TONIGHT: Girls Fight Back at Dinner Presentation
It's Ladies Night only at a dinner and presentation on crime prevention that will be held from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, March 12 at the UC Event Pavilion. National speaker and self defense instructor Erin Weed will hold a lecture and workshop as part of the Safe Spring Break programming sponsored by the UC Wellness Center. The dinner and lecture are free and open to all female members of the UC community.
Erin Weed is the founder of the organization Girls Fight Back, which works to give women the intuition, motivation and skills to protect themselves against crime. Weed, a certified personal trainer through the National Academy of Sports Medicine, founded the program after a sorority sister was attacked and murdered in her own apartment.
Kirsten Lupinski, director of the UC Wellness Center, says the program has a strong emphasis on prevention and intuition and concentrates on the value of being strong in mind, body and spirit.
For more information on the dinner and program, contact the UC Wellness Center at (513) 556-6124.
Related Stories
A year after Niger's dramatic coup
![ABC News logo](/content/dam/refresh/uc-news/news-icons/dark/abc-news.png)
July 26, 2024
UC School of Public and International Affairs Associate Professor Alexander Thurston tells ABC News that Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso will face difficult times in the wake of armed conflicts.
UC global health expert hones leadership skills as Fulbright...
July 26, 2024
The University of Cincinnati’s Michelle Burbage worked as a Fulbright Specialist in Tbilisi, Georgia, leading workshops and hands-on activities to build public global health research programs.
Advocates working to get ‘PICS’ named a public health crisis
![Spectrum News logo](/content/dam/refresh/uc-news/news-icons/dark/spectrum-news.png)
July 26, 2024
Spectrum News and WVXU highlighted the research partnership of the University of Cincinnati's Rachael Nolan and community advocate Chazidy Robinson who are working to raise awareness and recognition of post-incarceration syndrome.