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5 Mooseheart Grads at NIU All Fine; 2 Come Home to Discuss

Arturo Fernandez (left) and Nic Grasty spoke to Mooseheart students less than a week after the shooting at Northern Illinois University. Both attend NIU, along with three other Mooseheart grads. All were unharmed in the Feb. 14 shooting.
> When word that a gunman had opened fire in a Northern Illinois University classroom made bulletins on Feb. 14, five Mooseheart graduates found themselves in attendance at a college that was suddenly front-page news all over the world.
DeKalb-based NIU sits 25 miles west of Mooseheart and has hosted scores of graduates from the Child City. In 2007-08, there are five Mooseheart graduates at NIU: Arturo Fernandez, Nic Grasty, Katie Morones, Danny Anderson and Nick Diaz.
Though none of the Mooseheart graduates were in the Cole Hall auditorium that day, they were all touched by the events of the Valentine’s Day shooting in which five students were killed and 18 more were injured.
Grasty and Fernandez, both freshmen at NIU, returned to Mooseheart during NIU’s unscheduled weeklong break the week after the shooting, to discuss the events of that day as well as their experiences so far in college.
Fernandez said he was in his dorm room and about to go to class when news of the shooting spread across campus.
“We had to stay in our dorm rooms,” Fernandez said. “We had to stay there because they locked down the campus when the shooting happened.”
Grasty was driving back to campus and encountered a traffic jam. Initial thoughts of a normal traffic disruption soon changed as the reality of the day’s events emerged.
“It was hard getting through to people because the phone lines were busy as people called their parents and their friends,” Grasty said. “It was really scary learning there was a shooting on our campus and we didn’t know, for awhile, where he was or if there was more than one shooter.”
As events transpired, there was just one shooter, and he went on a 10-minute rampage in one lecture hall on the DeKalb campus before turning the gun on himself. Those brief moments were harrowing for many on campus, who did not know what the outcome of the incident would be.
“Katie Morones was in class and they locked the doors because they thought the shooter might have been headed their way,” Fernandez said.
Despite the university’s efforts to electronically inform all students as to what had happened, there were still those brief moments when all was still unknown, and Fernandez said the scenes in his dorm were memorable.
“A lot of people were crying,” he said. “You saw a lot of people praying. A lot of people saw people who were injured.”
Fernandez has some words of advice for the current Mooseheart students to whom he spoke.
“Make sure you cherish everything you have and everything you do,” Fernandez told the Mooseheart students. “Cherish your friends--everything. That means the work you do in school. You never know what might happen.”
Grasty said the terror of Feb. 14 was a huge contrast to his time at Mooseheart.
“There’s a lot of structure (at Mooseheart),” Grasty said. “There’s not a lot of room for even things like fights to happen. People actually died at NIU.”
Grasty said he thinks about Mooseheart “all the time.”
“I think about the houseparents and the teachers here and all the effort they put in,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot of things from Mooseheart and I’ve learned to appreciate everything that was given to me there.”
Fernandez said his feelings toward the Moose and Mooseheart remain strong as well.
“I have a lot of respect for the Moose and what it represents,” Fernandez said. “They fed me and clothed me and taught me for seven years of my life.
“Whatever I can do to recognize this organization, I will do, because it’s a great organization.”
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