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CAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI Here’s another very scary and very possible story: Leading AI experts say there’s a 5% chance that artificial general intelligence, or AGI, will cause a human extinction-level disaster. There was a time when the major concern with AI safety had been the one evil superintelligence, reflected in movies like “The Terminator,” “The Matrix RESTORATIVE JUSTICE ISN'T ALWAYS JUST Restorative justice is like employer-sponsored arbitration. It isn’t a means to help the most vulnerable person in the room. Instead, it’s a way for the community to feel better about not taking action to prevent the incident from happening, and therefore validate inaction in the event of future assaults. I was raised to be a goodliberal
A LOOK INTO ROCHESTER’S HISTORICAL JAZZ SCENE Squeezer’s (1946-1955) was one of Rochester’s earliest well-known clubs. Located in High Falls, the venue attracted many Kodak workers and hosted musicians such as composer Duke Ellington and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Another significant Rochester jazz venue was the Ridge Crest Inn (1953-1963). Even though this Irondequoit club wasjust a
THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH The Italian humanist writer published “The Decameron” in the immediate wake of the plague — 1353, to be exact — and it immediately became a literary classic. The collection depicts 10 Florentine socialites sheltering in a hidden garden outside the city, waiting out the plague’s aftermath and sharing stories, one each dayfor each
THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC The military draft is overtly problematic. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Megan Browne. February 17, 2020. Up until a few weeks ago, any time I decided to waste hours on TikTok, I would find at least 10 videos about WWIII memes and the draft in general. These jokes were in response to the killing of Iranian general Qassim Suleimani, andtensions
SHOULD WAKANDA SHARE ITS VIBRANIUM? JUST ASK UR DEBATE The debate, held Saturday, Oct. 20, focused on whether Wakanda, the fictional nation from the film, should share its vibranium — the fictional metal that allows the country to make notable advances in technology. About 15 attended the debate. Most were returning members and e-board of UR Debate Union, with two judges from the Humanities 'THE VAGINA MONOLGUES' IS UNCOMFORTABLE AND IMPORTANT At the College Feminists–sponsored production of Eve Ensler’s play “The Vagina Monologues,” which was performed on Feb. 2 in Strong Auditorium, it was definitely a relief to hear stories about all the various problems associated with vaginas because people don’t talk about it enough; it’s great to feel normal about all theCAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI Here’s another very scary and very possible story: Leading AI experts say there’s a 5% chance that artificial general intelligence, or AGI, will cause a human extinction-level disaster. There was a time when the major concern with AI safety had been the one evil superintelligence, reflected in movies like “The Terminator,” “The Matrix RESTORATIVE JUSTICE ISN'T ALWAYS JUST Restorative justice is like employer-sponsored arbitration. It isn’t a means to help the most vulnerable person in the room. Instead, it’s a way for the community to feel better about not taking action to prevent the incident from happening, and therefore validate inaction in the event of future assaults. I was raised to be a goodliberal
A LOOK INTO ROCHESTER’S HISTORICAL JAZZ SCENE Squeezer’s (1946-1955) was one of Rochester’s earliest well-known clubs. Located in High Falls, the venue attracted many Kodak workers and hosted musicians such as composer Duke Ellington and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Another significant Rochester jazz venue was the Ridge Crest Inn (1953-1963). Even though this Irondequoit club wasjust a
THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH The Italian humanist writer published “The Decameron” in the immediate wake of the plague — 1353, to be exact — and it immediately became a literary classic. The collection depicts 10 Florentine socialites sheltering in a hidden garden outside the city, waiting out the plague’s aftermath and sharing stories, one each dayfor each
THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC The military draft is overtly problematic. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Megan Browne. February 17, 2020. Up until a few weeks ago, any time I decided to waste hours on TikTok, I would find at least 10 videos about WWIII memes and the draft in general. These jokes were in response to the killing of Iranian general Qassim Suleimani, andtensions
