GRANTHAM, Pa. (4/25/12) — Some came to
give back to the communities where they grew up. Others attended to show
support for friends and fellow Soldiers. All said they learned a valuable
lesson - the amount they gave paled in comparison to the amount they received.
More than a dozen Pennsylvania Army
National Guardsmen from 1st Battalion, 108th Field Artillery, volunteered their
time to help athletes at the 2012 Special Olympics Area M Games at Messiah
College in Grantham, Pa., April 19.
Messiah College hosts the annual event,
which this year boasted a record-breaking attendance with more than 1100
athletes, buddies and volunteers from the central Pennsylvania area for a day
full of fun and friendly competition.
Soldiers drove from as far away as
Philadelphia to act as line judges, time recorders, track security and
presenters for this year’s games.
“To be given a ribbon or cheered on by
their military heroes, it can't get any better than that,” said Kay Straw,
director of the Special Olympics Area M. No matter how high or low the
athlete’s abilities, they view the Soldiers as role models and show respect and
admiration, she added.
Acting as presenters for this year’s
event were Army Sgt. 1st Class Francis Manley and Army Staff Sgt. Timothy
Corcoran, both members of Battery C, 1st Bn., 108th FA.
Manley estimates he and Corcoran awarded
ribbons to nearly 100 athletes who competed in events such as the 50-, 100- and
200-meter dashes, the 100-meter walk and the 400-meter run. Other presenters
awarded ribbons for the softball throw, wheelchair races and both the standing
and running long jumps.
For Manley, talking with the athletes
while awarding their ribbons made the biggest impact. In many cases, Manley
helped to pin the ribbons onto the athletes’ chests.
“When that Soldier pins that ribbon on
the chest of our athlete, you can see their chest go out; when he shakes their
hands or gives them a pat on the back and says, ‘good job,’ you can see the
pride come across the face of that athlete,” Straw said.
Army Staff Sgt. James Shirley, a supply
sergeant with the Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 1st Bn., 108th FA,
knows that feeling of admiration well. Shirley, a native of Carlisle, Pa., has
volunteered with the Special Olympics for three years, the first two of which
he acted as a buddy to a fellow Soldier’s autistic son. As a buddy, he ensured
athletes got to games, ribbon ceremonies and other events.
For Shirley, seeing the joy on the
athletes’ faces—no matter how well they did—brings him back year after year.
Other Soldiers echoed a similar
sentiment: in a world full of competition, Special Olympic athletes seem
genuinely happy to be competing with very little interest in the awards,
ribbons or trophies. Often, noted one Soldier, it is the athlete coming in last
that receives the biggest applause.
When the athletes did cross the finish
line this year, Army Staff Sgt. Shawn Rouvre and Army Sgt. Andrew Bankert
greeted them.
“I was a motivator,” Rouvre said, a
human resources non-commissioned officer with HHB, who made sure he gave as
many high-fives as he could handle. “When you see how excited they are [after
finishing the race], it is an amazing experience.”
Rouvre is also in his third year of
volunteering and said he especially likes seeing the same athletes year after
year.
“I like seeing the kids growing up,” he
said. “They often remember us from prior years.”
Army Sgt. Steven Robison, an
intelligence analyst with 1st Bn., 108th FA, said Special Olympics is a cause
close to his heart. Robison’s best friend has five adopted siblings with
varying special needs.
“They are like family to me,” Robison
said.
They are the reason that Robison, who
had previously volunteered during high school, chose to volunteer again when he
learned that the 108th FA has been involved in the games since 2008.
Robison, like the others, said he plans
to continue his volunteer work with the Special Olympics later this year when
the 108th FA assists with the “Polar Plunge,” an event held on City Island in
Harrisburg, Pa., each year to raise money for the Special Olympics.
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