RIT hosts annual Veterans Day Breakfast
More than 500 expected to honor servicemen and women and their families
Supporting our veterans is the theme of this year’s annual Rochester Institute of Technology Veterans Day Breakfast, from 8 to 10 a.m. Friday, Nov. 11, in the Gordon Field House and Activities Center.
The celebration, initiated by RIT President Bill Destler, pays tribute to individuals who serve or have served honorably in uniform.
More than 500 people typically attend the event, now in its sixth year. About 200 ROTC Army or Air Force cadets attend RIT and U.S. News & World Report recently reported RIT among the best colleges for veterans in the country.
Barry Culhane, executive assistant to Destler and chair of the event committee, said RIT has a long history of accommodating the educational needs of returning veterans, dating back to the end of World War II.
“The breakfast is a way to acknowledge the service of all veterans affiliated with RIT and special guests from the Greater Rochester community who work to serve veterans and their families every day,” Culhane said. “We are deeply grateful for those who protect our freedoms.”
He said it also is a good opportunity for families of servicemen and women to get a better understanding of military culture.
“We share with them all types of aspects of the military, including the history of Veterans Day, the oaths they use to swear-in, and the melodies are played from the five branches,” Culhane said. “And they’ll get to interact with veterans from various wars.”
Several groups of interest to veterans, including the Veterans Outreach Center, Gold Star Families Memorial and the RIT Veterans Club, will also attend and have information available about the services they offer. Military vehicles will be on display and uniforms from wars dating back to the Revolutionary War will be shown from the Rochester Military History Society.
Eric Wheeler, interim director of Veteran Services at Monroe Community College and a member of the RIT Veterans Breakfast committee for years, will serve as emcee and talk about ways to support veterans.
“It’s a great day to say thank you to someone who has served and a way to be patriotic,” said Wheeler, who served more than 20 years combined with the Army and Navy Reserves. “People sometimes confuse Memorial Day with Veterans Day. Memorial Day is a day to honor the fallen who we have lost in the battle field. On Veterans Day, we honor the more than 20 million Americans of all eras who have worn the cloth of our nation, who have served in peacetime and served in combat.”
And a video made by Jeremiah Gryczka, a second-year motion picture sciences major from Fayetteville, N.Y., will be shown, with interviews of five servicemen from various wars and conflicts.
All members of the campus community are invited to attend the Veterans Day recognition and celebration. For more information and to RSVP, contact Jolana Hollister at jbhpro@rit.edu or 585-475-7500.