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<Title>Yun &#8217;97, CompSci, Profiled in BBJ About Cybersecurity Company</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <p>Alumna <strong>Jeehye Yun ’97</strong>, computer science, was profiled along with her cybersecurity company<a href="http://www.securedsciences.com/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"> Secured Sciences Group</a> (SSG) by <em>The Baltimore Business Journal’</em>s Jack Lambert in an article published on September 7th.</p>
    <p><a href="http://www.bizjournals.com/baltimore/print-edition/2012/09/07/former-umbc-teacher-cuts-through-the.html" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Read the full story here.</a></p>
    <p>Yun told Lambert that SSG–a member of UMBC’s Research and Technology Park, and which is in the process of working with the research park on a plan to attract investors–is particularly adept at cutting through red tape and redundancies which can occur in government applications, saying, “We can take a lot of disparate policies and figure out where the overlaps are.”</p>
    <p>The alumna, who is CEO/President of SSG as well as a former teacher at her <em>alma mater</em> from the late-90′s, also told Lambert that the company’s upcoming technology will new technology will hopefully cut through the quantity of material companies have to sift through from government grant applications and contracts by finding the overlaps between for organizations like the Department of Defense, the Navy and the Marines.</p>
    <p>Yun also noted that her company’s products also have value for colleges, management consultants and small businesses, saying, “The biggest rule of thumb for us is, actually, are we solving a problem where we would want to use the product?”</p>
    <p><a href="http://umbcinsights.wordpress.com/2012/09/07/alumna-and-former-teacher-jeehye-yun-97-computer-science-in-baltimore-business-journal/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">This story originally appeared in UMBC Insights.</a></p>
    </div>
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<Summary>Alumna Jeehye Yun ’97, computer science, was profiled along with her cybersecurity company Secured Sciences Group (SSG) by The Baltimore Business Journal’s Jack Lambert in an article published on...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/yun-97-compsci-profiled-in-bbj-about-cybersecurity-company/</Website>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 19 Sep 2012 15:54:27 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123778" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123778">
<Title>Four UMBC Students Selected as Inaugural NSF CyberCorps Scholars</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <p>The department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering (CSEE) announces its new <a href="https://www.csee.umbc.edu/2012/09/four-umbc-students-selected-as-inaugural-nsf-cybercorps-scholars/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">NSF Scholarship for Service (SFS) CyberCorps program scholars.</a></p>
    <p>According to CSEE,</p>
    <p>“Four students in UMBC’s <a href="http://www.csee.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering</a> have been selected for major scholarships to study cybersecurity in the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Scholarship for Service (SFS) CyberCorps program.   Each student will receive full tuition, fees, and a nine-month stipend ($20,000 for undergraduates, $25,000 for MS/MPS students, and $30,000 for PhD students) for up to  two years (three years for PhD).  For this first year of the program at UMBC, recipients are Oliver Kubik (BS student in computer science), Brendan Masiar and Brandyn Schult (MPS students in cybersecurity), and Mary Mathews (PhD student in computer science).</p>
    <p>While in the program at UMBC, each student will participate in paid summer internships and have opportunities to engage in mentored research opportunities at the UMBC <a href="http://www.cisa.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Center for Information Security and Assurance (CISA)</a> and its partners from industry and government.  Following graduation, each student must work for the government (for pay) for one year for each year of scholarship received.  Drs. Alan T. Sherman and Richard Forno direct the program using support they received from their recently awarded $2.5 million NSF grant.  The CyberCorps program will produce highly-qualified professionals to meet the increasing need to protect American’s cyber infrastructure.</p>
    <p>Each year students may apply for SFS CyberCorps scholarships at UMBC, with application deadline in mid January.  For details, see <a href="http://www.cisa.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">www.cisa.umbc.edu</a>.  In each of the next three years, UMBC expects to make six new awards.   Applicants must be accepted to a full-time degree program in a cybersecurity-related field (CS, CE, cyber, EE, IS, math, physics, education, public policy).”</p>
    <p><a href="https://www.csee.umbc.edu/2012/09/meet-the-inaugural-batch-of-umbcs-nsf-scholarship-for-service-scholars/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Meet the scholars</a></p>
    </div>
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<Summary>The department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering (CSEE) announces its new NSF Scholarship for Service (SFS) CyberCorps program scholars.   According to CSEE,   “Four students in...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/four-umbc-students-selected-as-inaugural-nsf-cybercorps-scholars-2/</Website>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 19 Sep 2012 15:44:05 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123779" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123779">
<Title>New Policy on Development and Approval of Written Academic Agreements (MOUs)</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
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    <p><em>From Philip Rous, Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs</em></p>
