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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="106379" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/106379">
    <Title>How To &#8211; Summer 2016</Title>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content">Transform a Farmers Market Food Cart into a Restaurant —With Steve Chu ’12, economics, Nikhil Yesupriya’13, biology and English and …</div>
      ]]>
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    <Summary>Transform a Farmers Market Food Cart into a Restaurant —With Steve Chu ’12, economics, Nikhil Yesupriya’13, biology and English and …</Summary>
    <Website>https://magazine.umbc.edu/how-to-summer-2016/</Website>
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    <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 15:51:12 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="106380" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/106380">
    <Title>Discovery &#8211; Summer 2016</Title>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content">Magic Beans Like many students before him who have studied in the Albin O. Kuhn Library, Joseph Hyman ‘11, mechanical engineering, found …</div>
      ]]>
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    <Summary>Magic Beans Like many students before him who have studied in the Albin O. Kuhn Library, Joseph Hyman ‘11, mechanical engineering, found …</Summary>
    <Website>https://magazine.umbc.edu/discovery-summer-2016/</Website>
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    <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 15:49:25 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="106381" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/106381">
    <Title>Back Story &#8211; Summer 2016</Title>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content">Interdisciplinarity has always been part of the UMBC landscape. But where is it headed? UMBC Magazine asked Carole McCann – …</div>
      ]]>
    </Body>
    <Summary>Interdisciplinarity has always been part of the UMBC landscape. But where is it headed? UMBC Magazine asked Carole McCann – …</Summary>
    <Website>https://magazine.umbc.edu/back-story-summer-2016/</Website>
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    <Tag>perspectives</Tag>
    <Tag>summer-2016</Tag>
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    <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 15:45:52 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="106382" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/106382">
    <Title>At Play &#8211; Summer 2016</Title>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content">Family Guy Don Zimmerman coached championship men’s lacrosse teams at Johns Hopkins University, and his arrival at UMBC in 1994 …</div>
      ]]>
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    <Summary>Family Guy Don Zimmerman coached championship men’s lacrosse teams at Johns Hopkins University, and his arrival at UMBC in 1994 …</Summary>
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    <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 15:43:23 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="121048" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/121048">
    <Title>Alumni Stories &#8211; Summer 2016</Title>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content"><img width="150" height="140" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-alumnistories-microscope-150x140.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-alumnistories-microscope.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-alumnistories-microscope.jpg" width="470" height="140" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a></p>
          <p><a href="https://umbc.edu/umbc-magazine-summer-2016/alumni-stories-summer-2016/microscope-meter/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Microscope &amp; Meter</a> <em>by Diana Zeiger ’01</em><br>
          <a href="https://umbc.edu/umbc-magazine-summer-2016/alumni-stories-summer-2016/hurdles-healing/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Hurdles &amp; Healing</a> <em>by David Glenn</em><br>
          <a href="https://umbc.edu/umbc-magazine-summer-2016/alumni-stories-summer-2016/pining-for-the-past/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Pining For The Past</a> <em>by Caitlin James ’01</em><br>
          <a href="https://umbc.edu/front-row-seat/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Front Row Seat</a> <em>by Richard Byrne ’86</em></p></div>
      ]]>
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    <Summary>
      Microscope &amp; Meter by Diana Zeiger ’01 
      Hurdles &amp; Healing by David Glenn 
      Pining For The Past by Caitlin James ’01 
      Front Row Seat by Richard Byrne ’86
    </Summary>
    <Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/alumni-stories-summer-2016/</Website>
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    <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 14:26:54 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="61535" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/61535">
