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August 20, 2008
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Hornbake Studio -- Media Information

H9N2 Avian Flu Strain Has Pandemic Potential

Back To School Experts - 2008 Edition

UM Wins International Robot Competition

UM's Fall Semester to Focus on All Aspects Of War

Highlighted News Items, August 15

College Presidents Seek Debate on Drinking Age
President Mote encourages debate on effective student alcohol policy, among 100 college presidents signing Amethyst Agreement. (Baltimore Sun)

Military Funds Mind-Reading Study
Linguist David Poeppel's research engages in research that "could someday lead to a gadget capable of translating the thoughts of soldiers who suffered brain injuries or even stroke patients." A $4M Army contract sponsors the research. (Associated Press)




Maryland Moments, September, 2002

University Initiatives
(University News, Rankings)

  • UM Is Ranked in Top 20 Universities
    Maryland moved into the Top 20 of U.S. Public Universities for the first time in the U.S. News & World Report annual rankings at No. 18. The university has 70 programs (overall, undergraduate, graduate) ranked in their respective Top 25 categories, and 47 programs earned rankings among Top 15 schools.

    The 2003 undergraduate rankings:

    • The Smith School of Business ranks No. 18

      • Individual programs ranked are:

      • E-Commerce No. 4
      • Entrepreneurship No. 15
      • Management Information Systems No. 6
      • Marketing No. 19
      • Production Operations/Management No. 14
      • Supply Chain Management/Logistics No. 6

    • The Clark School of Engineering ranks No. 24

      • Individual programs are ranked:

      • Aerospace/Aeronautical/Astronautical No. 10
      • Electrical/Electronic/Communications No. 24

    • In its first-ever ranking of campus "Programs That Really Work," the university was ranked in three categories.

      • Learning Communities (Keeping the discussion going after class) No. 3
      • First-Year Experiences (Making freshmen feel connected) No. 12
      • Service Learning (Volunteering in the community) No. 24
  • Baccalaureate Bargains
    Maryland is rated No. 30 on Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine's list of the best values in public college education. In a sub-set of its top values, Kiplinger's recommended Maryland and nine other schools for value in "class size."

  • The Top 50 Business Schools

    The Wall Street Journal released its second annual rankings, and the Smith School was well-represented in many categories, including the following:

    • No. 16 among the top business schools in the world.
    • No. 3 as a Wall Street Journal 'Hidden Gem'
    • No. 8 among the top 10 Public Schools
    • No. 7 among Top Small Schools (enrollment under 500)
    • No. 7 among the Top Schools in the East

    The Journal asked recruiters to rate a 'Sharp Soft Skills' categories.

    • Smith ranked among the top 10 in "Communication and Interpersonal Skills" (No. 7) and Ability to Work Well Within a Team" (No. 9).

    • Financial service recruiters ranked Smith No. 7
    • Technology recruiters ranked Smith No. 8
    • Smith ranked No. 5 for Information Technology
  • Smith School Introduces Executive MBA Program
    The Robert H. Smith School of Business launches its first executive MBA (EMBA) program in January 2003 It is designed to not only provide a quality executive education to managers, but also to focus on the educational and developmental needs of the companies that sponsor the participants.

  • Robert H. Smith Goes to Beijing
    The Smith School of Business will open an executive MBA program in the Chinese capital, with Maryland faculty traveling to Beijing to teach most of the courses. The Smith School will work with Beijing's University of International Business and Economics on the 17-month curriculum.

  • Alumnus, Wife Provide Generously for UM Scholarship Program
    Murray Valenstein, a retired New York advertising executive, and his wife, Suzanne, are paying for two Baltimore city students per year to attend the University of Maryland under a the Baltimore Incentive Awards Program. Designed to increase the number of students from Baltimore matriculating to the university, the program just welcomed its second class with the start of the 2002-03 school year.

  • Cos for Celebration
    Entertainer Bill Cosby came to town to headline an evening honoring David Driskell, professor emeritus of art and distinguished university professor. The event, at the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, formally launched the campus's David C. Driskell Center for the Study of the African Diaspora, which has as its goal bringing to public attention the place of African American art among the master works of American art.

  • Sept. 11: "Remembrance of the Past, Hope for the Future"
    The university marked the first anniversary of Sep. 11 with a solemn vigil and program of remembrance. President C.D. Mote Jr. led the morning ceremonies at the east end of McKeldin Mall, where a Memorial Garden is planned. The names of those who lost their lives in the terrorist attacks were read during the vigil.

