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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="59138" important="true" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59138">
  <Title>"Multiple Communities, Multiple Stories" Event on April 23rd</Title>
  <Tagline>Free Community Conversation &amp; Digital Storytelling Workshop</Tagline>
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    <div><em><strong>The Dresher Center for the Humanities invites you to join the conversation on April 23rd.</strong></em></div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div><strong>Saturday, April 23, 2016</strong></div>
    <div>
    <strong>Creative Alliance</strong> (3134 Eastern Ave, Baltimore, MD 21224)</div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div>Community Conversation: 12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.</div>
    <div>Digital Storytelling Workshop:  2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.</div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div>In the aftermath of the death of Freddie Gray in April 2015, we need conversations that bring together a variety of voices and communities to address the intersections of poverty, race, ethnicity, and gender and help create new stories about Baltimore. This event will highlight Baltimore communities and stories through conversations about the past, present, and future of the city. Participants will explore questions about equity, identity, immigration, and belonging and discuss how residents' experiences are shaped in and through their neighborhoods. After the conversation, participants can also learn how to use digital storytelling as a way to record and disseminate their voices.</div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div>
    <strong><em>Community Conversation</em></strong> (12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.)</div>
    <div><strong>Mapping Dialogues Project: Baybrook</strong></div>
    <div>Rodette Jones, Community Activist and Manager of the Filbert Street Community Garden in Curtis Bay, and Nicole King (American Studies)</div>
    <div><strong><br></strong></div>
    <div><strong>Highlandtown Cultural Heritage Project</strong></div>
    <div>Maria Nicolaidis, Greektown Resident and Historian, and Michelle Stefano (American Studies)</div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div><strong>Identity, Immigration and Belonging: Baltimore’s Hispanic/Latino Community</strong></div>
    <div>David Rosario, Baltimore City Mayor's Hispanic Commission Member, and Ana María Schwartz Caballero (MLLI)</div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div><strong>Equity Across City Communities</strong></div>
    <div>Michael Scott, Chief Equity Officer/Founder of Equity Matters, and A. Adar Ayira, Director of Programs, Associated Black Charities and Trainer/Facilitator, Baltimore Racial Justice Action</div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div>
    <strong><em>Digital Storytelling Workshop</em></strong> (2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.)</div>
    <div>With Bill Shewbridge (MCS) and Tania Lizarazo (MLLI)</div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div>For more program information: <a href="http://dreshercenter.umbc.edu/?p=1656" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://dreshercenter.umbc.edu/?p=1656</a>
    </div>
    <div>To register: <a href="http://goo.gl/forms/NVg6wnJhqF" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://goo.gl/forms/NVg6wnJhqF</a>
    </div>
    <div>Questions: <a href="mailto:dreshercenter@umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">dreshercenter@umbc.edu</a> </div>
    <div><br></div>
    <div>The Baltimore Stories project has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and is a collaboration between the University of Maryland, Maryland Humanities Council, the University of Maryland Baltimore County, Enoch Pratt Free Library and the Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance. </div>
    </div>
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  <Summary>The Dresher Center for the Humanities invites you to join the conversation on April 23rd.     Saturday, April 23, 2016  Creative Alliance (3134 Eastern Ave, Baltimore, MD 21224)     Community...</Summary>
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  <PostedAt>Wed, 06 Apr 2016 11:37:36 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="59137" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59137">
    <Title>New Study Shows that Social Media is Dumb</Title>
    <Tagline>The study was conducted by YOUR ASS.</Tagline>
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          <span><p><span>This article exists today to bring you the cold, hard truth: social media is useless and dumb and senseless and… dumb. And anyone who uses any form of social media is unintelligent and foolish and brainless and belongs in the tool shed because you, my kind sir, are a fucking tool. Social media has consumed every second of the day with your Twitter lines and Facebook boards. Everyone’s so obsessed with finding the right filter that makes your face look three shades redder and really accentuates your ass….HOLENESS. Or that you need to retweet that reblog of the reshared picture that was reddited off Myspace that originally came from Friendster.</span></p>