  <Title>Project Lead the Way and STEM at UMBC</Title>
  <Body>
    <![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><span>Since 2004, UMBC has hosted Project Lead the Way training program, </span><span>directed by Dr. Anne Spence, a Mechanical Engineering Professor and </span><span>co-Director of the ME S-STEM Scholarship Program at UMBC.  This program </span><span>has offered a large variety of engineering and technology courses to </span><span>middle school and high school teachers in Maryland and prepared those </span><span>teachers to deliver pre-engineering curriculum in the middle and high </span><span>school classroom.  The ME S-STEM scholarship Program has been promoted to </span><span>the teachers who have served as a bridge between students in high school </span><span>and UMBC's strong engineering programs.</span><br></div>
]]>
  </Body>
  <Summary>Since 2004, UMBC has hosted Project Lead the Way training program, directed by Dr. Anne Spence, a Mechanical Engineering Professor and co-Director of the ME S-STEM Scholarship Program at UMBC. ...</Summary>
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  <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 14:25:27 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="108607" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/108607">
    <Title>UMBC School of Public Policy alumni advance as leaders in higher education and public health</Title>
    <Body>
      <![CDATA[
          <div class="html-content">Rear Admiral Sylvia Trent-Adams '06 Ph.D., public policy, now deputy surgeon general, is one of several public policy alumni to be recognized with a high-level appointment in recent months.</div>
      ]]>
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    <Summary>Rear Admiral Sylvia Trent-Adams '06 Ph.D., public policy, now deputy surgeon general, is one of several public policy alumni to be recognized with a high-level appointment in recent months.</Summary>
    <Website>https://news.umbc.edu/school-of-public-policy-alumni-take-on-leadership-roles-in-higher-education-and-public-health/</Website>
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    <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 13:56:52 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="61534" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/61534">
  <Title>Summer Undergraduate Research Fest</Title>
  <Tagline>Spotlight  on next generation of scientists</Tagline>
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    <![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/summer-undergraduate-research-fest-spotlights-next-generation-of-scientists/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>August 16, 2016</u></a> by </span><span><span><a href="http://news.umbc.edu/author/sarahhansen/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>Sarah Hansen</u></a><br><br><br><p>A crowd of more than 250 people gathered to learn from and celebrate emerging scientists at UMBC’s <a href="http://surf.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>Summer Undergraduate Research Fest (SURF)</u></a> on August 10, 2016. The program has humble beginnings, but it’s come a long way in 19 years.</p><p>“In its first year, we had 10 posters in the engineering building,” says <strong>Lasse Lindahl</strong>, director of the <a href="http://marcustar.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>MARC*USTAR Scholars Program</u></a> and professor of biological sciences. This year, there were 83 posters from 11 different summer research programs, ranging from the National Security Agency Scholars to the new <a href="http://chemistry.umbc.edu/sciart/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>SCIART</u></a> program.</p><p>“SURF’s growth demonstrates the commitment of UMBC to undergraduate research and getting the next generation of researchers prepared,” Lindahl says.</p><p>Kayla Sims, a rising sophomore at the STEM magnet high school Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, had never taken chemistry when she dived into research at UMBC’s <a href="http://mcac.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>Molecular Characterization and Analysis Complex</u></a> (MCAC) this summer as part of the <a href="http://summerbiomed.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><u>Summer Biomedical Training Program</u></a> sponsored by UMBC’s College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences (CNMS) and Graduate School. She was nervous, but, “The people at MCAC taught me a lot,” she says. Now she can explain myoglobin digestion optimization like a pro, and she is ready to tackle her first chemistry course this fall.</p><p><strong>Anna Opoku-Agyeman</strong> ’18, biological sciences, is a MARC*USTAR Scholar and says her summer of research has been “life-changing.” She researched novel therapies for breast cancer to help prevent recurrence. She also developed a clearer sense of her interests in scientific research and policy, and she now hopes to pursue a Ph.D. related to infectious diseases that affect sub-Saharan Africa. A law degree might also be in her future, to enable policy work.