    <p>The President has approved a new UMBC policy on development and approval of written academic agreements. The new policy covers all written academic agreements to which UMBC or any of its departments will be a party, except agreements for sponsored or unsponsored research and those between two or more departments within UMBC.<a title="see footnote" href="1" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">[1]</a> The new policy, the related procedures for developing written academic agreements, and the required forms can be found at <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/provost/Policies/Development_and_Approval_of_Written_Academic_Agreements.html" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://www.umbc.edu/provost/Policies/Development_and_Approval_of_Written_Academic_Agreements.html</a>.</p>
    <p>The new policy and procedures are intended to support the following objectives:</p>
    <ol>
    <li>
    <p>To give UMBC faculty and staff the tools to draft agreements with potential partners according to guidelines that have been pre-approved by the UMBC University Counsel, thereby reducing the time needed for legal review of written agreements</p>
    </li>
    <li>
    <p>To support UMBC faculty and staff in the efficient preparation of draft agreements by clarifying and streamlining the process by which they are developed, reviewed, approved, and signed at UMBC</p>
    </li>
    <li>
    <p>To identify the Office of the Provost as the administrative unit responsible for the implementation of the policy and procedures, to which faculty and staff may address all questions about development, review, approval, and signing of written academic agreements covered by the policy</p>
    </li>
    </ol>
    <p>Beth Wells is the point of contact in the Provost’s Office for questions or information about the new policy on written academic agreements or about development of particular agreements. You can reach her at <a href="mailto:bwells@umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">bwells@umbc.edu</a>. Thank you very much.</p>
    <div>
    <hr>
    <ol>
    <li>
    <p>Contact the Office of the Vice President of Research for guidance on development of research agreements. Consult UMBC departmental policies for guidance on development of agreements within UMBC.</p>
    <p><a title="return to article" href="1" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"> <img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/13.1.0/72x72/21a9.png" alt="↩" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a></p>
    </li>
    </ol>
    </div>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>From Philip Rous, Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs   The President has approved a new UMBC policy on development and approval of written academic agreements. The new policy...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/new-policy-on-development-and-approval-of-written-academic-agreements-mous/</Website>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 19 Sep 2012 15:09:30 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123780" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123780">
<Title>Josiah Dykstra, Computer Science PhD Student, Presents Paper at Digital Forensics Research Workshop</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p>Josiah Dykstra (computer science PhD student of Dr. Alan T. Sherman) presented the paper “Acquiring forensic evidence from infrastructure-as-a-service cloud computing: Exploring and evaluating tools, trust, and techniques” at the Digital Forensics Research Workshop (DFRWS), held August 6-8 in Washington, DC. Their pioneering work explains for the first time how to conduct a digital forensics exam of computations conducted in the cloud.</p></div>
]]>
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<Summary>Josiah Dykstra (computer science PhD student of Dr. Alan T. Sherman) presented the paper “Acquiring forensic evidence from infrastructure-as-a-service cloud computing: Exploring and evaluating...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/josiah-dykstra-computer-science-phd-student-presents-paper-at-digital-forensics-research-workshop/</Website>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 18 Sep 2012 20:55:20 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123781" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123781">
<Title>Alumna Rachel Younghans &#8217;12, Geography, in The Washington Post</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <p>It’s the open road for the next few months for recent alumna Rachel Younghans ’12, geography, as she and her boyfriend, photographer Rob Brulinski, cross the country in search of “Only-in-America Americans” for their art-project/website <em><a href="http://freakflagameri.ca/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Freak Flag America</a>.</em></p>
    <p><a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/rosenwald-md/post/md-couple-hits-road-to-find-only-in-america-americans/2012/09/17/519911ea-00d0-11e2-b260-32f4a8db9b7e_blog.html" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">The couple were profiled by <em>The Washington</em> <em>Post</em>‘s Michael Rosenwald on September 17th</a>, one day after they had set out on their cross-country trip. The two will travel to the Pacific and back in a Toyota Yaris packed with supplies ranging from a tent to rolls of film, from an American flag from Goodwill to a stuffed rat from IKEA which Brulinski plans to bug Younghans with.</p>
    <p>Younghans spoke to Rosenwald of the importance of the project, saying, “We really feel a lot of responsibility, and we like our role as storytellers, as historians preserving folk stories.”</p>
    <p>Adding that she is a fan of <em>Aesop’s Fables</em> and <em>Grimms’ Fairy Tales</em>, the alumna also detailed the vision behind the trip, which the couple hope to turn into a book on top of the blog posting which they plan to post to their site over the next four months</p>
    <p>“Stories just retell themselves over and over throughout history,” Younghans said. “We are a creating a book that stands as part of that — stories based on true events that still hold the value of moral stories.”</p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>It’s the open road for the next few months for recent alumna Rachel Younghans ’12, geography, as she and her boyfriend, photographer Rob Brulinski, cross the country in search of “Only-in-America...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/alumna-rachel-younghans-12-geography-in-the-washington-post-2/</Website>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 18 Sep 2012 15:52:51 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123782" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123782">
<Title>Robert Deluty, Graduate School, Publishes His 38th Book</Title>
