IAN in the Media
This searchable database contains a list of articles published about the Integration and Application Network in the media. It is a subset of the UMCES in the Media database, which allows you to view articles from all University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science laboratories.
Articles can be browsed by date or searched based on words in the title, article text, periodical name, author, or IAN staff quoted. Records link to the original article on the periodical's website (NB These links may not always be available as they are often removed by the periodical a certain time after publication date).
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Staff Articles
You are browsing all 93 articles featuring Mike Roman. You can browse/search by year/month, and search terms to view other articles in the database.
The Cambridge Daily Banner (Tue 13 Mar, 2007)
O'Malley hears revival efforts
Staff quoted: Mike Roman, Mutt Meritt, Roger Newell, Elizabeth North
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CAMBRIDGE — Monday, Gov. Martin O'Malley and and other political and environmental officials met at the Horn Point Laboratory to discuss an $8.9 million oyster restoration bill and current Chesapeake Bay research.
WJZ (Baltimore) Television (Tue 13 Mar, 2007)
Officials Pledge To Shell Out Money For Oysters
Staff quoted: Mike Roman
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ANNAPOLIS, Md. Oysters are still found in the Chesapeake Bay, but only a fraction of what was once there before disease began wiping out stocks along the coast.
The Baltimore Sun (Mon 20 Nov, 2006)
Enjoying a bountiful harvest: As holidays near, oysters prove plentiful in and around the bay
Staff quoted: Mike Roman
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Neavitt -- The fog on Broad Creek hangs like cotton as Floyd "Bunky" Chance Jr. wends his way toward the Choptank River and one of three oyster bars he knows are bulging with fat bivalves.
The Cambridge Daily Banner (Fri 13 Oct, 2006)
Lab brings science to life
Staff quoted: Andy Lazur, Elizabeth North, Dave Nemazie, Mike Roman
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HORN POINT - Science and fun unfold Saturday as the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Horn Point Laboratory holds its annual free open house.
Bay Journal (Sun 1 Oct, 2006)
Researchers seek to understand how blue crabs know to return to bays
Staff quoted: Elizabeth North, Mike Roman
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Swallows return to Capistrano, and buzzards to Ohio. In the Chesapeake and Delaware bays, it's the tasty and feisty blue crabs, and researchers are still trying to find out how.
The Easton Star Democrat (Sun 1 Oct, 2006)
Mace's Lane students are scientists for a day
Staff quoted: Mike Roman
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CAMBRIDGE - Seventh graders from Mace's Lane Middle School got to be scientists for a day at the Horn Point Laboratory where they conducted experiments on underwater grasses to learn about photosynthesis and the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem.
The Cambridge Daily Banner (Thu 21 Sep, 2006)
Horn Point Lab Opens Up
Staff quoted: Mike Roman, Laura Murray
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CAMBRIDGE — The number of students on the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science campus will increase this week, but not because of an unexpected influx of graduate students.
The Baltimore Sun (Wed 13 Sep, 2006)
On the trail of the crab: Using the latest in marine science gear, researchers track billions of larvae drifting from sea back to bays
Staff quoted: Elizabeth North, Mike Roman
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ABOARD THE HUGH R. SHARP -- Here where the Atlantic Ocean meets Delaware Bay, marine researcher Elizabeth W. North and 10 other scientists were in search of secrets kept by billions of tiny crabs bobbing this time of year at the mercy of tides and currents along the continental shelf.
The Associated Press (Wed 13 Sep, 2006)
Scientists to Study Crab Migration: Scientists seek to find how blue crabs find their way back to the Chesapeake and Delaware bays
Staff quoted: Elizabeth North, Mike Roman
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Swallows return to Capistrano, and buzzards to Ohio. In the Chesapeake and Delaware bays, it's the tasty and feisty blue crabs, and researchers are still trying to find out how.
The Cambridge Daily Banner (Wed 6 Sep, 2006)
Lab opens door to the ocean
Staff quoted: Mike Roman
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CAMBRIDGE - The University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Horn Point Laboratory invites local residents to take part in its upcoming open house: "Explore Your Bay and Oceans."
