• BU Today staff

    BU Today staff Profile

  • Cydney Scott

    Photojournalist

    cydney scott

    Cydney Scott has been a professional photographer since graduating from the Ohio University VisCom program in 1998. She spent 10 years shooting for newspapers, first in upstate New York, then Palm Beach County, Fla., before moving back to her home city of Boston and joining BU Photography. Profile

  • Jackie Ricciardi

    Staff photojournalist

    Portrait of Jackie Ricciardi

    Jackie Ricciardi is a staff photojournalist at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. She has worked as a staff photographer at newspapers that include the Augusta Chronicle in Augusta, Ga., and at Seacoast Media Group in Portsmouth, N.H., where she was twice named New Hampshire Press Photographer of the Year. Profile

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There are 5 comments on “What Veterans Day Means to Me”: BU Veterans and Active Soldiers Reflect

  1. Thank you so very much for these meaningful reflections. I am grateful for our veterans. I reflect on BU SON ‘73 nursing colleagues of mine, five of whom served in different branches – USN, USArmy, USAF. I thank them and all veterans for their service.

  2. We all owe such a debt of gratitude to those who have served our country. It’s wonderful to read these reflections from the veterans and service members who are part of our BU community. I appreciate Luis Costales’ reminding us of the duty we all have to support those who have served: “Suicide prevention within the veteran community is one of the most important battles we face today. Let us not only thank our veterans, but stand by them, not just today, but every day.” Thank you.

  3. Veteran’s day is a very important holiday as a way of acknowledging and giving thanks to the people that have enabled us to freely do everything we do at Boston University … in an otherwise hostile and violent world.

    Why did the university stop observing it as an academic holiday?

  4. Veterans 100% deserve a day to honor, appreciate, and celebrate them. Risking their own life for this country, and essentially, people they don’t even know. From leaving their families to serve, to all the even possibly traumatizing moments, all the make sure that our country stayed stable, and protected. Much love, appreciation to all veterans, that all made they life harder to make ours safer.

  5. I am the daughter of a WWI veteran . My family member was on the faculty when the war began in Austria and when US began sending troops to Europe. He did not wait to be drafted – in fact was only weeks. shy of being too old. to enlist. He told me he enlisted both of out sense of duty and to be a good example to his students. First he was assigned to the medical division in Boston to serve as a secretary to the chief of the medical service and then volunteered. for the Field Artillery and sent to Officer Candidate training in Kentucky. He graduated as a second lieutenant in the field artillery and discharged the same day as the Armistice had just been declared. Not all BU faculty were so fortunate. One of his colleagues had. been gassed and had trouble speaking when he returned to teach. As. a graduate of British University – he recalled seeing the names of most of his fellow. students on the wall of honor at the various colleges at Oxford. Nearly a generation of young men were lost in Great Britian, France, Germany, and Russia.

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