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<Title>Emokpae &#8217;03, Psychology, on NBC&#8217;s &#8220;The Voice&#8221; This Week</Title>
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    <p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/nelson-emokpae.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/nelson-emokpae.jpg?w=171&amp;h=214" alt="Nelson Emokpae" width="171" height="214" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>UMBC alumnus <strong>Nelson Emokpae ’03, psychology</strong>, will make his television debut tonight on NBC’s singing competition “<a href="http://www.nbc.com/the-voice/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">The Voice.</a>” Emokpae immigrated to the U.S. as a political refugee from Nigeria and received his B.A. from UMBC before picking up a guitar for the first time while in graduate school. He decided to pursue a full-time music career as <a href="http://nellysecho.com/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Nelly’s Echo</a> just last year, and has been touring at college campuses around the country.</p>
    <p>In a recent interview, the Baltimore-based Emokpae remarked, “I love touring. I love meeting different people. I love seeing different locations, trying out different cultures. Because even in America, the variety of cultures within one country is so vast, and being able to travel from California to Maine to Seattle to Florida and every [place] in between affords me that opportunity to meet a lot of people and amass a lot of great experiences.”</p>
    <p>To watch Emokpae’s audition on “The Voice,” tune into NBC at 8:00 p.m. EST on September 11th and 12th (Note: his exact air date has not been announced and it could be either day), and check out this <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaKhAbgc4IM" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">video performance </a>of the song “If I Were the King.”</p>
    <p><a href="http://umbcinsights.wordpress.com/2012/09/11/nelson-emokpae-03-psychology-on-nbcs-the-voice/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">This article originally appeared on UMBC Insights.</a></p>
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<Summary>UMBC alumnus Nelson Emokpae ’03, psychology, will make his television debut tonight on NBC’s singing competition “The Voice.” Emokpae immigrated to the U.S. as a political refugee from Nigeria and...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/emokpae-03-psychology-on-nbcs-the-voice-tonight-911/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123796" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123796">
<Title>The Beats Go On</Title>
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/beats_mainimage1-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><h5><em>At his San Francisco museum, UMBC alumnus Jerry Cimino ’76 makes sure the world is still hep to one of America’s greatest literary movements.</em></h5>
    <p><em>By Jenny O’Grady</em><br>
    <em>Photos by Mirissa Neff and Brittany Powell</em></p>
    <p><strong>The Beat Generation</strong> was a uniquely American movement – producing pockets of poetry and art across the land. You could find them in 1950s New York City in their early days clustered around Columbia University – or down in the cafes and jazz clubs of Greenwich Village. Some of them found refuge at Black Mountain College in North Carolina. And they drank and declaimed in juke joints across the Midwest and the Southwest.</p>
    <p>That restless urge to explore great spaces is at the heart of Beat verse and prose. But if you had to pick an epicenter of the movement, you’d likely choose San Francisco’s North Beach – and specifically the crossroads of Broadway and Columbus Avenue.</p>
    <p>That’s where you’ll find one of America’s great literary meccas: the checkerboard-floored City Lights Books, which was founded by poet/ publisher Lawrence Ferlinghetti in 1953. Right next to it is the Vesuvio Café, a popular watering hole of poets like Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac. And just up the street, at 1562 Grant Avenue, young writers spent hours smoking dope on a crooked stairwell called “Poet’s Corner” – and then headed to the press next door to check galleys of the latest chapbook.</p>
    <p>North Beach is also where you’ll find <strong>Jerry Cimino ’76</strong>, history. From the book-lined open air porch of the Beat Museum, which he founded in 2003 at 540 Broadway to pay homage to a generation of writers and artists who continue to inspire him, he takes in the rich history of this historic section of the city. He savors it. And he can’t help but share it with anyone who will listen.</p>
    <p>“What we like to say is: ‘Welcome to the center of the universe,’” enthuses Cimino, with the flair of a modern day P.T. Barnum. “Because you’re at Broadway and Columbus right now – and everything that happened with the Beat Generation happened right here at this intersection.”</p>
    <p>The museum’s walls reflect this, exploding with colorful posters, books, author photographs, drawings and videos covering every surface. One wall is devoted completely to editions of Kerouac’s<em> On the Road</em> from around the world. Another shows an early version of Ginsberg’s “Howl,” complete with scrawling edits by the author – enough to make even the biggest bookworm giddy.</p>
    <p>More than 60 years after the Beats’ heyday, the culture has found a true evangelist in Cimino, a determined man driven by respect for the inclusive, nonconformist ideals the Beat authors represented. With a little elbow grease – and some recent attention from Hollywood – he’s on the road to making a lasting tribute to his heroes.</p>
    <h4>“IT KNOCKED ME OUT”</h4>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/beats_museum_images11.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/beats_museum_images11.jpg?w=470&amp;h=940" alt="Beat Museum" width="470" height="940" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Items from the Beat Museum
    <p>Cimino grew up in the suburbs of Baltimore, the son of a WWII vet-turned-postal clerk. His first encounter with the music and movement of the Beat writers came when a teacher read poems from Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s classic collection <em>A Coney Island of the Mind</em> to his eighth-grade class.</p>
    <p>“That whole book of poetry literally changed my life…it knocked me out,” says Cimino, who to this day can recite the book’s fifth poem, “Sometimes During Eternity,” from memory.</p>
