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TERPCONNECTING
THE UNIVERSITY
OF MARYLAND
COMMUNITY VOL. 8, NO. 2 WINTER 2011
BAND’S HAWAIIAN PUNCH 5 I MANAGING WITH “GLEE” 9 I CAVEDIVING DEVOTEE 13
BigImpact
The Broad Reachof MarylandInnovation 20
Terp Cover WIN 2011 FINAL 1/21:Terp Cover Summer -FINAL 2/1/11 12:59 PM Page covI
Dear Alumni and Friends,
TERP
I have one of the greatest jobs in the world. Every day, I get to work on a dynamic campus, surrounded by energetic and engaged students and the best faculty and staff in the country. And every day, I am filled with pride at the important work being done here at Maryland.
In a special feature in this edition of Terp, we’ll take you on a tour of the university, college by college. From the work on wild-fires in the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences to fighting childhood obesity in the School of Public Health to the inspiring entrepreneurship programs in the Robert H. Smith School of Business and the A. James Clark School of Engineering, we are making a difference in our community and in our world.
It’s just this type of impact that makes Maryland one of the top public research institutions in the country. The Wall Street Journal ranked the university eighth in its annual list of Top Recruiter Picks—praising Maryland’s focus on teaching practical skills, its pipeline of graduates and its eagerness to forge corporate partnerships. Newsweek Education named Maryland to the 15th spot on its 2010 list of Most Desirable Large Campuses. And just last month, Maryland moved up to No. 5 on Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine’s annual ranking of the 100 Best Values in Public Colleges.
Between our groundbreaking research, student, faculty and alumni achievement and ever-rising rankings, the University of Maryland is on a roll. So how can we keep up this momentum? What can each of us do to support this great institution?
The answer is simple: Participate. Some of you may know that U.S. News & World Report’s rankings are determined, in part, by the participation rate of our alumni (the percentage of alumni who make financial
gifts to the school). The more donors we have, regardless of the amount of the gift, the higher our rankings will be.
I often hear people ask what their $100 can really accomplish. The answer is, a lot. We’re proud to launch a new program called TerpsChoice that pools together gifts under $250 and lets you vote on the cause that will receive the accumulated donations. In this way, small gifts will make a big impact for a worthy part of the university. (See pages 32-33 for more information.) I encourage you to show your support by using the enclosed envelope to make a modest gift—even $10 will make a difference—and vote for the cause of your choice.
As you enjoy this edition of Terp, I hope you feel the same sense of pride in our outstanding institution that I do every day, and that you’re inspired to participate so Maryland’s momentum can continue.
Go Terps!
Danita D. Nias ’81Assistant Vice President Alumni Relations and Development
publisherBrodie RemingtonVice President, University Relations
advisory boardJ. Paul Carey ’82 M.B.A.Managing Partner, JPT Partners
John Girouard ’81President and CEO, Capital Asset Management Group
Anil Gupta Ralph J. Tyser Professor of Strategy and Organization, Robert H. Smith School of Business
Beth MorgenChief Administrative Officer,Maryland Alumni Association
Danita D. Nias ’81Assistant Vice President, Alumni Relations and Development
Vicki Rymer ’61, M.B.A. ’66, Ph.D. ’83Teaching Professor,Robert H. Smith School of Business
Keith Scroggins ’79Chief Operating Officer, Baltimore City Public Schools
Lee ThorntonProfessor and Eaton Chair, Philip Merrill College of Journalism
magazine staffLauren BrownUniversity Editor
John T. Consoli ’86Creative Director
Jeanette J. NelsonArt Director
Monette A. Bailey ’89Mandie Boardman ’02Priya Kumar ’09Kimberly Marselas ’00Cassandra RobinsonTom VentsiasBrian Ullmann ’92Writers
Mira Azarm ’01Joshua HarlessPatti Look ’08Catherine Nichols ’99Brian PayneDesigners
Gail M. Cinoski M.L.S. ’10Photography Assistant
Ashley M. Latta M.A. ’11Christie Liberatore ’13Magazine Interns
Kathy B. Lambird ’94Production Manager
E-mail [email protected]
Terp magazine is published by the Division of University Relations. Letters to the editor are welcomed. Send correspondence to Managing Editor, Terp magazine, 2101 Turner Building, College Park, MD 20742-1521. Or, send an e-mail to [email protected]
The University of Maryland, College Park is an equal opportunity institution with respect to both education and employment. University policies, programs and activities are in conformance with pertinent federal and state laws and regulations on non-dis-crimination regarding race, color, religion, age, national origin, political affiliation, gender, sexual orientation or disability.
W11terp_depts_02.indd 2 1/21/11 5:00 PM
TERPwinter2011 photo courtesy of the DiamonDback; sculpture by patti look
feature
2 Big Picture PresidentLohonthego;bandlands$25Kpunch;newcybersecuritycenter;andmore6 terP online Labyrinthgardenvideo;collectingFacebook
fans;classnotes7 Ask Anne Evidenceofaninfamousbasketballgame;snowstormshutdowns;andmore8 clAss ActGleeLive!manager;advocateforAfricangirls’
education;andmore12 m-file Savingmuseums’silver;brain-controlledrobots;acavedivingresearcher;andmore16 PlAy-By-PlAyNewAD’splaybookforsuccess
17 sPotlightFootballintegrationrevisitedinplay18 mArylAnd live PreviewsofMarylandDay,“TheBarberofSeville,”Cupid’sCup;andmore32 in the looP
Socialgivingcontest;UniversityTeachingCenter;IncentiveAwardsProgram’s10thanniversary;andmore36 interPretAtions President’sinauguration
departments
20 making a world of difference
Maryland’s well known for its scientific impact on alterative energy, public health and national secu-rity—but that’s only a fraction of what we do. Our faculty researchers and alumni are pursuing creative solutions to many other important challenges, from treating leukemia to shrinking America’s foreign language gap to helping fight wildfires worldwide.
W11terp_depts_02.indd 1 2/1/11 1:48 PM
2 TERPwinter2011
bigpicture
Loh helps celebrate the field hockey team’s NCAA championship, a 3–2 double-overtime victory over North Carolina.
Loh with Student Government Association President Steve Glickman.
Wallace D. Loh arrived in November to begin his presidency at Maryland and has been off and running getting to know all of its stakeholders. He’s cheered on the
Terps at Homecoming, shared Ledo pizza with city of College Park leaders and residents and met with the governor. His goal has been to listen so he can best address the issues Maryland faces in an informed and collaborative way.
Students frequently stop Loh as he walks across campus to snap his photo and chat with him.
Loh with former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who spoke on campus in December.
One of his first responsibilities was to name a new director of athletics: Kevin Anderson. They chatted with Under Armour founder and CEO Kevin Plank ’96 at a football game.
Football and Field hockey photos by greg Fiume; glickman, o’malley and college park leaders courtesy oF the diamondback; testudo by lisa helFert; other photos by john t. consoli
W11terp_depts_02.indd 2 2/1/11 12:12 PM
TERPwinter2011 3
He greets “President Loh” behind the wheel of the Loh Rider float in the Homecoming Parade.
Loh with Testudo and wife Barbara at Homecoming.
The Lohs were among more than 500 people who gathered on the Main Administration Building steps for the annual holiday video greeting.
Loh talks with Chip Sollins ’82, past president of the Maryland Alumni Association, following a College Park Foundation Board of Trustees meeting.
Loh with Gov. Martin O’Malley during a visit to campus.
Former City of College Park Mayor Stephen Brayman ’88, M.Ed. ’95 (left) and current Mayor Andrew Fellows M.A. ’97 (center) meet with Loh at a community get-together at Ledo Restaurant.
W11terp_depts_02.indd 3 2/1/11 12:12 PM
michelle kim ’12, computer screen and dining hall photos by John t. consoli
big
pict
ure
Growthspurt
Visit the Farmers MarketThe grassy area between the Stamp Student
Union and Cole Student Activities Building
will be getting a little greener this spring with
the arrival of weekly farmers markets. During
a test run last April, the market drew a huge
crowd of people to Hornbake Plaza to peruse
local vendors’ fresh produce and baked goods.
The goal is to give students, staff and faculty
access to healthy, inexpensive fresh foods and
to get everyone thinking about what they are
putting into their bodies.
One-Stop Shopping @ wellness.umd.eduStatistics show the Internet is students’ primary
resource for health information. But before
they Google, they can check out the new UMD
Wellness website, which makes it easy to get
accurate information about health resources
and wellness programs across campus. The
calendar featured on the site shows an eclectic
array of upcoming events, such as group yoga,
athletic competitions and flu clinics. Other fun
elements include the wellness tip of the week,
healthy recipe ideas, a blog and Student Health
101—an online magazine tailored to students—
as well as links to national health news.
Real Ways to Get HealthyA new offshoot of the initiative, the Student
Wellness Committee, is promoting the many
dimensions of wellness and its effect on
academic life. In the fall, nearly 20 students
began working with Dining Services to
identify the healthiest options available in
campus eateries. It’s also hoping to launch
an educational campaign to reduce the
stigma surrounding seeking mental health
services.
T�he�university’s�Wellness�Initiative�is�working�to�make�Maryland�a�healthy�place�to�live,�work�and�play�through�new�services,�programs�and�events�that�reach�out�to�the�entire�community.�We’re�bringing�fresh�produce�to�campus,�providing�easier�access�to�health�resources�and�empowering�students�to�reach�out�to�peers�and�promote�change.
4
BIG DEAL
YEAH, WE’RE A
W11terp_depts_02.indd 4 1/24/11 11:33 AM
Mighty Sound of Maryland photo by ken rubin
Mighty Sound of Maryland Surfs onto TV Show
A cyberAttAck disAbles
millions of U.s. cell phones
and home computers, knocks
out east coast power grids,
closes Wall street for a
week and leaves govern-
ment officials searching for
answers. is this science
fiction or a realistic danger?
to help confront increas-
ing threats from cyberattacks,
campus officials launched
the University of Maryland
cybersecurity center, also
known as Mc2, which joins
already-established research
efforts with new initiatives
in education, outreach and
entrepreneurship.
“We want to take a holistic
approach that branches out
from technology to policy, busi-
ness, economic and behavioral
aspects of cybersecurity,”
says Patrick O’shea, profes-
sor and chair of electrical
and computer engineering.
O’shea, along with larry
davis, professor and chair of
computer science, will lead the
multidisciplinary center until a
permanent director is named.
