Video
- 58:50The Dean’s List: A Conversation with Graduate School Dean Kenneth WongOn this episode of Virtual Face to Face, UMB President Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS, will talk with Kenneth H. Wong, PhD, dean, University of Maryland Graduate School, and vice provost for graduate education, about Wong’s plans for the Graduate School.
- 1:44Lifelong Learners: From West Baltimore to AnnapolisIn celebration of Black History Month continue to follow the journeys of four young people featured in the six-part Emmy-nominated documentary series, “From West Baltimore.” Viewers have watched as Princaya Sanders, Davioin Hill, Tyler McKenzie, and Courtney Jacobs progressed from curious 6th graders in the University of Maryland, Baltimore CURE Scholars Program to young adults achieving their dreams of higher education and professional certification. Join them during Black History Month as they sit down with First Lady Dawn Moore and Joy Moore, mother of Wes Moore, Maryland’s first African-American governor, to discuss pursuing dreams, overcoming racism, and making history.In this clip, Davioin Hill asks for advice as first-generation college students.#blackhistorymonth #BlackHistoryMonth2024
- 2:31First, but not Last: From West Baltimore to AnnapolisIn celebration of Black History Month continue to follow the journeys of four young people featured in the six-part Emmy-nominated documentary series, “From West Baltimore.” Viewers have watched as Princaya Sanders, Davioin Hill, Tyler McKenzie, and Courtney Jacobs progressed from curious 6th graders in the University of Maryland, Baltimore CURE Scholars Program to young adults achieving their dreams of higher education and professional certification. Join them during Black History Month as they sit down with First Lady Dawn Moore and Joy Moore, mother of Wes Moore, Maryland’s first African-American governor, to discuss pursuing dreams, overcoming racism, and making history.In this clip, Princaya Sanders asks how does it feel to be the first African American first lady of Maryland.#blackhistorymonth #BlackHistoryMonth2024
- 2:31You Belong in the Room: From West Baltimore to AnnapolisIn celebration of Black History Month continue to follow the journeys of four young people featured in the six-part Emmy-nominated documentary series, “From West Baltimore.” Viewers have watched as Princaya Sanders, Davioin Hill, Tyler McKenzie, and Courtney Jacobs progressed from curious 6th graders in the University of Maryland, Baltimore CURE Scholars Program to young adults achieving their dreams of higher education and professional certification. Join them during Black History Month as they sit down with First Lady Dawn Moore and Joy Moore, mother of Wes Moore, Maryland’s first African-American governor, to discuss pursuing dreams, overcoming racism, and making history.In this clip, Tyler McKenzie asks how to be successful as young African Americans.#blackhistorymonth #BlackHistoryMonth2024
- 5:39Mark Graber Explains Section 3 of the 14th amendmentMaryland Carey Law Professor Mark A. Graber, a leading constitutional law scholar, is a recognized expert on Section 3 of the 14th amendment. Graber is also one of seven University System of Maryland Regents Professors.He recently submitted an amicus brief to the United States Supreme Court explaining how the Constitution’s “disqualification” clause bars those who engaged in insurrection from holding office.In an interview at Maryland Carey Law's Thurgood Marshall Library, Graber explains the brief and his thoughts on the groundbreaking case before the United States Supreme Court.#supremecourt #LawSchool
- 2:20See Me Rise: From West Baltimore To AnnapolisIn celebration of Black History Month continue to follow the journeys of four young people featured in the six-part Emmy-nominated documentary series, “From West Baltimore.” Viewers have watched as Princaya Sanders, Davioin Hill, Tyler McKenzie, and Courtney Jacobs progressed from curious 6th graders in the University of Maryland, Baltimore CURE Scholars Program to young adults achieving their dreams of higher education and professional certification. Join them during Black History Month as they sit down with Maryland First Lady Dawn Moore and Joy Moore, mother of Wes Moore, Maryland’s first African-American governor, to discuss pursuing dreams, overcoming racism, and making history.In this clip, Davioin Hill asks the Moores about how to handle racism.#BlackHistoryMonth #BlackHistoryMonth2024
- 1:26:08UMB Celebrates Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Black History MonthUMB Celebrates Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Black History Month Feb. 6, 2024 at Noon in Leadership Hall
- 1:01:04UMB Martin Luther King Jr and Black History Month Celebration 2024On Feb 6, 2024, the University of Maryland, Baltimore's annual Martin Luther King Jr and Black History Month celebration featured keynote speaker Fatima Goss Graves, JD, President and CEO of the National Women's Law Center.
- 1:00UMB Pushing Biomedical Technology ForwardThe University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) is at the forefront of supporting the biomedical research industry in Baltimore.UMB and the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC) were jointly awarded a four-year, $4 million Research Evaluation and Commercialization Hubs (REACH) grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to advance the biomedical entrepreneurship and innovation economy in the Baltimore region.This grant will be used to build on the work that began when UMBC and the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) received a $13 million NIH Common Fund Faculty Institutional Recruitment for Sustainable Transformation (FIRST) grant in 2022 to enhance recruitment and training of junior faculty from groups underrepresented in biomedical science.UMB will also use the grant to create the University of Maryland, Baltimore Life Science Discovery (UM-BILD) Accelerator program’s “proof-of-concept” hub — one of only five NIH-funded proof-of-concept hubs in the U.S. — in the University of Maryland BioPark and at bwtech@UMBC.Jim Hughes, chief enterprise and economic development officer and senior vice president for UMB, spoke to the Baltimore Mayor and City Council recently about the impact of the grant.
- 1:32Empowering Community: Inside Baltimore's Embrace Resource CenterThe Embrace Resource Center is now open at 55 N. Paca St., in the Baltimore Grand Garage.In the past three years, a program with a home of its own at this new center, has helped engage 4,000 people, assisted 200 people find employment, and also helped 130 people get into drug treatment, with 120 actively in treatment. This is all taking place around Baltimore's Lexington Market and Eutaw Street beside the University of Maryland, Baltimore campus.Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott celebrated the center's opening on Jan. 26, 2024, with UMB President Bruce E. Jarrell, and Embrace Executive Director Kyla Liggett-Creel.
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