News Releases

All of the latest news about our university. (by topic)

  • Woodard Named to Raymond Chair in Classics at UB
    3/3/00
    The new Andrew V.V. Raymond Chair in the UB Department of Classics is distinguished philologist and linguist Roger D. Woodard, author of a radical theory suggesting that the intellectual infancy of Western Civilization was far more complicated than we once thought.
  • Fund to Help Indochinese Students Pursue Study in U.S.
    3/3/00
    A 1999 trip to Cambodia -- a country whose economy and educational system was left in ruins by the Khmer Rouge genocide of the late 1970s -- has prompted a University at Buffalo administrator to create a fund to help meet an urgent educational need in Indochina, one of the poorest regions on earth.
  • June In Buffalo 2000 -- Spectacular Series Of Performances Will Mark 25th Anniversary Celebration
    3/3/00
    David Felder, artistic director of June in Buffalo, the pioneering festival for emerging composers of new music, promises "a spectacular festival this year, as deserves an event that has contributed so much to American music" as the festival, presented annually by the University at Buffalo Department of Music, marks its 25th anniversary in June,
  • UB Philosophers Awarded NEH Research Grants
    3/3/00
    Pablo DeGreiff, Ph.D., and Miriam Thalos, Ph.D., UB assistant professors of philosophy, have received prestigious research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
  • In a Measure of Charisma, McCain Wins Out, Says UB Professor
    3/3/00
    Presidential candidate John McCain is the clear front-runner in the battle for charismatic appeal among major presidential candidates, says a University at Buffalo researcher who studies the attributes of charisma and leadership.
  • Fall Campaigns Have Predictable Effects on Presidential Elections, UB Political Scientist Says
    3/3/00
    Contrary to long-held beliefs of the media and political scientists, U.S. presidential campaigns have systematic, predictable and significant effects on the outcomes of elections, an authority on the electoral process at the University at Buffalo has found.
  • Study Finds Link Between Mothers’ Substance Abuse And Their Style Of Child Discipline
    3/2/00
    Mothers who have alcohol and drug problems tend to be more punitive toward their children than women who do not have substance-abuse problems, according to a study conducted by two University at Buffalo School of Social Work faculty members.
  • Study By UB Neurosurgeons Finds That Cigarette Smoking Is Linked To Size Of Brain Aneurysms
    3/2/00
    Cigarette smoking appears to increase the risk for developing large brain aneurysms in patients who are predisposed to these life-threatening, blood-vessel malformations, a study headed by researchers in the University at Buffalo Department of Neurosurgery has shown.
  • UB Technology Solves Chip Fabrication Problem
    3/2/00
    A University at Buffalo professor who has spent the past decade developing a laser ablation apparatus that solves one of the trickier problems in computer-chip fabrication has received a $900,000 grant under the federal Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program to commercialize the technology.
  • Peace Bridge Designs Come To Life Virtually At UB
    3/1/00
    The final decision on whether to build a "Superspan" or to "twin" the existing Peace Bridge is still months away, but starting this week, all of the proposed bridge and toll plaza designs have come to life, virtually that is, in the Center for Computational Research (CCR) at the University at Buffalo.