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Alumni newsletter

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Page 1: Alumni newsletter
Page 2: Alumni newsletter

Happy Silver Anniversary EV! We are celebrating our 25th Anni-versary this year. I am sure that

Chaplain Richard McBride and John Barn-hill don’t feel a day older than when they sat together and hatched the brilliant idea that became Elon Volunteers! We have enjoyed an amazing journey that has led us to where we are today:• 105 student leaders and six professional staff members• More than 100,000 hours of service completed annually by over 2,000 student volunteers

• Five years on the Presidential Honor Roll• Endowments for the Kernodle Center and Alternative Breaks program• A new name that indicates our expan-sion as a “Center for Service Learning and Community Engagement”

While we have undergone many changes in the past 25 years, our core values remain the same. We value student leadership and community voice based on mutually beneficial and reciprocal relation-ships. We believe in treating students as colleagues and faculty members as part-ners in our work. We continue to evolve in

our relationships with community partners and to expand our reach across Alamance County.

The EV! acorn is a 25 year old oak with a long life to look forward to. Please mark your calendar for Homecoming on October 19-21, 2012. We are planning special events for alumni and current students alike to celebrate our anniversary next year. 25 years and growing…..long live Elon!

-Mary Morrison

From the director’s desk...

We have had a great year for the Alternative Breaks program. There was a record amount

of student interest and we have added several new trips. So far, more than 120 students participated in trips over Fall, Spring and Summer breaks this year. These trips have taken students to new places, both domestically and interna-tionally, and introduced them to service. Our trips have included:

• Appalachian Mountain: Rural Poverty• Turtle Island: Environmental Issues• Washington, D.C.: Hunger and Home-lessness• New Orleans: Housing and Disaster Relief• Atlanta: Urban Poverty• Dominican Republic: Affordable Housing• Honduras: Street Children• Jamacia: Rural Education• Morocco: Interfaith Exploration• Malawi: HIV/AIDS Orphans

We are amazed by our students, as they designed several of our new trips. Our newest summer break trip to Ma-lawi was designed by a current junior as a class project. We have also added new domestic trips to D.C. and Atlanta. Students have reported nothing but good experiences from alternative breaks so far this year!

-Evan Small

Alternative Breaks Program

Page 3: Alumni newsletter

Spring 2010 marked the beginning of the Downtown/East Burlington Express Route, helping to connect

445 students to service opportunities within the City of Burlington. Running four afternoons a week, the route was designed to meet the transportation needs of students serving and volunteer-ing in some of our community’s most utilized non-profits.

As transportation needs continue to look our greater Burlington community in the face, what was initially intended to support students is now meeting both student and community member needs with a total of 1,811 riders in the fall of 2011. This fall, we also added a stop at

the Company Shops Market, a new asset in our community. Increased student ridership can also be contributed to the fact that we had a record 52 academic service learning courses this year. These courses partnered with 79 commu-nity projects and service experiences throughout a range of disciplines.

Faculty have integrated the oppor-tunity to further expose students by taking a route tour and learn about local economics and some of the history of the areas on the route.

There remains no public transpor-tation system in Burlington and for routine riders this route has become a means to get to needed services or work,

as there is no charge. While it certainly meets only a small portion of need, it has made a difference in the lives of some.

While riding, students can see the reality of transportation needs as com-munity members utilize the service. On a recent tour, the real life needs of seeing a couple with three children manag-ing two strollers, plus bags of groceries bought at the Wal-mart stop was seen. After riding to their neighborhood near the Allied Churches stop, the man unloaded everything and got back on the bus to say, “This has been a Godsend. I do not know what our family would do without it.”

-Tammy Cobb

Downtown/East Burlington BioBus Route

The Campus Kitchen at Elon Univer-sity (CKEU) is part of a nationwide organization of 31 colleges and uni-

versities (and only 1 of 3 in North Caro-lina!) that utilizes a volunteer work force to provide student powered hunger relief.

Our MissionThe mission of The Campus Kitchens

Project is to use service as a tool to:Strengthen bodies by using existing

resources to meet hunger and nutritional needs in Burlington;

Empower minds by providing leader-ship and service learning opportunities to students, and educational benefits to adults, seniors, children, and families in need; and

Build Communities by fostering a new generation of community-minded adults through resourceful and mutually benefi-cial partnerships among students, social service agencies, businesses, and schools.

We currently provide 55-60 meals a week to the Good Shepard Soup Kitchen at the Allied Churches shelter. Our students resource, prepare and deliver these meals every week with most of the food provided by our on-campus food provider, Aramark.

Beginning this spring, we are branch-ing out further into the community. Not only are we are developing new relation-ships with locally based businesses to help our community help itself, but we are also planning more cooking shifts and seeking

additional outlet partners. This summer should begin our community involvement classes featuring basic culinary technique, as well as a farm-to-fork educational overview.

-Steve Caldwell

Campus Kitchen at Elon

Page 4: Alumni newsletter

EV!’s Awareness Council has expanded! With the addition of Oxfam

International and Sierra Club, we now have five awareness programs:

Sierra Club(www.sierraclub.org)

“Sierra Club is America’s larg-est and most influential grass-roots environmental organiza-tion. Inspired by nature, we are 1.4 million of your friends and neighbors, working together to protect our communities and the planet.”

Invisible Children(www.invisiblechildren.com)

“Invisible Children uses film, creativity and social action to end the use of child soldiers in Joseph Kony’s rebel war and restore LRA (Lord’s Resistance

Army) affected communities in Central Africa to peace and prosperity.”

Oxfam(www.oxfam.org)

“Oxfam is an international confederation of 15 organiza-tions working together in 98 countries and with partners and allies around the world to find lasting solutions to pov-erty and injustice.

Amnesty International(www.amnesty.org)

“Amnesty International is a global movement of more than 3 million supporters, members and activists in more than 150 countries and territories who campaign to end grave abuses of human rights.”

SGAC(www.studentglobalaidscam-

paign.org)“The Student Global AIDS Campaign (SGAC) is a US-based network of student and youth organizations commit-ted to the global fight against AIDS.”

The Awareness Council has been busy this year coordinat-ing letter writing campaigns, World AIDS Day program-ming, Oxfam Hunger Ban-quets, documentary screenings, and sustainability initiatives.

-Mary Leigh Frier

SafeRidesSafe Rides recently installed a new radio communica-tion system! Each of the 5 vehicles (3 vans and 2 cars) now has an installed radio that communicates with the central radio in the Kernodle Center. This system will improve operational efficiency by eliminating the excess time used dialing cell phones. We’re excited about our improved ability to accomplish our mission of providing safe travel to the Elon community.

Awareness programs grow

-American Red Cross Golden Heart Award (10th straight year for most blood collected during a drive)

-President’s Higher Education Community Ser-vice Award—Honor Roll with Distinction for the past 5 years

-Organization Awards and Inaguration Ceremo-ny 2012: -Outstanding Service to Students: Mary Leigh Frier -Student Organization Member of the Year: Andrew Somers -Dr. J Earl Danieley Leadership Award: Katie Kenney

Congratulations, EV!

Page 5: Alumni newsletter

Stay up to date with Elon Volunteers! and the Kernodle Center!Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/EV-Elon-Volunteers/29433375171 Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/ElonVolunteers YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/elonvols/featured

The Kernodle Center’s Wonderful Staff!

MaryMorrison

Mary Leigh Frier

Tammy Cobb

Steven Caldwell

LibbyOtos

EvanSmall