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Veterans

Service is in our DNA. It compelled our founding patron to lead the nation's first army and first elected government. It compels us to champion your hopes and dreams.

Our Commitment To You

缅北强奸鈥檚 participation in the Yellow Ribbon Program can mean an outstanding tuition-free liberal arts education for you or your eligible dependents. And our small community means big support for navigating admissions, financial aid, academics, and career guidance.

It鈥檚 easy to say that we honor your service to our country; we find action is more meaningful. That is our institutional commitment to your future or to the future of those you love.

 

Students in Action: Stories from our Veterans and their families

spencer mardis

As the son of an Air Force officer, Spencer Mardis 鈥18 has lived in three countries (Germany, Japan, and America) and studied in six different schools before heading for college. His area of interest is criminology, so he鈥檚 considering a major in behavioral neuroscience and biology.

He was set to enroll at the University of Delaware until he and his parents had a chance encounter with Satyajit Dattagupta, vice president of enrollment management, on a snowy February Sunday morning while they were strolling the campus.

鈥淗e just dropped everything and spent several hours talking with us, showing us around the campus, telling us his story,鈥 Chris Mardis says. 鈥淭his tells us they do things differently here, and it鈥檚 not just student-to-teacher ratios, it鈥檚 the way they do everything. And since then that has been underscored and corroborated with every encounter we鈥檝e had, whether it鈥檚 the business office or the financial aid office.鈥

That same enthusiasm came through when the three of them sat in on a biology class with Aaron Krochmal, associate professor of biology. 

鈥淲hen we came out I said, 鈥業 want to be in that class!鈥 鈥 says Emily Mardis, a speech pathologist. 鈥淲hat energy he had, what passion! What fun!鈥

Emily says it鈥檚 easy to connect to people鈥攕tudents, faculty, and staff鈥攐n campus. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a lot of the magic.鈥 

Spencer says although his parents attended larger universities as undergrads, he always preferred a smaller school, and 缅北强奸 was ideal. He鈥檚 still contemplating what clubs to join as he decides on his major; right now, he鈥檚 thinking about the College Democrats and the Psychology Club. 

ryan manning

 It鈥檚 pretty clear that Ryan Manning 鈥17 has a free-range kind of mind, one that鈥檚 precise enough to AP test out of general chemistry and, at the same time, creative enough to love the beautiful challenge of writing poetry. These diverse interests and skills, and 缅北强奸鈥檚 Yellow Ribbon Program, are what drew him to Chestertown. And so far, he says, it鈥檚 been everything he鈥檇 hoped.

鈥淭here are just so many opportunities for me here,鈥 says Manning, who is a double major in English and chemistry with a minor in creative writing. 鈥淚 really love how small 缅北强奸 is. I know that bothers some people, but I love it. I鈥檝e had an excellent first two semesters.鈥

Manning comes from a military family. His father enlisted in the Navy, ultimately becoming a nuclear engineer and serving as a Navy submariner. Growing up in Georgia, Manning moved with his family to Howard County, Md., when his dad took a job at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab after leaving active service.

When the time came to look at colleges, he sought places that had strong programs in English and chemistry, and family friends suggested he add WC to his long list of schools. During his visits to the campus, he said, 鈥渆very time I talked to any of the faculty members or the students, everyone I met was just fantastic. And over the summer I came out for a creative writing seminar at the Lit House with Jehanne Dubrow, and then first semester I had her as my creative writing professor. It鈥檚 probably my favorite class I鈥檝e ever taken in my whole educational career.鈥

Manning is spending his first college summer as an intern at the Rose O鈥橬eill Literary House, where Dubrow is director, helping launch the Lit House鈥檚 new publication, Cherry Tree. 鈥淲e鈥檙e learning how to use InDesign, the layout and publications program that professional designers use to make PDFs, books, magazines, etc.,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really interesting stuff, and we鈥檝e been encouraged to work on our own independent projects in the program as we learn to use it. I鈥檓 loving it so far, and I鈥檓 excited to learn more about the publication we鈥檒l be working on.鈥

Manning says his father鈥檚 veteran鈥檚 benefits 鈥渁re the only reasons I can even remotely consider coming here. He鈥檚 been able to provide me with an opportunity I otherwise wouldn鈥檛 have had.鈥

joe miloshevsky

For the record, Joe Miloshevsky 鈥15, really 鈥渄espised鈥濃攈is word鈥 high school. So much so that he decided joining the Army to learn how to be a diesel mechanic would be his best choice for the future.