          <p><span>Social media is supposed to connect people. I didn’t think people believed sharing that you’re “feeling thankful *insert crying face emoji and OK hand emoji* #BLESSUP” for your half-eaten messy lump of burrito was a relevant and moving statement. Bless you</span><span>up, as well.</span></p>
          <p><span></span><span>It’s not my fault that my pic on Instagram got only 12 likes in the past two days when you posted a blurry picture of your “crazy” night being “so lit” and now has over 30- excuse me, 34- likes in the past three minutes. In an official interview with myself, I said: “Well, fuck you, too. I hope your night was so fire that your house burned to the ground. And if not, I’ll do it for you.” </span></p>
          <span></span><span>Anyways, we made a Twitter. Follow us @heyuMBCnews. Tell us what you hate about social media! I know I hate the fact that people always gotta plug their pages at the end of a post. Don’t forget to paw this article, like our Facebook Page and myUMBC Group, listen to our podcasts on MixCloud, contribute to our Patreon, check our Snapchat stories, friend our Friendsters, add us on LinkedIn, and finally, donate your soul to our KickStarter and receive a starting kick.</span></span><div><span><span><br></span></span></div>
          <div><span><span>-Your Aunt</span></span></div>
          </div>
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    <Summary>This article exists today to bring you the cold, hard truth: social media is useless and dumb and senseless and… dumb. And anyone who uses any form of social media is unintelligent and foolish and...</Summary>
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    <PostedAt>Wed, 06 Apr 2016 11:36:03 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="59135" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59135">
  <Title>CBEE PhD student presents research and takes first place</Title>
  <Tagline>grad students share snapshots of research at conference</Tagline>
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    <span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/umbc-graduate-students-move-past-its-too-complicated-to-hone-research-communication-skills/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>March 30, 2016</u></a> by </span><span><span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/author/dwinnick/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>Dinah Winnick</u></a><br><span><br>UMBC President </span><strong>Freeman Hrabowski </strong><span>pointed out something interesting about the Graduate Research Conference as he spoke to the hundreds assembled for this year’s event: it’s not just about the research. It’s about communicating why research matters.<br><br></span><p><span>“Today is important to develop a sense of self that allows you to stand up in front of people and speak with confidence,” Hrabowski told the students in the crowd. “You will become leaders, and people expect that of leaders,” he said, noting that communicating effectively is essential to helping the public and research funders understand not just a specific project, but “the value of research” for society.</span></p>
    <p><span>UMBC’s 38th Graduate Research Conference, held on March 23, 2016, was jam-packed with presentations, professional development events, and a new Three-Minute Thesis (3MT) competition that challenged students to give clear and engaging bite-size descriptions of their research topics. </span></p>
    <p><span>Combined, these events provided an incredible experience for participants. They also offered a glimpse into what Graduate School Dean </span><strong>Janet Rutledge </strong><span>described as how graduate research “adds to the academic richness of this university.”</span></p>
    <p><span>Presentations throughout the day spanned all three UMBC colleges and a very broad range of topics.</span></p>
    <p><strong>Michael Abrams, a Ph.D. student in public policy, </strong><span>studied recent Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warnings for medications that treat depression, asthma, diabetes, and smoking addiction, and considered how media coverage of the warnings influenced medication usage. “Warnings matter,” explained Abrams, “and there is a good deal of evidence that news coverage matters.” Through qualitative and quantitative analysis, Abrams discovered strong evidence that FDA warnings led to decreased usage of medications in many instances, suggesting a greater focus by the FDA on communications could boost the impact of future warnings.</span></p>
    <p><span>The role of social media in propelling the Black Lives Matter movement sparked </span><strong>Deborah Kadiri</strong><span>’s research project “The Hashtag as a New Genre: #BlackLivesMatter.” Describing her topic, Kadiri shared, “I wanted to find something that had personal interest for me as well as social, political, and historical relevance.” As a texts, technologies, and literature master’s student, Kadiri compared communications surrounding the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s with the contemporary movement utilizing #BlackLivesMatter. She discovered that the hashtag often serves as a bridge between virtual and in-person conversations, and she highlighted how social media opens up spaces for new conversations about civil rights.</span></p>
