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<Title>UMBC Team Rallies to Win &#8220;Final Four of College Chess&#8221;</Title>
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    <h2>UMBC Team Rallies to Win �Final Four of College Chess�</h2>
    <p>With a final-round surge against its archrival, the UMBC chess team emerged once again as the undisputed kings of the collegiate game by winning the 2009 President’s Cup April 5. </p>
    <p>UMBC defeated the University of Texas at Dallas (UTD), which served as host for the tournament – better known as “the Final Four of College Chess.</p>
    <p>The Final Four victory was UMBC’s fifth in the past nine years.</p>
    <p>“This team had a very strong drive to win,” said <strong>Alan Sherman</strong>, director of the UMBC chess program and a professor in the Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering. “It is nice that our intellectual athletes get the recognition they deserve for their impressive accomplishments.”</p>
    <p>One might guess the squad celebrated in Dallas before returning to classes April 6 at UMBC. Instead, Board 2 player <strong>Sergey “the Stealth” Erenburg</strong>, a 4.0 student, returned to his hotel room after the tournament to study for an upcoming physics exam, Sherman said.</p>
    <p>Erenburg won the final match, a 140-move encounter that lasted more than six hours. </p>
    <p>The President’s Cup is comprised of the top four finishers from the Pan American Intercollegiate Championship (the “Pan Am”), held each year in late December. </p>
    <p>Although Stanford and the University of Texas-Brownsville emerged from the Pan Am as the two other Final Four participants, these top-level competitions remain a UMBC-UTD grudge match. </p>
    <p>At the 2008 Pan Am, the two teams tied for first place. UTD won the 2008 Final Four, held at UMBC, by the slightest margin.</p>
    <p>While the UMBC team enjoys international prominence, it remains committed to supporting the growth of chess in Baltimore and throughout the state. UMBC hosts the Maryland Scholastic Chess Spectacular May 10, a scholastic chess tournament open to any students in grades 1-12. </p>
    <p>The Chess Spectacular will have two sections, one for novice players and the other for those with more experience. The top four finishers in the latter classification are invited to compete in a playoff that features live, move-by-move commentary from an established player.</p>
    <p>“It is important to the chess program that we include the community in our activities,” Sherman said. “It has been demonstrated that students who play chess perform better on math and reading tests. Chess is a concrete way to develop young minds.”</p>
    <p>(4/6/09)</p>
    <p> </p>
    <p>    © 2007-08 University of Maryland, Baltimore County � 1000 Hilltop  Circle, Baltimore, MD 21250 � 410-455-1000 � </p>
    </div>
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<Summary>UMBC Team Rallies to Win �Final Four of College Chess�   With a final-round surge against its archrival, the UMBC chess team emerged once again as the undisputed kings of the collegiate game by...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/umbc-team-rallies-to-win-final-four-of-college-chess/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="124877" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124877">
<Title>UMBC&#8217;s Champion Twirler</Title>
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    <h2>UMBC�s Champion Twirler </h2>
    <p>The grace of a ballerina. The poise of an equestrian rider. The flexibility   of a gymnast. </p>
    <p>Those are the qualities baton twirlers like <strong>Stasi Kowalewski ’10</strong> need   to have, according to Stasi’s mother <strong>Mardel Kowalewski ‘81</strong>.   And Stasi, who is the world and national two-baton champion, possesses not   only those traits but also a desire to learn.</p>
    <p>“You need to have time and patience for this sport,” Stasi said. “You   need to want it bad enough to learn it. It still takes me a long time to perfect   my routines.”</p>
    <p>Stasi, who regularly performs at UMBC men’s basketball games, has been   twirling since age seven. She picked up the sport as an alternative to soccer,   a game in which she naturally excelled. Always wanting a challenge, Stasi decided   to give twirling a try instead. Her mother Mardel, both a former twirler and   coach, supported Stasi’s decision.</p>
    <p>“Being a former coach, I have the opportunity to help Stasi as both   a mother and a coach. But learning when to be a coach and when to be a mom   is important,” Mardel said. “Sometimes she just needs me to be   her mom.”</p>
