May 16, 2012
8:21 AM
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"Shark Lady" Eugenie Clark
"Shark Lady"
Eugenie Clark

Rachel Carson - photo from the web.
Environmentalist
Rachel Carson

Mary Shorb
Mary Shorb

Adele Stamp - 1930
Adele Stamp - 1930

Mrs. John L. Whitehurst
Mrs. John L. Whitehurst

Mrs. John L. Whitehurst
Lucy Wilson Benson

University of Maryland 38th among World's Top 100 Universities

University of Maryland Becoming the "Go-To" Campus for Presidents

University of Maryland M-Urgency App Streams Emergency Information


UMD Brain Cap Technology Turns Thought into Motion


Maryland in News

In This Week's News
Weeks of May 5 to May 11

Rankings:  BusinessWeek Names University of Maryland and Loyola among Top Undergrad B-Schools (Citybizlist Baltimore)


Science Experts:  Excuse me: Gassy dinosaurs helped warm Earth (Associated Press)


Innovation & Entrepreneurship:  Cool School: Where Peace Rules, the free peaceful skills building video game for kids is now available! (Yahoo! News)


National Interest :  Americans want to slash defense spending, but Washington isn't listening. (The Washington Post)


National Interest:  Talk to Me, Not to My Daughter. (The New York Times)


Global Impact, Research:  Revenue-Driven Surgery Drives Patients Home Too Early (The Cutting Edge)


Global Impact, Research:  Children's National Medical Center Breaks MRI Speed Sound Barrier. (Yahoo! Finance)




Culture

The Women of Maryland

Faculty and Staff Who Have Made A Difference

M. Lucia James
M. Lucia James

Eugenie Clark - Professor emeritus Eugenie Clark is known as the "Shark Lady" thanks to her world-renowned shark research.

M. Lucia James - The first African American to become a full professor (Education - 1970-1977) at the University of Maryland. Her responsibilities included the oversight of the School of Education's curriculum lab. See College of Education history site.

Rachel Louise Carson - A professor of zoology at Maryland in the 1930s, Carson wrote "Silent Spring" - a call to action on the environment that resounds loudly today. Her birthday could become a state holiday. (See www.rachelcarson.org for more information.)

Eugenie Clark
Eugenie Clark
courtesy SUNY - Stony Brook
Shirley Strum Kenny

Shirley Strum Kenny - Kenny, while a professor of English, was the first woman to serve as chair of what is now known as the University Senate (1977-1979). She is currently the president of the State University of New York at Stony Brook.

Sandra Greer - Greer, a professor of chemistry since 1983, chaired the 1988 university committee charged with determining the feasibility of and implementation strategies for recommendations included in the landmark report "The Education of Women Students of the University of Maryland, College Park : Issues and Opportunities" (referred to as "The Greer Report")

Linda H. Martin - First woman webmaster of the University of Maryland.

Sandra Greer
Sandra Greer
Marie Mount
Marie Mount

Marie Mount - Long-time dean of the College of Home Economics; Marie Mount Hall was named for her in 1969.

Virginia Peasley - First University of Maryland Women's Athletics Director (1929).

Alma H. Preinkert - The first woman registrar of the University of Maryland (1936 - 1954). Preinkert Field House is named after her, as is Preinkert Drive. Read about the mystery surrounding Alma Preinkert's death.

Alma H. Preinkert
Alma Preinkert

Agnes Saunders

Agnes Saunders and Frieda Wiegand - The first female faculty members (1919). Saunders was a professor of home economics and served as acting dean of the school of home economics for the 1919-1920 academic year. Wiegand was an assistant professor of textiles and clothing.

Mary Shorb - Shorb was responsible for the discovery of a microbe which led to the commercial development of vitamin B12. She served as a research professor at Maryland from 1949 to 1972 in poultry husbandry.


Frieda Wiegand
Adele H. Stamp
Adele H. Stamp

Adele H. Stamp - Alumna and beloved first Dean of Women (1922-1960). She said her primary job was to "deal with the stream of life that flows through the university." When Stamp retired in 1960, the Board of Regents granted her emeritus rank, the first woman to receive this highest faculty honor. The Stamp Student Union was named after her in 1983.

Missy Meharg - 20 seasons with the Terps as women's Field Hockey coach has now produced four of the five NCAA championships (first back-to-back championships), six ACC titles and 6 seasons with 20 or more victories. She's been National Coach of the Year 5 times.

Cindy Timchal - Former Maryland coach Timchal is the first woman in collegiate women's lacrosse history to compile 300 victories.

Cindy Timchal - courtesy UM Athletics Dept.
Missy Meharg

Anne Turkos
Anne Turkos

Anne Turkos - The first woman to hold the title "University Archivist" at the University of Maryland.

Deborah A. Yow - The first female athletic director at Maryland and in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).

Brenda Frese - The first maryland women's basketball coach to win 34 games and a national championship (2006).

Deborah A. Yow
Deborah A. Yow

OTHER WOMEN'S FIRSTS AT MARYLAND

Lillian Cleveland Compton
Anna Euretta Richardson in 1923 - Courtesy University Archives, ISU Library.

Lucy Wilson Benson - The first female commencement speaker (June 3, 1972). Benson was president of the League of Women Voters.

Anna Euretta Richardson (Home Economics) - The first woman to receive an honorary degree from the university (1930).

Queen Elizabeth II - The first (and only!) British Queen to see a Terps football game. She came to Byrd Stadium in 1957 to see Maryland beat UNC.

Mrs. John L. Whitehurst - The first woman to serve on the board of regents (1934-1966).

While a history professor at Maryland in 2006, Barbara Weinstein - was named the president-elect of the American Historical Association.

Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Elizabeth II

Women Alumni Who Have Made A Difference
The Women of Maryland - 150th Anniversary Edition
Women's History Month Expert's List
Generations of Women Moving History Forward

Did we miss a first? Let us know so we can add to the list. Email to: dottalin@umd.edu.

 



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