    <p><strong>Daniel Orozco</strong><span>, a PhD student in atmospheric physics, studies the impact of humidity on aerosol particles, which are known to have serious health and climate impacts. Current technologies to measure aerosol particles are inexact when it comes to humidity variation, but Orozco’s presentation described how UMBC’s airplane-based Polarized Imaging Nephelometer (PI-NEPH) tool was designed to move past those limitations. His work seeks to improve aerosol sensing techniques and models that impact how scientists understand air quality and climate change.</span></p>
    <p><span>Each year, the Delmarva region generates approximately seven million tons of poultry litter, leading to problematically high levels of phosphorus local bodies of water, like the Chesapeake Bay. To reduce the amount of phosphorus finding its way into bodies of water, </span><strong>Utsav Shashvatt</strong><span>, a PhD student in chemical, biochemical and environmental engineering (CBEE), is developing a process to recover nutrients, like phosphorus, from animal waste. Shashvatt notes that his work has “the potential of recovering about 120,000 tons of phosphorus.”</span></p>
    <p><strong>Amanda Lo</strong><span>, a master’s student in biological sciences, shared her research on the immune systems of fruit flies as the insects age. “I am looking at three specific genes to see if they have a critical role in the immune system,” she said. Lo injected one-week-old and five-weeks-old fruit flies with E. coli bacteria then plated and incubated the organisms. The resulting bacterial colonies indicated which genes led to a weaker or stronger immune system response. Her research may have future pharmaceutical applications.</span><span><br></span></p>
    <p><strong>Jeffrey Gangwisch </strong><span>’18 M.F.A., Intermedia and Digital Arts presented “The Human Figure as Animal and Object,” which illustrated his research and experiments with “alternative methods of documenting, obscuring and interacting with the natural world.” He discussed his use of 3D scanning and printing through UMBC’s Prototyping and Design (PAD) Lab, meshing body scans together to explore remapping the human form and 3D technology itself as a tool to reconsider the art forms of photography, sculpture, drawing, and video.</span></p>
    <p><span>“Iteration &amp; Vestige” by </span><strong>Melissa Penley Cormier </strong><span>’17, M.F.A., Intermedia and Digital Arts, was an introduction to the artist’s work mapping time through daily creative acts. Cormier explained her interest in the scientific method and her iterative process to archive and record mark-making and material experiments. Her most recent work has her “looking at her worries” with an array of apparati, from a child’s microscope to “magic lanterns.”</span></p>
    <p><span>A presentation by </span><strong>William Klotz </strong><span>’17 M.A.T., education, described his intermedia approach to researching the effects of activist action on national identity. His focus was on 39 years of weekly marches in the Plaza de Mayo by mothers of </span><em><span>desaparecidos </span></em><span>in Argentina. The culmination of his presentation was a dance he choreographed for a Spanish course on utopias and dystopias, performed by UMBC dance students </span><strong>Nikaela Bryan </strong><span>’16, </span><strong>Rachel Lum </strong><span>’16, and </span><strong>Samantha Siegel </strong><span>’19.</span></p>
    <p><span>Throughout the morning presenters competed in an initial round of the 3MT contest, vying for a spot in the finals where they would deliver their talks to an auditorium full of eager listeners, including President Hrabowski.</span></p>
    <p>“We all were very excited about the competition, and so were the audience and participants,” says <strong>Sourabh Arsey</strong> ’16, M.S., information systems, conference chair and vice president of the Graduate Student Association. “It feels great to be part of something new and I thank the whole graduate community for supporting us.”</p>
    <p><span>Emcee </span><strong>Dan Miller</strong><span>, Ph.D. student in atmospheric physics, noted that some disciplines have dissertations up to 80,000 words, so trimming that down to a jargon-free three-minute talk with just one visual aid would be quite a feat. The grand prize winner would earn a trip to the regional competition at the Council of Southern Graduate Schools, and second- and third-prize winners would receive monetary awards. </span></p>
    <p><span>The speakers quickly impressed their audience with research ranging from addressing troubling vulnerabilities in our everyday internet use, to creating “cyberphysical systems” that can help people with limited mobility become more independent, to targeting HIV drugs in ways that can avoid drug resistance. The contest winner was </span><strong>Kiranmayi Mangalgiri</strong><span>, Ph.D. student in CBEE, who spoke about the role of dissolved organic matter in determining how UV light transforms antibiotics in water impacted by agricultural runoff. </span></p>
    <p><span>“The worst thing you can say [in describing your research] is, ‘It’s too complicated,” President Hrabowski shared just before the 3MT finals began. The presenters took to heart his advice: “Be part of the bridge…to represent your discipline [in connecting] with the public.”</span></p>
    <p>Image: <em><em>Daniel Orozco, Ph.D. student in atmostpheric physics, presents his research at the 2016 UMBC Graduate Research Conference. Photo by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.</em></em></p></span></span>
    </div>