SHOULD WAKANDA SHARE ITS VIBRANIUM? JUST ASK UR DEBATE The debate, held Saturday, Oct. 20, focused on whether Wakanda, the fictional nation from the film, should share its vibranium — the fictional metal that allows the country to make notable advances in technology. About 15 attended the debate. Most were returning members and e-board of UR Debate Union, with two judges from the Humanities 'THE VAGINA MONOLGUES' IS UNCOMFORTABLE AND IMPORTANT At the College Feminists–sponsored production of Eve Ensler’s play “The Vagina Monologues,” which was performed on Feb. 2 in Strong Auditorium, it was definitely a relief to hear stories about all the various problems associated with vaginas because people don’t talk about it enough; it’s great to feel normal about all the MY PLEA TO YOU: GET VACCINATED My plea to you: Get vaccinated. I got my COVID-19 vaccination last Thursday at Strong Memorial Hospital. Conveniently, the University spammed my email with six messages telling me that I (and everyone else in the school) was eligible to schedule a vaccine appointment. To appease my crippling needle phobia, I decided to get Johnson &Johnson’s
IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made EMAIL FROM ADMIN: STUDENTS MUST GET POSITIVE COVID-19 TEST Email from admin: Students must get positive COVID-19 test for the fall. The following text is copied and pasted from a University-wide email sent out at 4:20 a.m. on this past D-Day (Friday, Apr. 30). It has come to the administration’s attention that many University students are distraught about the COVID-19 vaccine requirement for the WHY THE TRUTH IS SO HARD TO FIND Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. THE TRUTH HAS A LIBERAL BIAS The truth has a liberal bias. After the mass shooting in El Paso this August, which left 22 dead and 24 injured, the attacker’s so-called manifesto surfaced online. The document was a directionless rant against immigrants and Latinx people, and that parroted far-right rhetoric warning of a “Hispanic invasion,” and white people being LAKE ONTARIO: SHOCKINGLY BEREFT OF CRABS Lake Ontario: shockingly bereft of crabs. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. A man and his fish (as it was always meant to be). By Ethan Busch Publisher. February 07, 2021. Coming from Baltimore, I’m a southerner at heart. Baltimore definitely gets snow, but it’s nothing like the bay freezes. We also spend more time crabbing thanfishing.
ARTHUR SATZ: VISIONARY OF THE HUMANITIES Arthur Satz: Visionary of the humanities. Earlier this month, UR announced the largest-ever endowed gift for the Humanities from alum Arthur Satz ‘51. Satz, who passed away two years ago at 89 years old, left the gift through his estate. According to Senior Associate Vice President of Advancement Jack Kreckel, large estates often takeat
‘PET SOUNDS’ IS A TESTAMENT TO THE VULNERABILITY OF On a first listen, “Pet Sounds” may seem simply like a positive piece of art. The Boys sweetly harmonize together on most songs, the instrumentation is bright and diverse, and many of the melodies themselves sound upbeat. However, under this sweet veneer are lyrics about the fear of growing up, not belonging in your own skin, and theloss
A DEFINITIVE RANKING OF AMERICAN HOLIDAYS A definitive ranking of American holidays. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Mattie Martin-Olenski Social Media Editor. November 10, 2019. Because someone has to advocate that the end of Daylight Saving Time should be a celebrated holiday, and I guess that person is me. Election Day. I cannot stress this enough: Vote in the 2020 presidential election. UNPAID INTERNSHIPS AREN'T ALWAYS WORTH IT Part of me thinks the internship wasn’t that worth it for the benefits I got back. Part of the reason I took the internship is that I didn’t want to be a couch potato over the summer. There is an undeniable culture that says “running yourself into the ground is the only indication of a hardworking student,” and it doesn’t goaway when
CAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI Here’s another very scary and very possible story: Leading AI experts say there’s a 5% chance that artificial general intelligence, or AGI, will cause a human extinction-level disaster. There was a time when the major concern with AI safety had been the one evil superintelligence, reflected in movies like “The Terminator,” “The Matrix RESTORATIVE JUSTICE ISN'T ALWAYS JUST Restorative justice is like employer-sponsored arbitration. It isn’t a means to help the most vulnerable person in the room. Instead, it’s a way for the community to feel better about not taking action to prevent the incident from happening, and therefore validate inaction in the event of future assaults. I was raised to be a goodliberal
A LOOK INTO ROCHESTER’S HISTORICAL JAZZ SCENE Squeezer’s (1946-1955) was one of Rochester’s earliest well-known clubs. Located in High Falls, the venue attracted many Kodak workers and hosted musicians such as composer Duke Ellington and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Another significant Rochester jazz venue was the Ridge Crest Inn (1953-1963). Even though this Irondequoit club wasjust a
THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH The Italian humanist writer published “The Decameron” in the immediate wake of the plague — 1353, to be exact — and it immediately became a literary classic. The collection depicts 10 Florentine socialites sheltering in a hidden garden outside the city, waiting out the plague’s aftermath and sharing stories, one each dayfor each
THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC The military draft is overtly problematic. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Megan Browne. February 17, 2020. Up until a few weeks ago, any time I decided to waste hours on TikTok, I would find at least 10 videos about WWIII memes and the draft in general. These jokes were in response to the killing of Iranian general Qassim Suleimani, andtensions