    <p>Stasi took to twirling immediately and her once-a-week practices at age seven   turned into 40 hours a week in the gym today, when she’s not in school.   Her normal routine consists of stretching, working on “tricks” and   running routines. When she’s not twirling, she works as a coach, providing   individualized support to young twirlers. Her rigorous schedule and continuous   dedication have resulted in her winning the title of <em>World and National   Two-Baton Champion </em>not once – but three times, receiving awards   in 2008, 2006 and 2005. She’s performed both in individual and group   settings, winning awards throughout categories.</p>
    <p>But twirling has its setbacks. Stasi has dislocated her knee three times and   has literally lost her teeth in the gym. She once caught the baton and the   momentum of the catch forced her hand directly to her mouth.</p>
    <p>“I was standing there with my teeth in my hand,” Stasi said. “I   was hysterical. It was one of the scariest things that ever happened to me.”</p>
    <p>“I never pushed Stasi,” said Mardel. “But I always told   her when you’re done, you’re done. She just kept on going.” </p>
    <p>The continuous practice, recovery from injuries and love for the sport has   only enforced Stasi’s dedication to perform – that and that fact   that most twirlers “hang up their shoes” at the early age of 25.   But both Stasi and Mardel have twirling plans for the future.</p>
    <p>“One of the things we’re looking to establish is a scholarship   for twirling,” said Mardel. “We need to get the sport out there.”</p>
    <p>Stasi hopes to eventually pursue a law degree. She’s currently working   on her bachelor’s in political science and American studies. When it   comes to studies at UMBC, both Stasi and Mardel are in agreement.</p>
    <p>“UMBC is the best kept secret in Maryland,” said Mardel. “It’s   a public school with a private feel. You have to be smart to go to UMBC.”</p>
    <p>“I came to UMBC because I wanted a challenge,” said Stasi. “You   get what you want out of this school.”</p>
    <p>But she also hopes to continue her work as a coach.</p>
    <p>“Every twirler’s dream is to coach,” said Stasi. “I   would love to pass on my knowledge and someday teach a national title holder.” </p>
    <p>Stasi’s immediate plans for the future include twirling for the Washington   Mystics and a AAA baseball team. She will also be competing with the seven-time   reigning world championship team (the Dynamics) in the 2009 twirling competition   in Belgium.</p>
    <p>To see a video of Stasi’s half-time performance, click the play button   below.</p>
    
    <p>(1/23/09)</p>
    <p> </p>
    <p> </p>
    <p>    © 2007-08 University of Maryland, Baltimore County � 1000 Hilltop  Circle, Baltimore, MD 21250 � 410-455-1000 � </p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>UMBC�s Champion Twirler    The grace of a ballerina. The poise of an equestrian rider. The flexibility   of a gymnast.    Those are the qualities baton twirlers like Stasi Kowalewski ’10 need   to...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/umbcs-champion-twirler/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="124908" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124908">
<Title>Venus, If You Will</Title>
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/venus_sm1-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><h2>Venus, If You Will</h2>
    <p> Many theatre companies are born out of a mixture of inspiration and frustration. Take The Venus Theatre in Laurel, for instance.</p>
    <p> When its founder, <strong>Deborah Randall ’94, theatre,</strong> graduated from UMBC, she pursued a career as a playwright and a performer in Washington, D.C. Like many recent graduates, Randall had a desire to succeed in a challenging profession. But she also found some of the roles she played and the theatrical atmosphere that surrounded her to be stifling her creativity. She craved a theatre that valued women and living playwrights. </p>
    <p> Randall recalls UMBC theatre professor <strong>Wendy Salkind’s</strong> advice to her. “Every time I would gripe to her,” Randall recalls, “she’d say: If it doesn’t exist, create it. That was her mantra to me.”</p>
    <p> The theatre company that Randall founded in 2001 is dedicated to filling what she sees as a gap in the Baltimore-Washington region, presenting shows with a decidedly female perspective and recent work by contemporary playwrights. </p>
