By Jeff Murphy,
November 6, 2019
WARRENSBURG, MO – With a goal to collect food items for individuals in need, all military
veterans at the University of Central Missouri and in the local community are invited
to participate in the Veterans Engaging Through Service (VETS) Ruck March Monday,
Nov. 11 at UCM.
According to Kenneth Wall, a UCM senior criminal justice major from Oak Grove, the
Ruck March gets its name from a “rucksack,” which is how military personnel identify
their backpacks or “ruck” for short, when they carry them on a march.
For those participating in the upcoming event, one goal is to fill the rucksacks with
items for donation to the Campus Cupboard. This university-operated facility is located in the Student Recreation and Wellness
Center, and provides food for UCM students and employees who are in need.
“Veterans can bring non-perishable food and toiletries in their rucks to the event,”
Wall said. “We are collecting donations outside the Military and Veterans Success
Center, located on the lower level of the Elliott Student Union. We also have donation
cans at Bi-Lo Country Mart and CashSaver in Warrensburg. We will bring these items
for veterans to fill their rucks if they were unable to bring items themselves.”
The Ruck March will take place from noon to 1 p.m. on Veterans Day with the 1.5-mile
route starting at the UCM quadrangle flagpole. The route will take walkers north on
Holden street, where the group will stop at the Johnson County Courthouse, then travel
north to Shepard Park, and south on College Street back to UCM. It will end at the
Campus Cupboard, where items collected by the marchers and through donations prior
to the event, will become available to help UCM students and families who are struggling
financially.
The Ruck March is open to all UCM student, faculty and staff veterans, local community
veterans and all supporters. UCM’s food service provider, Sodexo, will sponsor lunch
for veterans, immediately following the walk.
The UCM Student Veterans Organization (SVO) is coordinating the event. Wall and another
student member of the group, Jim Ferguson, a senior engineering technology major who
resides in Holden, are providing leadership. They have been working with Chris Stockdale,
associate dean of the College of Education and faculty advisor to the SVO.
“I think this is a great example of a student led initiative,” Stockdale said. “These
students have taken it upon themselves to organize this event, and I’m proud of what
they have done.”
He said one of the purposes of the event is to help call attention to the number of
veterans who comprise the university community, and who bring valuable skills to the
workplace and the classroom. It reminds veterans who are used to serving their country
that they do not have to stop their good work after separating from the military.
“There’s a lot of efforts to reconnect veterans to service because they are people
called to serve,” Stockdale remarked. “Their service did not conclude the day they
took off their uniform.”
Wall said the “Overall goal for the UCM Student Veterans Organization is to bring
the veterans community together. What better way to bring everyone together than some
community service?”
In addition to meeting that objective, SVO and the VETS Ruck March could raise awareness
of the number of veterans who are on the UCM campus. This comprises about 10 percent
of the university’s student body and about 20 percent of its faculty and staff, Stockdale
said. This contributes to the university’s reputation as a military friendly institution.