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  <Summary>March 30, 2016 by Dinah Winnick  UMBC President Freeman Hrabowski pointed out something interesting about the Graduate Research Conference as he spoke to the hundreds assembled for this year’s...</Summary>
  <Website>http://news.umbc.edu/umbc-graduate-students-move-past-its-too-complicated-to-hone-research-communication-skills/</Website>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="59134" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59134">
  <Title>Cybersecurity experts share insights on MedStar Health</Title>
  <Tagline>cyber attack and cybersecurity safeguards</Tagline>
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    <span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/cybersecurity-experts-share-insights-on-medstar-health-cyber-attack-and-cybersecurity-safeguards/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>April 5, 2016</u></a> by </span><span><span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/author/meganhanks/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>Megan Hanks</u></a><br><span><br>As ransomware reportedly held MedStar Health’s records system and data hostage, two UMBC cybersecurity experts offered insight on the situation and the possibilities for preventing future cyber attacks.</span><p><strong>Anupam Joshi</strong><span>, director of UMBC’s Center for Cybersecurity and professor and chair of the department of computer science and electrical engineering (CSEE), spoke with </span><a href="http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2016/03/30/cyber-attackers-who-broke-into-medstar-want-big-payout/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em><span><u>CBS Baltimore</u></span></em></a><span> (WJZ) about what MedStar Health or other organizations in similar situations can do to better understand and address the threats of ransomware.</span></p>
    <p><span>He explained that ransomware takes over a computer system and holds it hostage until a demand is met, often a demand for bitcoins in exchange for returning access to the threatened data.</span></p>
    <p><span>“Unbreakable. It’s simply unbreakable,” said Joshi, in describing how ransomware is highly challenging to crack.</span></p>
    <p><strong>Rick Forno</strong><span>, assistant director of the UMBC Center for Cybersecurity and director of UMBC’s graduate program in cybersecurity, spoke with </span><a href="http://thedailyrecord.com/2016/03/31/medstar-cyberattack-highlights-health-care-it-challenges/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em><span><u>The Daily Record</u></span></em></a><span> about the MedStar Health system attack, specifically how ransomware attacks can be prevented.</span></p>
    <p><span>Organizations like hospitals should back up their systems and data regularly, says Forno. However, he explains, malicious programs, like ransomware, can be hard to detect. This means that companies may not be able to guarantee that if encrypted backup files don’t contain  viruses or malware. </span></p>
    <p><span>See “Cyber Attackers Who Broke Into MedStar Want Big Payout” on </span><a href="http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2016/03/30/cyber-attackers-who-broke-into-medstar-want-big-payout/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em><span><u>CBS Baltimore</u></span></em></a><em><span>,</span></em><span> and “MedStar cyberattack highlights health care IT challenges” in</span> <a href="http://thedailyrecord.com/2016/03/31/medstar-cyberattack-highlights-health-care-it-challenges/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em><span><u>The Daily Record</u></span></em></a><span>.</span></p>
    <p><em><em>Photo by Yuri Samoilov, </em><a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u><em>CC by 2.0</em></u></a><em>.</em></em></p></span></span>
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  <Summary>April 5, 2016 by Megan Hanks  As ransomware reportedly held MedStar Health’s records system and data hostage, two UMBC cybersecurity experts offered insight on the situation and the possibilities...</Summary>
  <Website>http://news.umbc.edu/cybersecurity-experts-share-insights-on-medstar-health-cyber-attack-and-cybersecurity-safeguards/</Website>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="59133" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59133">
    <Title>Colleges ramping up efforts to spin off companies</Title>
    <Tagline>after neglect</Tagline>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content">
          <span>Colleges ramping up efforts to spin off companies after neglect</span><div>
          <p>By Carrie Wells </p>
          <p><br></p>
          <p>Maryland universities have ramped up efforts in recent years to help students and faculty turn their discoveries into growing businesses but lag far behind many colleges around the country in spinning off companies and pulling in millions of dollars in licensing revenue.</p>
          <p>Helping faculty and students create businesses to market the medical devices, computer programs or other creations can help boost a university's bottom line and shore up the local economy if the startup companies stay in the area.</p>
          <p>"We have such great potential here, and it's lain fallow for so long," said Benjamin H. Wu, a deputy secretary at the state Department of Commerce who sits on a committee examining the issue. "Our economic climate has paid the price. There was some regret there. … If we had looked it at in the past, our business climate might not have needed improving over the last eight years."</p>
