Meet the new JUSTICE chair: Ashley Kekeisen
Ashley Kekeisen, the newly-named JUSTICE chair for the Undergraduate Student Association (USA), is a firm…
Ashley Kekeisen, the newly-named JUSTICE chair for the Undergraduate Student Association (USA), is a firm…
The Contemporary Writing Series held a virtual live event via Zoom on Tuesday which featured…
By Natalie Faas While the flurry of election season is in full swing, this election…
Officials in charge of the Andrew Bouwhuis Library are seeking student feedback on recent changes…
Professor Eric Gansworth’s new book, “Apple: Skin to the Core,” was chosen for the National…
Buffalo has so many beautiful places that can offer a great hike, here are 5 of the top hiking spots
“While Harris was largely reduced to fending off Pence’s accusations of government takeover … Pence lived up to his surname by being penny wise but pound foolish on the matter.” Read The Griffin’s analysis of Wednesday’s VP Debate.
Opinion Editor Khalil Gordon discusses his struggle with drifting away from his heritage and finding a new identity amidst the chaos of summer 2020. “I remember lying in my bed last semester in Dugan wondering, ‘Why do I feel so empty?’”
Have you been in need of a little break from the monotony of social distancing, Bailey McOwen has found some reprieve in the popular Enneagram and Myers-Briggs online personality tests. Some people claim that these tests are pseudo-science, and McOwen’s ran the experiments to make sure.
After 45 years, Jim McNicolas, a graduate of Canisius College in 1968, was able to get his class ring back from a good samaritan in El Paso, Texas