But it was during those six years and eight months spent as a diesel mechanic in the Army, based mainly in Germany but also through several deployments in Iraq, when the New Jersey native realized he wanted something more. When he returned to the States, he sought a college education, and through a series of events, he matriculated at 缅北强奸 as a sophomore.

鈥溍灞鼻考 had a major in what I thought I wanted to do, which was a dual degree in engineering and physics,鈥 Miloshevsky says. He enrolled in that major, then shifted to computer science with a minor in math as his focus changed. His transition back into the academic world was eased by attending Chesapeake College for a year, where he got most of his basic classes out of the way and regained an appreciation for school.

But he also says that 缅北强奸 has been extremely supportive as an institution as he has made his way here. 鈥淲hat I love about this school is the small class sizes. My computer science course I think we have seven students. It鈥檚 lovely because it鈥檚 so easy to communicate with the teacher.鈥

As a 29-year-old, he says it can be a little awkward in classes with students ten years younger. He鈥檚 working with other student veterans to develop a club on campus for veterans, so that they could study together, share experiences, and support one another.

鈥淨uite frankly, we鈥檙e vets鈥攚e鈥檙e designed to have camaraderie, and I think it would help us along a great deal to have a group,鈥 he says.

jeffery harrington

Jeffrey Harrington M 鈥11 鈥14 has been around the world with the U.S. Marine Corps, but it鈥檚 here in Chestertown where he is indulging one of his true passions鈥攍ifelong learning. Already a 缅北强奸 alum after earning his master鈥檚 degree in history in 2011, Harrington is nearly finished his second master鈥檚, this one in psychology. And that doesn鈥檛 include the EdD in education he already obtained while he was on active duty.

鈥淚鈥檓 a big believer in education, and I didn鈥檛 want to leave those benefits just sitting out there and not being used,鈥 says Harrington. 鈥淭his is really the first college experience I鈥檝e had in 30 years, because I was always at a duty station and I鈥檇 try to go to night classes and put it together.鈥

Harrington spent 25 years with the Marines before retiring and settling in Chestertown in 2006. With his background in sociology and public administration, he served as everything from a paralegal to an embassy guard over the years. After retiring from the Corps, he took a job on Kent Island working for a defense contractor, providing computer-based training and education for the Corps鈥 Center for Advanced Operational Cultural Learning.

After a bit he decided to use his Post 9/11 GI Bill benefit to enter the College鈥檚 graduate program in history, 鈥渇or the sake of learning.鈥

鈥淎 lot of people say it鈥檚 a degree you can鈥檛 do anything with, and I was one of the ones who said that,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut now I would disagree. It makes you a more well rounded person and it forces you to think outside the situation. It just gives you pause to look for more information.鈥

A member of Omicron Kappa Delta, the National Leadership Honor Society, Harrington says he feels that the WC鈥檚 quiet nature and beautiful campus invites personal growth and reflection, helpful particularly to veterans. Still, he says, they have to immerse themselves to get the most out of the education.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e older and more mature and they sort of get it when I say, you get out of the place what you put into it. This place is not here to give you anything unless you鈥檙e willing to take what it is they want to give you. You can come here with a chip on your shoulder that you have all this life experience, which is true, but there鈥檚 so much more to learn.鈥

鈥淭he best investment you can make is in yourself,鈥 Harrington says. 鈥淓ven when I was a 29-year-old working on my undergrad with three kids, the most important thing was finishing, because it opened doors. You need a key to open the door, and this is where you get the key.鈥

emily hoyle

Emily Hoyle 鈥14 had never visited 缅北强奸 until the week before her freshman year began and she arrived for the volleyball pre-season. That鈥檚 because it鈥檚 about 8,000 miles as the goose flies to Chestertown, Md., from Guam, where she attended high school.