          <p>The committee will issue recommendations in the coming weeks for improving the state's track record in technology commercialization, also known as tech transfer, Wu said.</p>
          <p><br></p>
          <p>Read more at <a href="http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bs-bz-university-commercialization-20160324-story.html">http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bs-bz-university-commercialization-20160324-story.html</a></p>
          </div>
          </div>
      ]]>
    </Body>
    <Summary>Colleges ramping up efforts to spin off companies after neglect  By Carrie Wells      Maryland universities have ramped up efforts in recent years to help students and faculty turn their...</Summary>
    <Website>http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bs-bz-university-commercialization-20160324-story.html</Website>
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    <PostedAt>Wed, 06 Apr 2016 10:47:26 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="59132" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59132">
  <Title>UMBC-USNA teams share progress on cybersecurity research</Title>
  <Tagline>symposium held at US Naval Academy</Tagline>
  <Body>
    <![CDATA[
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    <span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/umbc-usna-teams-share-progress-on-cybersecurity-research-at-symposium/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>April 1, 2016</u></a> by </span><span><span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/author/meganhanks/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>Megan Hanks</u></a><br><br><br><p>UMBC and U.S. Naval Academy (USNA) faculty researchers presented updates on five collaborative cybersecurity projects funded by the Office of Naval Research (ONR) during the inaugural USNA-UMBC Partnership Symposium, hosted by UMBC’s Office the Vice President for Research on March 22, 2016.</p>
    <p>The five projects presented are supported by three-year grants from the ONR, most of which are entering their second year of funding.</p>
    <p>When the joint research initiative launched a year ago, <strong>Karl V. Steiner</strong>, vice president for research at UMBC, described it as “the start of a long-term partnership.” The recent symposium was the first formal opportunity for the research teams to formally present their progress on tackling major cybersecurity challenges outlined when the partnership began.</p>
    <p>One team is developing a way to ensure that cloud-based storage services are secure, and that consumers can store their files with confidence. UMBC principal investigator (PI) <strong>Karuna Joshi</strong>, assistant research professor of computer science and electrical engineering (CSEE); <strong>Tim Finin</strong>, professor of CSEE; and USNA faculty are developing a cloud storage system that will make it impossible for deleted data to be restored or recovered.</p>
    <p>Another group is developing a system that can continuously monitor itself and detect potential threats more quickly than human monitors. This technology has important safety as well as security implications. In cars, for example, hackers can gain control of a vehicle through Bluetooth or other existing systems, potentially having deadly effects. UMBC PI <strong>Ryan Robucci</strong>, assistant professor of CSEE; <strong>Chintan Patel</strong>, assistant professor of CSEE; <strong>Nilanjan Banerjee</strong>, associate professor of CSEE; <strong>Anupam Joshi</strong>, professor and chair of CSEE; and USNA faculty are now completing tests that involve working to detect anomalies in various systems.</p>
    <p>Drawing on the finding that many online attacks follow predictable patterns, UMBC PI <strong>Tim Oates</strong>, professor of CSEE, and USNA PI Nate Chambers, assistant professor of computer science, presented their work on a tool to monitor social media networks, like Facebook and Twitter, in real-time to detect likely attacks. The team is analyzing language trends on social media platforms around the times that previous attacks took place. Regular social media users often notice attacks or threats of attacks first, and by analyzing and characterizing the content of their posts on “normal days” compared with “attack days” the team is developing a way to automatically generate an alert when real-time social media posts indicate a possible attack.</p>
    <p>Understanding the strengths and limitations of the range of existing mobile authentication methods is important in protecting individuals’ devices from getting hacked. UMBC PI <strong>Ravi Kuber</strong>, associate professor of information systems, and USNA faculty are studying the strength of various authentication tools on Android devices to develop new methods that use tactile cues, like vibrations, to authenticate mobile devices. The team conducted research to understand authentication practices of people who are conscious of security issues, and the susceptibility of current authentication methods to over-the-shoulder breaches. Kuber and his team developed a secure authentication tool called H4Plock that prompts individuals to enter strokes in response to cues, where response patterns would be unique to an individual user.</p>
