News Releases

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

  • UB and Town of Amherst Extend Shared Vision for a 'Knowledge-based Community'
    3/4/10
    The University at Buffalo and the Town of Amherst have signed a written agreement of cooperation for development of land adjacent to UB's North Campus in ways consistent with the town's Bicentennial Comprehensive Plan and UB's Comprehensive Physical Plan, which guides the university's implementation of the UB 2020 strategic vision to become a model 21st century university.
  • Moscow Festival Ballet to Perform Swan Lake as Part of M&T Bank Dance Series at UB
    3/4/10
    The Center for the Arts at the University at Buffalo will present The Moscow Festival Ballet in Swan Lake on March 23 at 8 p.m. in the Mainstage Theatre, Center for the Arts, North Campus. The performance is sponsored by M&T Bank. There will be a pre-performance talk at 7 p.m.
  • Adolfo Carrion, White House Urban Policy Czar, to Speak at UB April 23
    3/4/10
    Adolfo Carrión Jr., director of the White House Office of Urban Affairs Policy, a position created by President Barack Obama last year to focus federal investment in cities for the first time in several decades, will present the Graduate Planning Student Association Lecture in the University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning on April 23 at 1 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf Hall, UB South Campus.
  • UB Engineer Heads to Chile to See How Hospitals and Their Contents Fared
    3/4/10
    The University at Buffalo engineer who developed the world's first apparatus designed to realistically test how building contents, architectural components and equipment (called nonstructural components) fare during earthquakes will leave for Chile on March 5 on a week-long reconnaissance mission to see firsthand what kind of damage hospitals and tall, engineered buildings sustained during Saturday's powerful, 8.8 magnitude earthquake.
  • Media Advisory: Canadian author, social campaigner Margaret Atwood to speak at UB
    3/3/10
    Canadian author, poet, critic and social campaigner Margaret Atwood will speak at 8 p.m. today (Wednesday, March 3, 2010) in the University at Buffalo Center for the Arts as part of the 2009-10 Distinguished Speakers Series.
  • 'Cool Science' Returns: UB to Hold 24th Annual Science Exploration Day on March 10
    3/3/10
    Science Exploration Day, the University at Buffalo's annual science-education bash, will make a return engagement to UB's North Campus on March 10, once again attracting some of the top science minds in the area, ages 14 and up.
  • Edward Steinfeld to Receive UB Presidential Award for Faculty Excellence
    3/2/10
    Edward H. Steinfeld, ArchD, AIA, of Amherst, an award-winning professor of architecture in the University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning and an international pioneer in the field of inclusive design and environmental access, will receive the university's second annual Presidential Award for Faculty Excellence from UB President John B. Simpson at 5 p.m. March 25 in 146 Diefendorf Hall, UB South Campus.
  • UB Law School Dean Named to Elite Council on Foreign Relations
    3/2/10
    Makau W. Mutua, dean of the University at Buffalo Law School, has been elected to the prestigious Council on Foreign Relations, a New York City-based think tank and membership organization that studies major international issues and publishes the influential journal Foreign Policy.
  • Move Over, Spelling Bees; Teens Tout Financial Knowledge in "Money Bee"
    3/2/10
    The University at Buffalo School of Management and M&T Bank will host more than 80 students from 16 public, private and charter schools in the third annual "MoneySKILL® Mania," a financial literacy competition for high school juniors and seniors
  • Ancient DNA from Rare Fossil Reveals that Polar Bears Evolved Recently and Adapted Quickly
    3/2/10
    A rare, ancient polar bear fossil discovered in Norway in 2004 is yielding a treasure trove of essential information about the age and evolutionary origins of the species whose future is now seen as synonymous with the devastation wrought by climate change.