SHOULD WAKANDA SHARE ITS VIBRANIUM? JUST ASK UR DEBATE The debate, held Saturday, Oct. 20, focused on whether Wakanda, the fictional nation from the film, should share its vibranium — the fictional metal that allows the country to make notable advances in technology. About 15 attended the debate. Most were returning members and e-board of UR Debate Union, with two judges from the Humanities 'THE VAGINA MONOLGUES' IS UNCOMFORTABLE AND IMPORTANT At the College Feminists–sponsored production of Eve Ensler’s play “The Vagina Monologues,” which was performed on Feb. 2 in Strong Auditorium, it was definitely a relief to hear stories about all the various problems associated with vaginas because people don’t talk about it enough; it’s great to feel normal about all theCAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI Here’s another very scary and very possible story: Leading AI experts say there’s a 5% chance that artificial general intelligence, or AGI, will cause a human extinction-level disaster. There was a time when the major concern with AI safety had been the one evil superintelligence, reflected in movies like “The Terminator,” “The Matrix RESTORATIVE JUSTICE ISN'T ALWAYS JUST Restorative justice is like employer-sponsored arbitration. It isn’t a means to help the most vulnerable person in the room. Instead, it’s a way for the community to feel better about not taking action to prevent the incident from happening, and therefore validate inaction in the event of future assaults. I was raised to be a goodliberal
A LOOK INTO ROCHESTER’S HISTORICAL JAZZ SCENE Squeezer’s (1946-1955) was one of Rochester’s earliest well-known clubs. Located in High Falls, the venue attracted many Kodak workers and hosted musicians such as composer Duke Ellington and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Another significant Rochester jazz venue was the Ridge Crest Inn (1953-1963). Even though this Irondequoit club wasjust a
THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH The Italian humanist writer published “The Decameron” in the immediate wake of the plague — 1353, to be exact — and it immediately became a literary classic. The collection depicts 10 Florentine socialites sheltering in a hidden garden outside the city, waiting out the plague’s aftermath and sharing stories, one each dayfor each
THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC The military draft is overtly problematic. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Megan Browne. February 17, 2020. Up until a few weeks ago, any time I decided to waste hours on TikTok, I would find at least 10 videos about WWIII memes and the draft in general. These jokes were in response to the killing of Iranian general Qassim Suleimani, andtensions
SHOULD WAKANDA SHARE ITS VIBRANIUM? JUST ASK UR DEBATE The debate, held Saturday, Oct. 20, focused on whether Wakanda, the fictional nation from the film, should share its vibranium — the fictional metal that allows the country to make notable advances in technology. About 15 attended the debate. Most were returning members and e-board of UR Debate Union, with two judges from the Humanities 'THE VAGINA MONOLGUES' IS UNCOMFORTABLE AND IMPORTANT At the College Feminists–sponsored production of Eve Ensler’s play “The Vagina Monologues,” which was performed on Feb. 2 in Strong Auditorium, it was definitely a relief to hear stories about all the various problems associated with vaginas because people don’t talk about it enough; it’s great to feel normal about all the MY PLEA TO YOU: GET VACCINATED My plea to you: Get vaccinated. I got my COVID-19 vaccination last Thursday at Strong Memorial Hospital. Conveniently, the University spammed my email with six messages telling me that I (and everyone else in the school) was eligible to schedule a vaccine appointment. To appease my crippling needle phobia, I decided to get Johnson &Johnson’s
IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made EMAIL FROM ADMIN: STUDENTS MUST GET POSITIVE COVID-19 TEST Email from admin: Students must get positive COVID-19 test for the fall. The following text is copied and pasted from a University-wide email sent out at 4:20 a.m. on this past D-Day (Friday, Apr. 30). It has come to the administration’s attention that many University students are distraught about the COVID-19 vaccine requirement for the WHY THE TRUTH IS SO HARD TO FIND Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. THE TRUTH HAS A LIBERAL BIAS The truth has a liberal bias. After the mass shooting in El Paso this August, which left 22 dead and 24 injured, the attacker’s so-called manifesto surfaced online. The document was a directionless rant against immigrants and Latinx people, and that parroted far-right rhetoric warning of a “Hispanic invasion,” and white people being LAKE ONTARIO: SHOCKINGLY BEREFT OF CRABS Lake Ontario: shockingly bereft of crabs. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. A man and his fish (as it was always meant to be). By Ethan Busch Publisher. February 07, 2021. Coming from Baltimore, I’m a southerner at heart. Baltimore definitely gets snow, but it’s nothing like the bay freezes. We also spend more time crabbing thanfishing.
