
Citation:
MAC to Millennium, University of Maryland Archives
Pablo Neruda Literary Award-Distinguished
university professor and poet Jose Emilio Pacheco was awarded the first
Pablo Neruda Literary Award in 2004; the prize was established to commemorate
the 100th anniversary of the birth of the Chilean Nobel Laureate.
Parcels of land-the 428 acres of land which
George and Charles Benedict Calvert sold to the Maryland Agricultural
College on March 22, 1858, to form the original campus were named "Rossburgh
Farm" and consisted of parcels known as "Arthur's Stamp," "Original Buck
Lodge," "Resurvey on Buck Lodge," "New Look Out," "Godfather's Gift,"
and "Belt's Range"
Parking meters-as of January 15, 2005, there
were approximately 451 parking meters on campus
Parking spaces-as of January 15, 2005, there
were approximately 18,500 parking spaces on campus, of which 15,770 require
a parking permit
Patterson, H. J., Hall-constructed in 1931; named
for Harry Jacob Patterson, president of the Maryland Agricultural College,
1913-1917
Patterson, J. M., Building-constructed in 1953;
designed by Ted Englehardt; named for James Milton Patterson, member of
the Board of Regents, 1935-1953.
Patuxent Building-constructed in 1990; named
for the Patuxent River.
Peace Garden-garden created in 2003 to
honor the memory of the victims of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
The garden, located at the east end of McKeldin Mall near Main Administration,
marks the spot where the flowers placed along the ODK fountain during
the campus's memorial service on September 12, 2001, were buried. The
site includes a plaque with the phrase "May Peace Prevail on Earth" and
an explanation of the garden's origin.
Pendulum-in 1955, the Standard Art, Marble and
Tile Company installed a Foucault pendulum in the Mathematics Building,
which, as it slowly turned, created a sensation of the entire building
revolving; the pendulum itself is no longer in place, but the tile work
remains in the floor as a reminder
Penn Relays-annual indoor track relays held at
the University of Pennsylvania during April; University of Maryland relay
teams won the competition numerous times
Ph.D.-the first doctorate awarded by the University
of Maryland after the establishment of the Graduate School was given to
Charles E. Sando in 1920; Dr. Sando received his degree in botany, and
his dissertation was entitled "The Process of Ripening in the Tomato,
especially from the Commercial Standpoint"
Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity, Eta chapter-oldest
fraternity on campus, founded January 8, 1897; the chapter dedicated a
tree on McKeldin Mall near Woods Hall on September 13, 1997 honoring the
over 1700 students who have been initiated into the oldest continuing
fraternity at the University of Maryland
Plaques-the University of Maryland landscape is
dotted with numerous plaques honoring faculty, staff, students, alumni,
and events in campus history; many of the plaques are attached to particular
structures and have been listed elsewhere in MAC to Millennium;
others of interest include:
- memorial for Kelly Elizabeth Nalwasky, located between LaPlata and
Ellicott Halls
- Maryland Agricultural College map, commemorating the 75th anniversary
of the November 1912 fire, behind Shoemaker Hall
- Agricultural History of the Maryland Agricultural College, located
in front of Morrill Hall
- Pearson Gate, dedicated to Dr. Raymond A. Pearson, president of the
University (1926-1935), located on the south side of McKeldin Mall;
reunion gift of the Class of 1934
- memorial for Richard T. Farrell, Department of History, 1965-1991,
located near the Pearson Gate
- plaques honoring Charles and Ruth Manning and Marc F. Pizzuto, both
located in Morrill Quad
- memorial for Thomas Charles Dawson, located on the south side of
Memorial Chapel
- commemoration of the Class of 1991 gift of college banners and a
multi-cultural book endowment, located in Hornbake Plaza
- memorial for Meghan Price, president of the Student Government Association
killed in a car accident in 1998, located adjacent to Taliaferro Hall
- memorial tree and plaque, located between Worcester and Somerset Halls,
for Jayanth "JJ" Charya (1983-2003), a resident of Worcester
Hall and the North Hill Community
Pocomoke Building-dedicated on April 28,
1946; was previously called the Fire Service Extension Building; named
for the Pocomoke River and served as a fire house from 1946 to 1994
Potomac Building-constructed in 1955; named for
the Potomac River
Preinkert Field House-the cornerstone was laid
June 8, 1931, and the building was dedicated December 1, 1931; named for
Alma H. Preinkert,
Registrar, 1919-1954, by action of the Board of Regents on March 12, 1954.
Major Howard W. Cutler of Montgomery County, Maryland, designed the field
house. The pool was added in 1951.
Presidents-The current president of the
University of Maryland is C.
D. Mote, Jr., who began his tenure in September 1998. For information
on past presidents and chancellors of the College Park campus and the
University System of Maryland, see the
Past Presidents.
President of the United States-first president to visit campus
was Dwight D. Eisenhower; he delivered an address opening the White House
Conference on Children and Youth on March 27, 1960, in the Cole Student
Activities Building. Six years later, Lyndon Johnson paid a surprise
visit to campus when he decided at the last moment to address the
Conference of State Committees on Criminal Administration meeting in the
Center for Adult Education on October 15, 1966. William J. Clinton
visited campus in 1993 to celebrate the accomplishments of the Summer of
Service program, attending a conference in the Stamp Student Union's
Colony Ballroom, and again in 1999, when he encouraged an audience in
Ritchie Coliseum to advocate for more support for the Americorps
program. Jimmy Carter gave the Second Annual Sadat Lecture for Peace on
October 25, 1998, in the Union's Grand Ballroom.
Prince George's Hall-constructed in 1944; named
for Prince George's County, Maryland
Products-several commodities have been
marketed under the University of Maryland or Terrapin names, including
Terrapin Cola, introduced by the University Food Service in March 1967,
and Maryland cigarettes, marketed circa 1952. The Terp Bar, a creation
from the Dairy, invaded campus in May of 1940. The clean-up committee
of the Women's League offered a reward to every student who collected
fifteen Terp Bar sticks from the grounds in an effort to remove litter
from campus.
Pulitzer Prize winners-Jon Franklin, a 1970 graduate, won two:
one in
1979 for feature writing and one in 1985 for explanatory journalism;
Louis Harlan, professor emeritus of history, won the 1984 prize for
biography; Jane Healy, a 1971 graduate, won in 1988 for journalism;
Haynes Johnson, recently appointed to the Knight Chair in the College of
Journalism, won in 1966 for distinguished national reporting of the
civil rights crisis; David Broder, Journalism faculty member, won the
Pulitzer for his 1972 columns in the Washington Post; Patrick Sloyan,
Class of 1962, won the 1992 prize for International Reporting for his
articles in Newsday on battlefield tactics and "friendly fire" incidents
during the Persian Gulf War; Eric Newhouse, 1971 M.A., earned the 2000
prize for explanatory reporting. His 12-part series, "Alcohol: Cradle to
Grave," explores alochol abuse and its impact on individuals, families,
and society; Ira Chinoy, visiting journalism professor and doctoral
fellow, won in 1993 for investigative reporting and in 1998 for public
service; Sarah Cohen, 1992 M. A. and adjunct professor of journalism,
earned a Pulitzer in 2002 for investigative reporting for a series in
the Washington Post examining deaths of children in Washington, DC;
faculty member James MacGregor Burns won his 1971 Pulitzer for History
of the United States for his book Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom
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