A strong educational need
is driving the Mc2 initiative,
and the center will work with
academic departments to
develop new programs at the
undergraduate, graduate and
professional education levels.
davis says the university’s
strengths in cybersecurity
research will be aided by
a dedicated infrastructure
for providing proof-of-
concept testing for emerging
cybersecurity technologies.
He cites the success of
campus research in areas
like cryptographic protocols,
mobile device and wireless
network security, multimedia
security and forensics as
examples.
Plans call for Mc2 to
actively promote the uni-
versity’s entrepreneurship
resources. With several nearby
federal agencies involved with
protecting the nation’s cyber
infrastructure, the region is
attractive for both established
companies and startups that
Maryland can assist through its
entrepreneurship and incuba-
tor programs.
O’shea adds that the holis-
tic philosophy of Mc2—treating
cyberthreats as a rapidly evolv-
ing “disease” that requires
experts from multiple disci-
plines to treat the “patient,”
or critical systems—requires
bringing together faculty from
the school of Public Policy, the
college of information studies,
the robert H. smith school of
business and the college of
behavioral and social sciences
with colleagues in computer
science and electrical and com-
puter engineering. —TV
> thwarting cyberattacks <
An elite sqUAd is sent in to wipe out
the competition and picks up a $25,000
reward. the plot’s not nearly dark enough
for an episode of television’s new “Hawaii
Five-O,” but the happy ending played well
with the Mighty sound of Maryland.
the band’s take on the cop-show theme song won first place in cbs’s Marching
band Mania contest, locking up the cash prize and an October broadcast of its
performance.
learning an extra routine—even one that carried a chance at national
exposure—was no walk on the beach. band director l. richmond sparks said
students had just two weeks to master the music (a pep band staple since the
original show launched in 1968) and complicated formations including a tidal
wave and the phrase “book ’em danno” before the football opener against navy.
sparks then submitted a high-definition video of the halftime show for the
two-week online competition. band members appealed for votes on Facebook and
in classes. About 100 students gathered in the band’s rehearsal room to watch the
Oct. 11 episode of “Hawaii Five-O,” when Maryland was announced as the top vote
getter among 18 finalists.
“the place went wild,” says alto saxophonist kelly daniluk ’12. “it was the
most excited, the happiest, the proudest moment i have ever seen this band
collectively share.”
sparks hopes to use the $25,000 as seed money to replace his band’s 13-
year-old uniforms. the total cost for 300 uniforms will likely exceed $125,000. —KM
The Mighty Sound of Maryland steps out with its award-winning “Hawaii Five-O” routine at the Terrapins’ season home opener against Navy in Baltimore. To watch a video of the band’s routine, visithttp://tinyurl.com/UMD-hawaii.
umd:a big deal
TERP winter 2011 5
BIG
Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine ranked Maryland No. 5 on its 2011 list of 100 Best Values in Public Education, saying we offer a “stellar edu-cation at an affordable price.” Who doesn’t love a great bargain?
DEAL
YEAH, WE’RE A
A cyberAttAck disAbles
millions of U.s. cell phones
and home computers, knocks
out east coast power grids,
closes Wall street for a
week and leaves govern-
ment officials searching for
answers. is this science
fiction or a realistic danger?
to help confront increas-
ing threats from cyberattacks,
campus officials launched
the University of Maryland
cybersecurity center, also
known as Mc2, which joins
already-established research
efforts with new initiatives
in education, outreach and
entrepreneurship.
“We want to take a holistic
approach that branches out
from technology to policy, busi-
ness, economic and behavioral
aspects of cybersecurity,”
says Patrick O’shea, profes-
sor and chair of electrical
and computer engineering.
O’shea, along with larry
davis, professor and chair of
computer science, will lead the
multidisciplinary center until a
permanent director is named.
A strong educational need
is driving the Mc2 initiative,
and the center will work with
academic departments to
develop new programs at the
undergraduate, graduate and
professional education levels.
davis says the university’s
strengths in cybersecurity
research will be aided by
a dedicated infrastructure
for providing proof-of-
concept testing for emerging
cybersecurity technologies.
He cites the success of
campus research in areas
like cryptographic protocols,
mobile device and wireless
network security, multimedia
security and forensics as
examples.
Plans call for Mc2 to
actively promote the uni-
versity’s entrepreneurship
resources. With several nearby
federal agencies involved with
protecting the nation’s cyber
infrastructure, the region is
attractive for both established
companies and startups that
Maryland can assist through its
entrepreneurship and incuba-
tor programs.
O’shea adds that the holis-
tic philosophy of Mc2—treating
cyberthreats as a rapidly evolv-
ing “disease” that requires
experts from multiple disci-
plines to treat the “patient,”
or critical systems—requires
bringing together faculty from
the school of Public Policy, the
college of information studies,
the robert H. smith school of
business and the college of
behavioral and social sciences
with colleagues in computer
science and electrical and com-
puter engineering. —TV100 best values in public colleges
W11terp_depts_02.indd 5 1/21/11 5:00 PM
6 TERPwinter2011 labyrinth photo by john t. consoli; illustration by christie liberatore
terp online terp.umd.edu
click and choose: our bonus web con-
tent helps keep you connected to the university in ways that
will make you think, smile and cheer.
ask Anne
>
class notesWeddings, births, passings, promotions:
We want to hear about them all, and so
do your former classmates. So please
send and share your news!
terp.umd.edu/classnotes
impact on videoOur big feature in this issue is all about
how Maryland is taking on tough scien-
tific and social challenges. That’s also a
major theme in the university’s branding
campaign, which kicked into high gear in
the fall. Check out a sample of it in a short
new video at umd.edu/impact
peace is the word
The Garden of Reflection and Re-membrance, featur-ing a labyrinth and landscaped paths just outside of Memorial Chapel, opened Home-coming Weekend. Here’s your chance to take a virtual tour of this peace-ful new corner of campus and follow the fascinating story of its birth.
terp.umd.edu/garden
fan-ning the flame Are you a UMD fan on Facebook?
More than 37,000 alumni, students,
parents and friends have found our
page a great way to stay connected
to the university. In fact, our num-
bers have tripled in the past year.
But we always welcome more. We’d
love to be No. 1 in the ACC—our
competitiveness knows no bounds!
Can you help us top North Carolina
State and Miami? Visit us online at
facebook.com/univofmaryland
W11terp_depts_02.indd 6 2/1/11 12:12 PM
TERPwinter2011 7
ask Anne
Questions for Anne Turkos,
university archivist for
University Libraries, may be
sent to terpmag@umd.edu.Q.Isitunprecedentedforthecampustobeclosedforaweekforsnow?What’sthepreviousrecord?—Amy Alford ’05
A. I could not find a single reference to Maryland closing due to severe winter weather before the 1950s. This may be because a large percentage of students, faculty and staff lived on or near the campus. The great snowstorm of January 1922 did cripple transportation in and out of College Park, but The Diamondback did not make any mention of school closing. Likewise, The Diamondback did not report any classes cancelled for the major storms of February 1936, January 1940 or March 1942 (the famous Palm Sunday Blizzard). Looks like Snowmaggedon 2010 wins!
Q. I heard a faculty member in the College of Engineering developed the concept of a bar code. Is this fact? —Reg Traband, ’58, M.S. ’68
A. George J. Laurer ’51 is credited with this invention that radically changed the retail world. You can learn more about him on the Maryland Alumni Association’s Alumni Hall of Fame website at www.alumni.umd.edu.
>
Q. Are there any pictures of the halftime score (4 –3) of the 1971 basketball game between Maryland and South Carolina? —Dennie Masser
A. This is one of Maryland’s most memorable basketball games, which took place on Jan. 9, 1971, with a final score of 31–30 in overtime. It was a bit of a challenge to find images from the game that show the scoreboard, since most of them concentrated on the action (or lack thereof) on the floor. I am afraid that we did not find a scoreboard shot near halftime. The lowest score that we can see on the board is 3–2. There’s also an image showing the 1–0 score, with 16:01 to play in the first half. However, there is a shot in the background of the wild celebration on the court at the end of the game that clearly shows the final score.
photos courtesy of the diamondback and university archives, stuffed testudo by John t. consoli
W11terp_depts_02.indd 7 1/25/11 1:29 PM
photo by john t. consoli
Jacqueline audigÉ was only 8 when her parents chose her
over 13 older siblings to send to school two hours from their
home in cameroon. increasingly burdened by the lack of
emotional and financial support, she was forced to drop out
of high school.
Today audigé ’04, M.a. ’07 hopes to save girls in rural
cameroon from enduring similar hardships. she is founder
and ceO of aumazo, a nonprofit that seeks to stimulate
girls’ interest in education and develop secondary schools
with free tuition. The construction of aumazo’s first boarding
school is under way, and audigé hopes to welcome the first
50 students in Fall 2012.
“girls will feel valued and safe where they are,” she says.
audigé spent 10 years separated from her family to pur-
sue her education in the city of Mbanga because there was
no middle or high school in Bankondji, her native
village. Because of the distance, her parents could only visit
once a year.
such stories are common in the african nation, where due
to poverty, gender inequalities, cultural traditions and lack of
facilities, only 22 percent of girls are enrolled in secondary
school, compared to 28 percent of boys, accord-
ing to uniceF.
when audigé
married and moved to
the united states with
her family, she began her
education anew, culminat-
ing in undergraduate and
master’s degrees from the
university—all while raising five
children. “May 20, 2007, was the
best day of my life,” audigé says of
her last graduation day.
while earning her graduate degree
at the Robert H. smith school of Business,
she launched aumazo. she formed its name
from the “au” of her last name and the “Ma”
and “Zo” that begin her children’s first names.
aumazo was recognized nationally in 2010
in the great nonprofits’ Top-Rated list of women’s
empowerment nonprofits. she also was one of the “heroes
and ultimate viewers” on the “ultimate Favorite Things”
episode of “The Oprah winfrey show” in november. audigé
is auctioning some of the prizes she took home to raise more
money for the school. —MlB
Jacqueline audigÉ was only 8 when her parents chose her
over 13 older siblings to send to school two hours from their
home in cameroon. increasingly burdened by the lack of
emotional and financial support, she was forced to drop out
of high school.
Today audigé ’04, M.a. ’07 hopes to save girls in rural
cameroon from enduring similar hardships. she is founder
and ceO of aumazo, a nonprofit that seeks to stimulate
girls’ interest in education and develop secondary schools
with free tuition. The construction of aumazo’s first boarding
school is under way, and audigé hopes to welcome the first
50 students in Fall 2012.
