MIDDLETOWN, Pa. — This Veterans Day, a Penn State Harrisburg staff member and her son hope to remind the campus community of the importance of military service, they said, and the risks military members take every day to serve their country.
Amy Atkins, administrative operations manager for the School of Business Administration and a U.S. Navy veteran, will speak at the college’s annual Veterans Day ceremony. Her son, U.S. Marine Corps Capt. Corris Atkins, an H-1Z Cobra pilot, will share a pre-recorded message.
The ceremony is at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 11, on Vartan Plaza on campus.
Atkins served in the U.S. Navy from 1988 to 1992, advancing to petty officer 2nd class during her four years. She was 19 years old when she enlisted in the Navy.
“It was a really good choice for me,” she said. “The Navy gave me a great education. It also cultivated responsibility, maturity and, honestly, a love and appreciation for my country that I didn’t previously have.”
Atkins served as an aviation electronics technician — a field that at the time didn’t include many women. She was trained to test black boxes out of P-3 surveillance aircraft. A crew returning from a flight would report which modules weren’t working, and it was Atkins’ job to perform tests and identify components that needed to be replaced before the modules could be returned to the aircraft.
She enlisted during peacetime. But things changed drastically when, in 1991, she was deployed during the Persian Gulf War.
She was deployed first to Cubi Point in the Philippines, and then to Diego Garcia, a small British Indian Ocean territory where B-52 bombers would refuel. She said she remembers carrier groups coming into port at Cubi Point, turning what had seemed like a tiny town into a bustling hub working to resupply and support those who were headed back into battle. All of her training was being put to use, and it made her think about the importance of people stepping up to serve.
“It makes you realize as a young person … what if all these people didn’t volunteer?” she said.