Features

Catch em’ all over campus

If there is one thing this summer will be remembered for, it will be the day in early July when Pokémon Go swept the world. Read More

Urban Fellows learn through experience

The program itself began in 2002 when a small group of students wanted to help engage their peers in civil service and community outreach. Read More

College sex: just the basics

In college, talking about sex is almost a daily occurrence, and usually a weekly one in the Campus Times. Read More

Planning for commencement

Rain or shine, about 1,400 undergraduates will graduate in the 166th College Commencement ceremony Sunday morning—at around 40 percent of the cost in previous years. Read More

Brothel rumor busted

As a member of a UR sorority, your housing is relegated to special-interest floors in upperclassmen housing. Read More

Undergrad engineer researches rehab

Senior Mary Bucklin got her start in research the summer before her sophomore year, studying motion analysis and advancing ankle brace technology for patients with posterior tibial tension disorder. Read More

The art of the rejection email

In the process of applying to summer programs, I was given a brisk refresher in the timeless art of the rejection email. Read More

Decadence and depravity in Trump’s Rochester

And there was a great cry in Rochester, such as there has not been before and such as shall never be again, as He ambles to the podium in an ankle-length black coat, clad in a red power tie. He’s more orange than you’d expect, and His hair is more blonde, too. Read More

Small World in the shadows

Small World Food, a worker-cooperative food producer, has been selling their goods at local farmers markets for years, but only recently did it open a retail location, where the small customer base has been a major boon for the emerging business. Read More

Happily ever after

According to the CDC, 2,118,000 people get married every year in the U.S., and 20 to 25 of those occur at the Interfaith Chapel here on campus. You and The One could be one of those few couples who choose to marry on campus. Read More