To read content by topic area, feature type, or magazine issue, please visit the main landing pages for UMBC News and UMBC Magazine.
This is a joint archive of all UMBC News and UMBC Magazine stories.
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NASA awards AXIS X-ray telescope co-developed by UMBC faculty $5M for further study
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UMBC leads new program to build research security compliance support for mid-sized universities
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Faisal Quader, Ph.D. ’20: Expanding access to the cyber ecosystem
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Retrievers learn the art and heart of cooking Salvadoran food at True Grit’s Test Kitchen
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PANTHYR instrument installed in Chesapeake Bay to monitor water quality, validate satellite data
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Meet a Retriever—Emma Swartling ’10, prenatal and pediatric chiropractor
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Alumna introduces horseshoe crabs to K-12 classrooms to raise these scientifically useful arthropods
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Colonialism’s legacy has left Caribbean nations much more vulnerable to hurricanes
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UMBC researchers to study digital twinning technology, AI use in neurodegenerative diseases with NSF grant
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Dive into the food, fun, and friends of Homecoming weekend
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GRIT-X talk series ushers in UMBC’s 2024 Homecoming activities
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UMBC Poll, new election website, affirm UMBC commitment to civic engagement
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Baltimore-based international animation festival Sweaty Eyeballs returns with a visual feast
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UMBC announces partnership with national nonprofit to promote inclusive academic success
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President Sheares Ashby meets with King of Jordan at Annapolis roundtable
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Retrievers are upping their research game in the 2024-25 Fulbright U.S. Student Program cohort
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Pagers and walkie-talkies over cellphones—a security expert explains why Hezbollah went low-tech for communications
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Lee Blaney assumes presidency of the Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors
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Meet a Retriever—Jennifer Matthews ’02, Catonsville bookstore owner
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Record number of new Retrievers join UMBC this year
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Putin’s visit to Mongolia defies ICC warrant and tests neutral nation’s ‘third neighbor’ diplomacy
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Healing from home—with Taylor Gaines ’13, Doc on the Go
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The specter of China has edged into US election rhetoric − for Republicans much more than Democrats