“girls will feel valued and safe where they are,” she says.
audigé spent 10 years separated from her family to pur-
sue her education in the city of Mbanga because there was
no middle or high school in Bankondji, her native
village. Because of the distance, her parents could only visit
once a year.
such stories are common in the african nation, where due
to poverty, gender inequalities, cultural traditions and lack of
facilities, only 22 percent of girls are enrolled in secondary
school, compared to 28 percent of boys, accord-
ing to uniceF.
when audigé
married and moved to
the united states with
her family, she began her
education anew, culminat-
ing in undergraduate and
master’s degrees from the
university—all while raising five
children. “May 20, 2007, was the
best day of my life,” audigé says of
her last graduation day.
while earning her graduate degree
at the Robert H. smith school of Business,
she launched aumazo. she formed its name
from the “au” of her last name and the “Ma”
and “Zo” that begin her children’s first names.
aumazo was recognized nationally in 2010
in the great nonprofits’ Top-Rated list of women’s
empowerment nonprofits. she also was one of the “heroes
and ultimate viewers” on the “ultimate Favorite Things”
episode of “The Oprah winfrey show” in november. audigé
is auctioning some of the prizes she took home to raise more
money for the school. —MlB
alumniprofileclassact
Opening Doors
to Girls’ Schooling
Jacqueline Audigé holds photographs of prospective students and of women building the boarding school in Cameroon that’s she’s championed.
8 TERPwinter2011
W11terp_depts_02.indd 8 2/1/11 12:12 PM
TERPwinter2011 9photos courtesy of Maryland aluMni association and Jared paul
alumniprofile alumniprofile
travel 2011“�...�throw�off�the�bowlines,�sail�away�
from�the�safe�harbor,�catch�the�
trade�winds�in�your�sails.�explore.�
dream.�discover.” —Mark Twain
Classic Greek Isles
Sept. 19–Oct. 1
TourAthens,thecradleof
civilization,withguidedvisitsof
the5th-centuryAcropolisand
Parthenon.Spendsevennights
aboardtheHarmony Vgliding
throughtheazurewatersofthe
Aegeantoclassic
whitewashedislands.
Portrait of Italy
Sept. 24–Oct. 10
Experiencethebest
ofItaly’scountrysideandits
famedcities—Rome,Florence
andVenice.Immerseyourself
inItalythroughtours,art,wine
tastingandexploration.
Machu Picchu
Oct. 7–14
Traveltothemist-shrouded
mountaincitadeloftheIncasto
MachuPicchu,Cuscoandthe
SacredValley.ExploreMachu
Picchu,soremoteandinaccessible
thatitwasleftuntouchedby
theSpanishconquistadorsand
unknowntotheoutsideworld
untilHiramBingham
rediscovereditin1911.
Don’t miss the
chance to set sail,
explore, dream
and discover. For
more information, visit
alumni.umd.edu/travel2011 or
contact Angela Dimopoulos ’07
at 301.405.7938/800.336.8627
jaREd Paul ’99 wEnT from seeing the Smashing Pumpkins perform at Lollapalooza to managing them just over a decade later.
The former theatre major has built a successful career as a music manager, co-managing “American Idol” finalist and Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Hudson and “Dancing with the Stars” dancer and country singer Julianne Hough. This summer, he’ll repeat his role as manager of the highly popular Glee Live! tour.
He credits his Maryland experience with a large part of his transformation from ticket buyer to image maker, whether it was learning production and set design or balancing classes with a full-time job booking gigs at the Verizon Center in Washington, or his work with Student Entertainment Enterprises, or SEE.
“What I learned at Maryland—sound, lighting, PR and marketing in theatre—was key,” he says. “I learned that prep work is everything, especially in live entertainment. If you haven’t done your work ahead of time, when something does go wrong, it’s like a house of cards; it all comes down.”
The Rockville native began his foray into entertainment as a DJ for hire in high school, a business he brought with him to Maryland.
Paul and SEE helped bring George Clinton, Bob Dylan and the Fugees to campus.
Now a partner with Azoff Geary Paul Management, a division of mega-entertainment firm Front Line Management, Paul not only brings shows to stages, but he also helps to shape what is presented.
“It is challenging, even with a show like ‘Glee.’ What was most exciting was to watch a cast—who started out not as a true group since they read lines on set and recorded their vocals separately—become a unit,” says Paul. “When they walked out on stage they became New Directions [the television show’s glee club]. It was an amazing thing to watch.
“I love being a part of the creative process, working hand in hand with the artists,” he says. “If someone’s going to part with their hard-earned money [for a ticket], you’d better come with a lot of value.”
Creativity, a strong work ethic and the willingness to do just about anything, says Paul, make anything possible. The pecking order in entertainment is not as black and white as in other industries, he says. “Your first foray out of school could put you at the top. You could create a one-person show for Broadway or be the next big lighting director.” —MAB
from ticket buyer to image maker
W11terp_depts_02.indd 9 1/21/11 5:01 PM
Teresa “Terry” McTigue’s goal was to beat the
oil to shore.
The deputy director of the National Oceano-
graphic and atmospheric administration’s center
for coastal Monitoring and assessment and her
colleagues abandoned their offices just days after
the Deepwater Horizon well began spewing oil
into the gulf of Mexico. in two weeks, McTigue ’84,
who is an ecologist, and chemists and biologists
conducted tests on 62 sites from the Brazos river
in Texas to the Florida Keys to establish a baseline
of the level of contaminants in the water, sediment
and oysters.
along the way, the researchers hit up friends
along the gulf coast for available boats, subbed in
zip-close bags and canning jars for lab equipment
that didn’t arrive, and were touched by the kind-
ness of local officials who opened parks to them or
fishermen who simply gave them oysters.
“We were just screaming our way along
the coast,” McTigue says. “it was an amazing
experience. it felt like the communities we were
going through were on our team.”
she and her NOaa team returned in November
for more testing—at a less frenzied pace—to start
determining the extent of the oil contamination on
the environment and habitat. eventually, the data
will become part of the federal government’s case
against oil company BP.
McTigue got her first taste of fieldwork, in the
chesapeake Bay and at the Patuxent research
refuge, while earning her zoology degree at
Maryland.
she laughs as she recounts how her dad, who
wanted her to become “an educated woman,”
threatened to make her leave the university after
seeing her first-semester grades. a part-time job
in a professor’s lab washing glassware, she says,
helped her focus on science. (it grew into a four-
year internship studying plankton.)
she says the research experience and broad-
based education, including courses in geography
and geology, gave her a leg up when she went
on to earn her master’s at the university of south
carolina and doctorate at Texas a&M. McTigue’s
entire career has been with NOaa; after six years
managing the restoration of 25,000 acres of
wetlands along coastal Louisiana, she returned to
Maryland to the agency’s headquarters to continue
her work on a national level.
“i could be in my office all the time and be
safe,” she says. “Or i could be out doing the cool
stuff.” —LB
alumniprofile
clas
sact
getting down and dirty in the gulf
Terry McTigue ’84 has worked
extensively with Alaskan Native
tribes, helping to improve science
education in remote villages and to
establish projects to determine
contamination in tribal waters.
10 TERP winter 2011 photo by john t. consoli
Teresa “Terry” McTigue’s goal was to beat the
oil to shore.
The deputy director of the National Oceano-
graphic and atmospheric administration’s center
for coastal Monitoring and assessment and her
colleagues abandoned their offices just days after
the Deepwater Horizon well began spewing oil
into the gulf of Mexico. in two weeks, McTigue ’84,
who is an ecologist, and chemists and biologists
conducted tests on 62 sites from the Brazos river
in Texas to the Florida Keys to establish a baseline
of the level of contaminants in the water, sediment
and oysters.
along the way, the researchers hit up friends
along the gulf coast for available boats, subbed in
zip-close bags and canning jars for lab equipment
that didn’t arrive, and were touched by the kind-
ness of local officials who opened parks to them or
fishermen who simply gave them oysters.
“We were just screaming our way along
the coast,” McTigue says. “it was an amazing
experience. it felt like the communities we were
going through were on our team.”
she and her NOaa team returned in November
for more testing—at a less frenzied pace—to start
determining the extent of the oil contamination on
the environment and habitat. eventually, the data
will become part of the federal government’s case
against oil company BP.
McTigue got her first taste of fieldwork, in the
chesapeake Bay and at the Patuxent research
refuge, while earning her zoology degree at
Maryland.
she laughs as she recounts how her dad, who
wanted her to become “an educated woman,”
threatened to make her leave the university after
seeing her first-semester grades. a part-time job
in a professor’s lab washing glassware, she says,
helped her focus on science. (it grew into a four-
year internship studying plankton.)
she says the research experience and broad-
based education, including courses in geography
and geology, gave her a leg up when she went
on to earn her master’s at the university of south
carolina and doctorate at Texas a&M. McTigue’s
entire career has been with NOaa; after six years
managing the restoration of 25,000 acres of
wetlands along coastal Louisiana, she returned to
Maryland to the agency’s headquarters to continue
her work on a national level.
“i could be in my office all the time and be
safe,” she says. “Or i could be out doing the cool
stuff.” —LB
W11terp_depts_02.indd 10 1/26/11 2:37 PM
TERPwinter2011 11illustration by christie liberatore; photos by john t. consoli
byalumni
Jason Speck M.L.S. ’09 uses carefully selected photographs from the univer-sity’s archives to create University of Maryland, a pictorial history. Touching, insightful and rare images illustrate the university’s rise to an academic, artistic and athletic powerhouse.
In her debut novel, The Language of Trees,Ilie Ruby ’88spins a haunting tale examining the bonds of parents and children in rustic Canandaigua, N.Y., where all is not what it seems and the past refuses to stay where it belongs.
Known as the greatest detective in the world, Ellis Parker was the American Sherlock Holmes who solved 98 per-cent of the murders he investigated. Yet his illustrious 40-year career ended tragically in prison, where he died on the very eve of presidential pardon. InMaster Detective,John Reisinger ’66 tells the whole incredible story in detail for the first time.
The Value of MembershipJusT likE ThE univERsiTy, Maryland alumni are a lot of things: enterprising, creative, smart, independent. The value of a Maryland Alumni Association life membership also defies any one label.
To entrepreneurs, it’s an investment in the future. To our curious and driven alumni, membership means the opportunity to network, travel and continue their education. Still others appreciate the ability to strengthen the Maryland family by expanding clubs and chapters.
While membership at every level is important, Eric Francis ’71 saw the importance of a lifetime connection to Maryland. “It’s not just about giving back financially, but feeling a commitment to the place that did really wonderful things for you, and is now doing wonderful things through you for other people,” he explains.
