(left to right) Samira Powell, Zharia Crisp, and Miranda Custer, students at the University of Maryland, smile while promoting Kappa Lambda Xi, a multicultural sorority, on Thursday, February 6th, 2020 at the Second Look Fair at Adele H. Stamp Student Union in College Park, Maryland.
Lawrence Wakefield, student at the University of Maryland, displays different trophies and awards to promote his own club on Thursday, February 6th, 2020 at the Second Look Fair at Adele H. Stamp Student Union in College Park, Maryland.
Grace Yoo, member of Navah, informs students at the University of Maryland students of the Hope Generation on Thursday, February 6th, 2020 at the Second Look Fair at Adele H. Stamp Student Union in College Park, Maryland. Yoo uses colorful poster to grab the attention of anyone who passes by.
Students at the University of Maryland gather to recruit other students into various clubs with an orange balloon theme on Thursday, February 6th, 2020 at the Second Look Fair at Adele H. Stamp Student Union in College Park, Maryland.
Neita Mbuia Joao, writer for Stylus, excitedly promotes the literary journal to any and all passing people on Thursday, February 6th, 2020 at the Second Look Fair at Adele H. Stamp Student Union in College Park, Maryland.
Maryam Mahdi, junior at the University of Maryland, adversities for a computer hacking club on Thursday, February 6th, 2020 at the Second Look Fair at Adele H. Stamp Student Union in College Park, Maryland. The club is called Technica, and it is an all women and non-binary hackathon.
Stephen Coyne, mechanical engineer major at the University of Maryland, hands out fliers for a ballroom dancing club on Thursday, February 6th, 2020 at the Second Look Fair at Adele H. Stamp Student Union in College Park, Maryland. Coyne hopes to bring in a new ground of people interested in ballroom dancing to his club.
(left to right) Leticia Ridley, Gianina K. Lockley, Dr. Melissa Blanco Borelli and Jordan Easley, discuss black feminism among one another on Friday, February 7th, 2020 at the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center in College Park, Maryland. They talk about what black feminism means to them on a panel to an engaged audience of people asking their own questions about black feminism.
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