    <p>“You know, 1968 is when it all happened,” Cimino recalls. “Bobby Kennedy was shot and killed. Martin Luther King was shot and killed. The Vietnam War was raging, and all of us kids were looking at each other and saying, ‘What in the hell are we inheriting?’”</p>
    <p>When Cimino arrived at UMBC in 1972, he was among the few students actually living on campus at the time, splitting time between what were then called “Dorms 1, 2, and 3.” He says that many of the bonds that he formed in that era at UMBC – including friendships with older students freshly scarred from serving in Vietnam, and with closeted gays who trusted him with their secret – would forever change his own way of thinking. He also enjoyed some time on stage with the theatre club, sharing the bill (but, sadly, never the stage) with one-time UMBC student Kathleen Turner in a 1975 campus production of <em>Antigone</em>.</p>
    <p>“For the first time in my life, I was interacting with a lot of people who weren’t like me,” says Cimino. “And that’s what the Beats were all about – coming together and really celebrating your differences… they were about tolerance and compassion and having the courage to live the most authentic life you can.”</p>
    <p>Jonathan M. Cooperman, who roomed with Cimino at UMBC before finishing a degree in physical therapy at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, recalls a thoughtful, passionate friend who also had more hair back then.</p>
    <p>“He is very much the same guy to me now as he was then,” says Cooperman, who is now a member of the Beat Museum’s board. “If you walked into his room at three in the morning, the door would be cracked open with light pouring out into the hall. If you walked inside, Jer would be sipping tea and reading a book – usually Kerouac.”</p>
    <p>Although he loved history and other subjects he’d studied at UMBC, Cimino graduated without a clear career path to follow. So he went with the flow in which he found himself, relocating to California and forging a successful career in sales for both IBM and American Express.</p>
    <h4>VOICES THAT SPAN GENERATIONS</h4>
    <a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/beats_museum_images2.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/beats_museum_images2.jpg?w=470&amp;h=940" alt="Beat Museum" width="470" height="940" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Additional items from the Beat Museum.
    <p>Over the years, however, Cimino and his wife, Estelle, started craving something more than a career in business. His continuing affection for the Beat literature he had read as a young man led him to befriend John Cassady – the son of Kerouac’s friend Neal Cassady, who is immortalized in the character of “Dean Moriarty” in <em>On the Road</em>.</p>
    <p>Cimino also began building a collection of Beat generation memorabilia which eventually became “The Beat Museum on Wheels” in 2003. And just as Dean Moriarty took off across the country with Sal Paradise (the character representing Kerouac himself in <em>On the Road</em>), Cimino and Cassady drove “the mighty beatmobile” across America’s highways in October 2005 – even parking it overnight in Commons Circle at UMBC.</p>
    <p>Cimino says he reveled in the chance to share his growing collection with UMBC students and see his old campus. And faculty members were happy to have a bit of the Beats in Catonsville.</p>
    <p>“The students enjoyed visiting the museum on wheels, with all kinds of interesting, hard-to-get publications and memorabilia, and just hanging out with Jerry and John,” says UMBC associate professor of English <strong>Piotr Gwiazda</strong>, who helped organize the appearance.</p>
    <p>The Beats cast a spell over today’s students now just as much as ever, Gwiazda says.</p>
    <p>“Whenever I teach ‘Howl,’ students respond with interest,” he says. “There still seems to be something magnetic about the work of Beat Generation writers: the idea of community it embodied, its counter-cultural aspects, its philosophical dimensions, and of course its sheer verbal power and vitality.”</p>
    <h4>STAR POWER</h4>
    <p>Of course, interest in the Beats has never been limited to college students reading in circles on the grass. A new Hollywood treatment of Kerouac’s <em>On the Road</em> – which features Kristen Stewart of <em>Twilight</em> fame and Viggo Mortensen from the <em>Lord of the Rings</em> films – is traveling the festival circuit now and scheduled for general release later this year.</p>
    <p>Cimino couldn’t be happier about what the new film means for the legacy of the Beats – and for the future of his own museum.</p>
    <p>“It’s just great, have you seen it?” he says, cueing up the movie trailer on a screen above the museum’s entrance. Since filming began in 2010 under director Walter Salles, Cimino says members of the film’s cast have visited the museum and asked questions about their characters.</p>
    <p>The cast and crew even dropped off a surprise prop from the film at the museum. Just to the right of the museum’s check-in desk sits a dusty maroon 1949 Hudson Hornet used during filming and driven to its resting spot in North Beach by none other than the movie’s star Garrett Hedlund (“a really delightful young man,” says Cimino), who portrays the ever-restless Dean Moriarty.</p>
    <p>Beside it stands a sign: “Walter’s only request of us was that the dust and grime – accumulated on the car during the 5,000 miles he and Garrett spent traveling the country making the film – remain undisturbed. Walter considers this ‘the Holy Dirt of America.’”</p>
    <p>“You know, every fingerprint has a story,” says Cimino. “It’s important to keep that history intact.”</p>
    <p>That’s a major part of Cimino’s job as curator: making the story of the Beats accessible and fun for anyone who might wander in. He loves every second of his evangelism for the movement and its great writers.</p>
    <p>“The museum is successful because it represents a significant part of American culture and American literary history,” says Cooperman. “The opening of the movie<em> On the Road</em> demonstrates how this literature is still relevant.</p>
    <p>“Of course, the fact that Jerry is probably as knowledgeable of the Beats as any academic doesn’t hurt either,” he adds. “He’ll ultimately be successful because he has a passion for what he does.”</p>
    <h4>NOW AND LATER</h4>