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<![CDATA[
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    <p>Robert Deluty, associate dean of the graduate school, has published a new book of poetry, “A Crowded Life.” In his review, Joseph DeVitis writes: “In our crowded lives, where countless pressures often damage and paralyze us, Robert Deluty’s poems open windows allowing fresh, crisp air to renew us.  Each of his lines bespeaks an exquisite sensibility to life, exposing the common humanity of our losses and victories.  Wherever we live, however alone or free we might feel, Deluty extends our subtle understanding of the human condition within ourselves.”</p>
    <p>Copies of “A Crowded Life,” as well as of Deluty’s other books, are on sale at the UMBC Bookstore.</p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Robert Deluty, associate dean of the graduate school, has published a new book of poetry, “A Crowded Life.” In his review, Joseph DeVitis writes: “In our crowded lives, where countless pressures...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/robert-deluty-graduate-school-publishes-his-38th-book/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123783" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123783">
<Title>Robin Moskal &amp; Joyce Tenney Appointed Associate Directors of the Library</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
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    <p><em>From Larry Wilt, Director of the Library</em></p>
    <p>I am very pleased to announce the appointment of Robin Moskal and Joyce Tenney as Associate Directors, in recognition of their increasing roles in the management and leadership of the Library.</p>
    <p>Robin Moskal first came to UMBC in 1989 as an Assistant Reference Librarian. Since that time she has held several positions at UMBC, most notably as head of Collection Management and Interlibrary Loan. Since 2008, she has served on an acting basis as the supervisor of Library Accounting &amp; Receiving and of the Reference Department. These responsibilities are now permanent with her appointment as Associate Director.</p>
    <p>Joyce Tenney began as a student assistant in the Library and was appointed Serials Librarian in 1983. She has supervised several other units in the Library on a temporary basis since that time. Since 2008 she has supervised the Circulation and Library Media Departments on an acting basis. These responsibilities are now permanent with her appointment as Associate Director.</p>
    <p>Please join me in congratulating Robin and Joyce on their success.</p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>From Larry Wilt, Director of the Library   I am very pleased to announce the appointment of Robin Moskal and Joyce Tenney as Associate Directors, in recognition of their increasing roles in the...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/robin-moskal-joyce-tenney-appointed-associate-directors-of-the-library/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123784" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123784">
<Title>Outstanding Alumni of the Year for 2012 Announced</Title>
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<![CDATA[
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/rossman_beth-photo-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p>The UMBC Alumni Association will honor six alumni and UMBC president Freeman A. Hrabowski, III, at the annual Outstanding Alumni of the Year Awards ceremony on Thursday, October 11, 2012. <strong><a href="https://umbc.edu/alumni-award-winners/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Learn more about our past award winners</a>.</strong></p>
    <p>The following alumni will receive awards:</p>
    <p><strong>Outstanding Alumnus of the Year in the Humanities</strong><br>
    <em><strong> Greg Cangialosi ’96, English<br>
    </strong>Co-founder, Betamore</em><br>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/gregc.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/gregc.jpg?w=200" alt="" width="120" height="181" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>After graduating from UMBC in 1996, Greg Cangialosi launched Baltimore-based email service provider Blue Sky Factory, a company that in 2011 marked a ten-year successful track record and a global reach. In 2010, the company was named a Future 50 company by Baltimore SmartCEO magazine, an award which recognizes the 50 fastest-growing companies in the Greater Baltimore area based on employee and revenue growth. The company also made the INC 5000 list of the fastest growing companies in the United States for four consecutive years. In 2011, Cangialosi sold Blue Sky Factory to Atlanta-based company WhatCounts. Most recently, Cangialosi co-founded Betamore, an 8,000 square foot “urban campus for entrepreneurship and technology, focused on three main areas, education, community and incubation.” Cangialosi has served as a longtime leader and member of the UMBC Alumni Association and Board, and he was a member of the University’s “2016 Committee.” He has served as a frequent speaker at the Alex. Brown Center for Entrepreneurship, and he has also been a judge for the Center’s Idea Competition. At UMBC’s 2012 Career Week, Greg was keynote speaker at a networking event for students and alumni.</p>
    <p><strong>Outstanding Alumna of the Year in Engineering &amp; Information Technology</strong><br>
    <em><strong> Stephanie C. Hill ’86, computer science and economics<br>
    </strong>President, Information Systems and Global Solutions-Civil, Lockheed Martin Corporation</em><br>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/hill_stephanie-002.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/hill_stephanie-002.jpg?w=120" alt="" width="120" height="150" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>In a guest essay published this year in the Washington Post’s “College Inc.” blog, Stephanie Hill made a strong argument in favor of educating a new generation of female engineers. In her position at Lockheed Martin, Hill is an excellent example of how a woman can excel in this field. Hill began her career in 1987 with Lockheed Martin as a software engineer. Over the years she has assumed positions of increasing responsibility including Systems Engineering Manager and Director of Quality and Mission Success; Director of Technical Operations; Vice President and General Manager of the Electronic Systems-Mission Systems &amp; Sensors Baltimore site; and, most recently, President for Information Systems and Global Solutions-Civil, which delivers IT systems and services to various U.S. government agencies, international governments and regulated commercial industries, such as energy, health care and transportation. Hill was named one of the Top 100 Women of Maryland in May 2006, Black Engineer of the Year Award (BEYA) Alumni in 2006; Lockheed Martin’s Engineer of the Year in 1999 and was named Black Engineer of the Year (BEYA) Most Promising Engineer in 1993. Hill also lends her expertise to the Governor’s P-20 Leadership Council (STEM Task Force) and serves on the Board of Directors for the Greater Baltimore Committee. She has steadily supported UMBC as a willing volunteer and a mentor to students.</p>