</p><p>In addition to the two lively poster sessions, six student research teams gave oral presentations to the packed ballroom. <strong>Austin Gabel </strong>‘19, biological sciences, conducted research in the lab of <strong>Rachel Brewster</strong>, associate professor of biological sciences. He discussed his work on developmental arrest in zebrafish embryos with poise, enthusiasm, and clarity. <strong>Joel Tyson</strong> ‘17, biochemical engineering, explained his pioneering work to develop a minimally-invasive probe that measures brain activity, conducted in the lab of <strong>Gymama Slaughter</strong>, assistant professor of computer science and electrical engineering. Additional projects dealt with topics ranging from climate modeling to nanoscale drug delivery.</p><p>Across these diverse areas, the SURF presenters shared a commitment to developing new scientific knowledge through research, both in their future careers and in high-level work during their student years. CNMS dean <strong>Bill LaCourse</strong> reflected, “To see the joy and the excitement in the students’ faces is a wonderful thing.”</p><p><em><em>Image: SURF participants from the Summer Biomedical Training Program, with mentor Michael Summers on far left and Kayla Sims on far right; photo Tim Ford.</em></em></p></span></span></div>
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  <Summary>August 16, 2016 by Sarah Hansen    A crowd of more than 250 people gathered to learn from and celebrate emerging scientists at UMBC’s Summer Undergraduate Research Fest (SURF) on August 10, 2016....</Summary>
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  <Title>From the Editor &#8211; Summer 2016</Title>
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    <![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-1-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><h4>So You Want to Be a Pioneer?</h4>
    <h5>Founding UMBC faculty across disciplines reflect on building a new public university.</h5>
    <h5><strong>By Richard Byrne ’86</strong></h5>
    <p>See <a href="#editornote" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Editor’s Note</a></p>
    <p>UMBC opened its doors on September 19, 1966. But as concrete was poured and red bricks were laid, founding chancellor <strong>Albin O. Kuhn</strong> and founding dean of faculty <strong>Homer Schamp</strong> were also recruiting faculty members for a new research institution.</p>
    <p>In a 1994 oral history interview conducted by <strong>Ed Orser</strong>, emeritus professor of American studies, Kuhn observed that adventure and ambition were his key selling points to recruits.</p>
    <p>“[T]hat was the thing we talked about a lot when we were trying to attract original faculty and staff,” said Kuhn. “’Want to be a pioneer? Come join us. You can develop and help to make it what it will be…. It wasn’t a bad thing to get that kind of person.”</p>
    <p>Founding faculty members of UMBC remember that desire to forge new trails and build as a powerful lure.</p>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-1.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-1.jpg" alt="Su16-pioneer-1" width="470" height="314" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Professors emeriti Joan Korenman and Walter Sherwin (foreground)
    <p>“The thought of coming to a new university was very attractive to me,” says <strong>William Rothstein</strong>, emeritus professor of sociology, and one of the professors hired for the university’s opening day.</p>
    <p>“It was exciting to think about starting a program,” says <strong>Walter Sherwin</strong>, emeritus professor of ancient studies. “There was no one really over me. It was pretty heady stuff. It was all so exciting that I never thought about the risk.”</p>
    <p>And as UMBC grew, it attracted more top-notch young faculty members – many of whom built lengthy careers in research and teaching at what was then the University of Maryland’s newest campus.</p>
    <p>“I knew I was coming to a research university,” says <strong>Marilyn Demorest</strong>, emerita professor of psychology, “because it was the University of Maryland….We were University of Maryland faculty. And we were held to those standards.”</p>
    <h3>“It Was a Great Experiment”</h3>
    <p>Kuhn and Schamp initially organized UMBC into clusters: humanities and arts, social sciences, life sciences, and mathematics and physics. It was practicality at work: UMBC was too small to have full-fledged departments.</p>
    <p>Finding faculty to meet the demand created by baby boomers also had an impact. Even established universities struggled to fill their professorial ranks in 1966. For many founding professors, UMBC was their first job.</p>
    <p><strong>Robert Burchard</strong>, emeritus professor of biological sciences, arrived on campus in January 1967, fresh from the Peace Corps, where he had been teaching microbiology in Nigeria and doing research on tsetse flies.</p>
