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Eyes on UMBC
U.S. Presidential Award for UMBC

The usually casually dressed Michael Summers put on a suit and
tie for the occasion--he was, after all, going to the White House
to receive an award from the president of the United States.
Summers, UMBC professor of chemistry/biochemistry and
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, accepted
the 2000 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science,
Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring from President
Clinton. He was one of 10 national recipients of the award.
Administered and funded by the National Science Foundation,
the award honors leadership in encouraging minorities,
women, and people with disabilities to pursue careers in
scientific, engineering, and technical fields.
Summers brings UMBC undergraduates into his research
lab to work on unraveling the protein structure of the
HIV virus, affording them real scientific research, and even
publication experience. His guidance and encouragement
of UMBC's minority students interested in pursuing the
sciences have proven pivotal in launching their careers:
Summer's recent UMBC grads have gone on to medical school
and M.D./Ph.D. programs at Harvard, Yale, and
the University of Pennsylvania.
This marks the second time in four years that the award
has been brought home to UMBC--the university was honored
for its institutional mentoring efforts in 1997. Summers
brought back from the White House a commemorative
presidential certificate, and a $10,000 grant.
Well worth wearing a tie.
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