UC alumnus exposes fast-food fraud
March 9, 2020
University of Cincinnati alumnus Brian Lazarte co-directed McMillion$, an HBO documentary series about the largely unknown McDonald's Monopoly game fraud.
March 9, 2020
University of Cincinnati alumnus Brian Lazarte co-directed McMillion$, an HBO documentary series about the largely unknown McDonald's Monopoly game fraud.
May 19, 2020
Peter DePietro and Jonathan Kilberg created this new resource for the campus community
May 22, 2020
UC international grad student, Dylan David, credits his collaboration with Cincinnati Children's Hospital Med Ctr. for Fulbright grant to homeland in Trinidad.
May 7, 2020
Canada. Mexico. Canada again. Italy. Hong Kong. South Korea. India. Chile. And, if not for the cancellation of study abroad programs due to the COVID-19 outbreak, Ghana. Though her ninth study tour was cancelled, University of Cincinnati Lindner College of Business student Kalea Lucas still broke the known university record by going on eight unique experiences during her career.
May 5, 2020
Isiah Andrews was wrongfully convicted in 1975 of murdering his wife of just three weeks. It would take more than 45 years and a team of attorneys and students from the Ohio Innocence Project at the University of Cincinnati College of Law to uncover evidence that led to his conviction being overturned.
June 4, 2020
This newly minted University of Cincinnati graduate has decided to stay a Bearcat by pursuing her graduate degree. Stephanie Knechtly was set to start a job at The Walt Disney Co. when the COVID-19 pandemic brought her plans to a screeching halt.
July 24, 2020
University of Cincinnati mechanical engineering undergraduate student Alex Kopf-Moore will earn both his master's and bachelor's degrees next spring through the Accelerated Engineering Degree program. Influenced by a co-op internship at GE Appliances in Louisville, he plans to become a design engineer for consumer products.
July 24, 2020
Dean Marianne Lewis, Dean of the UC Lindner College of Business, explains why students should choose to study at Lindner.
July 16, 2020
Through an innovation grant from the University of Cincinnati’s College of Arts and Sciences, the department of Journalism is offering two new internships with community-based and minority-owned news outlets. The funding supports internships at urban news organizations which have traditionally been able only to accept unpaid interns. It also gives UC journalism students the opportunity to gain hands-on experience in reporting, photography, social media and more at local news outlets. With the novel coronavirus ravaging communities, and Black Lives Matter protests hitting the streets spurred in part by the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May, the timing is right to support local voices in the media, says department head and Journalism professor Jeff Blevins. “Your larger news outlets…aim to serve a broad geography—all of the people in a city and the region—including those who may not be on the front lines of what is happening within certain areas of the city,” Blevins says. “But those communities within the city which have real skin in the game—their voices need to be elevated now more than ever.”