    <p>The fifth group including UMBC PI <strong>Nirmalya Roy</strong>, assistant professor of information systems; <strong>Todd Pittman</strong>, associate professor of physics; <strong>James Franson</strong>, professor of physics; and several USNA faculty, is working to create quantum computers that can help identify abnormal behavior or patterns at much faster speeds than current computing technology. The team is extracting photons that will then be included in optical fibers to emit light. They are working to pull bundles of optical fibers thinner to create nanofiber cavities.</p>
    <p><strong>Don Engel</strong>, assistant vice president for research at UMBC, thanked the ONR for their close collaboration and shared his excitement that the research collaborations have already shown such “fruitful findings.”</p>
    <p><em><em>Image: Karuna Joshi presents during the USNA-UMBC Partnership Symposium. Photo by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.</em></em></p></span></span>
    </div>
]]>
  </Body>
  <Summary>April 1, 2016 by Megan Hanks    UMBC and U.S. Naval Academy (USNA) faculty researchers presented updates on five collaborative cybersecurity projects funded by the Office of Naval Research (ONR)...</Summary>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="59131" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59131">
    <Title>MD universities ramp up efforts to help students, faculty</Title>
    <Tagline>create companies</Tagline>
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          <h4><span>Maryland universities ramp up efforts to help students, faculty create companies</span></h4>
          <div>
          <div><span><br></span></div>
          <div>
          <span>By <span>Carrie Wells</span></span> <span>March 26</span>
          </div> <p><br></p>
          <p>Maryland universities have ramped up efforts in recent years to help students and faculty turn their discoveries into growing businesses but lag far behind many colleges around the country in spinning off companies and pulling in millions of dollars in licensing revenue.</p>
          <p>Helping faculty and students create businesses to market medical devices, computer programs or other creations can boost a university’s bottom line and shore up the local economy if the start-up companies stay in the area.</p>
          <p>“We have such great potential here, and it’s lain fallow for so long,” said Benjamin H. Wu, a deputy secretary at the state Department of Commerce who sits on a committee examining the issue. “Our economic climate has paid the price.”</p>
          <p>The committee will issue recommendations in the coming weeks for improving the state’s track record in technology commercialization, also known as tech transfer, Wu said.</p>
          <p>Read more at <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/maryland-universities-ramp-up-efforts-to-help-students-faculty-create-companies/2016/03/26/1d910b1c-f2e6-11e5-a61f-e9c95c06edca_story.html">https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/maryland-universities-ramp-up-efforts-to-help-students-faculty-create-companies/2016/03/26/1d910b1c-f2e6-11e5-a61f-e9c95c06edca_story.html</a></p> </div>
          </div>
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    <Summary>Maryland universities ramp up efforts to help students, faculty create companies      By Carrie Wells March 26      Maryland universities have ramped up efforts in recent years to help students...</Summary>
    <Website>https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/maryland-universities-ramp-up-efforts-to-help-students-faculty-create-companies/2016/03/26/1d910b1c-f2e6-11e5-a61f-e9c95c06edca_story.html</Website>
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    <PostedAt>Wed, 06 Apr 2016 10:44:07 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="59130" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59130">
    <Title>Summer sublease close to campus</Title>
    <Tagline>Master bedroom available May - August. $500</Tagline>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content">Hello, my roommates and I are looking for a summer renter for our master bedroom from the months of May - August. The house is located in the Arbutus neighborhood, right down the street from campus. We are three females, all working professionals in our 20's, very friendly, and we also have a cat. The bedroom has a huge closet as well as it's own private bath. Safe neighborhood, parking, walking distance to public transit.  The rent is about $500 plus utilities (usually range about 50-75 per month). Please let us know if you'd be interested! Email: <a href="mailto:ras2@umbc.edu">ras2@umbc.edu</a>
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    </Body>
    <Summary>Hello, my roommates and I are looking for a summer renter for our master bedroom from the months of May - August. The house is located in the Arbutus neighborhood, right down the street from...</Summary>
    <Website>http://baltimore.craigslist.org/roo/5524578967.html</Website>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="59128" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/59128">
    <Title>Northrop Grumman is coming today!</Title>
    <Tagline>Stop by our GBM today in M/P103 @noon</Tagline>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
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          <span>Northrop Grumman will be hosting a panel made up of NG Engineers talking about how to be successful at internships and </span><span>how to start on the right foot when beginning a new job!</span>
