• Why replacement ‘forever chemicals’ still show up in fish
    3/6/26

    A DoD-funded project will investigate how fluorotelomers — once thought to be safer PFAS alternatives — penetrate zebrafish cells.

  • Welcome home, GSE
    3/6/26

    The Graduate School of Education was officially welcomed back to its original home in Foster Hall last Friday with a special ribbon-cutting at the newly renovated South Campus building.

  • Landmark work joins Rare Books
    3/5/26

    “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave” is considered one of the most significant works in American literary and political history.

  • New app highlights local architecture
    3/4/26

    Designed by UB faculty members Gregory Serweta and Maia Peck, the app brings awareness to overlooked spaces tied to Black history.

  • Remembering longtime SEAS dean George Lee
    3/4/26

    During his 17-year tenure as dean, Lee established the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences as a world-class research and teaching institution.

  • UB to host national artificial intelligence leaders
    3/4/26

    The summit, being held in June, will explore AI’s incredible potential to improve health care, education, the environment and other areas.

  • UB to host Latino Medical Student Association regional conference
    3/4/26

    More than 300 medical students, residents and clinicians from throughout the Northeast are heading to Buffalo for the event.

  • The expanding meaning of toxicity
    3/4/26

    The UB Humanities Institute's annual conference will explore the range of interpretations now associated with toxicity.

  • The challenges of treating chronic pain
    3/3/26

    UB researchers Andrew Rodgers and Jeffrey Lackner co-authored an editorial about a study on how some patients with pain may benefit from exposure to nature.

  • Public programming addresses Love Canal legacy
    3/3/26

    The series of events is presented by the University Archives and GSE in connection with the archives' "Toxic Archives" exhibition.

  • Come together, right now
    3/2/26

    A new UB study shows why live music benefits well-being.

  • Analyzing women’s digital safety
    3/2/26

    The project co-led by Nadine Shaanta Murshid will measure online harassment, financial fraud, relational surveillance and other risks women face.

  • 'Is this a dagger which I see before me…?'

    When University Communications photographer Meredith Forrest Kulwicki visits a class to document its activities, it's always interesting, but not quite as exciting as a combat choreography session! Recently, theatre and dance students gathered to hone their combat skills for their production of "Macbeth," which ran March 5-8. Set in spring 2026, this bold adaptation follows three college students — outsiders facing political and social pressures — who escape into Dungeons & Dragons.

    Published March 13, 2026

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