Nov 8, 2011 | Student News
In this edition:
- Need a helping hand this holiday season?
- Nursing information system
- Express advising days
- Veterans Day is November 11
- Don’t be sick for the holidays
- Upcoming student events
- “The Anatomy of Hate”
Need a helping hand this holiday season?
NMC wants to support your educational endeavor and brighten your family’s holiday. If you are enrolled in either NMC or a University Center program and struggling to support your family and stay in school, consider applying to NMC’s Giving Tree Program.
Students are invited to apply for support from the Giving Tree Program by completing the attached brief application (also available at S:\Resource Development\Public\Giving Tree Program Application). Completed applications must be returned to NMC Resource Development in Founders Hall on main campus by November 14, 2011.
Applications will be reviewed by a committee, with 50 families selected to participate. Lighted trees will be placed on each campus, decorated with “ornaments” containing the gift recipient’s information: man/woman, boy/girl, age, clothing size and interests/special requests.
NMC and University Center faculty and staff volunteers will be invited to select an ornament(s) and provide a gift. A gift collection site will be at each location. Gifts will be distributed the week of December 12.
Students graduating at the end of fall 2011 should already have their Application for a Degree/Certificate submitted to the Records & Registration Office. If not, get it in right away!!
Nursing information session
November 29, 2011, 4:00-6:00 p.m., Oleson Center, NMC’s Main Campus
Please join us for a Nursing Information Session for current NMC pre-nursing students on November 29th from 4:00-6:00 p.m. in the Oleson Center. This session will better acquaint you with our Nursing program, review admissions criteria and discuss program policies and procedures. If you are interested in attending the Nursing Information Session please complete the registration form available on the Advising Center webpage (www.nmc.edu/advising). Space is limited to the first 100 students that RSVP electronically on the Advising Center website. A confirmation of your registration will be sent to your NMC email.
Express advising days
Express Advising is available on the following dates in Osterlin 118:
Tuesday, November 8: 12:30 p.m. – 3 p.m.
Friday, November 11: 8 a.m.–3 p.m.
Veterans Day is Friday, November 11
Since 1919, our nation has collectively paused on November 11 to honor all those who have served in the U.S. armed forces. On behalf of all faculty and staff this Veterans’ Day, I’d especially like to thank and recognize the 163 veterans currently enrolled here at NMC, as well as those among our faculty and staff who have served.
Our CIT and Maritime programs have the greatest concentration of veterans. In fact, more than a quarter of current Maritime cadets are veterans.
Beyond the individuals themselves, our campus is enriched by veterans. Under the leadership of Jim Press in the history department, NMC students have been part of the national Veterans History Project, recording the oral histories of veterans, for several years. The NMC Foundation also is honored to steward and award two scholarships for veterans or the descendants of veterans.
We owe much to these men and women willing to serve and sacrifice for their fellow citizens. On Veterans’ Day, please join me in taking a moment to say thank you.
Don’t be sick for the holidays
Every year there is an increase in flu cases after Thanksgiving due to exposure to sick relatives at holiday celebrations. Be smart this year and get vaccinated.
Walk in Flu Shots for $15 in Health Services LB106
Upcoming student events
- Student Government is hosting a free bowling night at Lucky Jacks November 17 from 9 pm – 12 am.
- Wings of Wonder is an educational program on raptors (hawks, falcons, turkey vultures, etc.) that explains their physical attributes, natural environments, threats to their survival, and ways to get involved in their rehabilitation. Wings of Wonder features several raptors in person along with their personal stories. This event is in the Fine Arts Building in room 115 at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, November 15.
The Anatomy of Hate
Student Life is showing the documentary, “The Anatomy of Hate: A Dialogue for Hope” in the Milliken Auditorium at 7 pm this Friday, November 11.
This film reveals the shared narratives found in individual and collective ideologies of hate, and how we as a species can overcome them.
For six years the filmmaker worked with unprecedented access to some of the most venomous ideologies and violent conflicts of our time including the White Supremacist movement, Christian Fundamentalism as an anti-gay platform, Muslim extremism, the Palestinian Intifada, Israeli Settlers and Soldiers, and US Forces in Iraq.
By juxtaposing this verité footage with interviews from sociological, psychological, and neurological experts, and interspersing stories of redemption told by former “combatants”, the film weaves a tapestry that reveals both the emotional and biological mechanisms which make all of us susceptible to acts and ideologies of hate, and demonstrates how these very same traits make us equally capable of overcoming them…
The film will be followed by a discussion with the director, Mike Ramsdell.
This event is open and free to the public.
For more information on Friday’s showing, visit: https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=204136929656444&ref=ts
For more information on the film, visit: http://www.theanatomyofhate.com/
Oct 11, 2011 | Student News
Check out the latest edition of the NMC Student Update, which includes:
- Get ready to register
- Find out when you can begin to register for Spring and Summer
- Spring Semester 2012 Financial Aid
- Change for Summer Financial Aid
- Traverse Bay Area College Night is tonight
- Flu vaccines
- US Marines offer ROTC Alternative Programs
Get ready to register
Spring term registration starts in November. Are you ready?
- Watch your mail for a postcard with info about when you can register. Registration starts November 9 – 11 depending on how many credits you have completed.
- Check Self-Service for any “holds” you’ll want to clear up before registration.
