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.
-
Josh Michael ’10, Ph.D. ’22, elected Maryland State Board of Education president
-
UMBC scientists show twisted carbon nanotubes might power “wind-up” sensors and other devices
-
New experimental archeology course connects students with premodern craft traditions
-
Christopher K. Tong, MLLI, returns from a research award in Mongolia to inform his work in Asian studies
-
Incoming Athletics Director Tiffany Tucker brings student-centric leadership to the role
-
Massive IT outage spotlights major vulnerabilities in the global information ecosystem
-
Karen Chen wins NSF CAREER award to build tools to empower students with data
-
Social media and political violence – how to break the cycle
-
UMBC welcomes Tiffany D. Tucker as new athletics director
-
UMBC’s exploratory artist in residence Levester Williams examines history of Cockeysville marble in film project
-
Meet a Retriever—Connie Pierson ’90, M.A. ’92, associate vice provost for institutional research
-
Meet a Retriever—Karen Woodard ’90, Alumni Association Vice President and co-chair of the Alumni Awards committee
-
Partnership with biotech giant Genentech benefits UMBC graduate students
-
Stepping up to the plate to preserve UMBC history
-
UMBC Center for Global Engagement welcomes its second cohort of the Young African Leaders Initiative
-
“Hidden” sex differences in neurological reward pathways suggest opportunity for improved psychiatric therapeutics
-
Ph.D. candidate Emily Faber improving climate modeling with NOAA fellowship
-
Infrastructure of support after Key Bridge collapse
-
Kelley Bell named Baker Artist Awardee, Corrie Francis Parks and Katie Hileman are finalists
-
STEM BUILD at UMBC leads to lasting institutional change, benefiting STEM students and beyond
-
China turns to private hackers as it cracks down on online activists on Tiananmen Square anniversary
-
Rotting sargassum is choking the Caribbean’s white sand beaches, fueling an economic and public health crisis