‘Incredibly rewarding': A look inside a New Jersey high school club dedicated to serving veterans
WEST ORANGE, N.J. (PIX11) — At this school, servicemembers have friends.
'Seton Hall Prep stands with our veterans,' said senior Graham Coakley, 'and we will always support our troops.'
More Local News
Seton Hall Prep School's Veterans Services Club is a group of dozens of young men who dedicate the time they have away from studies and sports to active duty and retired vets.
'I think it's just an incredibly rewarding feeling,' said senior Max Widmer. 'I haven't really found it anywhere else.'
'Over the years, we've worked with veterans, we've sent packages to veterans, visited veterans,' said club coordinator Vinny McMahon.
Coakley and Widmer are outgoing seniors and look back at all they've accomplished.
'We also did a lot of letter-writing, we did all throughout the year,' said Coakley. 'Veterans Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas, we wrote letters to veterans, sent them overseas.'
More: Latest News from Around the Tri-State
Recently, students in the club planted American flags all across campus, in a showing of support and pride ahead of Memorial Day.
'It would be great if more people did what they do,' said school security officer Thomas Ronnie, a Marine veteran. He says he's proud of all the students do, including their next gig: visiting the Lyons VA on June 5th. 'Lord knows there's a ton of veterans out there struggling every day to get through life after coming home.'
Mason Heskett is an up-and-coming senior and comes from a family of veterans. He will be taking the reins of the club, hoping it will grow even more.
'I want them to know that it's very important to look after the people that have looked after us,' said Heskett. 'It really should be at every school, I don't know if it is, but I'd say Seton Hall is definitely one of the lucky few that can do so much for veterans.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Black America Web
an hour ago
- Black America Web
Black Culture, White Face: How the Internet Helped Hijack Our Culture
Source: We see the great white heist that is continuing to happen in the White House, but we missed another hijacking right at our fingertips. Black culture hasn't just set the tone; it's the creator of it. From fashion to food, music to memes, the soul of what we now broadly call 'American culture' is actually a siphoning system. A system that has modernized its extraction of Black creativity, voices, and flavor, only to repackage it, sterilize it, and serve it back to the world, sans credit or context. This modern-day cultural hijacking didn't start with TikTok or X, formerly Twitter. It began in earnest when the internet first offered Black millennials and Xennials the opportunity to be heard on their own terms. For the first time in history, young Black people were able to bypass traditional gatekeepers and broadcast their lives, their humor, and their hearts. Message boards, early YouTube, and social platforms like Blackplanet, MySpace, Tumblr, Facebook, and eventually Instagram became digital cookouts—public yet intimate gatherings where our inside jokes, slang, family dynamics, and generational quirks were put on display, not for mass consumption, but for communal oneness. Unfortunately, the cookout didn't stay private. Without the gatekeeping wisdom of our elders—you know, who taught us what goes on in this house, stays in this house—we threw open the doors of the culture, posting everything from grandma's peach cobbler recipe to the exact tone of our mothers' 'don't touch nothing in this store' warning. We uploaded our sacred, nuanced, and deeply specific experiences for laughs, likes, and validation, not realizing the internet has no context, care, or conscience—only consumers. And consume, they did. The vitality of the content and the influence of our voices fed the machine that doesn't care that 'Black people be like…' was an inside joke for overcoming code switching, while passing down cultural survival and the ability to stand with joy in the face of oppression; it just cared that it was funny and millions of others thought so too. So the shared experiences of a group of people who have always had to push through quickly became memes and stereotypes for the masses, turning what we used to affirm us into trends that started to erase us. Because here's the gag: when Black people say 'Black people be like,' it's a nod to our shared rhythm, our inherited wit, our ancestors, and our community codes. When white creators mimic it, it becomes Blackface, a costume or cosplay rooted in caricature, not kinship, and that is the real danger of giving them a peek into intimate Black culture. Cultural expression void of cultural understanding becomes cultural theft, and while the old adage goes, 'imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,' what we've witnessed is not flattery; it's flattening. It's a long-standing practice in white America's history of not assimilating or integrating, but absorbing and erasing. Extracting what's valuable, profitable, and cool, while discarding the people who produced it. But this isn't new. From Jazz, Blues, Rock and Roll, Hip-Hop, we've seen this play of culture jacking before; but the internet has accelerated, gentrified and commercialized the process in such a rapid way that it's becoming hard to keep up. In today's social media economy, white influencers lip-sync Black vernacular and at times even cosplay as being Black or bi-racial, all while amassing millions of followers and brand deals. Meanwhile, the Black originators are flagged, shadowbanned, or worse, copied without acknowledgment. Even our most sacred colloquialisms—terms like 'woke,' 'period,' or 'it's giving'—have been repurposed in white mouths and have now been rendered meaningless or mockable, with AAVE now being labeled as Gen Z slang. Our pain turned into punchlines as our cultural currency is laundered and redistributed, without us seeing a dime. But per usual, it's strategic. Hijacking Blackness becomes a way to eliminate the very markers that make us distinct, powerful, and proud. When whiteness wears Blackness like a costume, it is not trying to understand us; it's inherently trying to replace us. It's digital gentrification. Just as they take the neighborhoods our ancestors built and rename them while