6654 Results
1

New York Times spotlights East Coast premiere of 'Blind Injustice'

February 23, 2024

The New York Times recently featured the East Coast premiere of "Blind Injustice," an opera based on true exonerations achieved by the Ohio Innocence Project. The production opened on Feb. 16 , 2024, at Peak Performances at Montclair State University. Premiered in 2019 at Cincinnati Opera, the opera was first workshopped through Opera Fusion: New Works (OF:NW), a collaboration between Cincinnati Opera and UC College-Conservatory of Music.

2

Cybersecurity expert arms the next generation

January 26, 2021

University of Cincinnati faculty member Coleman Kane blends research and industry to prepare the next generation of cybersecurity experts, create innovative digital security solutions and strengthen the local cyber workforce.

3

UC adds cybersecurity engineering degree

December 15, 2021

The University of Cincinnati College of Engineering and Applied Science introduced a new bachelor’s of science degree in cybersecurity engineering; the first cohort of students joined in the fall of 2021. The program complements UC’s various initiatives during the last five years to meet the quickly expanding need for a capable cybersecurity workforce. Cybersecurity jobs are expected to grow by 30 percent in the next 10 years.

4

A milestone centennial

March 8, 2021

In 1920, UC became the first university in the nation to open cooperative education — founded at UC in 1906 — to women.

6

New UC telehealth drone makes house calls

March 15, 2021

Three colleges at the University of Cincinnati collaborated to develop a semi-autonomous drone that can be dispatched right to people’s homes. The drones are big enough to carry medicine or medical supplies but small enough to maneuver the tight confines of a home using navigational algorithms developed by UC engineers so patients can talk face to face to their doctors or pharmacists.

10

Better-fitting face masks greatly improve COVID-19 protection

June 9, 2021

University of Cincinnati researchers found that while N95 masks are effective barriers against airborne diseases like COVID-19, poorly fitting masks can have substantial leaks around the face that reduce their effectiveness and increase the risk of infection.