    <p>Passion is one thing. But, if you’re wondering how a start-up museum makes it in such difficult economic times, here’s your answer: It ain’t easy.</p>
    <p>But the Beat Museum now survives and thrives thanks to Cimino’s magnetic business sense and a lot of hard work.</p>
    <p>Just above Cimino’s desk hangs a complicated organizational chart showing a collage of boxes representing duties spanning everything from marketing to merchandising to fixing the guest toilet. One line connects them all.</p>
    <p>“And every one of those boxes has my damn name on it,” he jokes. “That’s just how it is.”</p>
    <p>The museum’s collection has grown as fans discover it. Cimino admits that “most people who love the Beats don’t have a lot of money,” but as fans of certain writers have discovered his museum, the memorabilia contributions have flowed in steadily. There’s a plaid jacket once worn by Kerouac, and a creaky pipe organ owned by Allen Ginsberg. There’s even an original “Can YOU pass the acid test?” card from the days when Neal Cassady drove Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters across the country in a psychedelic bus – a trip immortalized by author Tom Wolfe in his 1968 book, <em>The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test</em>. (There’s also a film version of that book in works, to be directed by Gus Van Sant.)</p>
    <p>Over the years, Cimino also found mentors to advise him as his plans for the museum have grown. He singles out the late Kim Greer, who was president of the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas, California, until his death in 2006.</p>
    <p>“I have people come in every day telling me what I should be doing,” he says. “But I only take advice from people who have successfully done what they’re telling me I ought to do. It’s easy to guess…but that’s not going to get you anywhere.”</p>
    <p>Right now, the Beat Museum is just as Cimino would like it to be: full, eclectic, engaging. Not too smooth, or too uniform: that wouldn’t fit well with the artists that it celebrates. Mismatched shelves offer hand-assembled chapbooks by local poets. A claw-footed bathtub filled with dime store novels invites visitors to try something new. There’s a definite flavor to the place – a sort of San Francisco sourdough bite.</p>
    <p>Cimino would enjoy having someone else fix the toilet from time to time. More important, however, is growing the Beat Museum so that it can stand strong for generations to come. That’s his next step.</p>
    <p>“I started this place the only way I know how. I built it from nothing,” he says. “Now we’ve built a track record, we’ve made it succeed with the blood and sweat of a lot of people. If this thing’s going to outlive me…I’m going to have to think big.”</p>
    <ul>
    <li><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFwDWg_FxEU&amp;list=UU3Lp1hDZHbe2-McNzJ_Yp2Q&amp;index=1&amp;feature=plcp" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">VIDEO: Interview with Jerry Cimino ’76, founder of The Beat Museum</a></li>
    <li><a href="http://www.thebeatmuseumonwheels.com/ourblog/umbc.htm" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Read Jerry’s blog from his 2005 visit to UMBC</a></li>
    <li><a href="http://www.kerouac.com/blog/2012/05/on-the-road-delivers/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Read Jerry’s review of Walter Salles’s new movie, On the Road</a></li>
    </ul>
    </div>
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<Summary>At his San Francisco museum, UMBC alumnus Jerry Cimino ’76 makes sure the world is still hep to one of America’s greatest literary movements.   By Jenny O’Grady  Photos by Mirissa Neff and...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/the-beats-go-on-summer2012/</Website>
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<Tag>jerry-cimino</Tag>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 11 Sep 2012 19:19:29 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123797" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123797">
<Title>Search Engineers</Title>
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<![CDATA[
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/searchengineers_mainimage-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p><em>British writer and scientist Arthur C. Clarke once wrote that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” </em></p>
    <p><em>And for many of us, that’s exactly how the beeps and pings and connecting dings that keep our schedules, steer our cars to the right destination, and even maintain our bonds with family and friends over great distances seem to work. Like magic. </em></p>
    <p><em>But to the humans behind the technologies – including Silicon Valley-based UMBC alumni at <a title="A SIRI-ous Mind" href="http://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/2012/06/06/post-1/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Apple</a> and Google – it’s anything but abracadabra. It’s a combination of hard work, entrepreneurial drive and visionary imagination at its geekish best. </em></p>
    <p><em>Let’s meet some of the minds behind the magic of our technologies.</em></p>
    <p><strong><em>by Jenny O’Grady</em></strong><em><br>
    Photos by Gabriela Hasbun</em></p>
    <p>Stroll down the yellow brick walkway that leads to Building 43, and a trio of girls on colorful bikes rides by, dinging their handlebar bells and singing “Hello!”</p>
    <p>Take a right, and you’re in a garden of busts that depict everyone from Lloyd Bridges to Jacques Cousteau. Beyond that, a T-Rex skeleton feasts on helpless plastic pink flamingos. There’s a delicious savory breeze – does it come from one of the free cafeterias or the employee-run herb garden? – and a burst of laughter from a group of young engineers playing beach volleyball nearby.</p>
    <p>Oh, right: and today’s free haircut day. That’s life in the Googleplex for you.</p>
    <p>Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, California, is often depicted as a Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory of high-tech geekdom. It’s frequently listed on Top 10 lists of amazing workplaces. But what’s it really like to work at a company with a product so popular that it’s become a verb?</p>
    <p>“It is very good to foster a culture where people are engaged, want to be at work, and that allows you to concentrate your time on what you’re trying to do in the day,” says <strong>Jeffrey Burgan ’83</strong>, computer science, director of network engineering for Google Access, which delivers high speed internet. “People work very hard here, so if the place can take the burden off in other areas – like get an oil change or a haircut, or to have washers and driers so people can do their laundry – it definitely helps.”</p>