attempting to hush the very soul that brought them to the area, they've taken the internet blocks we made vibrant and claimed them as their own. What we are witnessing is the slow bleaching of the Black Internet, and it's time we admit our part in it, too. In our quest for visibility, we mistook exposure for equity, confused virality with validation, and uploaded everything under the guise of finally being heard, but it came at the cost of context and control. For those old enough to understand, we have entered an age in society where 'culture' is no longer tethered to the people who created it, and if we're not careful, our stories will be remixed, redacted, and retold by those who were never meant to tell them in the first place. So, where do we go from here? As a community, we have to become better stewards of our cultural inheritance. That means reinvesting in Black platforms, protecting our digital spaces, and not being so quick to make our culture content on their platforms so specific. That means teaching the younger generations that not everything is for everybody while reinforcing that some things still belong in the house. Because if we don't gatekeep, they will. So the next time you see a viral 'Black people be like…' meme or viral Black sound bites used by someone who doesn't look like us, remember this isn't just about jokes. It's about protection, because culture is not just what we create, it's what we preserve. And Black culture deserves to remain ours. SEE ALSO: New African American Dictionary: Homage Or Appropriation? When Outsiders Speak Freely About The Black Community SEE ALSO Black Culture, White Face: How the Internet Helped Hijack Our Culture was originally published on Black America Web Featured Video CLOSE


Chicago Tribune
3 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Today in History: EPA bans use of pesticide DDT
Today is Saturday, June 14, the 165th day of 2025. There are 200 days left in the year. This is Flag Day. Today in history: On June 14, 1972, the Environmental Protection Agency ordered a ban on domestic use of the pesticide DDT, to take effect at year's end. Also on this date: In 1775, the Continental Army, forerunner of the United States Army, was created by the Second Continental Congress. In 1777, the Second Continental Congress approved the design of the first 'stars and stripes' American flag. In 1846, a group of U.S. settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the breakaway state of the California Republic, declaring independence from Mexico. In 1919, British aviators John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown embarked on the first non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean. In 1940, German troops entered Paris during World War II; the same day, the Nazis transported their first prisoners to the Auschwitz concentration camp in German-occupied Poland. In 1943, the U.S. Supreme Court, in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, ruled 6-3 that public school students could not be forced to salute the flag of the United States or recite the Pledge of Allegiance. In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a bill adding the phrase 'under God' to the Pledge of Allegiance. In 1982, Argentine forces surrendered to British troops on the disputed Falkland Islands. In 1993, President Bill Clinton announced his nomination of Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2005, Michelle Wie, 15, became the first female player to qualify for an adult male U.S. Golf Association championship, tying for first place in a 36-hole U.S. Amateur Public Links sectional qualifying tournament. In 2017, fire ripped through the 24-story Grenfell Tower residential building in West London, killing 72 people. In 2018, a Justice Department watchdog report on the FBI's handling of the Hillary Clinton email probe criticized the FBI and its former director, James Comey, but did not find evidence that political bias tainted the investigation. Today's Birthdays: Actor Marla Gibbs is 94. U.S. President Donald Trump is 79. Olympic speed skating gold medalist Eric Heiden is 67. Jazz musician Marcus Miller is 66. Singer Boy George is 64. Tennis Hall of Famer Steffi Graf is 56. Classical pianist Lang Lang is 43. Actor J.R. Martinez is 42. Actor Lucy Hale is 36. Actor Daryl Sabara is 33. Rapper Gunna is 32.


Boston Globe
4 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Today in History: June 14, German troops occupy Paris
Advertisement In 1777, the Second Continental Congress approved the design of the first 'stars and stripes' American flag. In 1846, a group of US settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the breakaway state of the California Republic, declaring independence from Mexico. In 1919, British aviators John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown embarked on the first non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean. In 1940, German troops entered Paris during World War II; the same day, the Nazis transported their first prisoners to the Auschwitz concentration camp in German-occupied Poland. In 1943, the US Supreme Court, in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, ruled 6-3 that public school students could not be forced to salute the flag of the United States or recite the Pledge of Allegiance. Advertisement In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a bill adding the phrase 'under God' to the Pledge of Allegiance. In 1972, the Environmental Protection Agency ordered a ban on domestic use of the pesticide DDT, to take effect at year's end. In 1982, Argentine forces surrendered to British troops on the disputed Falkland Islands. In 1993, President Bill Clinton announced his nomination of Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg to serve on the US Supreme Court. In 2005, Michelle Wie, 15, became the first female player to qualify for an adult male US Golf Association championship, tying for first place in a 36-hole US Amateur Public Links sectional qualifying tournament. In 2017, fire ripped through the 24-story Grenfell Tower residential building in West London, killing 72 people. In 2018, a Justice Department watchdog report on the FBI's handling of the Hillary Clinton email probe criticized the FBI and its former director, James Comey, but did not find evidence that political bias tainted the investigation.