ARTHUR SATZ: VISIONARY OF THE HUMANITIES Arthur Satz: Visionary of the humanities. Earlier this month, UR announced the largest-ever endowed gift for the Humanities from alum Arthur Satz ‘51. Satz, who passed away two years ago at 89 years old, left the gift through his estate. According to Senior Associate Vice President of Advancement Jack Kreckel, large estates often takeat
‘PET SOUNDS’ IS A TESTAMENT TO THE VULNERABILITY OF On a first listen, “Pet Sounds” may seem simply like a positive piece of art. The Boys sweetly harmonize together on most songs, the instrumentation is bright and diverse, and many of the melodies themselves sound upbeat. However, under this sweet veneer are lyrics about the fear of growing up, not belonging in your own skin, and theloss
A DEFINITIVE RANKING OF AMERICAN HOLIDAYS A definitive ranking of American holidays. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Mattie Martin-Olenski Social Media Editor. November 10, 2019. Because someone has to advocate that the end of Daylight Saving Time should be a celebrated holiday, and I guess that person is me. Election Day. I cannot stress this enough: Vote in the 2020 presidential election. UNPAID INTERNSHIPS AREN'T ALWAYS WORTH IT Part of me thinks the internship wasn’t that worth it for the benefits I got back. Part of the reason I took the internship is that I didn’t want to be a couch potato over the summer. There is an undeniable culture that says “running yourself into the ground is the only indication of a hardworking student,” and it doesn’t goaway when
CAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. MY PLEA TO YOU: GET VACCINATED My plea to you: Get vaccinated. I got my COVID-19 vaccination last Thursday at Strong Memorial Hospital. Conveniently, the University spammed my email with six messages telling me that I (and everyone else in the school) was eligible to schedule a vaccine appointment. To appease my crippling needle phobia, I decided to get Johnson &Johnson’s
EMAIL FROM ADMIN: STUDENTS MUST GET POSITIVE COVID-19 TEST Email from admin: Students must get positive COVID-19 test for the fall. The following text is copied and pasted from a University-wide email sent out at 4:20 a.m. on this past D-Day (Friday, Apr. 30). It has come to the administration’s attention that many University students are distraught about the COVID-19 vaccine requirement for the IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made HOW MY ALLERGIES MADE ME FREE How my allergies made me free. Courtesy Bridget Tokiwa. By Kylah Rendell. May 02, 2021. When I first heard from my doctor that I was allergic to timothy and orchard hay, it weighed pretty heavily on my mind. I was a rambunctious kid growing up, running and tumbling around big, open fields and playing with the animals on my friend’s farm. DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI Here’s another very scary and very possible story: Leading AI experts say there’s a 5% chance that artificial general intelligence, or AGI, will cause a human extinction-level disaster. There was a time when the major concern with AI safety had been the one evil superintelligence, reflected in movies like “The Terminator,” “The Matrix LAKE ONTARIO: SHOCKINGLY BEREFT OF CRABS Lake Ontario: shockingly bereft of crabs. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. A man and his fish (as it was always meant to be). By Ethan Busch Publisher. February 07, 2021. Coming from Baltimore, I’m a southerner at heart. Baltimore definitely gets snow, but it’s nothing like the bay freezes. We also spend more time crabbing thanfishing.
THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. A COMPREHENSIVE BREAKDOWN OF GREEK LIFE DUES The dues of a Greek life organization can be broken down into three categories: national conference dues, national chapter dues, and local chapter dues. The NPC is the umbrella UR’s Panhellenic sororities fall under. The UR Panhellenic Association is a board that represents 26 sororities nationally, eight of which are at UR. THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC The military draft is overtly problematic. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Megan Browne. February 17, 2020. Up until a few weeks ago, any time I decided to waste hours on TikTok, I would find at least 10 videos about WWIII memes and the draft in general. These jokes were in response to the killing of Iranian general Qassim Suleimani, andtensions
CAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. MY PLEA TO YOU: GET VACCINATED My plea to you: Get vaccinated. I got my COVID-19 vaccination last Thursday at Strong Memorial Hospital. Conveniently, the University spammed my email with six messages telling me that I (and everyone else in the school) was eligible to schedule a vaccine appointment. To appease my crippling needle phobia, I decided to get Johnson &Johnson’s
EMAIL FROM ADMIN: STUDENTS MUST GET POSITIVE COVID-19 TEST Email from admin: Students must get positive COVID-19 test for the fall. The following text is copied and pasted from a University-wide email sent out at 4:20 a.m. on this past D-Day (Friday, Apr. 30). It has come to the administration’s attention that many University students are distraught about the COVID-19 vaccine requirement for the IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made HOW MY ALLERGIES MADE ME FREE How my allergies made me free. Courtesy Bridget Tokiwa. By Kylah Rendell. May 02, 2021. When I first heard from my doctor that I was allergic to timothy and orchard hay, it weighed pretty heavily on my mind. I was a rambunctious kid growing up, running and tumbling around big, open fields and playing with the animals on my friend’s farm. DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI Here’s another very scary and very possible story: Leading AI experts say there’s a 5% chance that artificial general intelligence, or AGI, will cause a human extinction-level disaster. There was a time when the major concern with AI safety had been the one evil superintelligence, reflected in movies like “The Terminator,” “The Matrix LAKE ONTARIO: SHOCKINGLY BEREFT OF CRABS Lake Ontario: shockingly bereft of crabs. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. A man and his fish (as it was always meant to be). By Ethan Busch Publisher. February 07, 2021. Coming from Baltimore, I’m a southerner at heart. Baltimore definitely gets snow, but it’s nothing like the bay freezes. We also spend more time crabbing thanfishing.
THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. A COMPREHENSIVE BREAKDOWN OF GREEK LIFE DUES The dues of a Greek life organization can be broken down into three categories: national conference dues, national chapter dues, and local chapter dues. The NPC is the umbrella UR’s Panhellenic sororities fall under. The UR Panhellenic Association is a board that represents 26 sororities nationally, eight of which are at UR. THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC The military draft is overtly problematic. Courtesy Jane Pritchard. By Megan Browne. February 17, 2020. Up until a few weeks ago, any time I decided to waste hours on TikTok, I would find at least 10 videos about WWIII memes and the draft in general. These jokes were in response to the killing of Iranian general Qassim Suleimani, andtensions
THE EQUALITY ACT ISN'T THE FREE-FOR-ALL CONSERVATIVES The Equality Act isn’t the free-for-all conservatives claim. Courtesy Bridget Tokiwa. By Mattie Martin-Olenski Social Media Editor. May 02, 2021. As transgender individuals face mounting attacks on their basic rights, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Equality Act at the end of February 2021. Passage of the Equality Actwould
RESTORATIVE JUSTICE ISN'T ALWAYS JUST Restorative justice is like employer-sponsored arbitration. It isn’t a means to help the most vulnerable person in the room. Instead, it’s a way for the community to feel better about not taking action to prevent the incident from happening, and therefore validate inaction in the event of future assaults. I was raised to be a goodliberal
IS DIGITAL ART ‘REAL ART?’ Two weeks ago, an article in the New York Times caught my attention: a feature about a piece of digital art which had sold for a whopping $69 million. The artist, who goes by Beeple, made a collage of 5,000 of the digital artworks that he’s been posting to the internet daily since 2007. The most unusual thing about the piece, called “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” was that Beeple made HOW MY ALLERGIES MADE ME FREE How my allergies made me free. Courtesy Bridget Tokiwa. By Kylah Rendell. May 02, 2021. When I first heard from my doctor that I was allergic to timothy and orchard hay, it weighed pretty heavily on my mind. I was a rambunctious kid growing up, running and tumbling around big, open fields and playing with the animals on my friend’s farm. A LOOK INTO ROCHESTER’S HISTORICAL JAZZ SCENE Squeezer’s (1946-1955) was one of Rochester’s earliest well-known clubs. Located in High Falls, the venue attracted many Kodak workers and hosted musicians such as composer Duke Ellington and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Another significant Rochester jazz venue was the Ridge Crest Inn (1953-1963). Even though this Irondequoit club wasjust a
