August 23, 2013 The Dispatch/Maryland Coast Dispatch Page 89 UMESAdds Bulletproof Whiteboards PRINCESS ANNE – A privatesector investment the University of Maryland Eastern Shore made in 2004 will pay safety dividends in its classrooms starting this fall. The university has committed to purchasing 200 Bulletproof Whiteboards manufactured by Pocomoke City-based Hardwire LLC. Hardwire and UMES announced the transaction last week at the 2013 Maryland Association of Counties summer conference in Ocean City, where they also shared a vendors’ booth to promote both entities. "UMES is the first university to adopt the Bulletproof Whiteboard as a critical layer of its student and faculty security system,” Hardwire founder George Tunis said. “It's ‘back-to-school’ season, and as a result of its leadership, UMES will be one of the safest campuses in the country as students return to school.” Classes for the fall semester at UMES resume Aug. 26. Tunis launched his high-tech company in 2000 with high-tensile strength, twisted-steel wiring for reinforcement of buildings and infrastructure. After America’s military was mobilized for the war on terrorism, Hardwire began “to work on armor protection for ground vehicles, aircraft, boats and personnel.” That transition occurred with the help of a $250,000 loan arranged in 2004 by the Maryland Hawk Corp., a UMES-affiliated, non-profit organization that focuses “on the commercialization and entrepreneurial development of intellectual property.” The Maryland Hawk Corp. eventually extended Hardwire a second, $500,000 loan. Tunis noted the first loan enabled “expedient delivery of armor to soldiers, which resulted in thousands of saved lives.” “The Bulletproof Whiteboard is a direct derivative of this same military armor that Hardwire and UMES scaled for the war effort, and it is now available for schools,” he said. “Hardwire is proud to work with UMES in making our students safer." UMES faculty members will be issued the 18-inch by 20-inch Bulletproof Whiteboards for use in their classrooms. Like first-generation whiteboards, they can serve as portable writing tablets during delivery of lectures and labs. “Classroom safety is not a pleasant topic,” UMES President Juliette B. Bell said. “Unfortunately, campus violence is a reality that we have to be prepared for, and this technology allows us to be proactive rather than reactive. We appreciate and applaud Hardwire for its innovative adaptation of this technology to potentially save lives. Their entrepreneurial spirit serves as a great example for our students.”