    <p> The company is in the middle of its current season, which features new plays that include a fresh look at the experience of women characters in Shakespeare and a contemporary retelling of Medea set in Los Angeles. The series concludes this coming fall with a new World War II memory play called <em>Why’d You Make Me Wear This, Joe?</em> by acclaimed writer Vanda and a comedic look at a very difficult Helen of Troy in a new play called <em>Helen of Sparta.</em> </p>
    <p> Randall says that the emphasis on new work – especially by women playwrights – is important to her. A steady cultural diet of reality television and revisiting the classical repertoire, she observes, has meant that “there are so many writers who are not getting an opportunity.” </p>
    <p> Finding and nurturing new work, she says, “is part of the life of the theatre…. Finding the pulse in a new work is kind of what I wake up in the morning to do.” </p>
    <p> Creating what ultimately became Venus Theatre took time, however. Randall started small, crafting one-woman shows for herself that played in various venues in Washington, D.C. She also started a reading series for women writers and tried her hand at children’s theatre before settling on more adult fare.</p>
    <p> After a series of misadventures and mishaps, including one show that had its last week in a D.C. theater interrupted by a street explosion that rendered the space unusable, Randall decided that she needed to find a more permanent home.</p>
    <p> The constant scrapping and hustling for space to rent “was not cute anymore,” says Randall, especially after the street explosion. After a long search, she finally settled on a storefront space just off Laurel’s Main Street, which she dubbed “The Venus Theatre Play Shack.” She and a dedicated crew of volunteers transformed the place into a black box theater that’s become a new home base for the company, perched halfway between Washington and Baltimore and drawing from both cities and the surrounding community.</p>
    <p> Randall recalls her time at UMBC fondly. “I was a nontraditional student,” she says. “So I was a few years older than everyone else. I had been to community college, worked for three years, sown some wild oats…. I wanted to squeeze everything I could out of the experience.” </p>
    <p> Along with Salkind, she counts professors <strong>Xerxes Mehta</strong> and <strong>Alan Kreizenbeck</strong> as influences on her current career path. Randall also recalls that her roles in a production of Peter Weiss’ <em>Marat/Sad</em>e (directed by Mehta) and in <em>Cinders</em> – a play by Polish playwright Janusz Glowack, directed by Kreizenbeck – were particularly memorable. </p>
    <p> Though Randall still writes plays (one of her works, <em>Molly Daughter,</em> is included in <em>Anthracite! An Anthology of Pennsylvania Coal Region Plays,</em> which was published by the University of Scranton Press), she says that she “has ended up more of a producer and a director than a writer and actor anymore.” Running a theatre company also involves a lot of logistics and fundraising. </p>
    <p> But Randall’s commitment to helping produce new works by playwrights – especially women playwrights – remains a primary challenge that she’s happy to take on. With the classics, she observes, “all the kinks have been worked out in a way.” New work, she says, is where the sizzle and satisfaction is.</p>
    <p> “If it has been done too often,” she says, “it doesn’t interest me.” </p>
    <p> This story by Richard Byrne ’86 originally appeared in UMBC Magazine. (<a href="http://www.umbc.edu/magazine">www.umbc.edu/magazine</a>)</p>
    <p>  <em>For more information about Venus Playhouse, visit <a href="http://www.venustheatre.org/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://www.venustheatre.org/. </a></em></p>
    <p>   (11/2/09) </p>
    <p> </p>
    <p> </p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Venus, If You Will    Many theatre companies are born out of a mixture of inspiration and frustration. Take The Venus Theatre in Laurel, for instance.    When its founder, Deborah Randall ’94,...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/venus-if-you-will/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="124852" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124852">
<Title>Weidong Zhu Recognized for Engineering Innovations</Title>
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/dr_zhu_sm1-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><h2>Weidong Zhu Recognized for Engineering Innovations</h2>