    <p>Google is known as much for the sheer difficulty of its confounding job interviews as it is for the replica of SpaceShipOne in its lobby. The secret to the company’s success seems to lie in its careful balance of work and play, and other UMBC alumni at Google agree that its unique culture pushes them to be more creative and constructive.</p>
    <p><strong>Jeetendra M. Soneja M.S. ’04</strong>, computer science, is the tech lead for Google Analytics API. He works in an outlying office, but finds the company culture persists across Google’s many campuses.</p>
    <p>“One thing that is common across all the Google offices all over the world is the friendly and helpful nature of the fellow Googlers,” he says. “This leads to a very healthy working environment and is one of the best things why I love working here. The work environment is also fun and relaxing, and yet focused and one that promotes and rewards innovation.”</p>
    <p><strong>Robert Banz ’95</strong>, computer science, has worked as a site reliability engineer at Google for four years. (“We make sure Google is ‘always on,’” he says.) Before that, he worked at UMBC, which gives him a bit of special perspective about what’s extra cool about working at the Mountain View campus.</p>
    <p>“Everyone says it’s the free food options, so I’ll go with something else. I’d say I was surprised how much it felt like a university campus,” he said.</p>
    <p>Banz also believes the atmosphere of Silicon Valley is a significant influence on the famed Google culture. “Silicon Valley and San Francisco, but really the entire Bay Area, has this amazing critical mass of passionate creative, scientific, and engineering talent,” he says. “These groups mix socially; mutual curiosity leads to unique ideas. I think that’s the secret to the creative engine, and the source of very engaging and entertaining conversation.”</p>
    <p><strong>Sandor Dornbush M.S. ’06</strong>, computer science, sometimes runs to work with his black lab, Coltrane. Other times, he takes the free Google shuttle. Today, he wheels his bike into a meeting room playfully covered in a soft padded material. Photos of the Burning Man festival hang nearby.</p>
    <p>“Despite all the games, and the food and everything, I honestly don’t think I’ve played a single game of pool in my six years here,” says Dornbush, an engineer for Google Play, who knows his work ultimately comes first.</p>
    <p>“People talk about the Google 15 (because of the free food), but I’ve actually found the opposite,” Dornbush says. “For the first time, many people have access to really good food, and they have access to the gym, and they see people around them taking care of themselves, and they start to drop pounds. So despite the fact that there’s all this free stuff, people work really hard. And it’s a culture that encourages that.”</p>
    </div>
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<Summary>British writer and scientist Arthur C. Clarke once wrote that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”    And for many of us, that’s exactly how the beeps and pings...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/search-engineers-summer2012/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123798" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123798">
<Title>A SIRI-ous Mind</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/trektrekkers_mainimage-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p><em>British writer and scientist Arthur C. Clarke once wrote that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” </em></p>
    <p><em>And for many of us, that’s exactly how the beeps and pings and connecting dings that keep our schedules, steer our cars to the right destination, and even maintain our bonds with family and friends over great distances seem to work. Like magic. </em></p>
    <p><em>But to the humans behind the technologies – including Silicon Valley-based UMBC alumni at Apple and <a title="Search Engineers" href="http://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/search-engineers/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Google</a> – it’s anything but abracadabra. It’s a combination of hard work, entrepreneurial drive and visionary imagination at its geekish best. </em></p>
    <p><em>Let’s meet some of the minds behind the magic of our technologies.</em></p>
    <p><strong><em>by Jenny O’Grady</em></strong></p>
    <p>Photos by Timothy Archibald. Illustrations by Meredith Nelson.</p>
    <p>* * * *</p>
    <div>
    <dl>
    <dt><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/mj_chen_idea_harry.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/mj_chen_idea_harry.jpg" alt="Siri-ous Mind" width="470" height="517" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a></dt>
    <dd>Just about anything can inspire an idea. It’s up to engineers like Chen to bring them to life.</dd>
    </dl>
    </div>
    <p><em>How a UMBC alumnus found more than (voice) recognition for his work on the iPhone’s enigmatic Siri technology.</em></p>
    <p>Sometimes, <strong>Harry Chen</strong> needs to get away. Far away.</p>
    <p>When he’s surrounded by the sands of Death Valley, California, even the GPS can’t find him. He can’t check his email, or video chat with his parents in Hong Kong, or stream music from his favorite Pandora station. And he likes that solitude.</p>
    <p>“Sometimes you’ve got to go to the desert,” says Chen, a UMBC computer science alumnus (B.A. ’98, M.S. ’00, Ph.D. ’04) who helped develop Siri, the voiceresponsive “personal assistant” found inside the latest Apple iPhones.</p>
    <p>“You stay out there, and when you come back, you see such a big contrast of civilization,” he continues. “And it makes you appreciate life a lot more. Everything we created – one way or another – is kind of superficial, but also kind of essential.”</p>
    <p>In a world where computing has left the desktop and lives in the clouds, Chen is a bit of a tech superstar. The work that he and his colleagues have done makes it easy for everyone from tweeners to grandfolks to whisper wishes into the palms of their hands to find the closest pizza, send an email or solve a math problem.</p>