During Homecoming 2010, the names of the association’s 280 newest life members were unveiled on the Eric S. and Frann G. Francis Lifetime Member Wall. Guests enjoyed a champagne toast and were treated to a copy of “University of Maryland” (pictured top right) by university archivist Jason Speck M.L.S. ’09.
Maryland Alumni Association Board of Governors President Steve Rotter ’82 underscored the importance of life membership in his remarks to the audience. “As a life member, I recognize how valuable and rewarding a lifetime engagement with alma mater is, and we are also creating a legacy for the next generation of alumni,” he said. “Whether you are a recent graduate or have reached emeritus status, the one common thread is that we are all Terrapins.”
To join today as a life member—or at any membership level—visit alumni.umd.edu. —MLB
“Whether you are a recent graduate or have reached emeritus status, the one common thread is that we are all Terrapins.”
W11terp_depts_02.indd 11 2/1/11 12:13 PM
12 TERPwinter2011 canola plant illustration by brian payne; geographic income cluster illustration by jeanette j. nelson and margaret hall
m-file
newsdeskUniversity of Maryland facUlty are the soUrce news Media tUrn to for expertise—froM politics and pUblic policy to society and cUltUre to science and technology.
“�The�number�of�things�Americans�hear�about�regularly�are�manifold.�They�assume�there�is�some�really�immense�foreign�assistance�effort,�which�of�course�is�not�true.”
Clay Ramsay, Program on
InternatIonal PolIcy attItudes, on
Its survey fIndIng amerIcans have
an Inflated vIew of u.s. foreIgn aId,
on the PBs newshour’s “rundown”
Blog, dec. 6, 2010.
improving agriculture, one gene at a time
FaRmERs can’T changE�the�weather�or�climate,�but�new�research�in�the�College�of�Computer,�Mathematical�and�Natural�Sciences�could�soon�help�their�crops�better�withstand�drought�or�other�extreme�conditions.�
June�Kwak,�an�expert�in�cell�biology�and�molecular�genetics,�leads�a�research�group�from�Maryland�and�five�other�institutions�to�improve�the�canola�plant—an�important�oilseed�crop�used�for�human�consumption�and�biodiesel�fuel—so�that�it�retains�more�water�during�dry�spells.
The�key,�Kwak�says,�is�to�develop�new�strains�of�canola�with�genetically�altered�“guard�cells”�that�effectively�close�the�stomata,�microscopic�pores�on�the�plant’s�leaves,�when�the�weather�turns�hot�and�
dry.�This�prevents�a�main�source�of�water�loss�in�the�plant,�he�says.
Biologist�Carlos�Machado�is�part�of�a�multi-institutional�team�hoping�to�transfer�the�hardiness�of�free-ranging�wild�rice�over�to�established�strains�of�cultivated�rice,�a�food�source�for�more�than�half�the�world’s�population.
Working�with�scientists�from�the�University�of�Arizona,�Machado�is�analyzing�the�genetic�traits�of�24�species�of�wild�rice�in�order�to�cross-breed�new�commercial�strains�that�produce�higher�yields�and�require�less�water�and�fertilizer.
The�National�Science�Foundation�is�funding�both�projects,�with�Kwak’s�team�receiving�$5�million�and�Machado’s�team�getting�$9.9�million.�—TV
“�If�the�economy�and�the�government�don’t�have�an�answer�to�a�problem,�people�are�forced�to�try�social�enterprise.”
GaR alpeRovitz, government
and PolItIcs, dIscussIng the
rIse of local cooPeratIves as
an economIc fIx-It In The New
York Times, nov. 27, 2010.
“�It�could�have�just�as�easily�not�have�hap-pened,�and�then�you�wouldn’t�be�wearing�a�gold�ring�after�your�wedding.”
RiChaRd WalkeR, geology, co-
author of a study fIndIng that
PrecIous metals were Brought
to the earth 4.5 BIllIon years
ago By massIve PlanetoIds
that crashed Into the Planet,
nature.com, dec. 9, 2010.
douGlas BeshaRov, PuBlIc PolIcy, on the
growIng gaP Between haves and have-nots,
BloomBerg News, dec. 19, 2010.
“The dispersion of income is larger than it’s ever been. There used to be a much
wider spread of incomes within geographic
areas than there is now. There’s much more of a
clumping together.”
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W11terp_depts_02.indd 12 2/1/11 12:13 PM
Soares caption
improving agriculture, one gene at a time
Exploring the DeepAssistAnt Professor DAPhne soAres ’96, Ph.D. ’02 is A neuroscientist who first won
AcclAim for her work on AlligAtors’ “sixth sense,” bumPs on their jAws thAt feel wAter
vibrAtions. now she’s stuDying the evolution of mexicAn blinD cAvefish, AnD the ADventure-
seeker leArneD to cAve-Dive to Pursue her reseArch. before her sPring triPs to ecuADor,
mADAgAscAr AnD the bAhAmAs, she PAuseD to tAlk to Terp’s lAuren brown.
TERP: you grew up on a farm outside rio de janeiro, the daughter of a brazilian mom and
American dad. is that where you developed your love of animals?
SOARES: Oh, yes! I was an only child surrounded by animals. I grew up on the back of a horse.
TERP: so how did you end up at maryland?
SOARES: This story is a buffet of craziness: My family moved to Chattanooga when I was a teenager,
then to Maryland. I was going to be an artist but changed my mind and joined a fire department.
Then I decided to go back to college, but I didn’t know what I wanted to do.
TERP: how did you get interested in neuroscience?
SOARES: A lecture by biology Professor Richard Payne changed my life. He said
certain cells in the body have electricity. I thought, You’re kidding me! Bodies
are all wet and gooey! How can neurons have electricity? I had to know more.
TERP: why turn to cavefish?
SOARES: They are nature’s comparative evolution experiment, already
done for us. There are lots of types of cavefish—catfish, goby, tetra, etc. And
they all evolved from river ancestors. So what happens after you take a fish
and cook it for a few hundred thousand years in the extreme environment of a
cave? Some senses diminish and some get augmented, and it turns out
there is a lot of variability in their behavior.
TERP: what’s the wildest run-in you’ve had studying alligators?
SOARES: I was with National Geographic’s Brady Barr and
a guide on Lake Okeechobee in Florida when we caught
the biggest alligator I’d ever seen. He’d been killing dogs.
We hauled him onto the boat and hog-tied him. But the
boat was so small Brady and I had to sit on him for the
ride back to the shore. By the time we got there, he’d
recovered his energy and exploded. He was thrashing so
hard that tail hit me and dislocated my jaw, and he hurt
Brady’s back. I popped my jaw back into place, because
we still had to move (the gator) into a holding pen.
TERP: you’ve hiked in iceland, spent a year tromp-
ing around Africa, lived on a boat and sailed up
the east coast. but cavediving is extraordi-
narily more technical, difficult and poten-
tially deadly. why do it?
SOARES: I do have a son and a husband
who love me. I am extremely conscientious
of what I do underwater. But the ability
to observe an animal in its environment
opens up a world of questions. The things I
see are just amazing. It’s an alien world, and
nobody has ever done this. It would be great to
be the Jane Goodall of cavefish one day.
photo by jill heinerth TERPwinter2011 13
Assistant Professor Daphne Soares, who learned to cave-dive specifically to conduct her research, says she’d love to be the Jane Goodall of cavefish someday.
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Assistant Professor Daphne Soares, who learned to cave-dive specifically to conduct her research, says she’d love to be the Jane Goodall of cavefish someday.
W11terp_depts_02.indd 13 2/1/11 12:13 PM
14 TERPwinter2011 image courtesy of walters art museum
m-fi
le
If you’ve ever worrIed about damaging
your grandmother’s silver while cleaning
it, imagine how museum curators confront
tarnish on priceless works of art.
Scientists from the A. James Clark
School of engineering have teamed up
with conservators from the walters Art
Museum in Baltimore to develop and test
a new, high-tech way to protect silver art
objects and artifacts.
The technique, called atomic layer
deposition, or ALd, will be used to create
nanometer-thick, metal oxide films which,
when applied to an artifact, are both
transparent and optimized to reduce the
rate of silver corrosion.
“ALd gives us an exquisite level of
control, literally at the atomic level,” says
ray Phaneuf, a professor of materials
science and engineering. “It’s an effective,
low-cost strategy to reduce corrosion
that preserves artifact appearance and
composition while complying with the
rigorous standards of art conservation
practice.”
walters conservation scientist Glenn
Gates says the new coating must be
acceptable for display in a museum
context, tough enough to endure transport
and handling and completely removable so
an object can be retreated to meet future
standards of conservation and aesthetics.
“And finally, it should not cause any harm
to a piece, even if it breaks down.”
The team will first test the new
technique on small samples of fine and
sterling silver, then on objects from Gates’
own collection, such as 19th-century
demitasse spoons and antique silver
dollars. —LB
Antoine-Louis Barye’s 1865 “Walking
Lion; Striding Lion” sculpture at the
Walters Art Museum could one day
benefit from the new treatment, says
Walters conservation scientist Glenn Gates.
Putting a New Shine on Silver Conservation
W11terp_depts_02.indd 14 1/26/11 2:37 PM
TERPwinter2011 15
fighting fungi with fungi
VisitorstotheA.JamesClarkschoolof
engineeringmighthaveimaginedtheywereat
aVegasmagicshowinsteadofaroboticsopen
house:Guestsguidedaminiatureflyingvehicle
buzzingaroundalab,butnotwithnimblefingers
onajoystick.insteadtheyusedbrainwaves.
thedemonstrationlastfallintheAutonomous
VehicleLaboratoryofAssistantProfessorsean
humbertshowcasedearlyresearchonwhetherthe
humanbraincancontrolthemovementofsmall
unmannedaerialvehicles,orUAVs,whichmaysoon
beusedbythemilitaryforsurveillanceorbycivil-
iansinvolvedinsearchandrescueoperations.
humbert,withtwodoctoralstudentsandPaul
samuel,presidentandCeoofDaedalusFlight
systems,isexploringtheconceptofhands-free
UAVsthatcanallowasoldiertofirmlygriphis
weaponorarescuertoholdontoaladder,while
simultaneouslyscanningthesurroundingswith
sensorsembeddedintheUAV.
UserswearingaheadsetcontroltheUAV’s
movementeitherbythinkinghard—concentrating
onmultiplicationtables,forexample,whichraises
thevehicle—orbylettingtheirmindtotallyrelax,
whichguidestheUAVlowerandforward.