  • University Hopes Fans Act Like They Know How to Behave
    The university's innovative "Act Like You Know Campaign," designed to increase sportsmanship at campus athletic events and in their aftermath, was introduced with an aura of mystery. Before the Florida State football game, unattributed "Act Like You Know" art work was displayed on campus. At the game itself, coach Ralph Friedgen announced that "Act Like You Know" is a parallel to act with "class." The campaign attempts to reach the community through editorial pieces in local newspapers and materials which will be distributed through football and basketball seasons.

  • Continuing "The Laramie Project" Earns Praise as Defense of Academic Freedom
    The university was the focus of media attention for selecting "The Laramie Project" as a reading choice for in-coming and dormitory students. Off-campus groups threatened lawsuits if the university did not cancel planned discussions of the play, which examines the killing of a gay college student, Matthew Shepard, in Wyoming. Academic freedom was insured with the university's decision to move ahead with the selection, which was intended to open a dialogue on the nature of hate crimes.

  • Graduation Rates Up for UM Student-Athletes
    The graduation rates for University of Maryland student-athletes rose for the fourth consecutive year, to 68 percent, according to figures compiled and released by the NCAA and the Department of Education.

  • America's Best Sports Colleges
    The university ranks No. 24 in a Sports Illustrated ranking of America's strongest college athletic programs. Rankings were based not only on competitive performance, but also on school spirit and recreational opportunities.

    Society & Culture

  • Md. Losing Farmland Faster Than U.S. Norm
    The Center for Agricultural and Natural Resource Policy in the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources released its long-awaited report on the state of Maryland farming. The two-year, $200,000 study was directed by Bruce Gardner, distinguished university professor of agricultural economics. Gardner: "(Politicians) should treat agriculture like any other business. The state now tends to be a little more adversarial toward farming."

  • Preventing Problems at the Polls
    Paul Herrnson, director of the Center for American Politics and Citizenship, and Ben Bederson, director of the Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory, conducted research on electronic voting machines used in Maryland elections for the first time this fall. They had words of caution as to the ease of use of the machines, whose installation was designed to avoid the problems of the 2000 elections in Florida.

  • Metts Touts Plan Involving UM to Up SAT Scores
    Prince George's County schools superintendent Iris Metts announced plans to improve declining SAT scores in the county. According to the Washington Post, the University of Maryland and Bowie State University are important collaborators in these plans. An example of a successful program to improve test scores is at Bladensburg High School. Under guidance from the university's Maryland Institute for Minority Achievement and Urban Education, Bladensburg elevated its scores by an average of 17 points.

  • Study Finds Inequity in Students' School Days
    Researchers from the College of Health and Human Performance and Teachers College, Columbia University, released a study published in the journal Teachers College Record that probes the perennial question "What did you do at school today?" The groundbreaking work was based on a nationally representative sample of 553 students in 1st through 5th grades. "Our data illustrate the racial and economic inequality in America's schools: Poorer minority children do not have the same opportunities as richer white students."

  • 1,200 Historians Sign Petition Urging Congress to Debate Iraq War

  • More than 1,200 historians signed a petition to Congress calling on it "to assume [its] Constitutional responsibility to debate and vote on whether or not to declare war on Iraq." A delegation of scholars, which included Ira Berlin, distinguished university professor of history, presented the petition to members of Congress. Other Maryland faculty members signing the petition were Randall Mason, director of the Program in Historic Preservation, Gary Gerstle, professor of history, Elsa Barkley Brown, associate professor of history, Claire Moses, professor and chair of women's studies and Robyn Muncy, associate professor of history.

  • American Muslims and Scholars Denounce Terrorism
    Charles Butterworth, professor of government and politics, is among 12 board members of the Center for the Study of Islam & Democracy to sign a "statement denouncing violence and terrorism, especially in the name of Islam, a religion of peace and justice." Also signing were prominent American Muslims, organizations and scholars, as well as others from around the world. Among the 44 academics lending their names to the statement were Jillian Schwedler, assistant professor of government and politics, and Rima Pavalko, graduate assistant in government and politics.

  • Realist Foreign Policy Scholars Denounce Attack on Iraq
    Shibley Telhami, Anwar Sadat Chair for Peace and Development, is among 33 scholars whose name appears on an advertisement in the New York Times saying a military attack on Iraq would be a profound and costly mistake.

    Science & Technology

  • NASA Institutes Launched
    NASA launched a University Research, Engineering and Technology Institute and Maryland and the University of Florida were picked to study reusable launch vehicles. Other schools playing lead roles are Princeton University (light-weight aeronautic materials), the University of California, Berkeley (information technology fusion), Georgia Tech University (aeropropulsion and power), and Purdue University (nanoelectronics and computing).