    <p>Reflecting on his short-yet-impressive career, the energetic 35-year-old software engineer is quick to note the importance of the nearly ten years he spent at UMBC. He says that the people and the environment of discovery at the university helped shaped him into the kind of thinker capable of seeing models and years ahead to the next cool thing.</p>
    <p><strong>Building The Basics</strong></p>
    <p>Like many blossoming tech geeks in the early 1990s, Chen first contemplated the inner workings of computers as a teenager, sitting at home in Hong Kong, his thumbs occupied by the bright red buttons of that era’s ubiquitous Nintendo controller.</p>
    <p>“While I was playing, I’d get so curious. How did all those characters come about? I started thinking about how some games would make very predictable moves, and why some are not predictable at all,” he says. “Later on, my dad bought me a computer…and the games on that were sort of like the ones with a snake going in different directions. It made me very interested in understanding more about computer instructions.”</p>
    <p>When Chen left home for Towson University in 1994, the world of web-based computing was just beginning to blossom. At the urging of his parents, he began a course of study in pharmacy, but a job opening at the campus library allowed Chen to help customers with computers. He started building simple websites with his friends. After taking a few classes, Chen discovered he had an aptitude for programming.</p>
    <p>Suddenly, the future – including a transfer to UMBC – seemed obvious to him. It didn’t take Chen long to make himself at home in the university’s computer science department, where he turned artificial intelligence algorithms into Java code for computer science research projects, won highly-sought internships at Hewlett-Packard, and generally wowed his peers.</p>
    <p>“One thing we always liked so much about Harry is that he liked to charge into things,” says <strong>Dr. Tim Finin</strong>, a professor of computer science and electrical engineering who specializes in artificial intelligence and who served as Chen’s Ph.D. advisor. “He was not afraid to just drop in and start working on something.”</p>
    <p>At the time, many of UMBC’s computer science researchers focused on pervasive computing – which aims to unobtrusively connect and share data between the many devices in our lives. Chen took to it like a teen to texting, and reveled in collaborating with fellow students to test new ideas.</p>
    <p>“Harry was, and probably still is, very good at that level. He could very effortlessly turn ideas into working prototypes,” says Finin. “It’s a really significant skill to be able to have an idea and then very quickly test it out…to be able to implement enough of it to get some feedback to know whether it’s a brilliant idea, whether it’s something that will pan out.”</p>
    <p><strong>The Smartest Room in the Building</strong></p>
    <p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/mj_chen_smartroom1.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/mj_chen_smartroom1.jpg" alt="Smart room" width="235" height="301" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Many computer science students at UMBC take jobs right after they finish undergraduate studies. But an iffy job market in the late 1990s and then the dot.com bubble’s burst a few years later kept Chen in school.</p>
    <p>Chen’s decision to wait to test the market turned out to be a good one. He used that time to develop a concept that helped shape his future research.</p>
    <p>Imagine a room that answers your questions, or anticipates your needs and then fulfills them. Chen imagined that room – and then figured out how it might be brought to life.</p>
    <p>“The graduate student’s life is really about exploration and to be free to identify your interests,” he says. “It’s almost like an accident when you find something you really like to work on and you just know it.”</p>
    <p>Chen had spent some time interning at the Hewlett-Packard Labs, which were – at the time – at the forefront of mobile computing research and development. So when Chen returned to UMBC, he figured out what he wanted to design: a conference room broker. This system would retrieve and translate data from the devices within the room itself to solve problems for occupants while also considering user-privacy issues.</p>
    <p>“So you walk into a meeting room,” Chen explains, “and the room understands how many people are in that room, what those people do…so the room says, ‘Oh, there’s a projector,’ and the projector would say, ‘I want to show a PowerPoint presentation. I can do that.’”</p>
    <p>The smart room would also locate the presentation on Chen’s phone, download it, and show it – after automatically darkening the room. It might know that one of the meeting attendees wants a copy of the PowerPoint, and then simply download it to their phone. The room might even detect that an attendee’s hotel room is several miles away – and offer to call them a taxi.</p>
    <p>“The idea is that people will use technology without thinking about it, which is just like you pick up chopsticks or a utensil and you just use it, you don’t think about it,” he says. “So that’s an idea, to try to encourage people to build technology for everyday people, to solve everyday problems.”</p>
    <p>Imagining this room would help Chen shape his later work.</p>
    <p><strong>Taking Chances – and Detours</strong></p>
    <p>Following graduation from UMBC, both Chen and his wife Gigi Yim, who earned a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in information systems from UMBC in 2004 and 2007, pursued jobs in the Baltimore area. They even bought a house.</p>
    <p>But the lure of Silicon Valley – and the fast-paced, creative life it offered – called to Chen.</p>
    <p>“At one point, I thought: life is too short. I woke up one morning and I wrote my wife an essay and I said these are the reasons why we should just move to the West Coast,” he says, smiling. “Kind of like writing a paper: these are my reasons. I sent the email in the morning, and in the evening, I come home, and she says, ‘OK. Let’s do it.’”</p>
    <p>Within days, they were looking for new jobs and making plans to move west. Yim took a job at Netflix, and Chen wound up at a vaguely-named startup working on a secret project involving voice recognition. (This startup – Siri – would later be bought by Apple.)</p>
