their needs and encourage students to communicate how they want things done, Trnavsky explained.

There are currently six workers that divide their time and attention between 39 disabled students in Lawrence Towers.

“Its like living in a family with a lot of kids,” said Trnavsky.A sign-up sheet in the personal care room is provided for students to write down the times that they will need help and indicate what they need the attendant to do.

“It’s all a matter of organization,” said Trnavsky.There are three different shifts for the workers in the personal care office, Fisher explained.

In each of the rooms, a buzzer is available for immediate and unscheduled help.Last year, Fisher said, they had both state and student workers. But this year the attendant office postponed hiringthe student workers.

Trnavsky explained that during the first two weeks of the semester, they don’t employ any students since they are busy settling into their new homes and getting their schedules figured out.

Just recently, Trnavsky has started employing student workers.“The student workers are a big help,” said Fisher.Students aren’t allowed to help with showers, but they can do some of the small chores, such as laundry, for the students enrolled in those services.

“It’s nice to have that extra help when the state workers are busy with other students,” said Fisher.

According to McConnell, OSD used to be directly involved in the personal care attendant service.However, as of last year, the responsibility transitioned out of OSD and into the Student Health Services.

“OSD has been going strong for 30 years, said Trnavsky, “and I expect it to keep going for many years to come.”

(Taken from The Spectator at Edinboro University – Vol. 3, Issue 2, October 20, 2011)

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‘Boro Reaches Out – Students Aim to Provide Orangutan Care

DSCF3148At 5 p.m. on Dec. 3, Colleen Reed, from Orangutan Outreach, will inform students at Edinboro University about the fact that orangutans are facing death, torture, abuse, capture and are being illegally sold as pets at an alarming rate.

“People need to know,” said Katrina Spirko, the orchestrator of the event and a senior at Edinboro, majoring in elementary education and early childhood education, with a minor in environmental studies.

Spirko has always been interested in the great apes and became personally involved when she discovered Orangutan Outreach through her research.

According to their website, some of Orangutan Outreach’s main goals are to protect orangutans in their native habitat, to promote public awareness of conservation strategies, and to fund rescue efforts of orangutans.

Orangutan Outreach is based largely on volunteering and provides the opportunity for people to adopt orangutans and sponsor them as they go through the rehabilitation program, Spirko explained.

 Last Christmas, Spirko and her boyfriend adopted Luna, the youngest and smallest of the apes at the Sintang Orangutan Center (SOC) in Indonesia, one of the centers that Orangutan Outreach sponsors.

“With her fluffy hair, her big bright eyes and her Mona Lisa smile, Luna stole everyone’s hearts,” Richard Zimmerman, executive director of Orangutan Outreach, posted on their website.

But, last April, Zimmerman received a devastating phone call. Luna had gone missing.

“I remember the day I heard about it,” Spirko said. “I cried. I love her so much and even though I’ve never met her, I feel like she’s really special [to me].”

According to Zimmerman’s blog, police and army officials were involved with the search as well as a team from Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN) and Center for Orangutan Prevention (COP), which are all based in Indonesia.

“[We’re] working tirelessly to find information about Luna,” Zimmerman said, as they made regular sweeps through local villages and sought out leads on local smugglers and wildlife traffickers.

Spirko receive up-to-date emails and notices from the Outreach center and she said that when Luna first disappeared, they sounded really determined to find her. “She was supposed to be protected,” Spirko said.

Femke den Haas, founding director of JAAN, wrote, “It is simply not believable that a baby orangutan can just ‘disappear’ like that.”

But now, after months of searching and trying to figure out what had happened to her, a memorial has been posted on the Outreach’s website. According to Spirko, it seems like they’re losing hope of ever finding her again.

“She may very well have been captured by wildlife smugglers and sold,” said Zimmerman, “She may even have been smuggled out of Indonesia by now.”

In order to help raise awareness of what is happening to the great apes, Spirko and members of Students of Edinboro for Environmental Defense (SEED) are organizing a presentation.

“I hope the room is packed and that people will be willing to donate,” said Spirko. “I want people to know [Luna’s] story, because if she is dead, I don’t want her to have died in vain. For me personally… it’s a shout-out for Luna.”

More information on Orangutan Outreach can be found at their website, www.redapes.org.

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EUP continues efforts to raise enrollment

EDINBORO, PA – Records show that the number of new freshman and transfer students for Fall 2011 at Edinboro University has dropped since last year’s census.

DSCF3126“This is not surprising, given the declining demographics in northwestern Pennsylvania,” said Jeff Pinski, associate director of university communications.

In 2010, Edinboro boasted 1,628 new freshmen and 464 transfer students. This year, according to Pinski, the total number was 1,584 freshman and 412 transfer students.

Even though the number of new students may be lower than it was in 2010, “undergraduate enrollment pretty much kept pace with last year’s record numbers,” states Pinski.

On opening day of classes, the number of undergraduate students was 6,826, compared to the 6,840 of last year.

“Also interesting is that our total enrollment on the first day of class, was 8,434, which exactly ties the second highest enrollment year ever [during Fall 2009],” said Pinski.

The efforts of the communication and marketing department at the university are part of what make these numbers possible.

“We are constantly promoting Edinboro by informing news media of university, faculty and student success stories and events, as well as launching major media advertising campaigns,” said Pinski.

The communications office tries to cover every aspect of advertising and communications in order to get word out about the university.

Television, radio, magazine, outdoor advertising, and social media targeting a key audience are some of the venues that are used.

Another reason Edinboro has gained more new students is because of the work of Craig Grooms, Director of Undergraduate Admissions, and his co-workers. They are busy every day of the year promoting our university through a myriad of activities, said Pinski.

“Our undergraduate admissions office does a tremendous job in working with school districts, media, students and families,” said Kimberly Kennedy, Director of Residence Life and Orientation.

Due to these efforts, Kennedy said that, “overall, our numbers are up slightly over last year for students residing on campus.  We opened approximately 40 students over last year’s census.” The total number of on-campus residents is 2,181.

Grooms and his co-workers promote the university at college and career fairs, like the one this past week that was located in Erie, in order to get a chance to talk face-to-face with the students and their parents, counselors, etc., said Pinski.

Conducting visits to high schools throughout Pennsylvania as well as parts of West Virginia and New Jersey, the Office of Admissions gives prospective students information about the university and encourages them to give out their contact information.

That way, said Grooms, we can send out more information and keep in contact with them throughout the rest of the year.

“We host numerous visit opportunities for perspective students and their families during both semesters and throughout the summer,” said Grooms.

October 1 will be the opening of the Fall Open House program. Grooms and his team also partner with different departments on campus for various events.

Yet, the official “freeze” date for admitting new students is not until September 20. So, the final numbers are currently “fluid and in a state of flux, as enrollment always is immediately before and for several weeks after the start of any new semester,” said Pinski.

While this year’s records may never equal last year, the university may still gain several more students.

(Taken from The Spectator, Vol. 3, Issue 1)

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