- Contact your assigned academic advisor to make an appointment now. A list of advisors can be found at nmc.edu/spring.
- Express Advising is available on the following dates in Osterlin 118:
- Fri, November 4: 11:00 a.m.–4 p.m.
- Mon, November 7: 12:30 p.m.–4 p.m.
- Tues, November 8: 12:30 p.m.–3 p.m.
- Fri, November 11: 8 a.m.–3 p.m
Contact the Advising Center in Osterlin 118 for help, or call (231) 995-1040.
Find out when you can begin to register for Spring and Summer
Students can see your first available time to register for Spring and Summer, by logging into Self-Service, then click Register, and then Select a Semester.
Spring Semester 2012 Financial Aid
We typically award financial aid for Fall and Spring Semesters at the beginning of the aid year. If you already have Financial Aid in place, you do not have to reapply for Spring Semester. If you did not attend Fall Semester, we will automatically package financial aid for Spring and Summer Semesters. Check your Self-Service for the status of your financial aid before contacting our office if you have questions.
Change for Summer Financial Aid
In order to continue Pell Grant at current funding levels during the academic year, congress has eliminated the Year Round Pell Grant Program that was in effect Summer Session 2011. Pell Grant recipients who attend school full time in the Fall Semester 2011 and Spring Semester 2012 will not have any Pell Grant eligibility for Summer Session 2012. Pell Grant recipients who do not attend full time in the Fall and Spring Semesters may have limited Pell Grant eligibility left for the Summer Session. If you plan to attend classes during Summer Session, it is recommended that you plan your finances well in advance. Funding for Summer Session is extremely limited and many students must rely on alternative loan options to attend Summer Session classes.
Traverse Bay Area College Night is tonight
Area high school students and parents are invited to meet with representatives from more than 50 colleges and universities at the annual Traverse Bay Area College Night, to be held from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, October 11, at the Hagerty Center on NMC’s Great Lakes Campus, 715 E. Front Street, Traverse City.
As part of the event, two financial aid seminars will be held, at 7 p.m. and 8 p.m.
NMC’s Great Lakes Maritime Academy, in partnership with the Traverse Bay Area Intermediate School District (TBAISD), is sponsoring the event. More than 1,000 area students and parents from 50 surrounding secondary schools are expected to attend.
Flu vaccines
Flu Vaccine Clinic for Culinary and Maritime students at GL231 on Wednesday, Oct.12th from 1:30pm to 3:30pm
Flu Vaccine Clinic for all students at Student Health Services Tuesday, Oct. 13th from 12pm to 2pm
Cost $15
US Marines offer ROTC Alternative Programs
The United States Marines offer two ROTC-alternative programs: Platoon Leaders Class (PLC), designed for freshmen through juniors in college and Officer Candidate Course (OCC) for seniors and graduates. Both programs offer leadership training and the opportunity to accept a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Marine Corps. For details about each program, visit http://www.marineofficer.com or contact First Lieutenant Marcus Carlstrom, USMC Officer Selection Officer, East Lansing, (517) 351-5515.
Oct 24, 1018 | Intercom, Student News
October 24, 2018
A quartet of NMC student entrepreneurs won the top prize at TC New Tech’s October Pitch Night, bringing their product another step closer to market and bolstering the college’s reputation as an innovation incubator.
Hybrid Robotics, comprised of four students in NMC’s engineering technology and marine technology programs, was the crowd’s “clear favorite” at the October 2 event, said Russell Schindler (on the left), founder of TC New Tech. In a Traverse City version of the Shark Tank TV show, they competed against four other companies seeking the $500 prize decided by a live audience vote at the City Opera House.
Each company got five minutes to pitch their idea and responded to five minutes of questions.
CEO Matt Goddard (second from left) co-presented their innovation, an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) capable of floating and deploying a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) into the water. The students built it in an engineering technology class last spring semester by customizing an off-the-shelf drone with everything from unique parts manufactured in the college’s 3-D printers to foam balls from JoAnn Fabrics. They are now refining the unit and concept.
“We’re trying to make a hybrid platform for the marine inspection industry,” Goddard said. “All this is proof of concept and we’re trying to get a production model by early next year.”
The $500 prize won’t get them there, but Schindler said Hybrid Robotics walks away with more than that one check.
“They now have bragging rights. They won the competition. It’s kind of an endorsement of their product, that they’re on the right track and deserve a second look by a serious investor.”
Goddard confirmed he and his colleagues, Ryan Mater, Clayton Harbin and Aaron Bottke have had such conversations since, but couldn’t reveal details.
Hybrid Robotics is now shaping up to be the second viable company to emerge from NMC’s Maker Space. Begun in 2014 at the Parsons-Stulen Building, the Maker Space offers both a place and a process for team-based, project learning that, when evolved to its highest level, can turn students into entrepreneurs. Interactive Aerial, a Traverse City company that specializes in drone inspections of interior, confined spaces, is the first.
“We wouldn’t have been able to build this without the support of NMC,” Mater told college trustees at an August presentation of the drone.
Instructor Keith Kelly (above), who taught the class in which the Hybrid Robotics team formed and developed their first unit, wants to see more.
“How can we make the transition with these teams from the college classrooms into startups?” Kelly asked. “That’s really the exciting stuff.”