    <p>Right away, Chen felt confident they had made the right choice.“There’s a mentality here among a lot of people…a sort of hunger drive to make something” in Silicon Valley. “I always feel like you capture people’s smartness in thin air here,” he adds. “Somehow, you just breathe in people’s knowledge.”</p>
    <p>“Harry, from day one, was pretty clear. Silicon Valley was where he wanted to end up,” says <strong>Dr. Anupam Joshi,</strong> a professor of computer science and another of Chen’s graduate school advisors. He observes that some students simply crave the risk and reward of the Silicon Valley environment.</p>
    <p>“Some of it could be – for all we know – genetic hard wiring,” Joshi says. “That is why some people become race car drivers and others, like me, drive five miles below the posted speed limit.”</p>
    <p><strong>Valley Life: 101</strong></p>
    <p>Drive down Route 101 from San Francisco, and you see signs of our burgeoning tech civilization everywhere.</p>
    <p>Billboards touting the latest cloud software. Silver-sided buildings in seemingly endless business parks that are home to startup upon startup. Even the street names themselves – like Apple’s famous Infinite Loop, or the punningly named Disk Drive in San Jose – conjure images of innovation and dreams.</p>
    <p>Strolling around the manicured Apple campus in Cupertino, California, Chen speaks quickly. Excitedly. He says Silicon Valley is a place where ideas can be imagined without fear, where innovation is rewarded.</p>
    <p>“People here have a passion for technology and innovation,” he says. “They want to change the world. They take risks. Most of the time they fail, but sometimes they succeed. So they step out, dream up some crazy idea and say ‘If I fail, fine. I’ll dream another one.’”</p>
    <p>Even so, Chen acknowledges that nothing happens overnight. If you think about the gadgets that have occupied your pockets over the last 10 years, the technology required to power them crawled more than it leapt. The palm-held organizers of the mid-’90s, for example, were little more than tiny personal computers; today’s equivalent relies on web networking and interaction with other devices. Who knows what tomorrow’s devices will look like?</p>
    <p>“Especially in the [artificial intelligence] research field, you can’t just jump to the dream right away,” Chen says. “You kind of have to think about yourself climbing a mountain. You have to do the work to get up there…you can’t just shoot straight up because that’s impossible. And once in a while you will have to make a detour, and because certain technology or culture has changed, you have to adapt to that.”</p>
    <p>Back at UMBC, Joshi acknowledges that Chen’s metaphor is rooted in the reality of how creativity works. “That’s part of the fascination of this field, I think, going back to the creative process,” he says. “So much is yet not done. So much power is available through the computational process…we just have to channel it. We’ve barely scratched the surface.”</p>
    <p>For Chen, it’s often enough just to see these products in use by the people he loves. When he was an undergraduate student, he communicated with his parents in Hong Kong by hand-written letter; today, he uses FaceTime to video chat with them whenever he wants.</p>
    <p>Chen isn’t able to discuss what he’s working on now at Apple – a company known for keeping a tight leash on its ideas and products until they are introduced. But when you ask Siri a question on your new iPhone and get an answer, consider yourself at the doorway of Chen’s smart room, engaging with his work.</p>
    <p>“It feels surreal,” Chen concludes, “because the things I talked about four or five years ago seem like a dream, and today, it doesn’t seem like a dream anymore.”</p>
    <p><a title="Search Engineers" href="http://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/search-engineers/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Read about UMBC alumni working at Google here.</a></p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>British writer and scientist Arthur C. Clarke once wrote that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”    And for many of us, that’s exactly how the beeps and pings...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/a-siri-ous-mind/</Website>
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<Tag>alumni</Tag>
<Tag>apple</Tag>
<Tag>harry-chen</Tag>
<Tag>siri</Tag>
<Tag>summer-2012</Tag>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123799" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123799">
<Title>Nelson Emokpae &#8217;03, Psychology, on NBC&#8217;s &#8220;The Voice&#8221;</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/nelson-emokpae.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/nelson-emokpae.jpg?w=236" alt="Nelson Emokpae" width="171" height="214" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>UMBC alumnus Nelson Emokpae ’03, psychology, will make his television debut this week on NBC’s singing competition “<a href="http://www.nbc.com/the-voice/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">The Voice.</a>” Emokpae immigrated to the U.S. as a political refugee from Nigeria and received his B.A. from UMBC before picking up a guitar for the first time while in graduate school. He decided to pursue a full-time music career as <a href="http://nellysecho.com/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Nelly’s Echo</a> just last year, and has been touring at college campuses around the country.</p>
    <p>In a recent interview, the Baltimore-based Emokpae remarked, “I love touring. I love meeting different people. I love seeing different locations, trying out different cultures. Because even in America, the variety of cultures within one country is so vast, and being able to travel from California to Maine to Seattle to Florida and every [place] in between affords me that opportunity to meet a lot of people and amass a lot of great experiences.”</p>
    <p>To watch Emokpae’s audition on “The Voice,” tune into NBC at 8:00 p.m. EST on September 11th and 12th (Note: his exact air date has not been announced and it could be either day). Check out this <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaKhAbgc4IM" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">video performance </a>of the song “If I Were the King.”</p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>UMBC alumnus Nelson Emokpae ’03, psychology, will make his television debut this week on NBC’s singing competition “The Voice.” Emokpae immigrated to the U.S. as a political refugee from Nigeria...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/nelson-emokpae-03-psychology-on-nbcs-the-voice/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123800" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123800">
