Work hard for the money
From DJing to drug dealing, UB students have found more than a few ways to get by financially during the semester. Here's a rundown of some students' odd jobs:
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From DJing to drug dealing, UB students have found more than a few ways to get by financially during the semester. Here's a rundown of some students' odd jobs:
Madison Darling, a junior health and human services major, was covered in mud from head to toe and she loved every second of it.
Madison Darling, a junior health and human services major, was covered in mud from head to toe and she loved every second of it.
On Tuesday, Aug. 20, Eliza Upton-Green, a sophomore linguistics major, opened her email and received dreadful news: For the first time since 1853, a U.S. president was visiting UB, and Upton-Green was not going to be in attendance.
On Monday and Tuesday, members of the UB community protested outside the Student Union because UB Students for Life President Christian Andzel invited the Center for Bio-Ethical Reform to campus, and the group set up graphic images of aborted fetuses.
As attendees slowly piled into Alumni Arena, there was a solemn sense of hope in the air. The crowd remembered those who lost loved ones while honoring those who overcame one of life's hardest battles.
As attendees slowly piled into Alumni Arena, there was a solemn sense of hope in the air. The crowd remembered those who lost loved ones while honoring those who overcame one of life's hardest battles.
UB students are saving lives.
Matthew Faulkner will never remember what happened on March 2, 2009.
The next Mark Zuckerberg or Bill Gates could be at UB.
Last April's Relay For Life event raised approximately $85,000 for cancer research. This year, participants hope to raise $150,000.
After two-and-a-half years of labor and education law, Tiffany Walsh realized it wasn't the career for her.
UB's undergraduate Jewish studies major is scheduled to become a full-fledged department in fall 2013.
Alex Van Horn's view of taxi drivers changed forever one afternoon.
Genderf**k isn't a word most professors use in their class. But professor Christine Varnado wants to eliminate the stigmas surrounding untraditional roles of gender. The term "genderf**k," among with other controversial topics, creates a stimulating discussion.
Maggie Kreuz, a sophomore occupational therapy major, was more than flattered when she logged onto Facebook and saw what an anonymous user had posted about her:
Mr. Movsesian blames his daughter's love of horses on his wife.