  • Maryland Joins Aerospace Institute Consortium
    The university is one of six schools who are establishing an aerospace institute for NASA in Hampton Roads, Virginia. The other schools are the University of Virginia, Virginia Tech, Georgia Tech, North Carolina St., and North Carolina A&T. The institute hopes to produce cutting-edge research by employing a combination of NASA's Langley Research Center efforts and those of institute partners. The institute will offer master's and doctoral degrees in science and engineering at Langley and to students at partner universities via distance learning.

  • UM Creates International Digital Library
    The growing International Children's Digital Library, being authored by the Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS), plans to launch a prototype containing 225 books for Internet use this autumn. Further, UMIACS' partnership with the Internet Archive won a $397,162 grant to evaluate the impact of the children's digital library.

  • Lathan is 'Innovator of Year'
    Corinna Lathan, who as founder of AnthroTronix Inc.is focused on easing physical therapy sessions for disabled children, was named Innovator of the Year 2002 by Maryland's Daily Record newspaper. AnthroTronix is part of the Technology Advancement Program at the university's Engineering Research Center.

  • Unique Hearing Research Program Nets Major NIH Grant
    A group of university researchers thinks understanding how different animals sense and process sound may uncover clues to restoring human hearing loss. Research by an interdisciplinary team in the Center for Comparative and Evolutionary Biology of Hearing has so impressed the National Institutes of Health that NIH has awarded a $2.6 million grant to the university to support the center and expand research.

    Undergraduate Experience

  • Solar Decathlon
    Maryland students--engineers, urban planners and computer science majors--prepared for months to compete at the National Mall in the Department of Energy's Solar Decathlon. The 22-ton Maryland entry earned high marks, finishing fourth among 14 teams. In the 10 categories that made up the decathlon, Maryland finished No. 1 in "Energy Balance" and "Hot Water," No. 2 in "The Comfort Zone" and No. 3 in "Design Presentation and Simulation."

    More Maryland Moments in September

  • Maryland Graduate a Nobel Prize Winner
    Raymond Davis Jr., described by Newsday as "a quiet, self-effacing chemist from Brookhaven National Laboratory who searched for secrets of the sun by putting an experiment nearly a mile underground in a South Dakota gold mine," won the Nobel Prize in physics. Davis earned his undergraduate and master degrees at Maryland.

  • UM Geniuses
    The MacArthur Foundation honors "Extraordinary people doing extraordinary things." And now two University of Maryland alumnae, choreographer Liz Lerman and novelist Karen Hesse can continue doing their extraordinary doings without financial worry. They join 22 other Americans as 2002 recipients of the so-called "Genius Awards" given out September 25th by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Each receives a no-strings-attached fellowship of $500,000 over five years.

  • Fewer Admitted to UM
    Maryland high school students who feel their credentials are faultless are now routinely put on hold for admission to the university, or are denied admission, according to the Washington Post. Part of the story is in the numbers: the percentage of admitted students from the applicant pool is dropping precipitously.

  • Md. Death Penalty Report Delayed
    Ray Paternoster, professor of criminology and criminal justice, extended the time for his research on the fairness of the death penalty in Maryland until Dec. 31. Commissioned by the legislature, the study has proven to be a more time-consuming endeavor than thought, according to Paternoster, who is reviewing criminal cases in the thousands going back several decades.

  • Ethics Take Center Stage as Honor Codes Get Look
    When Diane Waryold, executive director of the Center for Academic Integrity, was asked by the Raleigh News & Observer for good examples of student ethics programs, she pointed to Maryland. "I tell them to look at the University of Maryland..." The Center is part of the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University.

  • Most Powerful Women in Business
    Alumna Carly Fiornia, CEO of Hewlett-Packard, was named the most powerful woman in business by Fortune magazine.

  • Professional Journalists Name UMTV Newscast Best in Nation
    Maryland Newsline, the University of Maryland's nightly newscast, was named the best student-produced TV news show in the nation by the Society of Professional Journalists. The program, produced by advanced broadcast news students at the Philip Merrill College of Journalism and aired on the college-operated cable station UMTV, won the prestigious Mark of Excellence Award in its first year.

  • Maryland Wins Miss America Preliminaries
    Recent School of Music graduate Camille Lewis finished as the fourth runner-up at the Miss America Pageant. She won the talent and evening gown competitions before the final night of judging.

  • 'World Turns' Stops at UM
    Soap operas, which in their radio days depended on agonizing organ music to ratchet up plot interest, now tour college campuses. "As the World Turns" held auditions on campus for students who want to become real citizens of a fictional Oakdale, however briefly.


    Fall '02 :
    August | September | October | November | December
    Winter & Spring
    '03 :
    January | February | March | April | May | June | July


  • dotsInformation provided by the Office of University Communications
    Email University Communications at emailum@umd.edu