<Title>Four UMBC Students Selected as Inaugural NSF CyberCorps Scholars</Title>
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    <p><span>Four students in UMBC’s Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering 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).</span></p>
    <p> </p>
    <p><span>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 Center for Information Security and Assurance (CISA) 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.</span></p>
    <p> </p>
    <div><span>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).</span></div>
    <div> </div>
    <div><span><a href="http://www.cisa.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">www.cisa.umbc.edu</a></span></div>
    <div><span><a href="http://www.umbc.edu/cyber/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://www.umbc.edu/cyber/</a></span></div>
    <div><span><a href="https://www.sfs.opm.gov/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">https://www.sfs.opm.gov/</a></span></div>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Four students in UMBC’s Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering have been selected for major scholarships to study cybersecurity in the National Science Foundation’s (NSF)...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/four-umbc-students-selected-as-inaugural-nsf-cybercorps-scholars/</Website>
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<Tag>csee</Tag>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="123801" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123801">
<Title>UMBC &#8216;Cracks the Code&#8217; on Student Success, The Baltimore Sun</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
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    <p><em>The Baltimore Sun </em><a href="http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/education/bs-md-hrabowski-profile-20120901,0,5445294.story" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">recently chronicled UMBC’s rise</a> over the past two decades into a nationally-recognized powerhouse for academic innovation.</p>
    <p>As the campus approaches its 50th anniversary in 2016, UMBC sports enviable credentials, the <em>Sun</em> wrote: “It’s cited as America’s top up-and-coming university and a leader in undergraduate teaching by <em>U.S. News</em>. It has an endowment of about $60 million, built from less than $1 million when Hrabowski took over. Research funding has risen from less than $10 million to about $90 million.”</p>
    <p>While UMBC is known for excellence in a wide range of fields, the <em>Sun</em> notes that the university has found remarkable success in areas where higher education nationally has struggled. “Educational heavyweights such as MIT and Stanford have been to Catonsville to study the methods with which UMBC churns out elite black graduates in the sciences. How, they want to know, has a 46-year-old university, founded to serve commuters, cracked the code to one of American education’s most vexing problems?”</p>
    <p>The piece comes as President Hrabowski marks his 20th year leading UMBC, and it paints a picture of university and leader both deeply committed to students’ success.</p>
    <p>“This is a guy who’s on a flight to speak somewhere every other day,” Jeremy Brickey ’12, English, said of President Hrabowski. “But here he takes the time to talk with me for 30 minutes all the time. It’s amazing.”</p>
    <p>Miguel Calderon ’12, Visual Arts, seconded that: “I can’t speak to other universities. But from what I hear, it’s not an everyday thing to see the president asking students, ‘How are your classes? What did you get on your last test? You didn’t do well? Maybe you need a tutor.’ It’s really a miraculous thing.”</p>
    <p>More than that, though, President Hrabowski stressed that it’s a sign of the culture of UMBC, and of the dedication of so many faculty and staff members. It’s who we are.</p>
    <p>“It is part of the work of education to have substantive relationships with your students,” President Hrabowski told the <em>Sun</em>. “What people don’t realize is that everybody needs support, one way or another.”</p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>The Baltimore Sun recently chronicled UMBC’s rise over the past two decades into a nationally-recognized powerhouse for academic innovation.   As the campus approaches its 50th anniversary in...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/umbc-cracks-the-code-on-student-success-the-baltimore-sun/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123802" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123802">
<Title>&#8220;Uncle Devin&#8221; Walker '89, PoliSci, Shares Music with Kids in D.C.</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/uncledevin.png" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/uncledevin.png" alt="" width="219" height="273" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Musician <strong>Devin Walker ’89, political science</strong>, took his “Uncle Devin” show to the U.S. Capitol this summer, sharing educational music with children and parents alike.<br>
    Walker, who plays the drums, calls the show “a live, interactive musical experience for children five and over by renowned drummer Devin Walker. The show cultivates the minds of children through percussion instruments and is a dynamic cross between Fat Albert and Schoolhouse Rock.”<br>
    <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/84482856@N03/sets/72157630963725038/show/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">View photos from the show here.</a>  <a href="http://www.theuncledevinshow.com/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Read more about the show here.</a><br>
    Walker and his jazz band, <em>A Sense of Urgency</em>, will be one of three alumni-driven bands playing at this year’s Homecoming Crab Feast on Saturday, October 13. (The others are: <em>Fiddlin’ Around</em>, an Irish folk band featuring UMBC’s own staff and faculty members Terry Aylsworth, Eric Ebersole, and William Farrell, and alums <strong>David Aylsworth ’74, Tara Ebersole ’08</strong> and <strong>Sara Moreland ’97</strong>; and <em>Black Falls</em>, a blues and classic rock band featuring alumnus <strong>Philip Medenbach, Jr. ’87</strong>.)<br>
