UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER


The 'University of Rochester' ('UR') is a private, coeducational and nonsectarian research university located in Rochester, New York. The university is one of 62 elected members of the Association of American Universities.
Founded in 1850, UR offers degree programs at the bachelor's, master's, and doctoral levels, as well as in several professional disciplines. Its undergraduate and graduate degree programs in physics, medicine, economics, philosophy, clinical psychology, health and society, religion, political science, nursing, business administration and music are among the best in the nation. The Institute of Optics at the university is also the oldest optics program in the U.S., having granted about half of the optics degrees in the nation.
UR is a highly research oriented institution, hosting numerous centers of research, including the Laboratory for Laser Energetics, which boasts the most powerful ultraviolet laser in the world, and the University of Rochester Medical Center, featuring numerous biomedical and healthcare research facilities. Since 2005, UR with its affiliated Strong Health System, has been the largest employer in the Greater Rochester area.

Contents
History
Administration
Campuses
River Campus
University of Rochester Medical Center
Eastman School of Music
South Campus
Rochester Area Properties
Academics and research
Organization
Rankings
Research
University symbols and traditions
Symbols
Traditions
School song
Student life
Residences
River Campus
Eastman School of Music Campus
URMC and Mount Hope Campuses
South Campus
Students' Association
Athletics
Campus & area transportation
Notable alumni
Nobel laureates
Academia
Performing arts
Government
Literature
Science and technology
Other
Notable faculty
Points of interest
References
External links

History


Statues on the southern side of Rush Rhees Library.
The University of Rochester was founded in 1850 as a Baptist-sponsored institution. The impetus to form the university came primarily from the little town of Hamilton, New York, which has been home to Colgate University since 1819.[4] In 1850, the Baptist Education Society planned to move Colgate University to the city of Rochester, but was halted by legal action. Dissenting Colgate trustees, faculty, and students founded the University of Rochester.
Major growth occurred under the leadership of Rush Rhees, during his 1900-1935 tenure. During this time, George Eastman became a major donor, giving more than $50 million to the university, and the River Campus was established in 1927. The first Ph.D. was awarded in 1925. In 1955, the separate colleges for men and women were merged into The College. In 1958, three new schools were created in engineering, business administration, and education.[5]

Administration


Statue of UR's first president, Martin Brewer Anderson.

The university is headed by a board of trustees, with G. Robert Witmer, Jr. being the chairman.[6] The board appoints the president of the university, currently Joel Seligman, who replaced Thomas H. Jackson on July 1, 2005.
'Presidents of UR'[7]

Martin Brewer Anderson 1853-1888

David Jayne Hill 1889-1896

Benjamin Rush Rhees 1900-1935

Alan Valentine 1935-1950

Cornelis de Kiewiet 1951-1961

W. Allen Wallis 1962-1975

Robert Sproull 1975-1984

Dennis O'Brien 1984-1994

Thomas H. Jackson 1994-2005

Joel Seligman 2005-Present

Campuses


River Campus

The 'River Campus' is the center of the university's academic and administrative activities. It is located in a bend of the Genesee River about 2 miles south of downtown Rochester and covers around 200 acres. It is bounded by Bausch & Lomb Riverside Park, an 18-acre public park along the east bank of the Genesee River.
The River Campus.

The original buildings of the campus were dedicated in 1930. The main academic buildings, designed in the Greek revival style, are centered around the Eastman Quadrangle (generally referred to as the academic quad) which is formed by Rush Rhees Library and Dewey, Bausch & Lomb, Morey, and Lattimore Halls. The Eastman Quad is widely considered the best landscaped area of the university. Rush Rhees Library, the unofficial symbol of the university, is also home to the Hopeman Memorial Carillon, the largest carillon in New York State, featuring 50 bells that chime on the quarter hour. During the summer, the carillon features a recital series in which various artists perform on the instrument.
Wilson Commons student union. Designed by I.M. Pei.