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      ]]>
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    <Summary>Northrop Grumman will be hosting a panel made up of NG Engineers talking about how to be successful at internships and how to start on the right foot when beginning a new job!</Summary>
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  <Title>The traveling merchant: color and cloth in the Breezeway</Title>
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    <img width="1000" height="563" src="http://retrieverweekly.umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/20160309_141213.jpg" alt="20160309_141213" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><div> <span>Ginny Phalen - TRW</span>
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    <p>If you’ve spent any time around The Commons, you’ve probably noticed a woman selling scarves, clothes and jewelry in the breezeway. She shows up sporadically, but her merchandise is consistent: hats and gloves in the winter, dresses and shorts in the spring, rings and bracelets all year long. Her name is Denise Helou, though she is known by many names.</p>
    <p>“I had a student at St. Mary’s College come up to me and call me ‘the hippie lady,'” she says as she neatly sorts through a pile of tapestries that are stacked next to her table. “If I had to label myself as anything, I would say that I’m a roving vendor. A traveling merchant of sorts.”</p>
    <p>Students stop and peruse her wares as they make their way to their classes. Two girls giggle to one another as they try on rings, pursing their lips and determining which accessory best suits them before slipping them onto their fingers and admiring them. Helou assists another student examining a long floral dress, explaining that it is a “double-layer wrap skirt” that can be worn in a number of different styles.</p>
    <p>Helou has been in this business for over 20 years, traveling around to different colleges and universities in Maryland, DC, Virginia and Pennsylvania. When she first started her business, she sold homemade things – mostly journals and other paper goods – which she primarily sold in markets. Moving her store to college campuses changed her customer-base though, so she decided to change her stock. She currently ships in her goods from a number of suppliers all over the country.</p>
    <p>As Helou recounts her earlier days in the business, a student buys a dark brown skirt, fumbling through a bright red wallet to find cash. Helou carefully folds the skirt and places it in a bright blue plastic bag before handing it to the student and returning to her story. “There’s not a lot of competition in this line of work, but it honestly doesn’t take a lot to make a difference. If another vendor shows up before I do, they will get a lot more business than me. It doesn’t matter what you’re selling — you’ve got to be the first one there.”</p>
    <p>August and September are the most profitable months for Helou with tapestries being her best seller. “It used to be January,” she says. “Students would come back with money from the holidays and buy things here, but it’s been getting slower in recent years.” Most students buy tapestries to decorate their dorm rooms. “They work great as wall decorations, or you can use one as a table cloth or a rug,” she explains to a curious customer. But come the spring semester, dorms are decorated and business no longer booms.</p>
    <p>It’s a busy lifestyle, but Helou explains that she keeps it interesting by following her own whims when it comes to scheduling. While she primarily visits the same campuses, she does so in no particular order. In some instances, she is able to call a college one day and show up on their campus the next. She explains that UMBC usually requires prior notice, but has been very flexible with allowing her to come in with little warning. “It’s a busy campus, and there’s almost always a bake sale going on in this breezeway,” she says as she casts a sideways glance towards a loud fraternity selling cupcakes at a booth directly next to hers. “I try to make it to each campus at least once a month, but sometimes they are already booked.”</p>
    <p>Two large racks filled with dresses and shirts form a border around her booth, which she mans diligently. She brings color to the breezeway, with sparkling jewelry displayed across her table and clothing of every hue hanging from the racks. The color is prevalent year-round, a welcome invitation to students passing by between their classes. It’s rare to see her stand empty of customers — there’s almost always a student perusing her wares. Helou has become something of a staple to the campus community, and will continue to be one for years to come.</p>
    <p>The post <a href="http://retrieverweekly.umbc.edu/the-traveling-merchant/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">The traveling merchant: color and cloth in the Breezeway</a> appeared first on <a href="http://retrieverweekly.umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">The Retriever</a>.</p>
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  <Summary>Ginny Phalen - TRW  If you’ve spent any time around The Commons, you’ve probably noticed a woman selling scarves, clothes and jewelry in the breezeway. She shows up sporadically, but her...</Summary>
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