    <p>  Have you ever wondered how engineers can tell if a structure needs repairs? <strong>Weidong Zhu</strong>, professor of mechanical engineering at UMBC, is determined to make this process easier and more accurate. In conjunction with his graduate students, he has developed a unique method for testing and monitoring stationary objects for structural soundness. </p>
    <p><em>The Daily Record</em> recently recognized Zhu’s work by naming him an <em>Innovator of the Year</em>. The awards program recognizes Maryland individuals and companies that have created a product, service, program or process that has had a positive effect on their business, industry or community. </p>
    <p>Zhu, whose research focuses on continuous system vibration and structural damage detection, is being recognized for his development of a vibration-based damage detection method that uses changes in natural frequencies of a structure to accurately detect the locations and extent of structural damage. Currently, structural damage can be detected through either visual inspection or ultrasonic testing, but these methods are not as thorough and have limited accuracy in detecting internal damage.</p>
    <p>With several mechanical engineering graduate students in his Dynamic Systems and Vibrations Lab at UMBC, Zhu has developed new modeling techniques and inverse algorithms for structural damage detection. “Much of the work we do is theoretical, but it all has applications in industry,” says Zhu. These techniques have been used to test the lightning masts’ structural soundness at Baltimore Gas and Electric (BGE) electric substations. Testing can be done from the ground level, greatly reducing the employees’ risk for injury. His group is currently applying the methodology to other structures such as transmission towers, pipelines and cables, and the work is supported by the National Science Foundation and the American Society for Nondestructive Testing.</p>
    <p>Zhu has also worked with other industries. In particular, his group has developed traveling cable and hoist cable vibration models for Otis Elevator, Mitsubishi Electric and ThyssenKrupp Elevator. A native of China, Zhu was recently named a Visiting ChiangJiang Scholar Chair Professor in General Mechanics by China’s Ministry of Education. For his three-year appointment, he will conduct short-term research at the Harbin Institute of Technology in the field of dynamics and vibration, with the goal of developing a collaborative research program with Chinese universities. Zhu has previously received a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation for his work on continuous system vibration.  </p>
    <p>Zhu is most proud of the achievements of his students, who have gone on to prestigious jobs in both academia and industry, such as the United Technologies Research Center, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, A.O. Smith Electrical Products Company and Lockheed Martin Corporation.</p>
    <p>Zhu received his <em>Innovator of the Year Award</em> on October 14 at an awards ceremony at the American Visionary Art Museum. </p>
    <p>(10/19/09)</p>
    <p> </p>
    </div>
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<Summary>Weidong Zhu Recognized for Engineering Innovations     Have you ever wondered how engineers can tell if a structure needs repairs? Weidong Zhu, professor of mechanical engineering at UMBC, is...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/weidong-zhu-recognized-for-engineering-innovations/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="124888" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124888">
<Title>Wired Watchdog of the Waterways</Title>
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/claire41-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><h2>Wired Watchdog of the Waterways</h2>
    <p><strong>Claire Welty</strong> watched a thunderstorm roll in from the west. The network of monitors tracking Gwynns Falls streams began to react, tracking the Baltimore area’s streams and rivers like an MRI of a patient’s veins and arteries. </p>
    <p>Welty, director of the <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/cuere" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Center for Urban Environmental Research and Education (CUERE)</a>, was able to see this big-picture view of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed without even donning her field’s traditional waders or even feeling a drop of rain, thanks to CUERE’s new Computational and Visualization Lab. The high-tech facility located in the Technology Research Center offers near real-time views and a wealth of environmental and water science data on a bank of large screen TV monitors.  </p>
