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College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences



NARESH SUNKARA APPOINTED TO THE GRADUATE EDUCATION ADVISORY BOARD OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY (ACS)
Naresh Sunkara, a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, received a three-year appointment to the Graduate Education Advisory Board (GEAB) of the ACS. The appointment begins at the ACS National Meeting in Chicago, IL March 25-29, 2007. The GEAB is comprised of a committee consisting of nine senior ACS members, a graduate student and a postdoctoral appointee who advise the ACS Office of Graduate Education(OGE) on matters related to graduate education within the chemical sciences. GEAB members attend two yearly meetings at the ACS National Meetings with travel and hotel expenses covered by ACS. Key issues identifed by the GEAB for OGE review include student-professor relationships, advisor-advisee responsibilities, the digital divide, degree requirements, and relations between businesses and graduate programs. Sunkara was selected by the Younger Chemists Committee (YCC) of the ACS from a national pool of 30 graduate student leaders who applied for this appointment. ACS, which is the largest scientific society in the world, is a self-governed, individual membership organization founded in 1876 that consists of more than 158,000 members at all degree levels and in all fields of chemistry. Current president of the UMBC Graduate Student Association (GSA), Sunkara previously served as the vice president of the GSA and chaired the Graduate Research Conference (GRC) in 2006. He was awarded the Graduate Student Leader of the year in 2006. Sunkara's research in the laboratory of Dr. Katherine Seley-Radtke encompasses the synthesis and methodological development of anti-cancer and anti-viral drugs.

CONGRATULATIONS TO JOSEPH R. BLASIC, JR., UMBC's SECOND WYETH FELLOW
Joseph R. Blasic, Jr., a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Biological Sciences, was recently selected to receive the second two year Wyeth Fellowship at UMBC. Blasic, who is studying melanopsin in the laboratory of Dr. Phyllis Robinson, will receive an annual stipend and mentoring support from an industry scientist at Wyeth Research. Blasic is studying the deactivation of the G protein coupled receptor melanopsin, that is responsible for the the dection of light for non-image forming functions like regulation of circadian rhythms and pupil constriction. He earned a Master's Degree in Biotechnology from Johns Hopkins University in 2004 and B.S. Degrees from the University of Sciences in Philadelphia in Biochemistry and Microbiology in 2001.

Orrette R. Wauchope, a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, received the inaugural, two-year Wyeth Fellowship at UMBC. Wauchope is studying synthetic organic chemistry in the laboratory of Dr. Katherine Seley-Radtke. His research focuses on the design and methodological development of chemical agents that potentially serve as anticancer, antiviral and antiparasitic catalysts. Wauchope is a Summa Cum Laude graduate of Brooklyn College, where he majored in chemistry. A formal signing of a memorandum of understanding between Wyeth Research and UMBC took place on July 25, 2006 at the Wyeth Research Facility in Collegeville, PA. The partnership includes graduate fellowships for talented students conducting research in fields of joint interest to UMBC faculty and Wyeth scientists. The Wyeth-UMBC partnership includes a three-year commitment to Gold-Level sponsorship for UMBC’s annual life science symposium—A Look Ahead: Futures in Biomedical Research. Wyeth, headquartered in Madison, N.J., is a global leader in pharmaceuticals, consumer health care products and animal health care products. (Visit the link to the UMBC News & Events article from 8/4/06.)

The College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences currently enrolls 270 graduate students in 13 graduate programs and administers nearly half of the doctoral programs at UMBC. Our graduate students are dedicated researchers who work side by side with their faculty mentors as they pursue their educational goals at UMBC with the ongoing support of their home departmentthe UMBC Graduate School. Emphasis on interdisciplinary collaboration and access to faculty members and facilities of the entire University System of Maryland maximize the graduate students' abilities to identify programs best suited to their indiviual interests.

LIFE SCIENCES
Biochemistry (Ph.D.)
Biological Sciences (Ph.D. & M.S.)
Marine-Estuarine-Environmental Sciences (Ph.D. & M.S.)
Molecular and Cell Biology (Ph.D.)
Applied Molecular Biology (Masters of Science)
Neurosciences and Cognitive Sciences (Ph.D. & M.S.)
Biostatistics (M.S.)

NATURAL AND MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES
Chemistry (Ph.D. & M.S.)
Applied Mathematics (Ph.D. & M.S.)
Statistics (Ph.D. & M.S.)
Toxicology (Ph.D. & M.S.)
Applied Physics (Ph.D. or M.S.)
Atmospheric Physics (Ph.D. or M.S.)

For more information about the UMBC Graduate School, please visit:
http://www.umbc.edu/gradschool/

For information about UMBC Graduate School Admissions or to apply online, please visit: http://www.umbc.edu/gradschool/admissions/

In addition to a very active and supportive Graduate Student Association at UMBC, there are four CNMS Graduate Student Organizations that support UMBC graduate students.. These groups, which meet regularly, are student directed and focused on the interests of student members. For additional information, contact the following GSO leaders:

Graduate Association of Biological Sciences - Ryan McMullin - rmcmul1@umbc.edu

Chemistry/Biochemistry - Naresh Sunkara - naresh1@umbc.edu

Mathematics/Statistics - Ana Maria Soane - asoane@umbc.edu

Physics - Brian Wingert - bwing2@ubmc.edu

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