Fresh
traditional favorites include Loco
Mocos and combo meals. Easy to order
and a …
Love cooking? Interested in making your passion a
career? UH Maui College’s
Culinary Arts Program prepares students for the
culinary world.
Past Graduates have attained positions at 5-star
resorts and restaurants, opened independent businesses,
and have starred in cooking shows.
The following degrees can be earned:
Certificate of Professional Development (CPD)
Certificate of Competence (CO)
Certificate of Achievement (CA)
Associate in Applied Science (AAS)
Award-Winning
Culinary Arts
Program
Maui Culinary
Academy is an
award-winning
Culinary Arts
Program housed in
the beautiful 38,000
square-feet Pa‘ina
Culinary Arts Center
at the University of
Hawaii Maui College
campus in Kahului.
Instructors
integrate culinary
classes with
specialized
commercial
operations to offer
an intensive
learning
environment.
Students gain
practical training
in nine kitchen labs
and prepare for the
professional
industry by
operating several
food outlets. The
curriculum
emphasizes outreach
and field experience
through resort hotel
properties, local
restaurants,
agricultural
partners and
professional
industry support in
research and
development.
Where the advantage
of wealth may seem
unfair is for
students who are
marginal for a
particular college
or university and
need a lot of
financial aid. They
might not be
admitted over a
similarly marginal
student whose
parents can afford
to pay.
Geographical
Information Systems
The University of
Hawaii is now
offering an
Ecosystem Management
Certificate of
Competence!
The course is part
of a FAST TRACK
program that enables
you to complete all
of the required
courses in just one
semester! Geographic
Information Systems
are software systems
and strategies used
to compile and
present data in a
visual form.
Students Compete at
the ASME IShow
The ASME IShow, has
been inspiring
students to be
product innovators
and entrepreneurs
for the past nine
years, provides
teams of graduate
and undergraduate
students the
experience of
technology-product
commercialization. A
panel of judges will
select the most
innovative and
practical ideas,
awarding the top 3
winners more than
twenty grand in seed
funds as well as
some recognition
from people in the
industry. The IShow
is supported by the
ASME Foundation and
the
Mechanical-Engineering
magazine.
“Uji,” designed by
students at Tufts
University, is a
high pressure shower
head
that helps save
users water, energy,
and money by
changing from green
to red as users take
longer, less
efficient showers.
According to the
team, that reduction
in average shower
time pays for itself
in energy savings
versus a
high flow shower
head
after only seven
months in a home
setting, and three
months in a
university dorm room
where more people
use the same
showerhead on a
daily basis.
The Uji high pressure shower head (http://ujishower.com) lets bathers know when they are dawdling in
the bathroom by using an LED light that gradually turns from green
to red. Average shower time clocks in around seven minutes,
giving the user about a minute to finish up and rinse off.
Section 120 of The
Higher Education
Act, Drug and
Alcohol Abuse
Prevention, requires
that certification
of on-campus
prevention efforts
be made available to
the students and the
public. UHMC has a
personal support
counselor available
to provide substance
abuse education,
counseling, and
intervention
services.
Weapons Policy
The possession of
illegal and
dangerous weapons on
University premises
is strictly
prohibited. Illegal
and dangerous
weapons include, but
are not limited to,
firearms,
ammunition, spear
guns, explosives,
and dangerous
substances. Any
person found in
violation may be
subject to all
applicable state and
federal laws,
University policy,
and the Student
Conduct Code.
Should you suspect
or discover someone
on campus in
possession of a
weapon, contact UHMC
Campus Security
immediately.
Since 2003, public
displays of any type
of "replica"
firearms are
illegal; this
includes pellet,
air, water, and toy
guns.
Gambling Policies
In accordance with
the laws of the
State of Hawaii,
gambling is not
permitted on any
campus or outreach
educational center.