    <p>On the surface, the Lab looks like a cousin of a financial analyst’s war room or a big city’s traffic nerve center. On one screen, a Google Earth animation mash up produced by UMBC environmental science major <strong>Daniel Jones</strong> flies viewers around the area. The animation stops briefly at each of the multitude of gauges and sensors found across the region’s waterways. Thanks to the work of scientists affiliated with CUERE, the Baltimore Ecosystem Study, and the U.S. Geological Survey, greater Baltimore is one of the most heavily monitored urban watersheds in the country. </p>
    <p>Other screens show visual data from weather radar, web cameras monitoring smog, aircraft flyovers, satellite instruments and other sophisticated tools of the modern water scientist’s trade. One animation, made by UMBC/GES graduate student and IGERT Fellow <strong>Garth Lindner</strong>, models the ebb and flow of water through a road culvert.</p>
    <p>Welty’s vision for the Lab was brought to life thanks to the work of CUERE staff <strong>Jeffrey Campbell </strong>and<strong> Michael McGuire</strong>, who helped bring Welty’s vision of a real-time hydrologic monitoring nerve center to life. </p>
    <p> “We’re so excited to have this powerful research and teaching tool,” said Welty. “The Visualization Lab will help us predict, model and track the flow of many factors that impact the health of our waterways and the Chesapeake Bay. It also gives us a dynamic, eye-catching way to demonstrate to the public and partners how our research directly affects Marylanders.”       </p>
    <p> (8/28/09)</p>
    <p> </p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Wired Watchdog of the Waterways   Claire Welty watched a thunderstorm roll in from the west. The network of monitors tracking Gwynns Falls streams began to react, tracking the Baltimore area’s...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/wired-watchdog-of-the-waterways/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="124875" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124875">
<Title>Your Sneaker, Your Self</Title>
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<![CDATA[
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    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/sneaker_sm1-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><h2>Your Sneaker, Your Self</h2>
    <p>UMBC attracts students from many corners of the globe. And sneaker artist and media and communications major <strong>Martin Figueroa ’11</strong>, has figured out a way that these homesick students can remember that there’s no place like home. He’s painting the skylines of their hometowns – or any other image that represents their personal style – right onto their sneakers. </p>
    <p>Figueroa started drawing sketches on his own shoes when he was a senior in high school. Before long, friends asked if he would paint their shoes. Figueroa has now designed more than 25 pairs of shoes, with prices starting at $100 a pair. He’s also decided to start a business.</p>
    <p>When Figueroa contacted UMBC’s Alex. Brown Center for Entrepreneurship, the staff at the Center gave his fledgling enterprise a leg up by putting him in touch with experts to help him get his new business launched. Figueroa hopes to be marketing his work professionally later this year.</p>
    <p>To contact Figueroa, e-mail him at <a href="mailto:fig1@umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">fig1@umbc.edu</a>.</p>
    <p>(12/18/09)</p>
    <p> </p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Your Sneaker, Your Self   UMBC attracts students from many corners of the globe. And sneaker artist and media and communications major Martin Figueroa ’11, has figured out a way that these...</Summary>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="124915" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124915">
<Title>UMBC Athletic Hall of Fame</Title>
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    <p>The UMBC Athletic Hall of Fame was instituted in 1970’s, and has grown to include 96 members. Hall of Famers are chosen by a committee of athletic alumni based on their excellence on the fields and courts and their subsequent graduation from UMBC.</p>
    <p><a title="Athletic Hall of Fame" href="http://www.umbcretrievers.com/info/hall/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Visit the UMBC Athletic Hall of Fame online</a></p>
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]]>
