The Young Americans for Freedom student chapter at the University at Buffalo is hosting an event on March 9 with political commentator, author and media host Michael Knowles. This is a student-chapter event. Student government-sponsored clubs have the ability to invite speakers of their choosing, as long as they follow the laws and guidelines concerning public events on campus.
In message to campus regarding Thursday's scheduled speaking engagement by Michael Knowles, Tripathi says “Hateful and dehumanizing rhetoric is an affront to everything our community embraces.”
Like everyone who works in transplant medicine, Liise Kayler is keenly aware of the challenges and cruel ironies that plague kidney transplantation in general.
Questions of free speech come up all the time at a large university like UB, maybe now as much as ever with issues such as race, gender and religion continuing to polarize the nation.
Brian Hamluk, UB's vice president for student life, said: "We are proud of the way our campus exhibited the values we hold as a university, exercising its right to peacefully express their views."
Internationally recognized clinical researcher and epidemiologist who currently serves as chief science officer of the American Dental Association will join UB May 15.
Kelly Hayes McAlonie to officially launch her book on Louise Blanchard Bethune March 16 at the Hotel Lafayette, the historic building in downtown Buffalo designed by Bethune.
A veritable who’s who of impactful community organizations will be sharing their wisdom on Thursday, March 23, when the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences hosts its first Community Engagement Fair.
A UB physician who specializes in caring for newborns will receive the Physician of the Year Award from The Western New York Perinatal Bereavement Network, Inc. (WNYPBN).
The exhibit is based on the book “Louise Blanchard Bethune: Every Woman Her Own Architect,” by Kelly Hayes McAlonie, the first biography to thoroughly explore Bethune’s life and accomplishments.
Adjaye, known for the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., among other projects, is the first architect to receive a SUNY honorary degree.
UB researchers who study what makes people buy and eat healthy foods are teaming up with Instacart to test nutrition intervention programs for families at higher risk for obesity.
The Haudenosaunee Archive, Resource and Knowledge (HARK) portal represents the next phase of work at UB previously supported by a $175,000 planning grant from the Mellon Foundation in 2021.