 鈥淲hen I first came I was a little wary of how isolated it was,鈥 Hoyle says. 鈥淒riving through all those cornfields the first time made me think, what did I do? But it ended up really well, and I probably wouldn鈥檛 be going where I鈥檓 going and doing what I鈥檓 doing if I hadn鈥檛 come here.鈥

Where the double major in political science and philosophy is going next is George 缅北强奸 University Law School, on a full scholarship. Hoyle says the active engagement in her classes, 鈥渢hat dynamic of not just being talked to but having open discussions,鈥 and the way in which she learned to think critically and analytically prepared her extremely well for the LSAT. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also a big part of law, analyzing everything, and it鈥檚 also why I鈥檓 confident about pursuing that route. It鈥檚 something I know I can be good at.鈥

This wasn鈥檛 always the case, she says. The experiences she gained at 缅北强奸, including internships with 1st District congressional candidate John LaFerla and a legislative internship with state Sen. Nancy King, helped hone her ambition to study law.

鈥淗ere, with so many opportunities thrown at me, I have become a lot more focused. I never thought I would go to law school when I was in high school, because I didn鈥檛 feel like I was cut out for it. But here I realized that I could do it, and I wanted to, and I have much more concrete goals.鈥

So how did Hoyle end spending her teen years on a 200-square-mile island in the middle of the world鈥檚 biggest ocean? Stationed in Guam, her father serves as a criminal investigator for the Coast Guard, working cases including environmental violations and human trafficking. His career has provoked her interest in the law, and it also funded her education at WC through his veteran鈥檚 benefits and the Yellow Ribbon Program.

鈥淚 know I never would have been able to come here if I hadn鈥檛 had it,鈥 Hoyle says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 make a lot of money being in the military, so I鈥檓 really thankful. And I think he鈥檚 really happy, because he never really got an education other than what he鈥檚 doing now, so he鈥檚 really happy to see me have more opportunities.鈥

rachelle martinez

The military life runs like a deep river in Rachelle Martinez鈥檚 family; her mother is an Army medic who has served in Iraq, and her father served in the infantry in the Gulf War, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

So a military school for college was the first choice for Martinez 鈥14, until a blown knee and the surgery to repair it cost her that chance. It was her high school lacrosse coach, a 缅北强奸 alum, who suggested a different path. Amanda Arnoult 鈥05 encouraged Martinez check out WC as she looked at larger schools as well.

鈥淚 came here with my best friend, did my tour, met the lacrosse coach, and I went home that night and I said, 鈥業鈥檓 going to go there, Mom.鈥 I fell in love with everything here.鈥 Martinez majored in psychology, with minors in philosophy, and justice, law, and society. A lacrosse team goalie, she earned the 2012 most-improved player award after making her first career start against NCAA tournament team Montclair State and getting the win.

The College鈥檚 contribution to the Yellow Ribbon Program was the key to Martinez being able to pursue her undergraduate education here, she says. As soon as Martinez came home announcing that 缅北强奸 was her first choice, her mother immediately started researching how to pay for it. 鈥淏ecause 缅北强奸 has a Yellow Ribbon Program we were able to do it,鈥 she says.

After graduation, Martinez took over management at a Panera, a job that will help her fund graduate school to get her master鈥檚 degree in clinical psychology.  

oliver barnyak

Oliver Barnyak 鈥09 started his college career at WC in the fall of 2004 as an economics major, right after finishing up his basic training with the Army National Guard as a reconnaissance specialist. Then, in the fall of 2005, Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast, and the Guard called Barnyak up to go to New Orleans.

鈥淭he night before I left I got a phone call from [缅北强奸] President Tipson asking, 鈥榃hat do you need from us?鈥 I had already talked with my professors and everything was cool. But that was kind of nice.鈥

He spent about a month in New Orleans, then returned to WC to continue pursuing his studies until the spring of his junior year, when he learned he was going to be deployed to Iraq in 2007-08鈥攈is entire senior year. After nine months overseas, he returned to WC in the fall of 2008 and graduated in spring 2009 with a degree in economics. In spring of 2014, he was accepted to the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College.