University of Hawaii
Maui College Student
Lounge General Rules
Be respectful of
others and the
Lounge. Comply with
Student Lounge
Staff’s instructions
and requests. Be
courteous during
events and refrain
from any activity
that is disruptive
to the event (e.g.
video games, loud
music, loud
conversations,
etc.). Clean up
after yourself,
including the
appliances that are
used in the lounge.
Students are
responsible for
all of their own personal
items. Vaulting,
standing, or jumping
on furniture is
strictly prohibited. If
furniture is moved
the furniture must
be LIFTED and not
dragged across the
floor. Furniture
MUST be returned to
their original
location after use.
Do not place your
feet or shoes on any
furniture, tables,
or chairs. Tobacco,
vapor cigarettes,
alcohol, drugs, and
gambling of any kind
is prohibited.
Student Lounge
patrons must comply
with the UH Maui
College Student
Conduct Code.
Strategies for adult
learners is a
workshop is geared
for adult learners.
Build confidence and
manage college
stress. This
workshop can make
college an exciting
and rewarding
experience. You’ll
find helpful
strategies to
balance family,
work, and school.
7
College Students Get
System To Beat
Roulette Wheel Win
$96,000
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2245&dat=19560726&id=x4YzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1-4HAAAAIBAJ&pg=2927,2707572&hl=en
RENO, NEVADA, June
14 - Officials
at Harold's Casino
said a group of 7
college students
from a University
devised a
roulette
system that has one
$96,000.
General Manager of
the gambling club,
Raymond Smith, said
the students started
working out their
system for roulette
on the first day of
June. They manned
the roulette wheel
at the casino around
the clock in 6-hour
shifts. They
wrote down the
winning numbers from
the roulette table
for several days
before betting.
The youths varied
the roulette numbers
they bet on but the
biggest bets were
placed on six,
eight, nine, ten,
twenty,
twenty-seven,
thirty-two and
thirty-four. A
$25 bet on a single
number was their
maximum amount.
Smith said it was
against the casino's
policy to name the
gambling winners. He
also said the
roulette wheel
involved lost a
total of $120,000.
The college
student's roulette
strategy was so
successful that the
casino employees
removed the roulette
wheel for
inspection, thinking
it must have a
mechanical defect.
But a check showed
no faults in the
precision of the
wheel. Smith
joked how wonderful
college education
can be for young
people.
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2245&dat=19560726&id=x4YzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1-4HAAAAIBAJ&pg=2927,2707572&hl=en
Here is an
interesting paper
titled:
Predicting the
outcome of roulette
that demonstrates
that even a very
slight slant in the
roulette table can
lead to a very
pronounced bias
which could be
further exploited to
substantially
enhance returns. The
first system relies
only on a mechanical
count of rotation of
the ball and the
wheel to measure the
relevant parameters.
By applying
these strategies
to a standard
casino-grade
European roulette
wheel, we
demonstrate an
expected return of
at least 18%, well
above the −2.7%
expected of a random
bet. With a more
sophisticated,
albeit more
intrusive,
system (mounting
a digital camera
above the wheel), we
demonstrate a range
of systematic and
statistically
significant biases
which can be
exploited to provide
an improved guess of
the outcome.
15 brilliant math
geeks who outsmarted
the system
is a list of math
geeks who’ve used
their computational
skills to make big
bucks in Las Vegas
casinos,
playing the lottery,
or on other forms of
gambling strategies.
Check Residency Status
You must submit the Residency Declaration form. It is used to determine your residency status for tuition purposes. If you do not qualify as a bona fide resident of the State of Hawaii, according to the UH regulations in effect at the time you register, you must pay nonresident tuition for your classes. Residency status will be determined at the time of application. You may be required to provide verifying documentation.
If you are a non-resident, you must pay a $25.00 application fee to complete your application. You will be prompted for payment after you submit your online application, or you can mail your check with your paper application to:
University of Hawaiʻi Maui College
Attn: Admissions
310 W. Ka’ahumanu Ave.
Kahului, HI 96732-1617
Questions? Call the UHMC Cashier’s office at (808) 984-3257