“Wecanmanagebasicverticalandrotational
movementfairlywell,butwe’rejustbeginning
toscratchthesurfaceofwhat’spossible,”says
samuel’96,M.s.’99,Ph.D.’03.
thethought-controlledUAVisoneofseveral
projectsinhumbert’slabusingbio-inspired
technology.othermicroscaledevicescanmimicthe
navigationalabilitiesofabumblebee,whilestill
othermicrorobotsareabletocrawlandjumpover
obstaclesjustlikesmallinsectsdo.
“thescientificchallengeistogivethese
devicesasenseofautonomythatallowsthemto
interactwithmanydifferentenvironments,”says
humbert.“Wethinkstudyingnaturalsensory
systemsthathavedevelopedovermillionsofyears
willhelpguideourresearch.”—TV
In an EcologIcal twist of the adage “If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em,” a university researcher is searching South America’s jungles for fungi to circumvent a fungus-borne disease that has wreaked havoc on the continent’s rubber-producing industry.
Priscila Chaverri, an assistant professor of plant science and landscape architecture, traveled to the Amazon Basin in January looking for a natural biocontrol to stop the spread of South American leaf blight, which has destroyed much of the Hevea trees in the region.
Chaverri will use her expertise in systematics to try to identify a natural deterrent. “Nature has a way, over time, of producing its own remedies,” she says.
While most of today’s rubber is produced synthetically, latex taken from Hevea trees is the only rubber that can be used for condoms, medical gloves and other sensitive equipment. Finding a biocontrol could also prevent the disease from spreading to rubber-producing regions in Africa and Asia.
The research is funded by a $650,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, and joins Chaverri and her two graduate students with a researcher from the Smithsonian Institution and two plant pathologists from a private organization in France. —TV
A Thinking Person’s Robot
“Nature has a way, over time, of producing its own remedies.”
—Priscila Chaverri
Microcyclus Fungus photo by V. pujade renaud; robot and student photos by john t. consoli
W11terp_depts_02.indd 15 2/1/11 4:40 PM
Anderson photo by john t. Consoli; student photos Courtesy of university AthletiCs
Kevin Anderson looKed out at a sea of expectant faces. it was his first week on the job as Maryland’s
new athletics director, and he had gathered all 150 coaches and staff members. no one assembled in
Heritage Hall knew what to expect—until Anderson began asking each of them to stand and share some-
thing about themselves. something surprising.
A coach revealed a childhood scar inflicted by a run-in with a polar bear. A senior associate athletics direc-
tor admitted to a 15-year-old “smiley Terp” tattoo. A marketer spoke of having a twin brother with a different
birthday. At the end of the session, the heightened sense of camaraderie was clear.
All part of the plan, Anderson says. “This is about ‘we,’ not ‘me.’ This is about coming together as a team
and building upon the excellence of this athletic department, and of this university. This is about creating a
family here, about everyone getting on the same bus.”
With a grin, he adds, “i’m just the bus driver.”
Anderson was drawn to Maryland by its excellent reputation and high expectations for its student-athletes,
both on the field and in the classroom. He’s committed to those standards, and knows tough decisions must
be made to meet them.
Bringing in a new head football coach in January was just such a decision.
“We are a good football program,” Anderson says. “But i want to be a great football program.”
Anderson has exceeded high expectations over a long and notable career in collegiate athletics. He arrived
at Maryland from the United states Military Academy, where he had directed Army’s athletics department since
2004. Prior to West Point, Anderson served at some of the nation’s premier athletic departments, including
oregon state, the University of California, Berkeley and stanford. Additionally, he serves as second vice presi-
dent of the national Association of Collegiate directors of Athletics and chair of the nCAA division i Men’s
Basketball issues Committee.
“i’m one of the most competitive people you will ever meet,” Anderson says. “i want to win. And i want to
win the right way.” —BU
scorecardMaryland led Atlantic Coast
Conference public institutions
with 277 student-athletes
listed on the ACC Academic
Honor Roll during the 2009-10
academic year. The Honor
Roll is comprised of student-
athletes who participated
in a varsity-level sport and
registered a grade point
average of 3.0 or better for the
full academic year. Three of
those Terps were also named
ACC Players of the Year. Caitlyn
McFadden (women’s lacrosse),
Hudson Taylor (wrestling) and
Emma Thomas (field hockey).
Maryland men’s basketball
players and coaches
participated last fall in Zack’s
Run, a benefit 5K to raise funds
to prevent childhood cancer.
The race started and finished
outside the Comcast Center.
The Terps were led by junior
transfer Berend Weijs, who
despite his 6-foot-10 frame
finished in 21:12, just two
seconds off the pace of
last year’s winner, Greivis
Vasquez ’10.
Speaking of Vasquez, the
All-American and ACC Player
of the Year was taken by the
Memphis Grizzlies as the 28th
selection in the 2010 NBA draft.
play-by-play
Athletics Director Kevin Anderson (left) sees his role as the “bus driver,” encouraging students, fans and administrators to come together to help Maryland athletics succeed on and off the field.
McFadden ThomasTaylor
16 TERPwinter2011
new ad gets behind the wheel
Athletics Director Kevin Anderson (left) sees his role as the “bus driver,” encouraging students, fans and administrators to come together to help Maryland athletics succeed on and off the field.
W11terp_depts_02.indd 16 1/21/11 5:02 PM
When Darryl hill took the football field in 1963
wearing a Terps uniform, he caused a stir before the
game even started.
hill ’65 was known as the Jackie robinson of
Southern college football for his role as the first black
football player in the aCC. emmy award-winning
writer and english Professor Michael Olmert ’62,
Ph.D. ’80 recreates hill’s experience in his new play,
“Moving the Chains: The Darryl hill Story.”
“Darryl, he didn’t set
out to be a hero of the
race problem. he just
wanted to be a football
player,” Olmert says.
nevertheless, racism propelled hill
to excel on the field and in the classroom.
“Bigotry was my steroids,” reads one of hill’s lines
in the play. “it jacked me up into revenge, got the old
juices flowing.”
Olmert, a prolific author of books, plays, films and
TV documentaries, set this story on stage instead of
in the pages of a book because “a play is a much more
intense experience than a nonfiction book.”
hill attended a table reading of the play in Tawes
hall last May. Students questioned him afterward,
expressing disbelief at the discrimination he faced.
hotels refused to house the team and he was
subjected to death threats and racist taunts.
People are “used to seeing the hoses and
demonstrations of the ’60s, but when you switch it
over to football, it just doesn’t seem to click in,” hill
says. “i think it’s time that the nation understood that
the University of Maryland was on the forefront of
integrating sports. The play is as much about me as it
is about the [university’s] administration of the time.”
The lincoln Theatre in Washington, D.C., will
hold a staged reading on March 21 as part of its
“Backstage at the lincoln” series. The reading, a
cooperation between the lincoln Theatre and Theatre
J, seeks to spur a dialogue about the prejudice blacks
and Jews have faced.
“This play is so beautifully written. it’s very
poignant,” says Bonnie nelson Schwartz, executive
producer of the series. “it has great historical
significance, and it’s what this series is all about.” —PK
ACC Civil Rights History Takes Center Stage
spotlight
photo by john t. Consoli; inset Courtesy of university arChives TERPwinter2011 17
Darryl Hill ’65 (left and inset, above) and English Professor Michael Olmert Ph.D. ’62, Ph.D. ’80 (far left) attended the same elementary school, and they teamed up decades later at Maryland to retell Hill’s barrier-breaking story.
W11terp_depts_02.indd 17 1/25/11 1:28 PM
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W11terp_MdLive final v2.indd 18 1/24/11 4:43 PM
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W11terp_MdLive final.indd 19 1/21/11 11:56 AM
IMPACT > GLOBAL
CREDIT 20 TERP winter 2011
PrOtectinG Our global food supply thrOuGh
new science And POLicy? check. BuiLdinG A
“superbattery” tO POwer cArs Of the future?
check. discOverinG new meAsures Of
climate change? we’ve GOt thAt cOvered, tOO.
illustrations by Joshua harless, catherine nichols, Patti look and brian Payne / PhotograPhy by John t. consoli
W11_TERP_Feature_FINAL.indd 20 1/21/11 4:10 PM
TERPwinter2011 21
You’ve heard that MarYland is taking on soMe of the biggest issues facing the world. Butineverycollegeandschooloncampus,studentsandfacultyarepursuingnewapproachestomanyothervexingandcontemporaryproblems,whetherchildhoodobesity,urbanizationorbarrierstoinformationaccess.
ThecrewhereatTerpdecidedwiththisissuetorolloutabuffetofthefascinatingandimportantworktheuniversityisundertakingrightnow.Overthenext10pages,peruseoursamplingofMaryland’suniquepartnerships,outside-the-classroomopportunitiesandinspiringresearch.
W11_TERP_Feature_r2.indd 21 1/26/11 2:15 PM
IMPACT > wOrLd
“my advice to the next generation is to find problems that are unsolved and try to think up solutions for them. it’s that simple.”
—rOBerT BrIskMAn M.s. ’61
“if somebody says something’s impossible, i just tried to think of a way to make it possible.”
if this statement from robert briskman M.s. ’61 seems audacious, he backs it up. For 20 years, he dreamed of a new satellite service that would provide continuous radio programming across the united states. he envisioned legions of subscribers. it would be an entertainment revolution.
Problem was: nobody thought it would work. First, he was told that no one would ever pay for radio programming, when doz-ens of stations were readily available for free. and second, the technology didn’t exist.
so briskman invented that technology. he designed and built three of the most power-ful commercial satellites of the time, and launched them into a “figure 8” geosynchro-nous orbit over the americas.
the result was sirius satellite radio, the first major development in radio in decades. today, sirius XM has more than 20 million paying subscribers and on-air talent that includes howard stern, Martha stewart and bob dylan.
“robert is an inspiration to today’s engineering students,” says clark school dean darryll Pines. “that’s why we have the
innovation hall of Fame.”the signature of the clark school, the
innovation hall of Fame recognizes pioneers of many of the most significant engineering advances in the past century: Pulse doppler radar. the universal Product code. the auto-matic parachute.
it’s company briskman was humbled to join at his induction in october. “i don’t know if i’m an inspiration for the next generation. My advice to them is to find problems that are unsolved and try to think up solutions for them. it’s that simple.” —BU
a. JaMes clark school oF engineering
achieving the impossible
22 TERP winter 2011
W11_TERP_Feature_FINAL.indd 22 1/21/11 4:11 PM
When wildfires threaten homes in california, power lines in south africa or farmland in botswana, technology developed in part by a Maryland geogra-
pher comes to the rescue.chris Justice, department chair, worked
with nasa to develop the Fire information for resource Management system, or FirMs, which measures the extent and impact of fires around the world. the rapid-response mapping system uses remote sensing and
data from nasa’s aqua and terra satellites to pinpoint fires,
information that helps the
national Forest service develop its firefight-ing strategies and researchers track smoke that can cause health problems or commer-cial aviation hazards. in 2009, more than 77,000 fires in the u.s. burned a total of 5.9 million acres.
