The Key December 7, 2016 Edition

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A newsletter for students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends A University of Maryland Eastern Shore professor and an upstart company founded by a 2015 alumnus have been awarded a $100,000 grant from the Maryland Industrial Partnerships (MIPS) Program to underwrite a technologyproduct development project involving biodegradable batteries. The MIPS funding will support a research partnership between Salisbury-based Badjo-T Industries LLC and Dr. Kausik S. Das to create a graphene-based supercapacitor both hope can power an exoskeletal suit designed by JeanPaul Badjo when he was a UMES student. MIPS jointly funds projects to support Maryland businesses that partner with University System of Maryland faculty in developing high-potential, technology-based commercial products. Badjo’s fondness for video games and evolving technology as an adolescent inspired the so-called “Badjo Suit.” As an undergraduate, Badjo occasionally trotted out his suit from

Badjo Suit

December 7, 2016

an obscure campus lab for demonstrations, including a stunt where one of the gloved hands doubled as a flame-thrower. Badjo, who received a UMES degree in electrical engineering in December 2015, has single-mindedly pursued the design and development of a prototype he envisions someday could lead to versions that emergency first-responders, the military and the entertainment industry might use. To power the many options Badjo wants to incorporate in his invention, he needs a reliable, lightweight power source. Enter Das, an assistant physics professor whose interest in alternative energy sources brought the two together. A graphene supercapacitor is flexible, can be created with a 3-D printer and “will be able to be used in future high-end uses for the exoskeleton,” according to the partners’ grant application. BADJO / continued on page 2

It’s three in a row for UMES’ physical therapy program

INSIDE

All 27 graduate students who earned doctorates in physical therapy this past September from the University of Maryland Eastern Shore passed the national licensure exam on the first try. UMES’ class of 2016 is the third consecutive group of graduates to achieve that distinction, a string of success that marks a first for the university since it began awarding the Doctor of Physical Therapy degree 12 years ago. “I’m proud of my classmates,” said Dr. Matthew Lucas, a newly minted physical therapist at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury. “They’re all pretty smart. The school definitely prepared me for the test.” To be licensed as a practicing physical therapist, Lucas and his classmates had to pass a

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Winter Commencement

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Thanksgiving Tradition Froggy Fiascos

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Hawks’ Corner Students on Scooters

standardized test administered on behalf of the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy. Members of the class of 2016 acknowledged when receiving their degrees in September the “perfect” performances by their counterparts

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Faculty Spotlight Ben Webster: Student Ambassador

PT / continued on page 3

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Athletics: Lady Hawks Resurgence Bowling Poll

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International Education Week Pi Gamma Mu

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Calendar of Events


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