    <p><strong>Outstanding Alumna of the Year in Visual &amp; Performing Arts</strong><br>
    <em><strong> Deborah Randall ’94, theatre<br>
    </strong>Founder, Venus Theatre</em><br>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/debrandall.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/debrandall.jpg?w=180" alt="" width="121" height="202" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Deborah Randall is the founder and visionary behind Venus Theatre. Born in Washington, DC, and raised in Prince George’s County, she began directing as a student and president of the Drama Club at Prince Georges Community College. Her first paid acting gig was at Wild World Theme Park in 1986. She later went on to graduate cum laude from UMBC under the guidance of Xerxes Mehta, Wendy Salkind, Sam McCready, Alan Kriezenbeck, and Alice Robinson. She was in Mehta’s Marat/Sade at UMBC with the Maryland Stage Company and in McCready’s Merry Wives of Windsor with Shakespeare on Wheels. After college, Randall worked as an actor regularly in Washington, DC, and then began performing her own monologues. She has performed four solo shows, written two, and had one published. She has also written and staged works for multiple casts. She began doing public staged readings of other living playwrights in 2002, which led to cultivating strong relationships with many writers. The works of Randall and Venus have been seen up and down the Eastern seaboard. Venus Theatre began in 1995 as an all female improv troupe called Venus Envy. Venus led Take Back the Night Marches and did improvisational games at the House of Ruth as well as other empowerment projects. In 2000, Randall founded Venus Theatre, known for immersion staging and award-winning world premiere work. In 2006 Venus dropped roots in the county where the founder grew up. Venus hopes to bring culture to the community that has given her so much.</p>
    <p><strong>Outstanding Alumna of the Year in the Social Sciences</strong><br>
    <em><strong>Elizabeth Rossman ’85, political science<br>
    </strong>Vice President-Government Relations, Honeywell International, Inc.</em><br>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/rossman_beth-photo.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/rossman_beth-photo.jpg?w=200" alt="" width="121" height="182" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Rossman began her pursuit of a career in public service while still a student at UMBC, where she majored in political science and interned in the Baltimore City Mayor’s office. She received her master’s degree from the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public and International Affairs (GSPIA) and began work with the federal government in 1987 as a Presidential Management Intern, a prestigious program designed to bring bright young people into government service. She quickly moved from the General Services Administration to the Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget (OMB). After leaving the OMB for a brief stint with the Department of Interior’s Office of the Secretary as chief of the Budget Division, in 2001, she returned to OMB as Associate Director for Legislative Affairs, during which Rossman routinely engaged in negotiations with members of Congress and their staffs during the annual federal budget process. She had lead responsibility in the Executive Branch for the development of Statements of Administration Policy on appropriation bills, and she represented the White House, OMB, and agency officials in budget negotiations. Rossman contributed to the development of the legislative strategy that was central to the enactment of the $40 billion Emergency Response Fund (ERF) omnibus spending bill to address immediate needs in the aftermath of the September 11th terrorist attacks. After completing a stellar career with the federal government in 2005, Rossman was appointed by Honeywell International to her current role as vice president of Government Relations.</p>
    <p><strong>Outstanding Alumnus of the Year in Natural &amp; Mathematical Sciences</strong><br>
    <em><strong> Dr. Kimani A. Stancil ’94, physics and mathematics<br>
    </strong>Howard University, Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Specialty Area – Soft Condensed Matter Physics</em><br>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/stancil_headshot.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/stancil_headshot.jpg?w=225" alt="" width="120" height="160" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>After receiving his degrees in physics and mathematics from UMBC in 1994, Dr. Kimani Stancil proceeded to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where he obtained in 2002 his Ph.D. in Physics studying polymer gels. Before beginning a postdoctoral fellowship in 2004 in nanoscience at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at University of California Berkeley, he spent a little over a year teaching mathematics, science, and chess to grades 3 through 8 at Baltimore City’s Maarifa Elementary and Middle School; he later donated all his wages earned to the Maarifa School. After his postdoc in 2008, Dr. Stancil was appointed Assistant Professor of Physics at Howard University, where he currently teaches courses in calculus-based introductory physics – mechanics, electricity, and magnetism, and a course in graduate statistical mechanics. In his short career, Dr. Stancil has also produced one Physics PhD (Graduated Summer 2012), five publications (plus two recently submitted and three more in preparation), and has received external and internal research grants. He is a master level chess player and former Maryland High School Chess Champion, and has steadily found ways to combine his interests in math and science to attract students from under-represented groups to science. He is currently seeking external funding for his program, “AYA-All You can Aspire,” which combines physics and chess in an effort aimed to inspire youth and community. Dr. Stancil regularly serves as an unofficial mentor for students at UMBC – always giving back when possible. A member of the first cohort of Meyerhoff Scholars, he was the keynote speaker at the Meyerhoff Parent Association graduate reception this year. His speech included his original poetry written when he was a UMBC student.</p>