“We can use these nasa satellites for two things: pure science, to understand climate science’s impact on fire. or we can use them to generate practical applications that allow people to better monitor their natural resources or provide health warnings,” Justice says.
anyone around the world can view the data online or sign up for e-mail alerts from FirMs. traffic to the site spiked dramatically during last summer’s forest fires in russia. —PK
college oF behavioral and social sciences
tracking Wildfires Worldwide
TERP winter 2011 23
5.9million acres DestroyeD
• by wildfires •
in the U.s. in 2009
W11_TERP_Feature_FINAL.indd 23 1/21/11 4:11 PM
IMPACT > envirOnment
24 TERP winter 2011
CollEgE of agRICulTuRE anD naTuRal REsouRCEs
understanding urbanization
economists who study how, where and why urban areas expand generally don’t look at the effects on nearby waterways. natural resources scientists who study the degrada-tion of our bays, rivers and lakes in built-up areas don’t typically examine the policies that influence urbanization.
Putting those two groups together just might be the equivalent of a reese’s Peanut butter cup.
that’s the idea behind a new partnership of 13 senior scientists, including Maryland environmental economist charles towe and
hydrologists, ecologists and engineers. in the fall, they received $5 million from the national science Foundation to study the relationship of land use, climate and eco-systems in the chesapeake bay region. the findings could play a role in watershed and development policies at the local, state and regional levels.
balancing the urban environment with the earth’s natural resources is the mission of the college, and towe M.s. ’06, Ph.d. ’08 earned his doctorate “reconstructing” the howard county, Md., of 30 years ago to
determine how government policies, such as buying development rights from landowners, affected growth.
For this project, he’s expanding his work into four other Maryland counties in the bay watershed, to create models that can predict how policies and trends may further affect water sustainability.
“We make location decisions based on availability of land or water. Policies are influ-enced by those factors,” towe says. “We’re attempting to say something about a messy dynamic environment.” —LB
sChool of aRChITECTuRE, plannIng anD pREsERvaTIon
balancing the built environment
tucked among the strip malls, highways and faded industrial parks of bladensburg, Md., is the city’s rich heritage as a major revolutionary-era port and site of a pivotal battle in the War of 1812.
a first-of-its-kind project at the school is examining how to preserve the commu-nity’s past and revive its present, by bring-ing together graduate students studying real estate development, historic preserva-tion, urban planning and landscape archi-tecture. they and faculty, working with city officials, residents and preservationists, in december provided two vibrant, realistic redevelopment proposals for bladensburg.
at the same time, they modeled a collabor-ative solution for communities nationwide facing similar redevelopment challenges.
“We’re at a crisis in terms of suburban and urban development, and we have gone too long in this country letting people work in their silos,” says assistant Professor b.d. Wortham-galvin, who in the fall taught one of three courses devoted to the project. “having these students work in an integrated way is a step toward a more sustainable built environment.”
supported by the local aman Memorial trust, students scoured old records, inter-viewed current bladensburg residents,
compiled demographic information and conducted a market analysis to produce the plans for the clients to review.
this semester, the students are continuing to work with the trust and city on detailed projects that comple-ment bladensburg’s assets, says Professor Margaret McFarland, director of the school’s real estate development program. the physical, social and financial hurdles are significant, she says, but students are learning to confront them in a creative and productive way.
“it’s about as big a challenge as you can come up with,” she says. —LB
W11_TERP_Feature_FINAL.indd 24 1/21/11 4:11 PM
TERPwinter2011 25
in india, ambulances are known for ferrying the dead, not saving the liv-ing. but for the past five years, a company co-founded by naresh Jain M.b.a. ’93 has been changing that perception.
dial 1298 for ambulance provides ambulance service 24/7 in Mumbai and three other indian states to anyone dialing that four-digit number. Patients pay on a unique sliding scale based on which hospital they choose: those going to government hospitals pay less than those headed
to the costlier private ones, and charges are waived for the poorest patients. disaster and emergency patients are transported for free, too.
the goal is to spread the socially conscious business model throughout india, which has no centralized emergency services.
“What it’s doing is fantastic,” says smith school dean g. “anand” anandalingam. “he’s showing you can do more than get a financial return for yourself. you can use business prin-ciples to do good for society.”
Jain says the smith school taught him to think big and innovate. “nothing is impossible, as long as you get your basics right,” he says. after completing his master’s degree, he was back in india, expanding his fam-ily’s plastics business and looking for an opportunity to “do something new and something more” when a friend’s mother faced a medical emer-gency and couldn’t get an ambulance. he and four friends, all educated in the u.s. or united kingdom, began studying emergency medical service models at home and abroad, and voila: a business idea was born.
since dial 1298’s founding in 2005, the bright-yellow fleet of fully equipped ambulances has grown to 350, each staffed with a driver and emergency medical technician. the company gets approximately 60,000 calls daily and makes 1,200-plus trips per day, Jain says.
dial 1298 has the capacity to do more, but it faces challenges that are unique to india, such as widespread misperceptions about ambulances. the private white ambulances there are expensive and more like hearses. and indian drivers don’t traditionally make way for ambulances with sirens blaring; combine that with heavy traffic in Mumbai (population: 16.3 million), and rickshaws can often move faster than ambulances.
but long-term social investor acumen Fund is committed to the company, and last spring put solar panels on 25 of the ambulances to provide backup power. india’s blinding sunlight recharges the defibrilla-tor and other lifesaving devices inside, reducing fuel costs and easing the environmental burden. —LB
RobERT h. smITh sChool of busInEss
demonstrating social responsibility
“Nothing is impossible,
as long as you get your basics right.”
—naresh Jain M.b.a. ’93
$5 million • from the national • science foundation tostudy the relationship o f l a n d u s e , c l i m at e and ecosystems in the chesapeake Bay region
W11_TERP_Feature_r2.indd 25 2/1/11 10:21 AM
IMPACT > institutiOn
it seems that Matthew southerland began preparing for a career as a Foreign service officer in china when he was 2.
the son of a Washington Post east asia correspondent, he spent ages 2–8 in beijing. back in the states, he continued his lessons in chinese, and he returned to china during his junior year of college, then lived in taiwan for two years.
now he’s one of the school of Public Policy’s first four robertson Fellows, a new program that combines the school’s access to the policymaking process in Washington, d.c., and commitment to preparing students for a diverse scope of careers here and abroad.
the program is designed to provide the federal government with future policy leaders in international relations and foreign affairs by fully funding graduate study and a summer internship in exchange for at least three years of u.s. government service. Maryland was awarded $340,000 to establish the fellowship last fall. Joining southerland this year are students James trent, christopher vorhis and kira West.
“i’m excited to learn about ways of being a liaison between the u.s. and other countries, interacting with officials
and scholars, or helping people applying for visas,” southerland says. —PK
26 TERP
sChool of publIC polICy
strengthening good governance, globally
“I’m excited to learn about ways of being a liaison between the U.S. and other countries.” —MattheW southerland
W11_TERP_Feature_r2.indd 26 2/1/11 10:21 AM
TERP winter 2011 27
how do tweets threaten or enhance journal-ism? how does media bias influence or reinforce the public’s views? and how can multimedia be used to explain complex top-ics to general audiences?
as technology redefines how people find and use information, the Merrill college is exploring new ways to prepare students for a rapidly changing field while maintaining journalism’s traditional tenets, like accuracy, ethics and independence.
Part of its strategy is a unique i-series class called “information 3.0” that gets students thinking about how society seeks, selects and shares news and information—
and gives assistant Professor ron yaros an opportunity to study how students interact with technology.
“We’re learning how they’re learning from the technology, so journalism can respond to the next generation of tech users,” he says.
in the class, undergraduates from all majors conduct online research on technol-ogy and its expanding role. students write and post articles on blogs, twitter and blackboard in class and on iPod touches supplied by the university. all the while, they’re learning a healthy skepticism about the information they’re collecting and an appreciation for the challenges of contem-
porary journalism. the frequent surveys they take on their
tech use help shape the evolving curriculum at the college and increase understanding of the industry.
“We’re only at 3.0. like software, we’re going to go to 4.0 and 5.0 and 6.0,” says associate dean katherine Mcadams, referring to the course title and the field.
“iPhones, smartphones and blackberrys are now transmitters of news. a headline is morphing into a tweet. all these things are being used in journalism in ways we never imagined.” —LB
phIlIp mERRIll CollEgE of jouRnalIsm
fusing technology and tradition
closing society’s information gap isn’t as simple as stocking up on more desktop computers for public libraries. due to lingering disparities regarding socioeconomic background, gender, language, literacy, dis-ability, age and other factors, many people still struggle to access online resources like job listings, educational materials or government services.
a new initiative in the ischool addresses these challenges by training the next generation of information professionals to design, develop and integrate the wide range of services, resources, technol-ogy and outreach needed to serve diverse populations.
“information penetrates every aspect of our lives—education, employment, entertainment and more. if you don’t have equal access, then you’ll probably be left out of a lot of important things in our society,” says Paul Jaeger, principal investigator of an $800,000 grant
from the institute of Museum and library services to support the new information and diverse Populations concentration in the ischool’s master of library science program.
Jaeger expects research, classroom instruction and mentoring will allow students to develop the practical and analytical skills needed to serve people from almost any background in places like public libraries, archives, school libraries and government agencies.
he also expects the new courses to attract a range of students. “information professionals have not necessarily represented the way that society looks,” Jaeger says. “this program is the first that specifi-cally trains diverse information professionals to succeed in varied settings working with diverse patrons.” —TV
CollEgE of InfoRmaTIon sTuDIEs
providing equal access
W11_TERP_Feature_FINAL.indd 27 1/21/11 4:11 PM
IMPACT > knOwLedGe
unIvERsITy lIbRaRIEs
reinventing an institution
think a library is only for borrowing books and reading nooks? the university libraries are kicking that image to the curb, redefin-ing what services, collections and spaces will meet patrons’ evolving needs.
