All News Releases

Alumni Company Captures Space Objects on the ISS

Satellites orbiting Earth facilitate every GPS ping, global communication, weather prediction and live stream. But when they drift off course or end their missions, there has been no way to safely move, repair or retire them until now. Kall Morris Inc. (KMI), an alumni-owned company based in Marquette, recently completed the first commercial demonstrations of its REACCH robotic system, which features mechanical tentacles that can safely grab and move objects in space, aboard the International Space Station.
REACCH/Astrobee Testing on the International Space Station (KMI photo)

Alumni Receive Outstanding Faculty Awards

Two Northern Michigan University alumni were selected as recipients of 2025 Outstanding Faculty Awards from Bay College in Escanaba for exemplifying a deep commitment to student success and professional excellence. Tammra Houseman, who earned her NMU bachelor's degree in elementary education with a special education endorsement in 1994, was honored with the Outstanding Full-Time Faculty Award. Cassie Callahan, a 2019 BSN grad, was one of two recipients of the Outstanding Part-Time Faculty Award.  
Houseman (from Bay College directory)

NMU, BMCC Sign Transfer Agreement

In an effort to preserve the Anishinaabe language for future generations, Northern Michigan University and Bay Mills Community College recently signed an articulation agreement that will allow students to complete a two-year associate of arts degree in Anishinaabe language instruction at BMCC, then seamlessly transfer to NMU for the final two years to complete a bachelor of science degree in Native American studies, with potential for a Michigan Anishinaabemowin K-12 teaching certificate. This creates the state's first pathway for teachers to earn such an endorsement, according to the Michigan Department of Education (MDE).
Bay Mills Community College President Duane Bedell is pictured center, between former NMU President Brock Tessman and current Interim President Gavin Leach at the late June signing ceremony on campus, which was also attended by representatives of NMU's Center for Native American Studies and School of Education.

Beaumier Center Brings Back Two Popular Exhibitions

The Beaumier U.P. Heritage Center at Northern Michigan University has brought back two of its most popular exhibitions for the months of July and August, “Remnants: Ghost Towns of the Upper Peninsula” and “The Polar Bears: U.P. Soldiers in the Northern Russian Expeditionary Force 1918-1919” are on display in the center's gallery in Gries Hall from noon to 4 p.m. Monday-Saturday through Aug. 30. Admission is free.
Photos from the "Ghost Towns of the U.P." and "The Polar Bears" exhibits.

NMU Announces Road Closures

Northern Michigan University will permanently close two dirt roads on campus—Neidhart and Norwood—located east and south of the Woodland Park Apartments, effective Wednesday, July 9. The area will eventually be restored to a natural state with interpretive trails and outdoor lab space as part of the university's Wildcat Way/Landscape Maintenance Plan. Initial work to develop a portion of the Woodland Park Garden concept will begin this week.
Area impacted by closure of dirt roads Neidhart and Norwood

Sassi Elected MCTE Vice President

Northern Michigan University English Professor Kel Sassi has been elected vice president of the Michigan Council of Teachers of English (MCTE). She is only the second person from the Upper Peninsula to serve in the presidential cycle in the organization's 103-year history. Her term began July 1 and will continue for the next four years as she progresses from vice president to president-elect, president and then past-president for MCTE. 
Kel Sassi

NMU Board Approves Tuition

Northern Michigan University's Board of Trustees has approved 2025-26 tuition and fee rates that support contractual obligations, healthcare costs and investment in financial aid. The cost of attending NMU also will remain competitive, continuing as second-most affordable among the state's 15 public institutions.