    <p><strong>Rising Star Award</strong><br>
    <em><strong> Christopher Valentino ’02, M.S. ’06, information systems management<br>
    </strong>Director, Contract Research &amp; Development, Northrop Grumman</em><br>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/chris_valentino.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/chris_valentino.jpg?w=214" alt="" width="120" height="168" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Christopher Valentino is a Cyber Security expert and business leader who provides innovative technology solutions to a diverse set of U.S. Government customers. A recognized leader in developing enterprise cyber security and information assurance solutions for critical national systems, Valentino is responsible for managing contract research and development portfolios for Northrop Grumman’s Cyber Intelligence Division. Prior to his current assignment he led the Cyber Operations business area where he managed a team of more than 200 cyber security professionals providing research, development, testing and operations support to a variety of defense and intelligence customers. As a founding member of the former company Windermere, Valentino helped to develop and build a successful technology company that was acquired first by Essex Corporation and then Northrop Grumman. Throughout his career, Chris has demonstrated ongoing involvement and support of UMBC, its students and alumni. His achievements on behalf of UMBC include developing a UMBC / Northrop Grumman strategic partnership which includes technology incubation, research, recruiting, training education; and contributing to the development of the Cyber Security MPS Graduate Degree and Certificate program. Chris is also an active member of the UMBC Cyber Security External Advisory Board.</p>
    <p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/hrabowski-300.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/hrabowski-300.jpg?w=102" alt="" width="100" height="147" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>In addition, the Alumni Association will honor UMBC President <strong>Freeman A. Hrabowski, III</strong>, with the Distinguished Service Award in recognition of his 20 years of service to university as president.</p>
    <p>The Alumni Awards ceremony will be held on Thursday, October 11, at 7:30 p.m. in the Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery. The event is free, but guests should register online at <a href="http://alumni.umbc.edu/homecoming" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://alumni.umbc.edu/homecoming</a>.</p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>The UMBC Alumni Association will honor six alumni and UMBC president Freeman A. Hrabowski, III, at the annual Outstanding Alumni of the Year Awards ceremony on Thursday, October 11, 2012. Learn...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/outstanding-alumni-of-the-year-for-2012-announced/</Website>
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<PostedAt>Mon, 17 Sep 2012 12:10:11 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123785" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123785">
<Title>Donald Norris, Public Policy, in the Washington Examiner</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/donald-norris-umbc.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/donald-norris-umbc.jpg" alt="" width="154" height="140" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Three major issues are dominating the 2012 election season in Maryland, reports <a href="http://washingtonexaminer.com/ballot-issues-vie-for-attention-on-crowded-maryland-ballot/article/2507963#.UFNZJa53PzM" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em>The Washington Examiner</em></a>: the Dream Act, same-sex marriage and casino expansion. Although large ad buys are expected for all three ballot measures, UMBC’s Donald Norris anticipates that the deep pockets of casino developers will make that issue the most visible. Norris, professor and chairman of the Department of Public Policy, told the <em>Examiner</em>, “It’s the only [ballot question] where the opponents and proponents have nearly unlimited dollars.”</p></div>
]]>
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<Summary>Three major issues are dominating the 2012 election season in Maryland, reports The Washington Examiner: the Dream Act, same-sex marriage and casino expansion. Although large ad buys are expected...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/donald-norris-public-policy-in-the-washington-examiner/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123786" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123786">
<Title>From Aspiration to Achievement</Title>
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/freeman_mainimage_front-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p><em><strong>Twenty years ago, UMBC sought a greater academic reputation and a deeper sense of community. It advanced both goals under the leadership of President Freeman A. Hrabowski, III.</strong></em></p>
    <p><em>By Richard Byrne ’86</em></p>
    <p>Giving name to your aspirations is often the first step to achieving them. And back in 1995, the words that campus leaders summoned to encompass their hopes for UMBC were “An Honors University in Maryland.”</p>
    <p>The university was just shy of its 30th anniversary and only three years into the tenure of its fifth president, <strong>Freeman A. Hrabowski, III</strong>. UMBC already possessed institutional strengths, including its stellar faculty, the pioneering spirit that comes with being a young university, and an increased dynamism and connection with its closest cities – Baltimore and Washington, D.C. – bequeathed to it by Hrabowski’s predecessor, Michael Hooker. (<a title="Up On The Roof – Fall 2012" href="http://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/umbc-magazine-fall-2012/up-on-the-roof-fall-2012/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">See “Up on the Roof”</a>)</p>