    <p>Burchard recalls that creating a new biology curriculum from scratch was invigorating: “It was a great experiment. And we were excited about what we were doing.”</p>
    <p>Sherwin recalls that in the early years, offices were assigned by lot, and professors from various disciplines mingled together. “I enjoyed interacting with people outside my area,” he says. “We were in this together, and a lot of the conversation was not specific to discipline, but specific to making things work.”</p>
    <p><strong>Charles “Chuck” Peake</strong>, emeritus professor of economics, arrived in September 1967. “We had this idea we were going to build something,” he says.</p>
    <p>Peake had an office in the “Gray House” that once stood outside Hilltop Circle near today’s athletics fields. He recalls that some classes were held in the Hillcrest Building that overlooked campus. “I remember walking up the hill past apple trees to get to classes,” he says.</p>
    <p>The newness of the university, says Rothstein, also meant that “there was nothing to put your feet on. Everything was up for grabs.”</p>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-2.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-2.jpg" alt="Su16-pioneer-2" width="470" height="234" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Professors emeriti Robert Burchard and Joan Korenman
    <p>That feeling persisted through the university’s early years. “UMBC was an immense contrast to what I was experiencing in graduate school at Harvard,” says <strong>Joan Korenman</strong>, emerita professor of English and women’s studies, who arrived in 1969. “It was like a breath of fresh air. Everything was wide open and ready for discussion.”</p>
    <p>UMBC asked Korenman if she was interested in a lecturer position in English. But at an interview, she indicated an interest in an assistant professor position. That was the position she was offered. Advancement was quick. Like many of her colleagues, Korenman discovered that the freedom to build had other obligations when she was appointed as an area coordinator soon after her arrival.</p>
    <p>“Young faculty were expected to take on more administrative responsibilities,” she recalls.</p>
    <h3>“We Can Do This!”</h3>
    <p>Kuhn excelled in securing resources from the University of Maryland and state government. And as new students swelled the university’s enrollment, construction of UMBC’s physical campus was matched by an expansion of the faculty orchestrated by Schamp.</p>
    <p>“I remember talking to Kuhn,” says Rothstein. “He told me: ‘I bring the money in, and Homer spends it.’”</p>
    <p>Faculty took advantage of the opportunities. <strong>Jay Freyman, </strong>emeritus associate professor of ancient studies, landed at UMBC in 1968 with a Ph.D. in Classical Studies from the University of Pennsylvania. He says that the atmosphere at UMBC “was the same kind of attraction that someone feels when they go to a startup in Silicon Valley. It’s the ground up. There’s nowhere to go but up. You’re going to make something there that wasn’t there before. We could do some things that were offbeat. We could try things.”</p>
    <p>Freyman had ideas about where his discipline was headed – and how he and his colleagues needed to adapt. “We recognized that a traditional ‘classics’ program would not survive. Latin and Greek. Those were the departments that were getting dumped,” he says. “We realized that in order to survive, we had to have a broader appeal than just linguistic and literary. So we incorporated history and archaeology. We were one of the first departments in the country to do this.”</p>
    <p>Ancient studies faculty members were also at the forefront of another great UMBC tradition: Study abroad. UMBC faculty had already leapt ahead of many other universities in creating a January session (dubbed the “minimester”). But it was Sherwin, Freyman and their colleague <strong>Rudolph Storch</strong>, emeritus professor of ancient studies, who organized and led trips to Italy and Greece in the first years of the university.</p>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-3.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-3.jpg" alt="Su16-pioneer-3" width="235" height="245" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Associate professor emeritus Jay Freyman
    <p>For many of the students of that era, it was a mind-blowing adventure. Sherwin got the idea from a Fulbright fellowship he had at the American Academy in Rome that combined lectures and visits to historic sites. “I came back and told my colleagues, ‘We can do this! We will establish a program abroad.”</p>
    <p>UMBC professors didn’t stop at curricular innovations. Burchard’s passion for environmentalism and pedagogy intersected when campus planners turned their gaze to Pig Pen Pond – a body of water that remained from the campus’ days as farmland – and planned to pave over half of it.</p>
    <p>“The biology folks looked at that as a good teaching resource,” says Burchard. “I raised hell about it.”</p>
