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VETERANS EXPLAIN TO STUDENTS WHY THEY SERVE -- The
program, which some critics say is too one-sided,
began in 2006.

Story here...
http://www.usato
day.com/news/nation/2007-12-05-whyweserve_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
Veterans explain to students why they serve
By Heather Collura, Special for USA TODAY
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The auditorium was packed and
quiet as Marine Cpl. Sean Henry described how on his second tour of duty
in Iraq, he met a family of 12 Iraqis in the city of Al Habbaniyah who
were forbidden by local insurgents to leave their house.
They were not allowed to get food, go to school or even take an injured
child to a hospital, Henry said.
By the end of his seven-month deployment, he said, the United States had
gained control of the city and he could hear children running around and
playing soccer.
Article continues below:
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"We really did make this place so much better
when we came," Henry told a standing room only crowd of more than 500
students, staff, faculty and community members at Syracuse University last
week. "Nothing can replace that."
Henry, 22, a third-year Marine, was one of three veterans who shared their
experiences as part of a Department of Defense outreach program called
"Why We Serve."
The program, which some critics say is too one-sided, began in 2006. It
sends recently returned veterans across the country to share their
decisions to join the military and their experiences abroad with the
public. The program started with presentations to mostly small community
groups but branched out this fall to college campuses.
Marine Maj. Chris Devine, the program's director, said the group has
visited at least nine other campuses this fall, including the University
of Cincinnati, Georgetown University and the University of Wyoming.
For 2008, there are plans to go to Clemson (S.C.), Villanova (Pa.),
American (D.C.) and Stony Brook (N.Y.) universities, among others.
"This is the future leadership of America," Devine said. "Why wouldn't you
want to put our servicemembers in front of them so they can ask them
direct questions and hopefully get direct answers?"
The program at Syracuse was the subject of some debate. Mark Rupert, chair
of the Syracuse University Political Science Department, declined the
initial invitation to host it. "It seemed to me that it was intended to
substitute an allegedly 'non-political' meet and greet with the troops for
a direct and explicitly political discussion of the issues," Rupert said
in an e-mail.
Professor William Coplin, who teaches the honors course on improving
undergraduate education that stepped in to sponsor the event as a class
project, and Katelyn Hancock, one of the student organizers, said it was
not intended to be a debate on Iraq or U.S. foreign policy.
"It's a unique perspective," Hancock said. "We don't often get to hear
from troops that have been recently over there. We (can) get in our own
little bubble over here and not understand what is going on over there."
"Is it set up to sell the war in a backwards, backdoor way? I don't know,"
Coplin said. "It is what it is."
The Syracuse Peace Council, a community anti-war group, proposed that
three additional veterans with anti-war viewpoints join the discussion,
but the offer was declined.
"I admire you guys and what you are doing," Aly Wane, a member of the
Syracuse Peace Council, said at the event. "I just wish this forum was
open to a broader sort of experience of what the war is. … I have seen the
war has many sides, and I would like to see all those sides represented."
As Wane expressed his discontent, without asking a question, all three
veterans sat silently while they listened.
There were no such feelings expressed at an appearance at the University
of Wyoming in Laramie, according to Tammy Johnson, staff adviser for the
University of Wyoming College Republicans who hosted the program. "People
asked plenty of questions. He (Maj. Cedric Burden) answered them. He was
very forthright and honest."
Three other veterans spoke to University of Cincinnati history professor
Thomas Lorman's three classes last week. Lorman said he had feared the
event would take on political undertones. "I didn't feel there was any
hostility in the room at all," he said.
Some audience members at Syracuse asked tough questions, including how the
three servicemembers could speak so warmly of the job they are doing
despite the high numbers of civilian casualties and the American unrest
regarding the purpose of the war.
James Marcellino, a Syracuse sophomore, said any tension toward the
veterans disgusted him. "It's just astounding to me to have people come at
you in that way," he said to applause.
Henry and his two colleagues, Army Sgt. Jose Munoz and Air Force Tech.
Sgt. Mark DeCorte, each addressed the program's title question of why they
serve.
"I joined out of patriotism," said DeCorte, a 13-year veteran medic and
father of four who enlisted in the 10th grade through the delayed
enlistment program.
DeCorte is a 31-year-old whose wife is also active duty. His father,
mother and uncle were also Air Force flight medics. "I could think of 200
reasons to get out," DeCorte said. "I could line them all up. But I just
couldn't do it. I can't hang up my uniform in a closet and watch the news
and know that my brothers and sisters are willing to risk their lives. And
I want to be there to bring them home. So I re-enlisted for another six
years — for them."
The program ended with a lengthy standing ovation from most of the crowd.
"I feel like there is another side that everyone needs to hear," said
Samantha Wilder, a Syracuse freshman from Williamsburg, Va. "There are
pictures we never see. There's a side we never see."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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