    <p>What UMBC needed at that moment was an audacious imaginative leap: an identity that would help the campus seize upon the university’s strengths, elevate them, and create a more deeply knit community.</p>
    <p>“I think the campus agreed,” Hrabowski recalls, “that we needed to attract more students who could take advantage of what we had to offer – even as we worked to think about the learning process and engage students in research.”</p>
    <p>Twenty years into Hrabowski’s presidency, UMBC has undergone a profound transformation. The university is now renowned for nurturing young minds in an environment that values excellence, innovation, and diversity. Its investments to retain and attract top-notch faculty have paid off not only in rising prestige and research funding, but also in a reputation for providing undergraduates with a superlative environment for learning. UMBC’s physical campus has been transformed in ways that have improved the university’s teaching and research infrastructure – as well as its aesthetic appeal and overall quality of life.</p>
    <p>This metamorphosis at UMBC has been lauded by a national media that loves an unexpected success story. The university’s achievements have been praised in outlets including CBS’ <em>60 Minutes, Time</em> magazine, <em>The New York Times</em> and <em>The Washington Post</em>. And while Hrabowski’s leadership is often spotlighted in these stories, Hrabowski likes to point out that UMBC’s successes often have been proposed, nurtured and pushed forward by UMBC’s faculty, students and staff in an atmosphere of shared governance.</p>
    <p><strong>John Jeffries</strong>, Dean of UMBC’s College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences and a former president of the Faculty Senate, observes that “shared governance has always been vital and important at UMBC. It’s been a fundamental part of the health and progress of UMBC in the past two decades.” Jeffries adds that Hrabowski “meets regularly with the Faculty Senate president, brought the Faculty Senate president and Academic Planning and Budget Committee chair onto the Budget Committee and President’s Council, and works with the Faculty Senate. Shared governance has played a fundamental role in the progress of the academic programs.”</p>
    <p>Looking back, the principles undergirding UMBC’s rise to prominence seem clear. Elevate academic excellence. Create spaces and opportunity to forge community. Bring the entire university into the processes of academic research and creative endeavor.</p>
    <p>But how, exactly, did it all happen? As the campus celebrates two decades of Hrabowski’s leadership, it is now possible to trace more fully the arc of that evolution.</p>
    <p><strong>TAKING THE HONORS</strong></p>
    <p>UMBC’s efforts to attract the best students from Maryland and elsewhere had gathered steam by the end of the 1980s. Average SAT scores for freshmen entering UMBC in 1989 climbed above the national average – and subsequently those scores have skyrocketed to almost 200 points over the average.</p>
    <p>Yet it took a certain degree of audacity to proclaim UMBC “An Honors University in Maryland” only six years after reaching that important milestone. But stating the university’s aspirations publicly was a key step in UMBC’s transformation.</p>
    <p>“It was the marketing initiative that taught us that we had become known as a place for serious academic study,” recalls Hrabowski. “A university attracting more students from high school honor societies. A university that was sending a disproportionate number of students to graduate and professional schools. And, most important, that we were a public university that openly valued the life of the mind. All these things were part of the honors university concept.”</p>
    <p>The concept of an honors university might have been new, but its foundations had been laid in previous years.</p>
    <p>One essential element in UMBC’s reimagination of itself was the creation of the <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/meyerhoff/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Meyerhoff Scholars Program</a> by Hrabowski (who had been recruited to UMBC in 1987 as vice provost by Michael Hooker) and philanthropist Robert Meyerhoff. The program aimed to increase the number of minority students pursuing graduate degrees in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) disciplines – and its success in doing so has made the program an international model for fostering excellence and diversity. The program’s more than 700 graduates have subsequently earned 81 Ph.D.s, 25 M.D./Ph.D.s and 92 M.D.s. – and many more of its graduates are still pursuing advanced degrees.</p>
    <p>The Meyerhoff Program also created wider ripples at UMBC. Its formula of recruiting talented students and forging shared and structured intellectual communities was adopted (and adapted) elsewhere at the university. New programs including the <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/las/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Linehan Artist Scholars Program</a>, the <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/sondheim/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Sondheim Public Affairs Scholars Program</a>, the <a href="http://humanitiesscholars.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Humanities Scholars Program</a>, and the <a href="http://cwit.umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Center for Women In Technology (CWIT)</a> were created to extend the values of academic excellence and shared enterprise across disciplines.</p>
    <p>Such programs would not exist without a significant investment in UMBC’s innovation from a myriad of donors – including an increasing number of UMBC alumni who give back to their alma mater. UMBC’s first two capital campaigns for the university, which concluded in 2002 and 2011, each exceeded their goals by at least $15 million.</p>
    <p>Baltimore businessman and philanthropist <strong>Earl Linehan</strong> was a co-chair of that first capital campaign – and also a longtime chair of UMBC’s Board of Visitors. When he was first invited to visit the university by Hrabowski, Linehan says that he was immediately impressed by the UMBC president’s “unbelievable energy and personal connection with the students.”</p>
