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Campus Connections, Top Stories, March 9

Legislators impressed with Midcoast CampusLegislators-Optimized

Legislators from the Joint Select Committee on Labor, Commerce, Research and Economic Development came away impressed following a hands-on tour and an informational update on the important economic development and job creation taking place at SMCC’s Midcoast Campus.

A group of seven lawmakers met March 4 at SMCC鈥檚 Midcoast Campus, where SMCC President Ron Cantor and Midcoast Regional Redevelopment Authority Executive Director Steve Levesque updated them on the developments taking place at the campus and at Brunswick Landing, the former Brunswick Naval Air Station where the Midcoast Campus is located.

Legislators were given a comprehensive tour of the campus and later visited other entities 鈥 Tempus Jets, Molnlycke Health Care, and MRRA鈥檚 Tech Hub 鈥 located at Brunswick Landing.

Taking part were Sens. Amy Volk, Andre Cushing, and Stan Gerzofsky, and Reps. Susan Austin, Dillon Bates, Ryan Fecteau and Anne-Marie Mastraccio.

After touring the Maine Advanced Technology and Engineering Center, they were given a preview of the Learning Commons and Health Science Center, which will open to students in the fall, and the residence hall facilities at Orion Hall, which will also open in the fall.

鈥淭his is impressive,鈥 Rep. Austin said.

鈥淪peed dating鈥 for Fire Science, EMS studentsFire-Science-Optimized1_small

In what could be called a version of 鈥渟peed dating,鈥 Fire Science and EMS students came face-to-face with potential future employers by meeting in rapid-fire succession with fire chiefs from across the region.

Students met with fire chiefs on March 4 and 5 for the sixth annual Fire-EMS Chiefs鈥 Roundtable at the McKernan Center. The event allowed Fire Science and Paramedicine students to meet with chief officers from fire and EMS departments in Maine, New Hampshire and Connecticut in 10-minute sessions, rotating from chief to chief while picking up tips on what fire departments are looking for in the hiring process.

This year鈥檚 participants came from departments in Brunswick, Lewiston, Portland, Scarborough, South Portland and Westbrook, Maine, Rochester, N.H. and Hartford, Conn.

Science students contribute to understanding of ocean currents

A device that SMCC released into Casco Bay last fall to help gauge ocean currents off New England has exited the Gulf of Maine and made its way into the Gulf Stream.

Marine science students in November launched a 鈥渃urrent drifter,鈥 which is equipped with a satellite transponder so its track and location can be measured in real time. The drifters are built by SMCC Marine Science alumnus Kara LaLomia and are monitored through the National Marine Fisheries Services eMOLT program.

This year鈥檚 drifter took an unusual track through the Gulf of Maine, indicating that the Western Maine Coastal Current was displaced west of its usual track. The drifter floated into Massachusetts Bay, out to Georges Bank and into the Gulf Stream. Marine Science Professor Brian Tarbox says this the farthest any SMCC drifter has ever traveled.

People can track the drifter by going to the eMOLT website at and clicking on the Surface Current Drifter Study under the 鈥淩esults鈥 link on the left-hand side of the page.

Basketball teams end stellar seasons

The men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 basketball teams鈥 quests for a national championship came to end in hard-fought, close games in the USCAA Division II national basketball tournament.

The men鈥檚 team fell March 5 to Penn State Mont Alto in the quarterfinals of the national tournament, held in Uniontown, Pa. The team ended its season with a record of 23-5 and earned the No. 1 seed for the national tourney.

The women鈥檚 team lost the same day to Penn State Lehigh Valley, also in the quarterfinals. The team ended the season with a 21-9 record and was the No. 6 seed in the national tourney.