I may have graduated from Maryland in 2006, but I made a foursquare list with some tips that can help you learn about Maryland, and find some fun things to do around campus. Check it out! :) Read more.
Take a break from studying Friday afternoon at 1 to see Erasable, Inc., one of UMD's oldest student groups, perform here. It's one of the great McKeldin rituals, like rubbing Testudo's nose for luck! Read more.
In August of 2011, a 5.8 earthquake hit DC. There was a significant amount of damage to McKeldin's 8 floors of books, but just over 24 hours later the staff had all the books ready to be sorted! Read more.
First opened in 1975 and received a much-needed renovation in '02; Hoff shows movies and things like the traditional (15+ years!) live Rocky Horror Picture Show 2 shadowcasted by Satanic Mechanics. Read more.
This honors Jim Henson, perhaps the most famous Maryland Alumni to "build" a degree, combining Home-Ec classes with Art and Drama to form "Puppetry". His other creations are pretty cool too ;) Read more.
Opened in '01, CSPAC was named for Clarice Smith (duh), member of the Art Department from 1980-87, after getting a BA at UMCP! Student tickets to shows are a flat $10, or FREE the Monday beforehand. Read more.
Formerly known as Shipley Field, it was dedicated to Bob "Turtle" Smith, a baseball alumnus and booster, in 2010. It included the establishment of Maryland's first fully-endowed baseball scholarship. Read more.
If you've got spare time in your schedule and are looking for something fun, you can take bowling classes offered by the Kinesiology department! Great thing to do your last semester. Read more.
Constructed in 1944, the Record Armory is named after Maj. Gen. Milton A. Reckord, who served as the Adjutant Gen. of the Maryland National Guard, and president of the National Guard Association. Read more.
Built in 1961, TYD wasn't named until '69. Millard E. Tydings was a US Senator from 1927-51, a fiscal conservative who actually opposed the New Deal and was against Prohibition before repealed in '33. Read more.