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Two NIU alumni who served in Iraq shared their stories for a documentary taped in Watson Hall on Friday.
The documentary is a project created by a team of graduate students under the guidance of Jeffrey Chown, professor and director of graduate studies in the Department of Communication. The project is for a class, COMS 557 Documentary Theory and Practice.
“I find Americans tragically ignorant about what is going on in the Mideast,” Chown said in an e-mail. “Maybe if they listened to what these vets have to say, we would have a better informed public.”
The first veteran to speak was Marc Marin, a 2005 NIU graduate with eight years of experience serving in the U.S. Army.
Marin was questioned for approximately one hour about what he thought of the military before joining. He was also asked about his experiences in Iraq and elsewhere serving as a journalist, the stress and terror he felt and how he copes with the memories.
Marin said the experience of serving molded him into a man, but he also said he doesn’t think he would go back to Iraq.
“When I came back to America, I started appreciating every little thing way more than I ever did before,” Marin said. “The emotions of war didn’t really catch up to me until after graduation, so during my last five semesters of school, I was pretty well-adjusted to college life.”
Marin said his emotions regarding war typically cause him to have strange, recurrent dreams, and bad memories will randomly pop into his head and usually last about an hour.
“I never talked about my experiences to this extent,” Marin said. “[The documentary] lived up to my expectations and it was a chance for me to get things off my chest.”
The second interviewee – Mike Ippolito, a current NIU student and medic for the Illinois Army National Guard with eight years of service – spoke positively of his time in Iraq, but acknowledged the negative aspects of serving as well.
“Iraq was both the worst experience but the best experience of my life,” Ippolito said.
However, the positive experiences of saving lives, helping Iraqi citizens, reversing hatred toward Americans and developing friendships outweighed the negatives for Ippolito.

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Do you think the media coverage of Barack Obama's campaign has been over the top? |