Fellowship to Support Future Entrepreneurs

Fellowship to Support Future Entrepreneurs

Fellowship to Support Future Entrepreneurs

Warren Citrin, co-founder and board member, Gloto Corporation, and co-founder, Solipsys Corporation.
Warren Citrin, co-founder and board member, Gloto Corporation, and co-founder, Solipsys Corporation.

The University of Maryland has announced the new Warren Citrin Graduate Fellowship program, which supports graduate students in the A. James Clark School of Engineering conducting research in the broad area of sustainability.

Made possible by a $560,000 gift from Warren Citrin, co-founder of Solipsys Corp. (now Raytheon Solipsys), the program, commencing fall 2011, will provide four first-year students with $35,000 and additional financial support through the completion of their doctoral degrees. The Maryland Technology Enterprise Institute (Mtech) will manage the program.

"Solutions to the many daunting problems facing the global community will come from first rate science, engineering and technology research institutions," says Citrin, who is also co-founder and board member of Gloto. "I can think of no better way to invest in our collective future than to invest in the Clark School of Engineering."

Interested graduate students will complete an application process to enter the program. A committee will select the best candidates.

"The Warren Citrin Graduate Fellowship program will enable the Clark School to attract talented graduate students to address the critical societal issue of sustainability while contributing to an increasingly entrepreneurial culture at the University of Maryland," says David Barbe, executive director of Mtech.

Citrin's gift also supports a new half-time position at the university dedicated to helping the four fellowship students commercialize their technologies. That position will be housed under Mtech's VentureAccelerator Program, which helps university faculty and students launch successful ventures from their inventions by systematically guiding and coaching inventors through new business processes such as: sound business planning; understanding customers and markets; setting goals and priorities; acquiring skills and recruiting talent; and raising capital.

Launched in 2003, the program helped grow Lurn.com into one of the fastest growing companies in the U.S. and an Inc. 500 listing in 2009 by Inc. Magazine.

In 2007, Citrin established the $250,000 Impact Pre-Seed Fund, which offers grants, in $500 to $5,000 increments, to students in Mtech's Hinman CEOs, Hillman Entrepreneurs, and Entrepreneurship and Innovation programs. Students in those programs present business plans for new companies that benefit society to qualify. The funds are also used to support the University of Maryland $75K Business Plan Competition’s Social Impact Award each year.

Citrin is an accomplished businessman and engineer who received the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year award in 2003. He received a BS in electrical engineering from the University of South Carolina in 1973 and an MS in applied mathematics from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1976. Citrin led numerous system engineering and radar processing programs over his 18-year career at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory before co-founding Solipsys Corporation in 1996. As CEO of Solipsys, he provided strategic vision and leadership to grow the company before it was sold to Raytheon Company, a Fortune 50 company, in 2003.

"Sustainability problems are like a meteor coming our way," says Citrin. "People younger than me are not going to be able to escape them. My hope is that something good can come from these fellowships to divert this meteor or perhaps lessen its impact."

Watch a video of the fellowships being announced or download a high-resolution photo of Citrin at: www.mtech.umd.edu/citrin.html.

To learn more about the University's Great Expectations campaign and how you can make a difference in the Clark School’s progress, please contact Leslie Borak.

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May 6, 2010


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"I can think of no better way to invest in our collective future than to invest in the Clark School of Engineering."

Warren Citrin



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