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Wednesday, April 24, 2024
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CLAUDIA ORNIS


The Spectrum
FEATURES

Healing through activism

Cecilia Brown was 18 years old when she discovered she was pregnant. Brown, then a freshman in college with little money, made a decision that she would grow to regret for the rest of her life: She got an abortion. It happened Nov.


FEATURES

Healing through activism

Cecilia Brown was 18 years old when she discovered she was pregnant. Brown, then a freshman in college with little money, made a decision that she would grow to regret for the rest of her life: She got an abortion. It happened Nov.


FEATURES

Healing through activism

Cecilia Brown was 18 years old when she discovered she was pregnant. Brown, then a freshman in college with little money, made a decision that she would grow to regret for the rest of her life: She got an abortion. It happened Nov.


FEATURES

"Kickboxing, choir and French literature "

Halfway through a Cardio Kickboxing and Toning session in Alumni 75, everyone looks tired - everyone but one woman. With a voice that overwhelms the blaring music in the room, she continues her reps and sings along with the music, seemingly unfazed by the high-intensity workout. This is Ute Inselmann. Inselmann, a Ph.D.


The Spectrum
FEATURES

"UB's Society of Feminists discusses sexuality, sensuality of breasts"

What began as a conversation about "top freedom" and the stigma of not wearing bras morphed into discussions of breastfeeding, nude dancing and prostitution, as students attending a discussion hosted by UB's Society of Feminists grappled with their opinions on society's treatment of breasts. Claire Modica, the president of UB's Society of Feminists and a neuroscience graduate student, moderated the dialogue, which took place Wednesday in the Student Union. "When I see a woman standing nude, there's almost no sexual nature at all," Modica said.


FEATURES

Paranormal activities

Alicia Knauf has always felt surrounded by the supernatural - even before she was born. When Knauf's mother was pregnant, she visited a psychic, who told her the child she was carrying was a "gift from the angels." Knauf's mother always told her there was a bright white light coming from her room at night, which symbolized the "Lady in White" visiting. When Knauf, a sophomore biomedical sciences major, saw the advertisement for UB Paranormal Activity Research Association (PARA) at a club fair her freshman year, she took it as a sign and eagerly joined the group. UB PARA is a club geared toward the education and investigation of paranormal and supernatural activities.


NEWS

Paranormal activities

Alicia Knauf has always felt surrounded by the supernatural - even before she was born. When Knauf's mother was pregnant, she visited a psychic, who told her the child she was carrying was a "gift from the angels." Knauf's mother always told her there was a bright white light coming from her room at night, which symbolized the "Lady in White" visiting. When Knauf, a sophomore biomedical sciences major, saw the advertisement for UB Paranormal Activity Research Association (PARA) at a club fair her freshman year, she took it as a sign and eagerly joined the group. UB PARA is a club geared toward the education and investigation of paranormal and supernatural activities.


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