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<Summary>The UMBC Athletic Hall of Fame was instituted in 1970’s, and has grown to include 96 members. Hall of Famers are chosen by a committee of athletic alumni based on their excellence on the fields...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/umbc-athletic-hall-of-fame/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="124916" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124916">
<Title>Past UMBC Alumni Award Winners</Title>
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    <p><strong>Distinguished Alumna/us of the Year Award</strong></p>
    <p>Established in 1988, the Distinguished Alumna/us Award was presented to an alumna/us who has achieved national recognition for excellence in his/her profession or field of endeavor.   This award was presented until 2003. Past recipients were:</p>
    <p>2003:    Diane L. Bell-McKoy ’73<br>
    2002:    Ram S. Mohan ’92<br>
    2001:    Richard Chisolm ’82 and William Whiteford ’80<br>
    2000:    Dr. Tayebeh Pourmotabbed ’86<br>
    1999:    Robert G. Seasonwein, Esq. ’71<br>
    1998:    Charles L. Bevins, M.D., Ph.D. ’76 &amp; ’86<br>
    1997:    Dr. Charles A. Taylor, ’73<br>
    1996:    Dr. Richard Lytel ’75, Dr. Lauren A. Schnaper ’71 and Peggy Southerland ’75<br>
    1995:    Dr. Jo Ann E. Argersinger ’74<br>
    1994:    Dr. Blair Grubb ’76<br>
    1993:    Ruth Williamson ’77<br>
    1992:    Dr. Stephen Vicchio ’73<br>
    1991:    Dr. Rita Berndt ’71<br>
    1990:    Dr. Paula Grabowski ’76<br>
    1989:    Dr. Robin West ’76<br>
    1988:    Dr. Winston Griner ’74</p>
    <p><strong>Outstanding Alumna/us Award</strong></p>
    <p>Established in 1991, the Outstanding Alumna/us Award was presented to an alumna/us who received recognition for the contributions s/he had made to his/her profession or community, and for the individual’s volunteer participation and advancement of UMBC.   This award was presented until 2003. Past recipients were:</p>
    <p>2003:    The Honorable Adrienne A. Jones ’76<br>
    2002:    Paul W. Behrens ’80 and ’83<br>
    2001:    Karen Johnson ’85<br>
    2000:    Jennifer Anne Cooper ’94<br>
    1999:    Roosevelt Hairston, Jr., Esq. ’87<br>
    1998:    George Thomas Grace, M.D. ’77<br>
    1997:    Richard S. Foster ’73 and Richard Moreland ’83<br>
    1996:    W. Jack Mullen ’72 and Kimberly Joseph ’83<br>
    1995:    Dr. Scott M. Rifkin ’81<br>
    1994:    Nathan Chapman, Jr. ’80<br>
    1993:    The Honorable Dana Levitz ’70<br>
    1992:    The Honorable David Young ’74<br>
    1991:    The Honorable Lawrence LaMotte ’71</p>
    <p><strong>Alumni Community Leadership Award</strong></p>
    <p>Established in 1994, the Alumni Community Leadership Award recognized an alumna/us who had demonstrated, through dedicated service and leadership, including voluntary service beyond employment, a commitment to strengthening the community and creating positive change for society. This award was presented until 2003. Past recipients were:</p>
    <p>2003:    Emily A. Byrne ’70<br>
    2002:    Elsa T. Collins ’95<br>
    2001:    Gary M. Brooks ’79<br>
    2000:    Cheryl Burke-Schwarz, D.V.M. ’82<br>
    1999:    James P.M. Atsaides, Ph.D. ’71<br>
    1998:    Anita Maddox Jackson ’80 and Karin Wagner Walker, M.Div., D.Min. ’85<br>
    1997:    Jack B. Neil ’77<br>
    1996:    The Honorable Thomas H. Dewberry ’73<br>
    1995:    Dr. Michael L. Zollicoffer ’80<br>
    1994:    Bobby Richardson ’89</p>
    <p><strong>UMBC Volunteer(s) of the Year</strong></p>
    <p>This award was presented until 2003. Past recipients were:</p>
    <p>2003:    Robert A. Baruch ’89<br>
    2002:    Michael A. Rowe ’78 and C. Emmerson Small, II ’74<br>
    2001:    Scott E. Weber ’85<br>
    2000:    Jack Suess ’81<br>
    1999:    Maureen McCormick ’91<br>
    1998:    Diana Fertsch, M.D., Ph.D. ’82 and Stephen Rice ’79<br>
    1997:    Robert Dietrich ’70 and Mary “Mimi” Haw Dietrich ’70<br>
    1996:    Lori Smith-Watson ’85 and Yvette Mozie-Ross ’88<br>
    1995:    William Glover ’90<br>
    1994:    Michele Hayes ’85<br>
    1993:    James Andercyk ’88 and Jose Barata ’79<br>
    1992:    Tyrone Bullock, Sr. ’84<br>
    1991:    Edward Hodges ’82<br>
    1990:    Sandra Geest ’72, Mary Beth Schoch Engelbride ’84 and James L. Wiggins ’75</p>
    <p><strong><a href="https://umbc.edu/alumni-award-winners/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Learn more about Alumni Award winners</a>.</strong></p>
    </div>
]]>
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<Summary>Distinguished Alumna/us of the Year Award   Established in 1988, the Distinguished Alumna/us Award was presented to an alumna/us who has achieved national recognition for excellence in his/her...</Summary>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="124917" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124917">
