Get the low-down state by state on this page.
Whether you’re relocating to a new city, researching political movements by
location or checking out the latest developments, the state link is for you.
This comprehensive site includes information on each state, including state
flags, elected officials and current events. Find out what the weather is like,
which state is soaking up sunny rays, and which one is typically soggy. Even
better, get a real slice of life in each state with alumni interviews from local
universities and headlines breaking in that area. Catch up on videos and watch
newscasts from each state to learn more about each segment of the nation.
Have
you been interviewed yet?
Mark Junge
Historian, Photographer, Author
Nothing stops Mark Junge from making
history - not even blood clots that
developed in the Winter of 2002.
Permanent damage resulted in Junge
having to use oxygen for everything
from sleeping to excercising. But
Junge refused to give into the
supposed limitations of his
conditions.
CSU alum travels with military as journalist
By Beth Etter, ’03
“I joined the Army because I wanted to pay
for school,” says Kelly Kennedy (Bogdanowicz)
(’97). From 1989 to 1993, Kennedy was a
communications specialist with the U.S. Army
during the Persian Gulf War and in
Mogadishu, Somalia. Now, as a civilian
reporter with the Times News Service,
Kennedy has returned to the Middle East –
Iraq – to report on the medical issues of
war.
Kennedy’s focus for the
Army Times, a Gannett-owned newspaper, is
the health beat. She writes stories about
traumatic brain injuries, post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD), suicide, and stress
relief. While the magazine’s audience is
mainly people in the armed forces, her
“Wounded Warrior” story in February of this
year put the Army Times and the Army at the
forefront of American readers’ attention.
Kennedy’s story on the treatment of soldiers
at the Walter Reed Medical Center was
released one day before a very similar story
by the Washington Post.
“The story was floating
around for years, but I don’t think anyone
thought it was real. When a lieutenant
colonel told me about the conditions there,
I believed him,” says Kennedy. And she had
the personal experience to back up her
belief. After returning from her service in
Mogadishu, Somalia in 1993, Kennedy was sent
to Walter Reed because she was fainting
often. “They told me there was no such thing
as hypoglycemia and sent me on my way,” says
Kennedy.
Because Walter Reed is
the main hospital that soldiers are sent to
when returning from war, Kennedy thought the
story would generate great reaction, and it
did. “The change was pretty immediate.
Generals were being fired and new medical
personnel were arriving,” says Kennedy.
One of Kennedy’s
rewards as a journalist for the Army Times
is being able to help people. “I recently
wrote a story about traumatic brain
injuries. In sports, they’ll pull you from
the game if you have a brain injury, but in
the military they don’t. I’m trying to
educate soldiers and their superiors about
what to look for,” she says.
Although most of her
colleagues do not have experience in the
armed forces, Kennedy believes that her
experience serves her well as a journalist.
“Because I was in the Army, I know to ask
about things that other people wouldn’t
know,” she says. But, she says, the Army has
changed a lot since she was in it. “During
the Persian Gulf, there was no information
about PTSD. The culture, which followed a
“suck it up” mentality, is changing,” she
says.
As the culture
of the military changes, the war goes on,
and medical issues arise, Kelly Kennedy will
continue to be a voice for soldiers and
their needs.
ImageEastern dry high plains; hilly to mountainous
central plateau; western Rocky
Mountains of high ranges alternating
with broad valleys and deep narrow
canyons
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