Indulge with the Black Student Union and Black Explosion
UB’s Black Student Union (BSU) made it its mission to showcase black excellence through art, music, dancing and fashion at the Black Explosion fashion show.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Spectrum's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
89 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
UB’s Black Student Union (BSU) made it its mission to showcase black excellence through art, music, dancing and fashion at the Black Explosion fashion show.
Gregory Dimitriadis was never too busy to help his students, according to Kushal Bhardwaj.
For those who can’t decide between a Hawaiian pizza and a garlic-flavored souvlaki wrap, Jack Adly has given them both.
We’ve all done it: Walked seamlessly down the crowded spine with our eyes glued to our phones. “Oops, excuse me, sorry.”
Syllabus week is just about over, which means the lines at Tim Hortons and Starbucks will only get longer. I am not one of those people you’ll see in line.
Julian Chinana recalls carrying a dead body on his back while stranded in the mountains of Afghanistan.
In high school, Nnabugwu Ohia-Enyia, a Bronx native, was in the “wrong place at the wrong time.” He got into a fight and was detained for a night by the police.
I downloaded the Yik Yak app on my phone in October. At first, I thought it was entertaining and a good way to waste time before class started. Reading about people’s random hookups in the lecture halls and everyone’s drunk stories was funny at first, but within a matter of days I was disgusted with some of the things I was reading.
Alana Barricks isn’t afraid to admit she is the person on Facebook “everyone hates.”
As Lady Gaga so expertly puts it, “I’m the spirit of my hair / it’s all the glory that I bare.” Hair plays a crucial part in many people’s individuality.
After being diagnosed with melanoma – the deadliest form of skin cancer – at 18 years old, Anastasia Harisis turned to what some may deem a nontraditional outlet to raise awareness.
UB’s Dazzlers and cheerleaders may both be wielding pom poms at football games, but that doesn’t mean the university views the two groups in the same light.
African Student Association fused music, dancing and fashion into one big cultural circus.
On-campus students clamoring for what many consider the “original chicken wing” can now get their Anchor Bar fix without driving downtown.
There aren’t many English classes that allow you to sit back, eat popcorn and watch movies on the big screen once a week.
Goldfish in plastic bags became new members of some families this weekend as students tried their hand at games of luck or chance at The Student Association Carnival.
Living a healthy lifestyle doesn’t mean you have to toss away the pizza and chew on celery sticks. It’s all about balance.
What was once a plot of grass will soon be a flourishing garden dedicated to remembering and honoring victims and survivors of domestic violence.
What was once a plot of grass will soon be a flourishing garden dedicated to remembering and honoring victims and survivors of domestic violence.
Katherine Rizzone led students through their first experience at an art museum. She held earth science labs outdoors. She watched one of her students score his first-ever goal on the soccer field.