Find us On Facebook Twitter
News
news and events Events Energy Lectures Sustainability 2011 Sustainability 2010 Sustainability 2009 White Symposium Whiting Turner Lectures Current News News Archives Search News Press Coverage Press Releases Research Newsroom RSS feed Events Calendar events events

News Story

Current Headlines

UMD Announces Appointment of Schultheis to Lead New Regulatory Science Initiative

UMD Steel Bridge Team Meets Members of Congress at AISI Steel Day in DC

Hubbard Chosen for HistoryMakers Oral History Collection

Delivering Drugs to Inner Ear, Eyes, and Brain Made Easier with "Magnetic Syringe"

Vote to Support Team Mulciber in Wood Stove Design Challenge

BioE and Mtech Partner with Children's National Health System to Form Pediatric Device Consortium

NSF-Backed DC I-Corps Kicks Off First Cohort with 20 Federal Laboratory, University and Regional Inventors, Entrepreneur Teams

UMD Hosts 2nd Cybersecurity and Cybersafety Workshop for Girls

UMD Ranked Top Public School for Tech Entrepreneurship in 2013 StartEngine College Index

ECE Students Take Top Prize at Michigan Hackathon for Intelligent Trashcan

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search Clark School News

Research Newsroom

Press Releases

Archived News

Magazines and Publications

Press Coverage

Clark School RSS Feed

Events Resources

Clark School Events

Events Calendar

Bookmark and Share

Clark School Sends Students to Aid Katrina Victims

Mark Treadwell, Amon Ducao and Sajjad Husain work in Pass Christian, Miss.

Mark Treadwell, Amon Ducao and Sajjad Husain work in Pass Christian, Miss.

Ten Maryland students, including eight Clark School engineering students and Tau Beta Pi members, visited the Mississippi Gulf Coast over winter break to help Hands On USA, a disaster relief organization.

The Clark School helped fund the students' trip to the region.

The duties the students performed included sorting donated materials, gutting houses to be rebuilt and sifting through the debris at a historic mansion in search of lost artifacts.

"It was unbelievable to see how much debris still covers the Biloxi community," the students wrote in their journal. "Katrina hit four months ago, but the neighborhoods are still nothing but abandoned homes, waiting to be demolished or gutted, and streets and yards filled with trash and rubble."

The students slept in tents in temperatures that went down as low as 28 degrees at night.

The students who participated include civil and environmental engineering graduate student Andrew Churchill; electrical and computer engineering undergraduate Amon Ducao; aerospace engineering undergrads Ashley Korzun (organizer), Jamie Meeroff, Sajjad Husain and Dean Bawek; chemical and biomolecular engineering undergrad George Chacko; and Institute for Systems Research graduate student Mark Treadwell.

January 25, 2006


Prev   Next