    <p>Burchard and others succeeded in saving Pig Pen Pond. Today, it is a key element of the Conservation and Environmental Research Areas [CERA] – and it remains as a locus for campus research.</p>
    <h3>“Pushing for Quality”</h3>
    <p>UMBC did have growing pains. The administration and the faculty debated which courses should be required for graduation for a number of years. The denial of tenure to some popular professors hired in UMBC’s early years also elicited student protests.</p>
    <p>And though UMBC was the first university founded in Maryland in the post-segregation era, racial disparities in enrollment, employment, and curriculum at UMBC quickly became apparent.</p>
    <p>In May 1969, a committee created by Kuhn to achieve “significant integration of minority groups at UMBC” offered an array of proposals to the chancellor, including creation of a department of “Black Studies.” A year later, the university’s Black Student Union and a caucus of black faculty and staff pressed the case for change more urgently, and by the end of 1970, UMBC had hired <strong>Elechukwu Njaka </strong>from Tuskegee Institute to build a program with the rank of a division within UMBC.</p>
    <p>Among the faculty who built the program was <strong>Daphne Harrison</strong>, emerita professor of Africana studies, and founder of UMBC’s Humanities Forum. “I found that UMBC was quite different from many institutions,” she recalls. “The attitude was that you as a professor are important, but the professor also has to work.”</p>
    <p>Harrison taught a wide array of courses, but she says that her insistence on rigorous interrogation of notions received from mass culture was at the heart of the endeavor: “Young people were getting a lot of information but they didn’t know how to vet it. That was one of the things I remember doing with them. You have to know whether or not what you’ve got is real. You have to check to see whether it is accurate.”</p>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-4.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-4.jpg" alt="Su16-pioneer-4" width="470" height="248" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Professors emeritus Willie Lamousé-Smith
    <p>In 1975, UMBC hired <strong>Willie Lamousé-Smith</strong> from Syracuse University to head the program. A Ghanaian scholar who received his doctorate from the University of Münster, he was lured from a tenured positions in Syracuse’s Afro-American studies program department and as associate director of the East African studies program in its Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.</p>
    <p>Hiring Lamousé-Smith from a prominent research institution was one signal that UMBC aspired to raise its profile in the humanities. But demanding the best from students and helping them find their place in campus life was equally important to him.</p>
    <p>“I do not intend to make people comfortable,” says Lamousé-Smith. “And that is my policy when I am teaching. People have to take their studies seriously. It’s only a short time in the person’s life. And yet the person’s whole future is going to depend and rely upon what that person does in that short period. So if I do not help the person to achieve their highest level, I feel I have not done well.”</p>
    <p>Other key academic programs emerged. The late 1960s and 1970s was a busy era in experimental psychology – and psychology quickly became (and remains) one of UMBC’s most popular majors.</p>
    <p>Demorest recalls hearing about “that place in Catonsville,” as she finished graduate studies at Johns Hopkins University and post-doctoral work at the University of Pittsburgh. She admits it didn’t sound appealing at first.</p>
    <p>In 1972, however, she was recruited by the late <strong>Aron Siegman</strong>, a professor of psychology at UMBC. She reluctantly came for an interview and was surprised. “I spent two absolutely glorious days,” she recalls, “being passed from one faculty member to another, talking about every different type of psychology…. So I ended up coming to ‘that place in Catonsville’ really excited about being here.”</p>
    <p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-5.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-5.jpg" alt="Su16-pioneer-5" width="235" height="221" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a></p>
    <p>Psychology launched one of UMBC’s first graduate programs: a community clinical psychology master’s program created in 1974.</p>
    <p>Demorest says that the burgeoning quality of UMBC’s faculty in that era later helped her, as vice provost, to recruit others to campus to join her. “I would invite [candidates] to look at the credentials. We were recruited from first-rate institutions from Columbia and Chicago and Hopkins….and so we came in with the standards we were held to, and so those were the standards we held our students to. We didn’t know any different.”</p>
    <h3>“You Can’t Do That with Just Science”</h3>
