Campus Recreation's Online Fitness Program brings class to your computer screen
September 10, 2020
Online Fitness classes now available on Campus Recreation's website. Workout wherever and whenever it's convenient for you.
September 10, 2020
Online Fitness classes now available on Campus Recreation's website. Workout wherever and whenever it's convenient for you.
September 14, 2020
Kingsgate Logistics, an 1819 Innovation Hub partner at UC, got help from the Kautz-Uible Economics Institute to learn more about blockchain technology.
October 6, 2020
UC political scientist explains how the Philippines has been the perfect target for Chinese disinformation campaigns.
October 21, 2020
Trump delivered on Supreme Court promise, but his pandemic response cost him support among Christians, says UC expert Andrew Lewis
October 21, 2020
University of Cincinnati cosmetic scientist Harshita Kumari has received a research grant for over $700,000 to study new uses for surfactants in personal care products such as skin- and haircare as well as laundry detergents.
October 21, 2020
UC assistant professor Eric Webb's research was cited in a recent column that appeared in the Harvard Business Review
October 21, 2020
University of Cincinnati's Sheryl Sorby, professor of engineering education, plans to address needed updates in the process of how universities educate engineering students. Sorby is the current president of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE).
October 23, 2020
It's possible for Mitch McConnel to both win in Ky. and lose in the senate, says David Niven, UC political scientist.
October 23, 2020
Recent data released by the Ohio Secretary of State's Office shows Ohioans are voting early in record numbers.
November 4, 2020
Benjamin Harrison The ongoing fight against cancer isn’t going to go away anytime soon, but the work from In-Kwon Kim, assistant professor of chemistry, and his team could drastically improve the field of cancer research. Kim recently received a 4-year grant ($792,000) from the American Cancer Society. With the help of this grant, Kim and his team will put the University of Cincinnati at the head of the next-stage cancer treatment. Before coming to UC, Kim was an assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biophysics at Washington University’s School of Medicine. He decided to take the opportunity in precision cancer medicine in UC and join the chemistry department in 2016. Kim’s research group focuses primarily on the ADP-ribosylation cycle that regulates many cellular signaling pathways, including DNA repair and cell death. Currently, Kim and his team are working with human enzymes that remove different types of ADP-ribosylations. These enzymes play key roles in DNA repair and are often associated with breast cancer.