<Title>A Natural Progression: Rithy Chhay '02</Title>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/rithy_etriever.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/rithy_etriever.jpg" alt="" width="110" height="116" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Only four short years have passed since Rithy Chhay graduated from UMBC, but he is already on the fast track to success.<br>
    At just 26 years old, the computer science grad is a senior software engineer with Red Arch Solutions, a software and systems engineering firm in Columbia, Md. He’s a young husband, as well, and one of the core members of the recently re-energized Chapter of Young Alumni steering committee.<br>
    Then again, Chhay has been ahead of the game for most of his life, as least where computer science is concerned.<br>
    “I started writing my own computer programs when I was in middle school,” he explains, adding that he took several computer science classes in high school, including an Advanced Placement course. He describes his choice to continue studying computer science in college as “a natural progression.”<br>
    Chhay decided to pursue his studies at UMBC for several reasons. He liked the location, which was close to his family, and the cost was reasonable, especially with the merit scholarship he earned. Chhay’s decision was also influenced by his brother, Sinath Chhay, who graduated from UMBC in 1996. “He always spoke highly of the school,” Chhay says.<br>
    Chhay was invested in the UMBC community from day one. “I was actively involved with Greek life and Residential Life,” he explains, adding, “I worked as part of the desk staff for Potomac Hall and I was a resident assistant for two years in Erickson Hall.” He was also a member of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, giving him a close-knit group of friends with whom he still keeps in touch.<br>
    By combining what he learned in the classroom with the life skills he gained through leadership activities, Chhay had a solid foundation of lessons to take with him to the working world.<br>
    “Interpersonal relationship skills, teambuilding, problem solving, and time management – all of those things on top of what I learned from my coursework enabled me to be where I am today,” he says.<br>
    Chhay credits his calculus II class with Dr. Jagmohan Kapoor as being a particular turning point in his life. “I began to realize what my potential could be and what I could achieve if I really worked hard for what I wanted,” he explains. Dr. Kapoor’s class was important to Chhay’s future for another reason as well – it’s where he met his future wife, the former Lauren Boudra ’03, biochemistry and molecular biology.<br>
    Now that he’s out in the “real world,” Chhay has to use his multitasking skills even more than he did in college. He is currently balancing a career, a new marriage, and continuing his education. A computer science master’s candidate at UMBC, Chhay admits, “I’d be lying if I said balancing life, work and school was a walk in the park.”<br>
    In addition, Chhay’s involvement in the 15-member C-YA steering committee allows him to give back to the university that gave him his start. As a member of a group that is focusing on educational programming, he has been helping to organize upcoming Etiquette &amp; Networking Dinner at the Brass Elephant, as well as a seminar on how to buy a home.<br>
    For Chhay, transitioning to the real world hasn’t been too difficult. “Life after college is definitely different,” he says, “but I always looked at college as my job.” With such a strong work ethic and positive attitude, Chhay is sure to be successful for years to come.<br>
    <em>– Jennifer Matthews ’07</em><br>
    <em>Originally posted August 2006</em></p></div>
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<Summary>Only four short years have passed since Rithy Chhay graduated from UMBC, but he is already on the fast track to success.  At just 26 years old, the computer science grad is a senior software...</Summary>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="124918" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/124918">
<Title>A Healthy Balance: Stephanie Hill '86</Title>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p><a href="/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/stephaniehill_1.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/stephaniehill_1.jpg" alt="" width="125" height="156" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>Stephanie Cole Hill ’86 sometimes feels like a woman in a man’s world.<br>
