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  • Mathematics major Angel Tuong '19

    Class of 2019: Angel Tuong

    Angel Tuong '19 traveled all the way from Ho Chi Minh in Vietnam to study Mathematics, Economics and French at McDaniel. She describes her Math Problem Seminar as the best class ever, where she "gained skills to solve math and real life problems like patience, logical reasoning and a lot more patience."
  • Biology professor Katie Staab (left) with research students Riley Palmer, Adelle Laniyan, Courtney Bohn and Biology professor Molly Jacobs in New Orleans.

    Four Biology seniors present research at annual biology conference

    Four seniors at McDaniel College presented student-faculty research findings with Biology professor Katie Staab at the annual Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology conference.
  • Senior Garrett Gregoire discusses his research with Biology professor Cheng Huang.

    Student’s research advances the field of developmental biology

    Garrett Gregoire matter-of-factly points out that his student-faculty research project won’t cure cancer. Perhaps not, but his work does make a real contribution to the field of developmental biology and just might provide the tools that will help some future researcher grow replacement red blood cells in a Petri dish.
  • Kinesiology major and research assistant Isabella Mendiola demonstrates lifting in McDaniel’s new Neuromuscular Lab.

    Kinesiology’s new labs and classrooms open in Gill Center

    The newly renovated Gill Center bustles with activity. After all, this is the epicenter of McDaniel’s study of movement — the place Kinesiology students and faculty alike call home. Three classrooms, three labs, nine faculty offices and a seminar room were newly built inside Gill Center to support a program that prepares students for careers as health professionals, coaches, athletic trainers, physical education teachers, personal trainers and others whose work centers on the science of physical activity and movement.
  • Riley Palmer '18, in a pink shirt, helps raise the main sail on board the SEA Semester ocean research vessel, Robert C. Seamans.

    Alumna discovers a mission in the planet’s most remote coral reefs

    Just days after her graduation this May, Riley Palmer sailed from Tahiti to Hawaii on board SEA Semester’s ocean research vessel, the 134-foot brigantine SSV Robert C. Seamans. Along the 2,600 nautical mile route, the Biology major from Pikesville, Md., studied the effects of environmental change on remote and pristine Pacific coral reefs.
  • Student walking across campus.

    Scholarship winner takes time out for cancer research before medical school

    Kristen Upton ’18 is taking a gap year before using her most recent honor, the Maryland Association of College Directors of Athletics (MACDA) scholarship, towards medical school — if, that is, doing cancer research at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) can be considered a gap year.
  • Biology students conduct research on quarry life

    Neither snow nor freezing temps stops Biology students’ pursuit of research

    Less than two weeks after a late March nor’easter dumped more than a foot of snow on campus, McDaniel juniors Taylor Bauman and Garrett Gregoire went fishing in the nearby Haines Branch Creek near the Lehigh Cement Company quarry in Union Bridge, Md.
  • Rising Senior Eli Williams Lands Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship

    Eli Williams of Mountain Top, Pa., a senior chemistry major at McDaniel College, has been awarded a National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF). Williams is spending 11 weeks this summer at the Institute for Bioscience and Biotechnology Research in Rockville, Md., working alongside chemists Dr. Jeffrey Hudgens, Dr. Ioannis Karageorgos, and Dr. Kyle Anderson in the biomolecular measurement division conducting research on the dynamical structure of proteins and glycoproteins. Williams is a member of the college’s Honors program and Green Terror Programs. He has served as vice president of the Gamma Sigma Epsilon national chemistry honor society and was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa national honor society.
  • 2019 graduate Brittany Sears

    Class of 2019: Brittany Sears

    A first-generation college student, Brittany Sears is a single mom of a 4-year-old little girl, worked two jobs while attending McDaniel full time and was diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome later in life. She earned Dean’s list each semester and was inducted into three different honor societies and, during her senior year, presented her research at the Eastern Psychological Association Conference in New York.
  • Religious Studies professor Brad Stoddard with students presenting on Religion and Race at national conference

    Students present panel on religion and race at academic conference

    Weaving their papers together with the common thread of religion and race, three McDaniel students created and recently presented a panel at the regional meeting of the American Academy of Religion in New Jersey.