A COMPREHENSIVE BREAKDOWN OF GREEK LIFE DUES The dues of a Greek life organization can be broken down into three categories: national conference dues, national chapter dues, and local chapter dues. The NPC is the umbrella UR’s Panhellenic sororities fall under. The UR Panhellenic Association is a board that represents 26 sororities nationally, eight of which are at UR. CT COOKS: LATE-NIGHT VEGGIE TALES The concoction is cooked at 375 F for 20-30 minutes, during which you move the vegetables around in 10 minute increments. This works on just about any vegetable you can roast. Plus, it’s so good it’s been proven to cause cravings. Here, I offer a little sage (ha) advice: I know many Gen Z’ers got caught up in the craze surrounding Trader BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH The Italian humanist writer published “The Decameron” in the immediate wake of the plague — 1353, to be exact — and it immediately became a literary classic. The collection depicts 10 Florentine socialites sheltering in a hidden garden outside the city, waiting out the plague’s aftermath and sharing stories, one each dayfor each
THE TRUTH HAS A LIBERAL BIAS The truth has a liberal bias. After the mass shooting in El Paso this August, which left 22 dead and 24 injured, the attacker’s so-called manifesto surfaced online. The document was a directionless rant against immigrants and Latinx people, and that parroted far-right rhetoric warning of a “Hispanic invasion,” and white people being 'THE VAGINA MONOLGUES' IS UNCOMFORTABLE AND IMPORTANT At the College Feminists–sponsored production of Eve Ensler’s play “The Vagina Monologues,” which was performed on Feb. 2 in Strong Auditorium, it was definitely a relief to hear stories about all the various problems associated with vaginas because people don’t talk about it enough; it’s great to feel normal about all theCAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. MY PLEA TO YOU: GET VACCINATED Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. RESTORATIVE JUSTICE ISN'T ALWAYS JUST I failed my restorative justice workshop. I’m a good person, I swear. I care about racial justice. I believe police operate with minimal accountability and that murder is a crime regardless of whether the murderer is wearing a uniform. DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI This article contains major spoilers for the game “Tacoma.” “Hey, ODIN? Can you tell me the average time has taken to send an evac crew to investigate in situations like this?” asks Andrew Dagyab, a botanist in the 2017 game “Tacoma,” set in the titular lunar transfer station which is quickly losing oxygen.. The AI assistant, ODIN, is the crew’s only lifeline. WHY THE TRUTH IS SO HARD TO FIND The best way to see truth is as a rainbow of grays. Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. A LOOK INTO ROCHESTER’S HISTORICAL JAZZ SCENE Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH Many of us have not seen an outbreak of infectious disease on the global scale of the novel coronavirus during our lifetimes. While the closest comparison in recent history is the HIV/AIDS pandemic, a seasonal respiratory illness causing these levels of mortality, government response, and panic is practically unheard of in our time. THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. 'THE VAGINA MONOLGUES' IS UNCOMFORTABLE AND IMPORTANT Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org.CAMPUS TIMES
Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. MY PLEA TO YOU: GET VACCINATED Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. RESTORATIVE JUSTICE ISN'T ALWAYS JUST I failed my restorative justice workshop. I’m a good person, I swear. I care about racial justice. I believe police operate with minimal accountability and that murder is a crime regardless of whether the murderer is wearing a uniform. DISASTER PREVENTION LESSONS FROM AI This article contains major spoilers for the game “Tacoma.” “Hey, ODIN? Can you tell me the average time has taken to send an evac crew to investigate in situations like this?” asks Andrew Dagyab, a botanist in the 2017 game “Tacoma,” set in the titular lunar transfer station which is quickly losing oxygen.. The AI assistant, ODIN, is the crew’s only lifeline. WHY THE TRUTH IS SO HARD TO FIND The best way to see truth is as a rainbow of grays. Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. A LOOK INTO ROCHESTER’S HISTORICAL JAZZ SCENE Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. THE MILITARY DRAFT IS OVERTLY PROBLEMATIC Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH Many of us have not seen an outbreak of infectious disease on the global scale of the novel coronavirus during our lifetimes. While the closest comparison in recent history is the HIV/AIDS pandemic, a seasonal respiratory illness causing these levels of mortality, government response, and panic is practically unheard of in our time. THE ROLE OF FACEBOOK MODERATORS DURING A PANDEMIC The internet is so ingrained in our daily lives that we often take it for granted. But when the pandemic forced most students off campus last semester, and our campus got converted to cyberspace, the internet allowed a now-worldwide University community to remain close. 'THE VAGINA MONOLGUES' IS UNCOMFORTABLE AND IMPORTANT Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. MY PLEA TO YOU: GET VACCINATED Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. HOW MY ALLERGIES MADE ME FREE Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. WHY THE TRUTH IS SO HARD TO FIND Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. CT COOKS: LATE-NIGHT VEGGIE TALES After two and a half semesters of Zoom-education, UR students are ready for a change of pace. To be clear, UR students are no stranger to burnout, but it has been particularly different this past year due to the academic conditions, global pandemic, and a challenging socialclimate.