“We’re not doing anything less than transforming libraries,” says dean Patricia a. steele. “that’s our goal: to make sure that
the library that everyone equates with books is one that people equate with information, doing their work, getting the support they need, the environment they need—physical and virtual—and having the collections and resources they need.”
at Maryland, e-resources now account for 75 percent of the libraries’ collections budget.
in addition, the libraries are digitizing special collections, making what was formerly avail-able only by visiting a library now available anywhere, anytime via the internet. they’re archiving Web pages to preserve the record of the university and state. they’re encourag-ing faculty to publish online and adopt prin-ciples of open access. and they’re providing
unDERgRaDuaTE anD gRaDuaTE EDuCaTIon
remaking the grade
sweeping changes to the university’s educational core are expected to make Maryland even more of a draw for the top students in the state and around the world.
at the graduate level, Maryland is streamlining and energizing its 83 doctoral programs by admit-ting fewer students, boosting financial support through new grants, fellowships and research stipends and increasing mentoring and placement opportunities.
“the doctoral programs at a major research institution are really what define that institution,” says charles caramello, dean of the graduate school. “it’s where great universities produce and disseminate knowledge. and it’s where the next generation of scientists and scholars, particularly in our region, are trained for positions in important
federal labs and government agencies where they can have an impact.”
undergraduates entering Maryland this fall will see an expansion of the i-series courses launched last spring as part of the university’s revamped general education program. students taking the courses, such as “the sustainable city” and
“genetically Modified humans” investigate signifi-cant issues to understand how different disciplines address them.
the new general education program, set to begin in Fall 2012, will strengthen students’ com-mitment to using knowledge and skills to better themselves and others, says ira berlin, a distin-guished university professor of history.
“the changes are designed to inspire and chal-lenge both faculty and students,” he says. —TV
W11_TERP_Feature_r2.indd 28 2/1/11 10:22 AM
TERPwinter2011 29
CollEgE of aRTs anD humanITIEs
extending lines of communication
TERPwinter2011 29
students with greater access to technology and new ways to collaborate in the terrapin learning commons in Mckeldin library.
“We won’t be alive in 20 years if people still think of us as a place for books,” steele says. “We are putting forth the model of what the library is in the future, and it will be a continual and changing thing.” —LB
china, russia and india are among the 22 nations that require stu-dents to learn a second language. Most mandate that instruction start at age 7 or 8. Many students in the united states, however, can gradu-ate from high school having studied only english.
study after study from the u.s. government sounds the alarm about this “world language gap,” and how it puts the nation’s security and economic competitiveness at risk.
the national Foreign language center, housed in the college, has for 25 years been dedicated to closing this gap by providing opportu-nities to help americans communicate in languages other than english.
the center administers the startalk program, which offers sum-mer programs nationally in nine critical languages that attracted nearly 7,000 participants, including 1,500 teachers, in 2010 alone. its e-learning department has developed 9,000 modules in more than 60 languages, available to any american learning institution or government agency. its research arm helps inform policymakers, as
in an october report recommending expanded world language instruction for younger u.s. students as well as an increased teacher supply.“it’s become more and more apparent that world language education (in the u.s.) has not
changed, but the world has, and the demands have,” says shuhan Wang, the center’s deputy director, who wrote the report with director catherine ingold. “We have been sleeping.”
the college also houses the school of languages, literatures, and cultures, which offers all levels of language instruction to uMd students.
Wang says global firms and the government are hiring people who are multilingual, and the college has been in the forefront of offering chinese, Japanese, arabic, Persian and other world lan-
guages. the federal government, in fact, provided startalk with $15 million in funding last year.
the center’s new frontier: producing Web-based courses in map reading, critical thinking and
signals analysis.“We’re a one-stop shop,” says david P. ellis, head of
e-learning program, “so when the government has a need, they know we can draw on the resources of the university to meet it.” —LB “It’s become
more and more apparent that world language education (in the U.S.) has not changed, but the world has.”
—shuhan Wang
75% OfThelIBrArIes’COlleCTIOnBudgeTIsAllOCATedfOr
• e-resOurCes •
W11_TERP_Feature_r2.indd 29 2/1/11 10:22 AM
IMPACT > heALth+humAn deveLOPment
sChool of publIC hEalTh
shrinking childhood obesity
30 TERPwinter2011
O f C h I l d r e n I n T h e u. s .
AreseverelyOverweIghT.
getting schoolchildren to choose fruit over French fries in the lunch line may be as simple as marketing the healthier choices more effectively.
research associate stephanie grutzmacher M.s. ’04, Ph.d. ’07 is testing that theory with the Maryland state department of education and the university of Maryland extension by training cafeteria workers and school administrators in low-cost ideas and offering classroom programs to be used in 60 schools starting in august.
examples of “nudging” children include placing a pretty basket of apples near the cash register, where students may be tempted to grab one while waiting to pay. or putting the cookies and pudding out of sight, so students have to specifically request them. or having food-service workers ask their young customers to choose between a banana or orange, rather than if they want either one.
“Maybe we can make the carrots look cooler, and we can change behavior without reducing choices, being paternal-
istic or spending much money,” says grutzmacher, who’s affiliated with the department of Family science.
the latest figures on childhood obesity demonstrate the urgency and importance of her research. an estimated 17 percent of children in the u.s. are severely overweight, triple the rate 30 years ago. and many children get a large portion of their calories at school, highlighting the value of eating smart there.
grutzmacher’s work also ties into the school of Public health’s commitment to health equity and health literacy, since the school meals program has the potential to increase access to nutritious food for low-income children. in the classroom component of the project, children might not only learn about the importance of healthy eating, but also develop a preference for healthy foods.
“the problem we have in reforming school meals is that people think reforms won’t matter,” she says. “We want to show it’s easy and cheap.” —LB
W11_TERP_Feature_r2.indd 30 2/1/11 10:22 AM
CollEgE of EDuCaTIon
overcoming learning disabilities
CollEgE of CompuTER, maThEmaTICal anD naTuRal sCIEnCEs
treating disease through math
biologists and physicians have an increas-ingly important partner in fighting disease: mathematicians.
associate Professor doron levy, work-ing with hematologist Peter lee at stanford Medical school, has been combining mathematical models with biological data to predict when and how individual leukemia patients should be treated for maximum effectiveness.
they found that the protocol for chronic myelgenous leukemia, or cMl, patients who are already receiving the drug inma-tinib could improve if the natural immune
response is stimulated with accurately timed cancer vaccines.
the discovery on targeted therapy, which was widely published, is expected to go to clinical trials. in the meantime, levy has been creating models with christian tomasetti Ph.d. ’10 to determine how drug resistance propagates in cMl stem cells. the research-ers ultimately hope to expand their results to other cancer cells.
“a mathematical model can provide a tool to extend the reach of current lab experi-ments,” he says.
levy’s interest in such interdisciplinary
research, increasingly the focus at the newly integrated college of Mathematical, Physical and natural sciences, doesn’t end there. he’s recently teamed up with Jakub simon at the university of Maryland school of Medicine to produce mathematical models on the shigella bacteria. it causes severe diarrhea and kills 1 million people a year, mostly in developing countries. there is no vaccine to protect against it.
“My goal is never to just develop a mathematical model, but to use mathemat-ics to improve the treatment to patients,” he says. —LB
TERP winter 2011 31
d.J. bolger’s 10-year-old daughter would like dad to stop talking about brains. little does she know that her father’s research helps further the understanding of brain development in children with learning disabilities such as dyslexia and how to teach them reading, language and math.
bolger, an assistant professor, explores how techniques such as using phonics and strengthening short-term memory can help young children learn to recognize and use patterns. With neuroimaging technology, such as functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMri, he and colleagues can detect cell growth and stronger connections between areas responsible for transmitting information.
“We’re following these children over time and hoping to see the changes remain long after intervention. and we’re looking at the impact on behavior, such as better reading comprehen-sion and math ability,” he says.
researchers in the three-year study are also examining how the backgrounds or educational settings of the approximately
100 study subjects, ages 3–5, contribute to their lag in reading and math.
between 20 and 35 percent of all children in the united states, and up to 60 percent of those from low-income back-grounds, have difficulties learning, says bolger.
bolger looks forward to this summer’s opening of the uni-versity’s Maryland neuroimaging center, with a $2 million fMri scanner, which will enhance his research.
“the children are making gains in how much they’re doing … making leaps and bounds personally, yet overall they’re still in the bottom first to fifth percentile. What else is going on, and is there more that we can do?” —MAB
Between 20 and 35 percent of all children in the u.s. have difficulties learning.
W11_TERP_Feature_FINAL.indd 31 1/21/11 4:11 PM
You may not be on campus wielding a hammer, but
you can help students build a solar-powered house
for an international competition. You can outfit the
Mighty Sound of Maryland in mightily needed new
uniforms. You can keep cash-strapped students
from withdrawing from Maryland.
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32 TERPwinter 2011
What difference can one person make, you ask? The answer lies in the power of commu-nity. That’s what TerpsChoice is all about.
TerpsChoice, the university’s new social giving effort, seeks to make a big impact through small contributions.
“This is about the transformative power of small gifts,” says Brodie Remington, vice president for university relations. “Even modest support can make a real difference to these terrific causes.”
To participate, use the envelope included in this issue of Terp or visit TerpsChoice.umd.edu to view videos for each of the causes and make your gift online. —BU
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Learning caLcuLus is difficult enough, but when a col-
umn in the middle of the room obstructs your view of the
instructor and the examples on the chalkboard, it gets
even tougher.
That’s the challenge facing students in many of the
27 math classes that meet in the basement of Reckord
Armory, built in the 1930s as a rifle range. Low ceilings and
structural columns limit the use of modern teaching tech-
nologies, and outdated, inefficient climate control systems
often make rooms too warm or too cold for comfort.
“When I came to the university in 1965, I was told the
Armory would soon be torn down to make way for a new
classroom building,” says Professor Denny Gulick, who is in
charge of scheduling math classes. “But we’re still using it.”
Prospects are brighter now for a new University
Teaching Center, following state approval to include it
among projects considered for funding next fiscal year.
“We envision a teaching center that will be better than
state-of-the-art, that will set the bar for an enriched
learning experience for every student attending the uni-
versity,” says Provost Nariman Farvardin.
The 95,800-square-foot facility will be located at the
center of the campus, making it easily accessible to the
more than 10,000 students who will use it every week. A
new building will be constructed on the site of Shriver
Hall facing Campus Drive, integrating the historic façade
of Holzapfel Hall facing McKeldin Mall.
The proposed design includes five multimedia lecture
halls and six technology-rich classrooms, all totaling
2,000 seats. Group study areas, informal learning
spaces and spaces for faculty and technical support
staff are also planned.
The $55.8 million project requires the university
to raise $12 million in private support to receive
$45 million in state funding.
