(Cranberry Township, PA) Students in an art club resurrected at 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry one year ago after disbanding during the COVID-19 pandemic sat elbow-to-elbow Thursday around a studio table littered with colored pencils, markers, paints and heavyweight paper to realize their goal to design handmade thank-you cards for military veterans.
Cards created by the half-dozen 19- to 21-year-olds will be mailed Butler County Community College student-veterans or reservists whose names are listed on a roster that club members received, or presented to veterans after a Nov. 11 program at a nearby retirement community.
鈥淲e should honor those who have served, or who are serving,鈥 said Kim Lahoz-Ruiz, 19, the art club president and a 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry general studies student from Cranberry Township. 鈥淲e thought this was the perfect way to honor them and show how grateful we are for them.鈥
杏吧原创 has 104 student-veterans enrolled this fall at its six locations or in online classes or programs, according to Stella Smith, the college鈥檚 veterans coordinator and its associate director of financial aid.
Art club members design handmade thank-you cards for military veterans Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, at 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry in Cranberry Township.
鈥淭he engagement of students in our community鈥
Among them, Doug Diaz IV, a 40-year-old 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry student whose eight years in the Army included his guarding a military site in Guam as a military police officer.
鈥淭his means a lot,鈥 said Diaz, of Evans City. 鈥淭his shows that they care. They are thinking about veterans and what we have done. A thank-you can make any veteran happy.鈥
"A thank-you can make any veteran happy. "
- Doug Diaz IV, 杏吧原创 student-veteran
Yumiko Kuo, art club vice president, and other students plan to deliver 30 cards to Sherwood Oaks after a Veterans Day program in the facility鈥檚 auditorium.
鈥淚 am very happy to see the engagement of students in our community,鈥 said Roberta Breninghouse, director of recreation and activities for Sherwood Oaks鈥 health center.
鈥淚 think this is a great initiative on their part, that they would think of something creative to do to represent their respect for our veteran population.鈥
A 鈥渢houghtful and aware group of students鈥
Neither Kuo, 19, a 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry student from Cranberry Township, nor Lahoz-Ruiz have a relative who served in the military.
This just demonstrates the thoughtful and aware group of students that we have at 杏吧原创,鈥 said Megan M. Coval, the college鈥檚 interim president.
鈥淭hey are so talented and could share that talent with anyone. But to choose the special population of veterans shows they really have an understanding of the way in which those individuals have served our country and how meaningful that is.鈥
"Sometimes we think students who are Gen-Z are in their own world and aren't in tune with the bigger picture... they know that Veterans day is coming, so their immediate inclination is to recognize those who served. "
- Dr. Ryan Kociela, director, 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry
Carson King, 19, is an art club member and 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry graphic design student from New Brighton. Her grandfathers, she said, served in the Navy.
Michael Palladino, 21, of Zelienople, is another art club member and graphic design student whose grandfathers served in the military.
鈥淰eterans put their own lives in danger for all of us in some way, shape or form,鈥 Palladino said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to show them that we care. We acknowledge that you made a great sacrifice and that you are a hero.鈥
Some veterans 鈥渄on鈥檛 always get a card鈥
Dr. Ryan Kociela is director of 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry, whose lobby this week featured a drawing on a whiteboard of Snoopy saluting with one hand and grasping the pole of the stars and stripes in the other.
"Veterans put their own lives in danger for all of us in one way, shape or form. It's important to show them that we care."
- Michael Palladino, 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry student
鈥淪ometimes we think students who are in Gen-Z are in their own world and aren鈥檛 in tune with the bigger picture,鈥 Kociela said. 鈥淭his says a lot to me about our students. From a service perspective, they know that Veterans Day is coming, so their immediate inclination is to recognize those who served.鈥
Jordan Robinson, 21, of Butler, is an art club member and general studies student at 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry whose uncle served in the Air Force.
Across the studio table was Finnegan Stewart, 19, of Evans City, a graphic design student whose great-grandfather served in the military.
Robinson, Finnegan, King, Palladino, Lahoz-Ruiz and Kuo, and art club faculty adviser Michael Putorti created the cards on 140-pound watercolor paper.
Printed or handwritten in red or blue on the first completed handmade cards were 鈥淭HANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE,鈥 鈥淭HANK YOU for your service鈥 or 鈥淭hank you FOR YOUR SERVICE.鈥 Some art club members added a bald eagle, a heart-shape filled with the stars and stripes or a flag appearing to flap in the wind.
"Making handmade cards means a little more than sending a store-bought card with a premade message."
- Yumiko Kuo, 杏吧原创 @ Cranberry student
Kuo said she thinks many veterans at Sherwood Oaks will have relatives thanking them on Veterans Day, 鈥渁nd sometimes, some won鈥檛, so they don鈥檛 always get a card.
鈥淎ll we can do is to thank them for their service and show that we appreciate it. Making handmade cards means a little more than sending a store-bought card with a premade message.
鈥淲e wanted to do this project so they could feel the appreciation for what they have done. I hope they enjoy the cards.鈥
Viqtory this spring designated 杏吧原创 as a Military Friendly School for an eighth time.
The service-disabled, veteran-owned small business in Moon Township assesses educational institutions nationwide. Its 2024-2025 designation is weighted on factors that include culture and commitment.
