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Veterans Alliance offers fellowship, structure

The University鈥檚 NROTC color guard performs at the 2015 Military Appreciation Day football game. This year's game is Saturday at noon, the 110th meeting with Hobart College. (人妻少妇专区 photo / University Athletics)

John Bissonette 鈥19 left the military seven years ago, but he still thinks of himself as a Marine first.

鈥淚t鈥檚 how I identify myself,鈥 says the 32-year-old data science major in the College, who works in the University鈥檚 IT department. 鈥淓very day, I think about my time in Iraq. And sometimes, I just need to talk to someone who shares my experiences.鈥

Christopher Nesbitt 鈥18S (MBA), a Simon Business School student who is on active duty with the North Carolina National Guard, says, 鈥淩egardless of the branch, we all have a shared experience. And it鈥檚 a level of connection not understood by most non-veterans.鈥

Honoring veterans

The fourth annual Military Appreciation Football Game kicks off Saturday, November 11, at noon against Hobart College at Fauver Stadium, featuring an appearance by the NROTC Color Guard. Parking and admission for the football game are free.

A NOTE: Due to expected unsafe road conditions in the early hours of the morning, the annual Veterans Alliance Run planned for Friday, November 10, has been CANCELLED.

Bissonette and Nesbitt have found a niche in the , a University Resource Group (formerly affinity group) created in 2013 that consists of active military and veteran members of the University community and their family members. The support network is open to students, faculty, staff, and alumni, and hosts social events throughout the year such as happy hours, panel discussions, a military appreciation football game, and a Veterans Day run.

Scott Clyde 鈥03, executive director of college enrollment, cochairs the Veterans Alliance committee with Nate Kadar 鈥10W (MS), director of student life at the . Clyde served 10 years in the Marines following college, as a fighter pilot who reached the rank of major. He says veterans who enroll in college after the military face a difficult transition. They鈥檙e often older, and the structure of military life is gone.

鈥淭here was a veteran who went to an Ivy League school,鈥 Clyde says. 鈥淗e was there studying, but he didn鈥檛 feel like he belonged. He said, 鈥業 feel like a weed among the ivy.鈥欌欌

Kadar says many veterans are searching for a way to connect with others who share their experiences.

The Veterans Alliance is distinct from the , established a year after the alliance. Run by director Pat Toporzycki and school certifying official Kate Ayers, the office is the first place veteran prospective students and their families visit while exploring academic programs and veteran benefit options at the University.

Rochester offers tuition benefits to veterans and their dependents through many programs, including , which includes the There were 47 veterans and 20 dependents using military benefits at the University during the 2016鈥17 academic year.

鈥淯nderstanding veteran educational benefits can be daunting,鈥 Toporzycki says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that veterans know we鈥檙e here to assist them so they can focus on being a student.鈥