“We are confident that with the help of alumni
and friends,” says Farvardin, “we can make sure our
students have the facilities they deserve.” —CR
New Teaching Center Hinges on Support
An architectural interpretation of the University Teaching
Center viewed from Campus Drive.
Vote for one
FacebookTwiTTerYouTubeSpread the word
terpsChoice. umd.edu
In May, we’ll pool the
gifts together and award
them to the cause that
gets the most votes.
Entrepreneurship and Innovation ProgramThis new Honors College living and learning program, launched with the support of the Maryland Technology Enterprise Institute, gives freshmen and sophomores from different majors the opportunity to develop innovative con-cepts for their own startup companies or other ventures. Donor support can provide much-needed seed funding to help these students succeed.
Keep Me MarylandThe recession may be officially over, but many families of Maryland students continue to face economic hardship. Keep Me Maryland was established two years ago to award emergency grants to students at risk of not returning to the university. This fund has made a big difference for hundreds of students, but pleas for aid continue to rise.
Mighty Sound of MarylandThe 300 members of the Mighty Sound of Maryland Marching Band represent a tradition of excellence and pride at UMD. Their uniforms should reflect that. But after 15 years of parades and field performances, the uniforms are show-ing their age. Donations to the uniform replacement fund will help keep our band looking as great as it sounds.
Solar DecathlonFor the fourth time, a Maryland team has earned one of only 20 coveted spots in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon 2011, a competition to cre-ate a solar-powered house. Nearly 200 students from architecture, engineering, environmental science and technology, plant sciences, landscape architecture and other disciplines seek donor support to design and construct their entry,
“WaterShed,” and win the contest on the National Mall this fall.
Veterans InitiativeStudent veterans may face unique physical, emotional, financial and other chal-lenges. Maryland’s Veterans Initiative is providing critical services, support and scholarships to this growing community. These men and women have made enormous sacrifices for our nation, and the university welcomes gifts that can ease their readjustment to academic and civilian life.
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34 TERPwinter 2011
GRowinG uP in innER-ciTy BalTimoRE,
Darian Scott-carter ’08 always knew he wanted to go to Maryland. He was less sure of how he’d handle college life: managing the course load and cost and being away from his family.
Once here, however, he found a group of people through the Incentive Awards
Program, or IAP, who were determined to help him not just succeed, but lead. “All along the way,
they support you, so I didn’t feel alone,” Scott-Carter says. He’s one of many Maryland alumni who thrived on campus, thanks to the
program, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary. Created by former president C. D. Mote, Jr., IAP relies on donor contributions to annually provide four years of full financial support to nine seniors from Baltimore and eight from Prince George’s County high schools who’ve demonstrated academic promise despite extreme hardship.
Led by Director Jacqueline Lee, the program surrounds students with fellow scholars, IAP staff and mentors who connect them to campus resources, provide listening ears and offer guidance. In return, each student is expected to reach back and encourage those in their neighborhoods to attend college. Alumni have gone on to graduate school and careers as lawyers, teachers, researchers, financial analysts and more.
Scott-Carter, who majored in criminology and criminal justice, is now a counselor with the CollegeBound Foundation, a nonprofit providing guid-ance services at city high schools. He talks with students at his alma mater, Paul Dunbar High School, about what’s possible, something he learned at Maryland.
The self-proclaimed “silent leader” built his confidence as a drum major and president of UMD’s chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi, the national honorary band fraternity. He says Lee forces IAP students to look beyond their circumstances.
“I try to get them to focus on why they pursued the award in the first place, to relive the excitement of getting it,” she says. “Then I present to them the harsh reality of what life looks like without a college degree.”
Scott-Carter, who just completed a master’s in homeland security manage-ment at Towson University, says not going to college wasn’t an option; he’d received acceptances from other schools.
“But here it really is the support. There’s nothing else like it.” —MAB
Around: IAP scholars, inset: Darian Scott-Carter ’08
IAP PhotogrAPhy by DAvID bArAtz, johAnsen krAuse, mIke morgAn AnD robert vIsser; scott-cArter Photo courtesy of DArIAn scott-cArter
I present to them the harsh reality of what life looks like without a college degree. —jacqueline lee
A Decade of Achievement
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$1 BILLION
campaign total
$796 millionas of Jan. 25, 2011
Terrapin Support Continues to Climb Make your gift online at www.greatexpectations.umd.edu.
New Gallery Reveals Treasures from the Vault
ShannEn hill’S STuDEnTS no longer have to leave cam-pus to view a collection of African art. A new space set aside in the university Art Gallery allowed students studying with the assistant professor to have an array of alluring sculp-tures displayed especially for them.
The Herman Maril Teaching and Research Gallery, honoring a longtime Maryland art professor, was created with a $50,000 gift from the Herman Maril Foundation and Kenneth Grief, a Maril family friend. It enables the gallery to move works out of its vault into a space where students, faculty and other scholars can use them. “It’s wonderful to have a space to reserve materials for students all semester,” says Hill.
“Many of the Art Gallery’s 1,500 works will never be part of an exhibit, and they typically
stay locked away in the vault,” says Director John Shipman. “They are
valuable for teaching and research, and now we can make them accessible on request.”
The teaching gallery fea-tures display space for objects and flat prints as well as two computer stations and a resource library to encourage
on-site research.“I was really impressed with
John’s vision for this space and thought it was something my father
should be a part of,” says David Maril, who heads the foundation
dedicated to preserving Herman Maril’s legacy. “My father taught here for 30 years, and I’m hoping that by maintaining his presence, students today will also be influ-enced by him.”
One wall of the gallery will always feature a painting by Maril,
whose art is included in more than 100 museum collections. The student
gallery in the Department of Art is also named in his honor. —CR
Gridiron Fan Catches 400th Game
Longtime Maryland supporter Bob Baker attended his 400th consecutive Terrapin football game on Oct. 23, a remarkable run that extends back to 1976. His wife, Carol, was with him at Byrd Stadium—she’s missed only two games in 34 years.
AfrIcAn Art PhotogrAPhy by john t. consolI TERPwinter2011 35
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credit 36 TERPwinter2011
Interpretations
The Inauguration of Wallace D. Loh
ThE UnivERsiTy of MaRyland will celebrate a milestone with the inauguration of Wallace D. Loh as its 33rd president on April 28. The official installation will be the highlight of several days of special events.
More than a celebration of Loh, the inauguration will serve as a tribute to the University of Maryland and its vitally important role in today’s fast-changing society. Founded as a land-grant institution with a focus on agriculture, Maryland is now one of the world’s great universities and a leader in areas as diverse as public health, entrepreneurship, alternative fuels and sustainability, national security, arts and athletics.
On April 6, our graduate students will kick off the inauguration events by sharing their research at Graduate Research Interac-tion Day. Our undergraduate students will display their research at Undergraduate Research Day on April 27. Both events will be a terrific showcase for the impact Terrapins everywhere are making.
The festivities close with the 13th annual Maryland Day on April 30, a campuswide open house featuring more than 400 special events, free of charge to all, followed by the annual Student Awards Banquet on May 1.
The Inauguration Committee invites all faculty, staff, students and alumni to participate in this historic occasion. A series of official inaugural events are listed at right; some—including the official installation event—are open to the public (though tickets are required). The Inauguration Committee will also be streaming select inauguration events.
The official activities of the inauguration include:april 6GraduateResearchInteractionDayAdele H. Stamp Student Union
april 27UndergraduateResearchDayAdele H. Stamp Student Union
NationalScholarshipsRecognitionReceptionAdele H. Stamp Student Union
JointInstituteforFoodSafetyandAppliedNutritionSpringSymposiumand15thanniversarydinnerGreenbelt Marriott
april 2810 a.m.TheinaugurationofWallaceD.LohClarice Smith Performing Arts Center
noonReceptionforentireuniversitycommunityClarice Smith Performing Arts Center
6:30 p.m.Inauguraldinner(invitationonly)Samuel Riggs IV Alumni Center
april 29InnovationsinTeachingandLearningConferenceAdele H. Stamp Student Union
CelebrationofScholarshipsReception(invitationonly)Samuel Riggs IV Alumni Center
april 3010 a.m.13thannualMarylandDayCampuswide
3:30 p.m. Red/WhiteSpringFootballGameCapital One Field at Byrd Stadium
may 13:30 p.m.UniversityofMarylandStudentAwardsBanquet(invitationonly)Adele H. Stamp Student Union
Pleasevisitwww.president.umd.edu forupdatedinformationandacompletelistofallevents.
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The Inauguration of Wallace D. Loh
*All gifts to the University of Maryland are tax-deductible as allowed by law.
See your tax adviser for details.
V I S I T G I V I N G . U M D . E D U T O J O I N I N A N D G I V E B A C K T O D AY.
The winter weather brings a chill to the air, but here’s a great way to warm up your Terrapin heart. Join the Maryland Alumni Association and make an annual gift
through the Maryland Fund for Excellence to the program of your choice.
Your membership will provide invaluable opportunities to students following in your footsteps. Your gift will help the university foster excellence
and continue to make its impact on the world.
JOIN GIVE
JOIN
+ G
IVE
JOIN + GIVE
To learn how a planned gift can support the University
of Maryland cause of your choice and meet your personal
financial needs, visit www.giftplanning.umd.edu or contact:
University of Maryland Office of Gift Planning
Toll-free phone: 866.646.4UMD | E-mail: [email protected]
That’s why the Gelfelds feel good about establishing a deferred
charitable gift annuity to benefit Keep Me Maryland. The annuity
allows them to claim a large charitable tax deduction and will later
provide them with lifetime annual income. With this planned-giving
option, the Gelfelds are able to support a Maryland program they
are passionate about.
“When you make this kind of gift—or any estate gift,” Carole
says, “you are modeling behavior for your children and showing
them that this is what you need to do to give back.”
Doug ’60 and Carole Gelfeld know better than almost anyone the benefits of an estate gift: He’s a retired financial services executive, and she’s an estate planning attorney.
The Rewards of Planned GivinG
OFFICE OF GIFT PLANNING
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Division of University RelationsCollege Park, MD 20742-8724
Change Service Requested
Nonprofit Org.U.S. Postage
PAIDPermit No. 10
College Park, MD
MARYLANDE X P LO R E O U R WO R L D !
Join us for the 13th annual Maryland Day, a family-friendly event that features hundreds of interactive exhibits, workshops and live performances. Comeand discover the best of our academics, athletics and the arts along with new fare like our health and fitness extravaganza.
SATURDAYAPRIL 3010 a.m. to 4 p.m.Rain or shine / Admission and parking are free
marylandday.umd.edu
MARYLANDE X P LO R E O U R WO R L D !
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