A COMPREHENSIVE BREAKDOWN OF GREEK LIFE DUES Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. MY GROWTH STARTED WITH A SENTENCE Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org. BOCCACCIO'S DECAMERON: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK DEATH Many of us have not seen an outbreak of infectious disease on the global scale of the novel coronavirus during our lifetimes. While the closest comparison in recent history is the HIV/AIDS pandemic, a seasonal respiratory illness causing these levels of mortality, government response, and panic is practically unheard of in our time. THE TRUTH HAS A LIBERAL BIAS After the mass shooting in El Paso this August, which left 22 dead and 24 injured, the attacker’s so-called manifesto surfaced online. The document was a directionless rant against immigrants and Latinx people, and that parroted far-right rhetoric warning of a “Hispanic invasion,” and white people being “replaced” as the racial majority in the United States. This idea, frequently BUFFALO RAP GROUP GRISELDA ARE BRINGING REALITY BACK TO Rapper Westside Gunn once said, “It’s never sunny in Buffalo.”Now, his rap group and record label Griselda are bringing that quote to life. The group is run by Gunn, his longtime friend Benny the Butcher, and his brother Conway the Machine. ASK US: WHAT DO YOU THE COLORS AND STRIPES MEAN ON Welcome to the new campustimes.org. The Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org.__ __
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Protests
ROCHESTER PROTESTORS USE THE UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE OF ART IN PROJECT AIRAND RSO
By Alex Prideaux on Nov 22, 2020 Rochester protests are transformed with the presence of art through the Rochester Street Orchestra and Project AIR.Campus
THIS IS A RUSH RHEES LIBRARY APPRECIATION POST By Ethan Busch on Nov 22, 2020 I am no architecture student, but the blend of Doric columns — borrowed from classical Greece — with the red brick of the mid-20th century makes it feel like a modern temple.Liv on the Edge
LIV ON THE EDGE: “SABRINA THE TEENAGE WITCH” AND OTHER THOUGHTS By Olivia Alger on Nov 22, 2020 The show's idea of another world, and other such innocent musings, take me away from the current state of the world and into another one — a cute, peculiar, early 2000s world.COVID-19
RUNNER RESPONDS TO STUDENT CONCERNS OVER LUNCH By Hailie Higgins on Nov 22, 2020 On Monday, Nov. 16, 15 students attended a Zoom lunch hour with Jeffrey Runner, Dean of the College in Arts, Sciences, and Engineering, to air grievances and ask questions about whatever theywanted.
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BUY CT CUPS!
By Stella Rae Wilkins on Nov 22, 2020 From the Humor Section: Its flimsy build also makes it easy to fold to get to those hard-to-reach areas, making it great for watering plants and performing your routine enema. ------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------NEWS
-------------------------kearns center
STUDENTS REFLECT ON UR’S MENTAL HEALTH SUPPORT By Haven Worley on Nov 22, 2020 The increased difficulty of the semester in addition to online classes, COVID-19 precautions, and Zoom fatigue, has made burnout a critical issue for many students — especially the FGLI/POCcommunity.