    <p>Yet Linehan says that he and the other donors who helped fuel UMBC’s transformation in that era also saw an institution that was ripe to make a big leap. “A lot of us initially were attracted by Freeman,” he continues. “But then we got to know the institution. Even then, the reality of the place already outshone the perception of it. We became inspired by the whole ethos of the place.”</p>
    <p>And as UMBC found resources to advance its ambitions, its progress toward becoming an honors university was extended into every corner of the school by faculty and staff members who served on an Honors University Task Force that issued its final report in May 2000.</p>
    <p>The task force aimed to extend “the rigorous ways of learning that are options for students in select programs at UMBC to a wider student body,” and identified changes to significantly strengthen and broaden both the curriculum and student support services. The task force offered crucial advice on implementing those changes, and its work has given talented students attracted by the honors university concept more pathways and support to achieve academic excellence at UMBC.</p>
    <p><strong>GIVE US TREES </strong></p>
    <p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/freeman_trees.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/freeman_trees.jpg" alt="Planting trees" width="470" height="300" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a></p>
    <p>Improving UMBC’s aesthetic appeal and creating new spaces to foster deeper community were on Hrabowski’s agenda from his earliest days as president. He fondly recalls his first meeting with the late <strong>William Donald Schaefer</strong>, who was Maryland’s governor when Hrabowski was named to the job.</p>
    <p>“[Governor Schaefer] said to me, ‘What can I do to show people how proud I am of you and of the university?’ And I said, ‘Give us trees,’” Hrabowski recalls. “Because people said that this place would look better and better as the trees grew. And he was absolutely delighted to give us support.”</p>
    <p>A year before Schaefer’s passing in 2011, Hrabowski invited Maryland’s former governor back to campus. “I reminded him of those trees,” he says. “He was amazed by how much we had developed, and moved that we were giving him credit for helping us to develop.”</p>
    <p>Green campus spaces such as the <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/cadvc/exhibitions/beuys.php" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Beuys Sculpture Park</a> (just southeast of the Retriever Activities Center) are a tangible sign of UMBC’s aesthetic upgrade. And with a strong push from UMBC’s faculty, green spaces became part of the university’s research infrastructure when its <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/cera/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Conservation and Environmental Research Areas (CERA)</a> – contiguous to the long-planned <a href="http://www.bwtechumbc.com/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">bwtech@UMBC Research and Technology Park</a> – were created in 1997.</p>
    <p>In the midst of those green spaces, other sorts of growth took place. The addition to UMBC’s <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/aok/main/index.html" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Albin O. Kuhn Library</a> that opened in 1995 was underway when Hooker left the university.</p>
    <p>And under Hrabowski’s leadership, 13 new buildings and 12 major additions and renovations to UMBC’s campus have been completed in the past two decades.</p>
    <p>Much of this flurry of new construction – and the state funding that supported it – advanced both the research and teaching missions at UMBC.</p>
    <p>“When I think about this growth,” says Hrabowski, “I think about the confidence that the state has in us as a major institution of learning. And I think about the areas that have been strengthened academically as a result. The physical transformation reflects a trend of growth in the academic program.”</p>
    <p>The new buildings on campus created new opportunities for innovation across disciplines: a new Physics building, a new Public Policy building, two new Information Technology/Engineering buildings, and, just this autumn, a new Performing Arts and Humanities Building (<a title="The News – Fall 2012" href="http://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/umbc-magazine-fall-2012/the-news-fall-2012/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">See “The News”</a>). UMBC also undertook major renovations of key structures in the natural sciences, overhauling the Biological Sciences and the Meyerhoff Chemistry buildings. And the opening of bwtech@UMBC in 2002 – a research park that is now home to nearly 100 companies that generate over $200 million annually in total business – created even closer collaborations with industry and commerce in the region.</p>
    <p>UMBC’s building boom also focused squarely on creating deeper community on campus and encouraging students to call the school their home during the academic year.</p>
    <p>The centerpiece of this effort was the 2002 opening of The Commons, a new university center that swung the center of campus closer to the residential heart of the school. And that heart has seen a boom of its own: two new apartment complexes, two new dormitories, and the refurbishment and expansion of other existing student residences.</p>
    <p>“The development has emphasized the importance of community,” Hrabowski says. “Spaces like The Commons, and even the benches that we have on campus, are spaces that invite conversation, reflection and community – and the feeling that the university is becoming more residential.”</p>
    <p>The creation of new community spaces and the growth campus housing have supported UMBC’s gradual shift from a predominately commuter school into a substantially residential university. When Hrabowski assumed UMBC’s presidency in 1993, the percentage of students who lived on campus had finally risen to 30 percent. Today, the number has moved closer to 50 percent in total. Even larger strides have been made with incoming freshmen: Fully 75 percent of those enrolled at UMBC as freshmen now live on campus.</p>
    <p><strong>Yvette Mozie-Ross ’88</strong>, health science and policy, has seen the changes at UMBC over the last 20 years as an undergraduate and as a staff member who now serves as associate provost for enrollment management. She says the biggest change she has seen is “the recognition that the institution has attained. I remember as a student, and then as an admissions counselor, you’d say UMBC and people would say ‘UM-what?’ Now you say UMBC and they can name all sorts of accolades we have received, and tell you about people they know who have gone to UMBC and done great things.”</p>