    <p>Psychology was not alone in its prominence. Many founding faculty point to the arrival of the late <strong>Martin “Marty” Schwartz</strong> as the coordinator of the biology division in 1969 as the beginning of UMBC’s ambitious push to make grant-funded research an engine that would propel the university into maturity and excellence.</p>
    <p>“The scientists were clearly the most hard-nosed in terms of academic research,” says Rothstein. “And making UMBC have a name for itself as a quality research institution, the sciences were clearly leading the pack.”</p>
    <p><strong>Phillip Sokolove</strong>, emeritus professor of biology, arrived in 1974 and found himself in the center of a busy hub of research activity spearheaded by Schwartz.</p>
    <p>“He was a man with vision,” Sokolove says. “My interaction with him was extremely positive as a young professor. He was quite clear what the nature of the department was, and that we had to become one of the premier research departments on the campus, along with chemistry. Since Swartz was chair of both departments, and of the biochemistry department, he adds, “Schwartz saw them as natural allies.”</p>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-6.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-6.jpg" alt="Su16-pioneer-6" width="470" height="147" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Professors emeriti William Rothstein, Joan Korenman, Marilyn Demorest, Robert Burchard, and Walter Sherwin
    <p>Sokolove says that Schwartz was driven to get the best from his faculty. “He was able to give his faculty the time to do what they needed to do,” he recalls, “and then pushed them hard to do it. And when somebody came in and couldn’t cut the mustard he was ruthless. Not ruthlessly himself. What he did was turn the faculty into a well-developed jury of peers.”</p>
    <p>Lamousé-Smith, who served with Schwartz on UMBC’s Council of Divisional Deans with Schwartz, recalls that he pushed for academic excellence and leadership with equal vigor. Schwartz was a “strong personality” who often played hardball over resources in meetings of academic leadership. “He would chew you up and spit you out and then embrace you and kiss you on the cheek,” Lamousé-Smith says.</p>
    <p>“But Marty Schwartz was not just pushing for his own department, but for every department,” Lamousé-Smith continues. “Marty Schwartz, and his impatience, planted the seeds of pushing for excellence at UMBC.”<a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-7.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pioneer-7.jpg" alt="Su16-pioneer-7" width="235" height="230" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a></p>
    <p>UMBC now boasts a strong balance between research and teaching across disciplines. That strength in all areas is part of its founding chancellor’s blueprint. As Kuhn told associate professor of history <strong>Joseph Tatarewicz</strong> in an oral interview conducted in 2001, UMBC was created at the moment when influential University of California system president Clark Kerr touted America’s universities as a ‘prime instrument of national purpose.”</p>
    <p>Kuhn argued that a modern university “can’t do that with just science. You have to do that with understanding people. You have to do it with understanding the real drive that’s involved in the humanities and arts. And when you put it all together, it can be very forceful. Without all of it together, you won’t get there.”</p>
    <p>“That place in Catonsville” – as Demorest fondly refers to it now – has come a long way toward fulfilling Kuhn’s vision because of the strength of its founding faculty, and the professors who have followed them to this day.</p>
    <h3>Editor’s Note</h3>
    <p>The cover of the Summer 2016 issue of <em>UMBC Magazine</em> you may have received in the mail has a significant error for which I would like to personally apologize to our readers.</p>
    <p>In our image of professors then and now, the magazine cover mistakenly paired a recent photo of Professor Emeritus of Africana Studies <strong>Willie Lamousé-Smith</strong> with an archival photo of longtime UMBC professor of Africana Studies <strong>Jonathan Peters</strong> from the Albin O. Kuhn Library’s collection of university photographs.</p>
    <p>Our magazine team has redesigned the magazine cover digitally to pair Professor Lamousé-Smith with a correct image – which we have posted on the magazine website, to our Facebook site, and to our wider UMBC Alumni site. But I did not catch the error before the magazine was sent to the printing press and then on to our readers.</p>
    <p>As you will discover both in the “<a href="https://umbc.edu/umbc-magazine-summer-2016/to-you-summer-2016/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Editor’s Note</a>” to this issue and in the story about the founding faculty of the university (“So You Want to Be a Pioneer? – read below this note), Professor Lamousé-Smith’s wisdom and spirit have played a significant role in UMBC’s rising fortunes as a university through the decades. I have reached out to Professor Lamousé-Smith personally to apologize for this error.</p>