Over the course of the last several decades, other academic buildings have been built south of the Eastman Quad, including Meliora Hall (1972), Hoyt Hall (1962), Harkness Hall (1946), Gavett Hall (dedicated with the Eastman Quad in 1930), and the Hopeman Engineering Building (1963). The southernmost part of the River Campus contains the new Science and Engineering Quadrangle: Hutchison Hall (1972), Hylan Building (1971), the Computer Studies Building and Carlson Library (1987), Wilmot Building (1961), and Goergen Hall (completed in March 2007).[8]
Students often congregate outdoors during the warmer months on the various quads. Other centers of student life include Todd Union, Frederick Douglass Dining Center, various locations inside Rush Rhees Library, and Wilson Commons, a student union designed by I.M. Pei. Many academic buildings, including Rush Rhees Library, are connected by a series of tunnel systems, which are used extensively, especially during unfavorable weather. Most academic buildings, the Eastman Quad, Wilson Commons, and Susan B. Anthony, Gilbert, and Hoeing Halls also have authenticated Wi-Fi internet access.[9]
University of Rochester Medical Center

Main articles: University of Rochester Medical Center

The School of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Rochester's Medical Center.
The 'University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC)' is the primary campus for the university's medical education and research as well as the main patient care facility. The Medical Center is located adjacent to the River Campus and is dominated by a single large structure that houses the majority of the education, research and patient care facilities, including Strong Memorial Hospital.
Eastman School of Music

Main articles: Eastman School of Music

The 'Eastman School of Music' is situated on its own campus in downtown Rochester, which includes a residence for students, classroom and performance facilities, and the Eastman Theatre. The campus also features the Sibley Music Library, which is the largest academic music library in North America, as well as the largest privately owned collection of sheet music.
South Campus

The 'South Campus' is located in Brighton, NY, immediately south of Rochester proper. The campus includes the Laboratory for Laser Energetics, the Center for Optics Manufacturing, the Center for Optoelectronics and Imaging, and the now defunct Nuclear Structure Research Laboratory (NSRL). Graduate student housing is also provided at the Whipple Park complex.
Rochester Area Properties


C.E.K. Mees Observatory

Memorial Art Gallery

★ Mount Hope Campus

Academics and research


UR's undergraduate enrollment at The College and the Eastman School of Music consists of about 4,500 full-time and about 100 part-time students from across the U.S. and over 90 countries.[10] Graduate enrollment at The College, Eastman and the four graduate and professional schools comprises about 3,300 full-time and about 550 part-time graduate students. The university has more than 97,000 alumni living. The university employs more than 1,200 tenure-track faculty, with more than 17,000 faculty and staff across the university and the Strong Health System. UR's faculty include fellows of all four National Academies of the U.S., Guggenheim Fellows, and recipients of many other awards and recognitions.[11]
Organization

Academics at the University of Rochester are generally organized and administered by school. The various departments offer degree programs ranging from certificates and bachelors degrees to doctorates.
The Flaum Atrium between the School of Medicine and Dentistry and the Arthur Kornberg buildings in the University of Rochester Medical Center.


★ 'The College of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering'
Main articles: University of Rochester College of Arts Sciences and Engineering

:'The College' offers undergraduate and graduate education in large number of fields and encompasses the majority of undergraduate and graduate enrollment at the university. The College is primarily located on the River Campus.

★ 'Eastman School of Music'
Main articles: Eastman School of Music

:The 'Eastman School of Music' is a premier music institution offering both undergraduate and graduate education in a broad range of fields, including composition, theory and performance.

★ 'Margaret Warner Graduate School of Education and Human Development'
Main articles: Warner School

:The 'Warner School' is the university's primary graduate school for education. It is located on the River Campus.

★ 'School of Medicine and Dentistry'
:The 'School of Medicine and Dentistry' is a top rated graduate school that prepares students in medical, dental and research disciplines. The school is located in the University of Rochester Medical Center.

★ 'School of Nursing'
:The university also includes an accredited 'School of Nursing', located on the campus of the University of Rochester Medical Center.

