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2007-10-28 15:57:14 · 6 answers · asked by phoenixflyer 2 in Politics & Government Military

can't i do it in college?

2007-10-28 16:01:27 · update #1

6 answers

whatever college you attend must have a NROTC program. doesn't matter where you attend, as long as it has a ROTC brigade. SOME colleges that do not have their own ROTC units have an agreement with nearby ROTC units where you can take the Military Science course with them.

2007-10-28 16:15:27 · answer #1 · answered by Mrsjvb 7 · 0 0

NROTC is in college, the other answere must have been confused. Often you can join NROTC at a school that does have NROTC, if yours does not but it is affiliated with a college that does.

These are the Colleges in IL that have NROTC

Illinois Illinois Institute of Technology
Cross-Town Affiliate:
- University of Illinois at Chicago (N)

Northwestern University
Cross-Town Affiliate:
- Loyola University (N)

University of Illinois (N)
Cross-Town Affiliate:
- Parkland College

This website will give you more information also..

https://www.nrotc.navy.mil/colleges.cfm

2007-10-28 23:07:58 · answer #2 · answered by ContainedCHAOS 5 · 3 0

Not necessarily. You would have to attend a college that offers NROTC but this could be anywhere. I believe you have to be a student at the school where you take part in NROTC but this doesn't have to be a school in the state where you are originally from.

2007-10-28 23:03:11 · answer #3 · answered by scoop 5 · 1 0

No, but you'll pay out of state rates in another state. I'd suggest you avoid the military, as their abuses are legendary (though only the most photogenic get the attention they deserve, and Congress only acts when there is enough public outcry).

My experience is: I was inducted and given a TS/SCI clearance with my adopted name, but told the military would use my birth name. I used my adopted name for civilian matters and was court-martialed because the military law is much broader than civilian (the ruling held that using a common law name, such as most married women use, as true is intent to deceive). To make it worse, my Social Security account was in my adopted name, so I couldn't get military medical care or a job for the nearly 2 years I was on appellate leave, or even change the name because Social security requires ID in the old name.

2007-10-28 23:08:54 · answer #4 · answered by ChicSpandex 2 · 0 4

Your high school should have this program available

2007-10-28 23:00:19 · answer #5 · answered by tebone0315 7 · 0 0

probably contact the school

2007-10-28 23:01:26 · answer #6 · answered by thiswarismadness 2 · 0 0

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