Browsing About UMBC and Its People by Title
Now showing items 1-20 of 118
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10 Admissions Deans Who Are Shaping Their Field
(The Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007-04-27) -
2012 Laird Fellow
(University of Delaware, 2012-06-01)The prestigious fellowship honors the memory of George W. Laird, a UD mechanical engineering graduate who died in an accident at the age of 35. Given since 1997, it is bestowed upon candidates who exhibit character, ... -
4 pillars of college success in science
(TED Conferences, LLC, 2013-02)At age 12, Freeman Hrabowski marched with Martin Luther King. Now he's president of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), where he works to create an environment that helps under-represented students -- ... -
American Chemical Society honors UMBC’s Lee Blaney for commitment to mentoring student researchers
(UMBC News, 2020-10-28) -
Art AND: Ashley Minner
(BmoreArt, 2019-11-01) -
Ashley Minner, Reclaiming Space for the Lumbee Indians of Baltimore
(Smithsonian Institution, 2020-09-14) -
Back Story – Summer 2014
(UMBC Magazine, 2014-07-02) -
Bahama Oriole Project team awarded NSF grant to offer more UMBC undergrads International Research Experiences
(UMBC News, 2018-11-06)UMBC is recognized as a national leader in undergraduate teaching, in part because the university connects so many students with meaningful research opportunities. Now, a new $300,000 NSF International Research Experiences ... -
Book Review: Easy Living: The Rise of the Home Office by Elizabeth A. Patton
(LSE, 2021-06-23) -
Brian Dannelly
Brian Dannelly is an American film director and screenwriter best known for his work on the 2004 film Saved! -
Bringing Public Humanities to Asian American Studies
(Humanities for all, 2022-07-20) -
Brutalist Building Finds Life After Demolition
(2018-07-30) -
BU Wheelock Partners with Dr. Shana E. Rochester for the Diverse Books Project 2.0
(Boston University, Wheelock College of Education & Human Development, 2021-05-24) -
Camera Captures Spheromak Plasmas
(Photonics Meidia, 2002-11) -
Catherine Clarke Fenselau
Catherine Clarke Fenselau (born 15 April 1939) is an American scientist who was the first trained mass spectrometrist on the faculty of an American medical school; she joined Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1968. She ... -
Cinderella Story? It’s True for U.M.B.C. in Academics, Too
(New York Times, 2018) -
Curtis Menyuk, CSEE, Wins Humboldt Research Award
(UMBC News, 2015-04-10)