Always, he says, he had solid support from WC faculty and staff to make the transitions as painless as possible. The College鈥檚 small community becomes a big benefit for veterans, he says. 鈥淵ou develop a rapport and relationship with your professors and staff, and after a while they know that you don鈥檛 come bug them with small stuff and stupid stuff, and sometimes they drop what they鈥檙e doing and help you out right away.鈥

There was no strong cohesion of veterans on the campus while he was in school, Barnyak says, but neither was there pressure to force his military experience to become part of his college experience. 鈥淚ntegrating them was something I wasn鈥檛 interested in,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd it鈥檚 nice that you have that choice.鈥

vernon gene davis

Vernon 鈥淕ene鈥 Davis III started his 缅北强奸 career as a full-time employee after finishing his service with the Army. A patrol officer with Public Safety for seven years now, he hadn鈥檛 really thought about pursuing a college degree until his boss, Director of Public Safety Jerry Roderick, and his wife encouraged him to consider it. After making the decision to matriculate, he met Associate Professor of Sociology Ryan Kelty, who has been his mentor through the entire process.

鈥淭hey saw something in me that I didn鈥檛 see in myself,鈥 Davis says. 鈥淣ow I鈥檓 aware of it. I didn鈥檛 realize I could be a good student, and that means a lot to me.鈥

Davis, who grew up in the area, joined the Army, First Cavalry Division, after 9/11. He already had his truck driving certification, since before he joined up he drove the Kent County recycling truck. So he signed up with that skill, and before long found himself in Baghdad.

鈥淢y main mission was convoy security between southern Baghdad and the international airport. So some days I was on top of the truck as a gunner, sometimes I was shotgun, other times I was driving,鈥 he says.

After a year in Iraq he was awarded the U.S. Army Combat Action Badge, and in May 2006 earned his honorable discharge. Two months later he started work on campus. 鈥淚 took off one uniform and put another one on,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is a good place to transition. You鈥檙e around good people here, everybody around you inspires you to better yourself.鈥

Davis is majoring in American Studies, going to school part-time, since he has a full-time job and a family. He鈥檚 also a certified self-defense instructor who teaches rape aggression self-defense classes on campus, as well as crime prevention instruction.

Davis has joined Kelty and fellow student-veteran Joe Miloshevsky in developing a veterans鈥 club on campus. 鈥淭he group is open to veterans and non-veterans,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nybody who wants to support veterans can be part of it as well.鈥

Davis is also part of the 100 Faces of War Experience, an online exhibit of portraits and words of Americans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. You can read his own story and see his portrait 

The Yellow Ribbon Program

The Yellow Ribbon Program is a provision of the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008 (GI Bill庐). Under this program, the act provides payment for tuition, fees, a stipend for books and supplies, and a housing allowance for qualified veterans who have served on active duty since September 11, 2001. Veterans who wish to be considered for this educational benefit must apply, qualify, and be approved by the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA). Once approved, veterans may apply to transfer the benefit to qualified dependents.

The VA will determine eligibility for the Post-9/11 GI Bill庐 (Chapter 33), and issue a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) which will advise the student if he/she is eligible to participate in the Yellow Ribbon Program.

缅北强奸 Yellow Ribbon is designed to cover the student鈥檚 tuition and allowable fees above the annual maximum benefit established annually by the Department of Veteran's Affairs. After restricted institutional, state, federal and Post-9/11 GI Bill Benefits are applied, the student's remaining tuition and fees are covered one-half by 缅北强奸 College and one-half by the Department of Veteran鈥檚 Affairs.

Funds are applied to net tuition and fees in the following order:

  1. State and External Scholarships restricted for tuition only.
  2. Institutional aid restricted for tuition only.*
  3. Post-9/11 GI Bill庐 Benefits
  4. 缅北强奸 Yellow Ribbon Grant and VA matching funds

*At the time of acceptance, a Yellow Ribbon eligible student may be awarded a merit scholarship. Merit scholarships are applied to tuition and fees. 

The combination of veteran's benefits, Yellow Ribbon funds and 缅北强奸 scholarships may not exceed the total cost of tuition and fees.

If a continuing student's Yellow Ribbon Benefits are exhausted, their previously awarded 缅北强奸 scholarships will be reinstated. 

Eligible Majors

Not all majors at 缅北强奸 are eligible to receive Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits. Please see the link at the top of this page for a list of majors that are eligible to receive Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits.

 

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