    <p>In addition, Mozie-Ross believes that the physical transformation of the campus – and the construction of communal spaces where students, faculty, and staff can gather – have helped spur the rise of students living on campus. “They have played a critical role,” she says. “There are now places where the process of gathering as a community happens more naturally.”</p>
    <p><strong>DELIGHT IN DISCOVERY</strong></p>
    <p>One of UMBC’s strengths from its founding was its faculty. Key faculty members across disciplines arrived in the university’s early years, and stayed on at UMBC through the 1970s and beyond.</p>
    <p>These professors and researchers – and those who have joined them in subsequent decades – have propelled UMBC’s transformation through their research and innovations in the classroom.</p>
    <p>The numbers tell part of the story. When Hrabowski became interim president of UMBC in 1992, the university’s total research and development expenditures stood at $7.6 million, with nearly $5 million of that amount coming from the federal government. Only ten years later, in 2002, that total had grown to $36 million, with $29 million in federal research dollars. And that astonishing growth has continued over the second decade of Hrabowski’s presidency, as total expenditures have almost tripled to $91 million and federal funding has doubled to $61 million.</p>
    <p>Beyond the numbers however, are two decades of developing dynamic and high-powered research partnerships, including deep and continuing research relationships with NASA, IBM, Princeton University, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.</p>
    <p>The university has also excelled in disciplines where research isn’t measured in dollars but in cultural and societal reach. A 1997 study by Hugh Davis Graham and Nancy Diamond, published as <em>The Rise of American Research Universities: Elites and Challengers in the Postwar Era</em>, ranked UMBC scholars in the arts, humanities, and related social sciences as 13th among all U.S. public university faculties in the attainment of prestigious awards. And UMBC faculty members in those disciplines continue to receive prominent grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and numerous other institutions.</p>
    <p>As UMBC’s Provost <strong>Philip Rous</strong> pointed out in a recent interview: “External funding is a measure of excellence in many disciplines. But we have to be careful not to generalize that observation as far as defining the excellence piece of it, because there are many disciplines where large amounts of external funding are not available or not really appropriate. Yet a person working in those fields can be a world-class scholar in exactly the same way as a scientist or engineer who is bringing in millions of dollars…. The difference is in the disciplines, not in the excellence. And excellence is our common goal.”</p>
    <p>Yet another key value in the university’s rapidly expanding research footprint has been the way in which UMBC’s undergraduates have been brought into the process of discovery. Faculty members have found numerous ways to encourage students to participate meaningfully in research labs and field work and the artistic process. Innovations to improve the undergraduate learning experience have also been a key element in the past twenty years at UMBC, including the creation of new classroom environments such as the College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences (CNMS)’s Active Science Teaching and Learning Environment – better known as CASTLE – and the Chemistry Discovery Center, as well as the imminent revamping of the English composition curriculum.</p>
    <p>The fruits of this effort can be seen not only in UMBC’s lofty <em>U.S. News and World Report</em> ranking in undergraduate education (4th in the nation in 2011), but also in the university’s annual celebration of an Undergraduate Research and Creative Achievement Day (URCAD) that recognizes the shared journey of exploration for new knowledge by faculty, students, and staff.</p>
    <p>UMBC’s journey of discovery began almost 50 years ago, and has only accelerated in pace and intensity over the two decades of transformation under Hrabowski’s leadership. The scope of the university’s progress has inspired alumni who have returned to see what’s changed.</p>
    <p><strong>Gene Trainor ’86</strong>, economics and health science and policy, the chief operating officer at Foundation Capital, recalls being profoundly moved by the changes at the university when he reconnected with UMBC on a visit more than a decade after graduating.</p>
    <p>“It was exciting to have a conversation with [President Hrabowski] and hear the vision,” recalls Trainor. “And then to see how that vision was executed across the board – in the humanities and the sciences. So many exciting things were happening, and they were happening with limited resources.”</p>
    <p>Trainor was so inspired that he became chair of the Alumni Campaign Committee for UMBC’s second capital campaign. “I wanted to be involved with something where I could make the biggest impact and the biggest difference,” he continues. “I look back on it with great pride and know that I was part of something great. As an alumnus, it makes you happy to stick your chest out.”</p>
    <p>Twenty years into his presidency, Hrabowski agrees that the biggest change he has witnessed at UMBC is that growing sense of the university’s belief in itself and where it’s headed.</p>
    <p>“There is much greater pride and emphasis on the unique strengths of this campus,” Hrabowski observes, “and a much greater recognition that we are admired nationally for our undergraduate experience and our growing strength as a research institution.”</p>
    <p><a href="http://alumni.umbc.edu/innovationfund" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">– Read more about The Hrabowski Fund for Innovation</a></p>
    <p><em>This article appeared in the Fall 2012 issue of </em>UMBC Magazine.</p>
    </div>
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<Summary>Twenty years ago, UMBC sought a greater academic reputation and a deeper sense of community. It advanced both goals under the leadership of President Freeman A. Hrabowski, III.   By Richard Byrne...</Summary>
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