USM National Green Campus
News Archive
Week of August 17, 2009
News from Across the USM Campuses
Additional USM
institutions signed on to the Maryland Green Registry - As of 8/16/09, the
following USM institutions have signed on to the Maryland Green Registry: Bowie
State University, Coppin State University, Frostburg State University,
Salisbury University, Towson University, University of Baltimore, University of
Maryland Baltimore, University of Maryland Baltimore County, University of
Maryland Biotechnology Institute, University of Maryland College Park, as well
as the University System of Maryland Office. Other USM institutions are in
the process of joining the state's Green Registry.
8/16/09 UMBC
welcomes new IGERT trainees Aaron Churchill, Nick Magliocca, Laura Merner, Anna
Johnson, Danielle Schwartmann, and Sheena Young. For more information about
the IGERT program visit the IGERT
site.
Bay
advocates to feds: Now it's your move: EPA
to outline plans to clean up Chesapeake next month (By Sean R. Sedam, SoMdNews.com, 8/14/09)
[Article quotes Dr. Donald Boesch, President of the University of Maryland
Center for Environmental Science]
State of Maryland News
Baltimore
'green' rules on par with Boston, D.C.: City's
regulations include private and smaller buildings (By Meredith Cohn, The Baltimore Sun,
8/15/09)
Maryland's
Nitrogen-Reducing Septic Upgrade Program a Success: Program to Upgrade Septic
Systems, Paid for through the Bay Restoration Fund, In High Demand; Highest
Priorities Will be Given to Failing Systems in Critical Area and Failing
Systems Elsewhere (Maryland Department of the Environment Press Release, 8/14/09)
State
receives stimulus money for energy programs (By Meredith Cohn, The Baltimore Sun, 8/14/09)
National and International News
Oil
Group's 'Citizen' Rally Memo Stirs Debate: Firms Asked to Recruit Employees, Retirees (By David A. Fahrenthold, The Washington Post, 8/16/09)
Alaska's
Kensington gold mine gets a green light: The
Army Corps of Engineers allows a controversial plan to dump millions of tons of
waste into Lower Slate Lake. (By Kim
Murphy, The Los Angeles Times, 8/16/09)
Big
Tropical Storms in Atlantic Hit 1,000 -Year High: Study Suggests Hurricane
Frequency Has Increased Dramatically; Climate Change a Potential Culprit (By Patrik Jonsson, ABC News, 8/16/09)
A
New Test for Business and Biofuel (By Kirk Johnson, The New York Times,
8/16/09)
Antarctic
Glacier Thinning At Alarming Rate (Science Daily, 8/15/09)
Bottled
water sales see a drought: Amid the
recession, thrifty consumers have rediscovered another source for their
third-favorite drink: the tap. (By Ylan Q. Mui, The Los Angeles Times, 8/14/09)
Seattle
is front line in grocery bag fee fight (By Phuong Le, The Associated Press
as reported by The Washington Post, 8/14/09)
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