-------------------------Academic Honesty
REFORMS PASSED TO THE BOARD ON ACADEMIC HONESTY By Sanghamitra Subba on Nov 22, 2020 The main reform includes a change to the student and faculty representation. Previously, the Hearing Board consisted of three professors and two student representatives. The Board now consists of two professors and two student representatives. -------------------------evictions
CITY-WIDE TENANT UNION CALLS FOR MAYOR TO SIGN EXECUTIVE ORDER TO HALTEVICTIONS
By Henry Litsky and Alex Prideaux on Nov 22, 2020 Organizers were gathered outside of 405 Brown St. where Chris Green, a father of two daughters, is currently fighting an eviction from his home of four years.FEATURES
-------------------------from the archives
FROM THE ARCHIVES: THE VOICES OF THE COLLEGE FOR WOMEN By Michelle Shuai on Nov 22, 2020 Although first shunned by the male students, the first female students were determined to not let their voices go unheard. Through their newspapers, The Cloister Window and Tower Times, the female students documented their livelihood and struggles. -------------------------2020 Election
UR REACTS TO ROCKY ELECTION By Micah Greenberg on Nov 15, 2020 On Nov. 3, millions of people from around the world — including much of the UR community — watched as the results of the American election began to trickle in. But some close states took days to count, causing increased anxiety and anticipation. -------------------------CT Eats
CT EATS: SZECHUAN OPERA HAS ME SINGING ITS PRAISE By Olivia Banc on Nov 15, 2020 In the midst of Rochester's gloominess, I was craving some Chinese food and Szechuan Opera absolutely delivered. Consider me singing for them and, if you try it out, I guarantee you will be, too. -------------------------OPINIONS
-------------------------Editorial Boards
CHEERS AND JEERS: THANKSGIVING EDITION By Editorial Board on Nov 22, 2020 -------------------------Ed Observers
ARGUING IS NOT A LOVE LANGUAGE By Carolyn Richter on Nov 22, 2020 -------------------------Op-Eds
WHY WE PLAY
By Ava Schwartz on Nov 22, 2020PRINT EDITION
Volume - Issue 6
------------------------- -------------------------Trending on campus
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BLM PROTESTERS SHARE MESSAGE WITH UR AT ESCALATING DANIEL PRUDEDEMONSTRATIONS
Sep 7, 2020
2
TITLE IX COORDINATOR MORGAN LEVY RESIGNSNov 2, 2020
3
UR TO FINISH FIRST PLACE IN FORT COMPETITIONSep 20, 2020
4
FROM THE ARCHIVES: ROCHESTER’S ROLE IN THE MANHATTAN PROJECTSep 6, 2020
5
AVENUES FOR STUDENT EXPRESSION ARE DWINDLINGSep 13, 2020
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-------------------------SPORTS
-------------------------Campus Times
SPORTS SECTION ON PAUSE FOR THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE By Hailie Higgins on Nov 8, 2020 Due to a lack of writers, editors, and general interest, as well as COVID-19 disruptions to the normal sports seasons, the Campus Times has decided to discontinue the Sports section. -------------------------COVID-19
COVID-19 IS MAKING ONE OF THE MOST DANGEROUS SPORTS EVEN RISKIER By Ethan Busch on Oct 25, 2020 Social distancing in any setting is only as effective as itspractitioners.
-------------------------Baseball
WITH FOUR TEAMS REMAINING, LOS ANGELES DODGERS FAVORED IN UNUSUAL MLBPLAYOFFS
By James Gunn on Oct 12, 2020 The championships of both the American League and the National League of Major League Baseball began this weekend. Two pairs…CULTURE
-------------------------art
ARTIST TALKS: UR STUDIO ART SENIORS By Sarah Woodams on Nov 22, 2020 Last Wednesday, UR’s 15 Studio Arts seniors gave a virtual talk discussing their past and present artworks and senior theses.… -------------------------Television
‘KIM POSSIBLE’ IS A PERFECT COMEDY FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS By Melanie Earle on Nov 22, 2020 The characters are top-notch, the animation is butter, and the fight scenes are imaginatively and meticulously thought out. -------------------------band
CHECK OUT FOUR ARMENIAN MEN YELLING FOR ARMENIAN RIGHTS! By Jenna Hraki on Nov 15, 2020 System is a group of four Armenian activists, who were activists long before they were artists.HUMOR
-------------------------economics
DISOBEY THE NO-GUEST POLICY AS AN ACT OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE By Megan Browne on Nov 22, 2020 I encourage the rest of campus to follow suit in my noble endeavor to stop the unjust laws governing our campus and really stick it to theman with me.
-------------------------Douglass
CT EATS: DOUGGIE
By Brianna Lindsey on Nov 22, 2020 I found some real delicacies there, and I’m honestly impressed... that I’ve been eating the same three things without ending upcomatose.
-------------------------CDCS
LOVE, LOSS, AND LISTINGS ON UR STUDENT By Alyssa Koh on Nov 22, 2020 If you are one of the many people having issues with scheduling, here is a list of tips and tricks for you to try. Campus Times Serving the University of Rochester community since1873.
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