NMU Selected for National LER Accelerator Cohort to Advance Digital Credentialing

Northern Michigan University has been selected to join the inaugural cohort of the LER Accelerator, a national initiative focused on advancing accessible, interoperable Learning and Employment Record (LER) systems. As one of only 25 nationwide chosen for participation, NMU's project will help pioneer innovative approaches to digital credentialing that enhance learner employability, integrate academic and workforce competencies, and align with state and national workforce needs.
Brad Hamel, NMU

Tessmans Establish Student High-Impact Practices Fund

Northern Michigan University President Brock Tessman and his wife, Kristin, have personally experienced the life-changing benefits of student high-impact practices such as study abroad and undergraduate research. They have also watched talented students miss out on such opportunities for financial reasons. The couple made a $50,000 gift to the NMU Foundation to establish a Student High-Impact Practices Fund, which will support mini-grants for faculty to design experiential learning opportunities including internships, research, capstone projects and fieldwork experiences. The fund will also help to alleviate expenses associated with engaging in such experiences for individual students facing financial hardship.
Kristin and Brock Tessman

NMU Hosts High School Dance Intensive and North Coast Dance Festival

Northern Michigan University Theatre and Dance will host its Wildcat Performing Arts Academy Summer Dance Intensive for high school intermediate- to advanced-level dancers July 13-27. Participants will attend sessions led by prominent industry professionals from Giordano Dance Chicago, Ballet Project OC of California, a former Broadway touring company member and others. They will also perform alongside the two visiting ensembles and NMU CO/LAB Dance Company during the North Coast Dance Festival, which consists of a masterclass and two public performances.  
Dancers from Ballet Project OC (Orange County, Calif.) during a photo shoot on the black rocks at Presque Isle Park last summer. They are returning to the North Coast Dance Festival in July.

NMU, Memphis Theater Company Partner for Playwriting Competition

Northern Michigan University's Forest Roberts Theatre and Playhouse on the Square in Memphis, Tenn., have launched a new partnership that unites their two esteemed playwriting competitions into one “dynamic opportunity” for playwrights nationwide. The collaboration expands their commitment to fostering new voices and bringing original works to life on multiple stages. Marquette native and 1985 NMU alumnus Michael Detroit serves as executive producer at Playhouse on the Square, a professional resident theater company.
NMU Theatre and Dance logo and Playhouse on the Square logo

NMU Alumna, Faculty Coauthor Published Wildebeest Study

The largest remaining migratory population of brindled wildebeest in southern Africa serves as a cornerstone prey species for large predators. Yet it has been understudied because of its remote location in the Greater Liuwa Ecosystem in western Zambia and Angola. Northern Michigan University alumna Steph Szarmach, along with Biology faculty members Alec Lindsay and Katherine Teeter, worked with collaborators in Zambia to explore the wildebeest's genetic diversity and demographic history. They are among the coauthors of a recently published paper on the study's findings.
Steph Szarmach in Zambia at Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park (Victoria Falls) during her "Zambassadors" field studies course through NMU

NMU Offers Master's Degree in Speech-Language Pathology

Northern Michigan University will offer a Master of Science degree in Speech-Language Pathology. Students who complete a bachelor's degree can ladder into the master's degree program for advanced training to become skilled professionals in the field while remaining in the Upper Peninsula, where there is a strong demand for related services. Applications for the first cohort in summer 2026 will be accepted starting this fall through Jan. 15.
Isaacson (right) and a student in NMU's Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic

Visiting Scholar, Students Develop Jackfruit Products to Extend Shelf Life

While growing up in central Uganda, Justine Nakintu regularly ate jackfruit, the largest edible fruit on the planet, which grew in abundance year-round on trees surrounding her home. Beneath its bumpy green rind is a stringy flesh that yellows and sweetens to a tropical taste as it ripens. Unripe, it has a mild flavor and is used as a meat substitute in tacos and a variety of savory dishes. But because this nutrient-rich fruit spoils within five days of being harvested, Nakintu has spent her one-year research fellowship working with NMU students on two goals: creating jackfruit products with extended shelf lives to reduce waste and help Ugandan farmers; and mapping the best locations for cultivating the commodity based on suitable climate and soil conditions.
Student Sabrina Mata and visiting AAUW research fellow Justine Nakintu in the NMU Chemistry lab.