    <a href="http://alumni.umbc.edu/homecoming" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">For more information about the event, visit the Homecoming website here.</a></p></div>
]]>
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<Summary>Musician Devin Walker ’89, political science, took his “Uncle Devin” show to the U.S. Capitol this summer, sharing educational music with children and parents alike.  Walker, who plays the drums,...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/uncle-devin-walker-89-polisci-shares-music-with-kids-in-d-c-2/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123803" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123803">
<Title>&#8220;Uncle Devin&#8221; Walker &#8217;89, PoliSci, Shares Music with Kids in D.C.</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/uncledevin-150x150.png" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/uncledevin.png" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/uncledevin.png" alt="" width="219" height="273" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Musician <strong>Devin Walker ’89, political science</strong>, took his “Uncle Devin” show to the U.S. Capitol this summer, sharing educational music with children and parents alike.</p>
    <p>Walker, who plays the drums, calls the show “a live, interactive musical experience for children five and over by renowned drummer Devin Walker. The show cultivates the minds of children through percussion instruments and is a dynamic cross between Fat Albert and Schoolhouse Rock.”</p>
    <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/84482856@N03/sets/72157630963725038/show/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">View photos from the show here.</a>  <a href="http://www.theuncledevinshow.com/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Read more about the show here.</a></p>
    <p>Walker and his jazz band, <em>A Sense of Urgency</em>, will be one of three alumni-driven bands playing at this year’s Homecoming Crab Feast on Saturday, October 13. (The others are: <em>Fiddlin’ Around</em>, an Irish folk band featuring UMBC’s own staff and faculty members Terry Aylsworth, Eric Ebersole, and William Farrell, and alums <strong>David Aylsworth ’74, Tara Ebersole ’08</strong> and <strong>Sara Moreland ’97</strong>; and <em>Black Falls</em>, a blues and classic rock band featuring alumnus <strong>Philip Medenbach, Jr. ’87</strong>.)</p>
    <p><a href="http://alumni.umbc.edu/homecoming" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">For more information about the event, visit the Homecoming website here.</a></p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Musician Devin Walker ’89, political science, took his “Uncle Devin” show to the U.S. Capitol this summer, sharing educational music with children and parents alike.   Walker, who plays the drums,...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/uncle-devin-walker-89-polisci-shares-music-with-kids-in-d-c/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="123804" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/123804">
<Title>With BreakingGround, Philanthropy Takes on Infinite Forms</Title>
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<![CDATA[
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/truegrit_verticalhr-1-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><p><a href="http://umbcgiving.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/truegrit_verticalhr.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="http://umbcgiving.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/truegrit_verticalhr.jpg?w=214" alt="" width="214" height="300" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Philanthropy is an extremely personal act. We all give in different ways, and for very different reasons.</p>
    <p>Many of us give back by writing a check to a favorite program, providing an immediate (and, often, necessary) infusion of funds. Some of us also volunteer time to the organizations that mean the most to us. And, many times, we give as members of groups — interactions that bind and strengthen our communities.</p>
    <p>It is in this spirit that UMBC has launched <a href="umbcbreakingground.wordpress.com" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">BreakingGround</a>, “a campus-wide initiative to embed opportunities for civic learning and collaborative problem-solving even more broadly and deeply in our curriculum and co-curricular activities.” Already, stories of new partnerships and programs designed to make UMBC — and, ultimately, the world — a better place are streaming onto the BreakingGround site.</p>
    <p>For students learning how best to shape their world, BreakingGround is terrific way to inspire good work, and to frame and measure successes. It is also an excellent showcase of the many ways we, as members of the UMBC community, can put the philosophy of philanthropy to work in ways both fun and fulfilling.</p>
    <p>In an <a href="http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bs-ed-college-democracy-20120904,0,1151003.story" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">op-ed published in this week’s <em>Baltimore Sun</em></a>, co-authors SGA president Kaylesh Ramu and David Hoffman, assistant director of student life for civic agency at UMBC, share a vision of civic engagement that invites students — and the community surrounding them — to think creatively about how they can improve UMBC, and beyond:</p>
    <blockquote><p>UMBC has received so much attention because our culture and practices make creativity, innovation, appreciation for diverse perspectives and talents, and public impact central to our identity. We take pride in our scrappy, can-do spirit, celebrating entrepreneurs, boundary-busters and problem-solvers in every field.</p></blockquote>
    <p>We look forward to seeing how UMBC’s students, faculty, staff and alumni use BreakingGround as a springboard for community-based philanthropy, and we will share the most interesting stories from these efforts throughout the year.</p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Philanthropy is an extremely personal act. We all give in different ways, and for very different reasons.   Many of us give back by writing a check to a favorite program, providing an immediate...</Summary>
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<PostedAt>Fri, 07 Sep 2012 20:18:55 -0400</PostedAt>
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