    <p>The many contributions and achievements of our faculty and staff are a significant part of what we are celebrating this year in UMBC’s 50<sup>th</sup> anniversary. It has been part of the mission of <em>UMBC Magazine</em> to tell these stories accurately. In this case, we let our readers down. We hope this note serves both to correct the record and express our regret for the error.</p>
    <p>Richard Byrne ’86<br>
    Editor, <em>UMBC Magazine</em></p></div>
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  <Summary>So You Want to Be a Pioneer?   Founding UMBC faculty across disciplines reflect on building a new public university.   By Richard Byrne ’86   See Editor’s Note   UMBC opened its doors on September...</Summary>
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  <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 13:23:24 -0400</PostedAt>
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  <NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="121050" important="false" status="posted" url="https://dev.my.umbc.edu/posts/121050">
  <Title>The Pursuit Of Excellence</Title>
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    <![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-feature-pursuit-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p>From the day UMBC opened its doors, the work of teaching and research has been at the heart of university life. The love of learning has been passed on by the university’s faculty across disciplines in lecture halls, laboratories, office hours, and in the field. We’ve selected some of the best images of a dynamic endeavor of teaching and exploration that has stretched from 1966 to the present day, aspiring not only to excellence but to greater access for all students to the wisdom and understanding that our faculty carry with them.</p>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-2.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-2.jpg" alt="Su16-pursuit-2" width="470" height="627" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>TOP (Left to Right): Paul Lovett, Professor of Biology; Felix Powell, Professor of Music BOTTOM (Left to Right): Patrick Canavan, Professor of Visual Arts; Karen Vitelli, Professor of Ancient Studies
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-1.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-1.jpg" alt="Su16-pursuit-1" width="470" height="615" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>TOP (Left to Right): Jim (En-Shinn) Wu, Professor of Physics; William Bettridge, Professor of English; Bernard Rabin, Professor pf Psychology; BOTTOM (Left to Right): Sinan Koont, Professor of Mathematics; Daphne Harrison, Professor of Africana Studies
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-4.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-4.jpg" alt="Su16-pursuit-4" width="470" height="625" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>TOP (Left to Right): Timothy Brennan, Professor of Public Policy and Economics; Carol Hess, Professor of Dance; BOTTOM (Left to Right): Chen Yung-Jui, Professor of Electrical Engineering; Ivan Kramer, Associate Professor of Physics
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-3.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-3.jpg" alt="Su16-pursuit-3" width="470" height="612" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>TOP (Left to Right): Bruce Walz, Professor of Emergency Health Services; Andrew Miller, Professor of Geography and Environmental Systems; BOTTOM (Left to Right): Marilyn Goldberg, Professor of Ancient Studies; Doug Hamby, Associate Professor of Dance
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-5.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-5.jpg" alt="Su16-pursuit-5" width="470" height="615" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>TOP (Left to Right): Marie DesJardins, Professor of Computer Science; Zeev Rosenzweig, Professor of Chemistry BOTTOM ( Left to RIght): Jason Schiffman, Associate Professor of Psychology; Kimberly Moffitt, Associate Professor of American Studies
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-6.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Su16-pursuit-6.jpg" alt="Su16-pursuit-6" width="470" height="627" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>TOP (Left to RIght): Thomas Field, Professor of Linguistics and French; Michael Summers, University Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry; Lisa Moren, Professor of Visual Arts BOTTOM: Steven McAlpine, Assistant Director, Interdisciplinary Studies</div>
]]>
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  <Summary>From the day UMBC opened its doors, the work of teaching and research has been at the heart of university life. The love of learning has been passed on by the university’s faculty across...</Summary>
  <Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/the-pursuit-of-excellence/</Website>
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  <PostedAt>Tue, 16 Aug 2016 13:17:43 -0400</PostedAt>
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