    Most of the other executives at Lockheed Martin Corporation, a major engineering firm which earns most of its income from contracts with the U.S. military, are men. Hill began to face feeling like “the only one in the room” early in her computer science career, a feeling she still experiences sometimes. However, she learned not to let that feeling get her down.<br>
    “I have learned that you have a choice. You can allow others’ perceptions to define you, or you can decide to define their perception and be a pathfinder,” she said. “Although some may still wonder initially if I have what it takes to make it, working hard and performing with excellence and professionalism at all times quickly answers their question, and I get to define their view in a very positive way.”<br>
    A Turning Point<br>
    As an undergraduate at UMBC, Hill originally planned to major in economics and become an accountant. However, she became interested in computer science after taking a programming class and decided to double major in economics and computer science. During her sophomore year, Hill interned at the U.S. Department of Labor, applying her computer science knowledge to the real world. It was a turning point in her education.<br>
    “I realized at that point that all of the things that I was learning in school would be applied as I entered the workforce as a professional,” she explained. “Although I was always a conscientious student, this experience reinforced the importance of the subject matter being taught and I was more invigorated to learn.”<br>
    Putting Knowledge to Work<br>
    After graduating in 1986, Hill quickly moved up in the corporate world. She currently works as a program director and site general manager at Lockheed, where she oversees 600 employees specializing in engineering, finance, business development and production and is responsible for business growth, program execution, community involvement, and site morale.<br>
    She credits UMBC with teaching her several important lessons that helped her to get to where she is today, from the necessity of working hard to the importance of teamwork.<br>
    “The variety of classes that I was fortunate enough to take also helped me to be better rounded and able to function in the corporate environment,” she added.<br>
    Lessons in Diversity<br>
    Additionally, UMBC taught her important lessons about diversity. As a member of the Black Student Union, she enjoyed the social interaction and support of the group as well as their work on serious issues. Additionally, the diversity at UMBC prepared her for conditions she would later encounter in the workplace.<br>
    “The diversity of the student population is so very representative of the real world,” she said. “Understanding how to interact and make things happen with multiple cultures and backgrounds was an invaluable experience in preparation for corporate America.”<br>
    Today, Hill passes on this lesson in diversity in several ways. She works with the Society of Women Engineers to encourage high school girls to pursue a career in engineering. She also mentors many younger employees at work.<br>
    “I hope that I help them to see that regardless of their obstacle, whether it is perception based on physical difference or personality type, that they can show their value and make the difference for the business and grow in their career,” she says.<br>
    A Great Support System<br>
    Hill has a passion for working with children as well. She leads the children’s ministry and directs the children’s choir at her church, and is active in sports and the arts with her three children, Kori, Cole, and Cameron. Hill admits that balancing a family and a career can be difficult sometimes. However, she doesn’t let her job get in the way of her family life.<br>
    “I am fortunate enough to have been able to have an incredible family and great career. It’s hard work, but it can be done. You need to have a great support system, good priorities, and personal courage, and you need to be clear about your personal boundaries,” Hill explains. “I am a wife, mother and executive – in that order.”<br>
    <em>– Jennifer Matthews ’07</em><br>
    <em>Originally posted November 2006</em></p></div>
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<Summary>Stephanie Cole Hill ’86 sometimes feels like a woman in a man’s world.  Most of the other executives at Lockheed Martin Corporation, a major engineering firm which earns most of its income from...</Summary>
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