★ 'William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administration'
Main articles: William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administration

:The 'Simon School' is a nationally ranked business school located on the River Campus.
Rankings

UR is one of 25 schools named a "New Ivy League" in the 2007 Kaplan/Newsweek "How to Get into College Guide." The list names institutions whose academic programs and students are considered to rival traditional Ivy League schools. The rankings are based on admissions statistics as well as interviews with administrators, students, faculty, and alumni.[12]
The University of Rochester also placed 21st on The Washington Monthly College Rankings list. The list includes institutions that The Washington Monthly believes are "benefiting the country." The rankings take into account how a school contributes to social mobility by helping the poor improve their economic standing. Other criteria include the institution's support for research in the humanities and in the sciences and its promotion of an ethic of service to country.
The Eastman School of Music ranks first among graduate music programs in the U.S. according to ''U.S. News & World Report''. Other schools in the university also rank highly, with the School of Medicine and Dentistry at 30th overall among medical schools and its primary-care program ranked 17th among primary-care medical schools, and the Simon School ranked 23rd among graduate business schools. UR also consistently ranks among the top 50 national research universities, being the third highest in New York.[13]

Research

UR is a leading private university and a major center for diverse fields of research. The university boasts eight Nobel Prize winners among its faculty and alumni. UR consistently ranks among the top 40 colleges and universities nationwide in federally financed science, engineering, medical, and other research, with a total research budget of around $350 million spread across many departments and research centers, including the Laboratory for Laser Energetics, a laser-based nuclear fusion facility, and the extensive research facilities at the University of Rochester Medical Center. Recently, the university has also engaged in a series of new initiatives to expand its programs in biomedical engineering and optics, including the construction of the new $37 million Robert B. Goergen Hall for Biomedical Engineering and Optics on the River Campus.[14] Other new research initiatives include a cancer stem cell program and a Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute.[15][16] UR also has the ninth highest technology revenue among U.S. higher education institutions, with $30 million being paid for commercial rights to university technology and research in 2005.[17]

University symbols and traditions


Symbols

Flagpole on the River Campus bearing the seal of the university.

UR's official symbol is the seal of the university, which features a book, representing arts and sciences, a symbol of music and a modified symbol of medicine.[18] The official flower of the university is the dandelion, purportedly prolific on the cow pasture that became the university's first campus.[19] The mascot is the Yellowjacket.[20]
The university uses Dandelion Yellow and a shade of blue ("Rochester" blue) as its official colors, which are the prominent colors on the official regalia.[21]
The motto of UR is ''Meliora'', which loosely means "better" with the connotation of "always better", which is the meaning adopted by the university.[22]
Many other unofficial symbols in prevalent use, including the image of Rush Rhees Library's main dome.
UR also has official logos for the university as a whole as well as individual units, including The College, URMC and Eastman. President Seligman, as part of his efforts to improve UR's external appearance, commissioned Bill Murphy, the Vice President of Communications, to start an initiative to develop a new graphic identity, including a new logo, in hopes of improving uniformity and overall usage of official standards.[23] During March 2007, the communications office was soliciting opinions and comments on finalist designs for the new logo, which is expected to be unveiled later in the year.
Traditions

Graduation at the university.

UR features several traditional events throughout the year with diverse history.[24]

★ The 'Boar's Head Dinner' began in 1934 and continues as an annual event.

★ 'Convocation' celebrates the start of the academic year and provides the opportunity for students, faculty, and staff to come together. The ceremony opens with a processional by faculty and administrators in traditional regalia, features presentation of the Goergen Awards for contributions to undergraduate education, and is accompanied by a picnic, activities fair and performances.

★ 'Dandelion Day', colloquially known as 'D-Day', is a day late in the spring semester that was established as an annual respite around final exams with extensive celebrations.

★ 'Meliora Weekend' is celebrated in early October during a weekend around the University anniversary, combining class reunions, homecoming, family weekend, and a regatta.

★ 'Wilson Day' is day of community service for all incoming university students which include working on neighborhood picnics, voter registrations, painting, landscaping, meal service, and various other service efforts in the community.
School song

''The Genesee'': words by T. T. Swinburne 1892, melody arranged by Herve D. Wilkins, 1966.[25]

I.
:''Full many fair and famous streams
:''Beneath the sun there be,
:''Yet more to us than any seems
:''Our own dear Genesee.
:''We love her banks and stately falls,
:''For to our minds they bring
:''Our dear old alma mater's halls
:''Where sweetest mem'ries cling.

II.
:''No castled crags along her way
:''Romantic splendors cast;
:''No fabled or historic lay
:''Recalls the golden past.
:''But more than battlemented walls,
:''Or legends they may bear,
:''Are alma mater's vine-clad halls
:''And mem'ries ling'ring there.

III.
:''As flows the river gath'ring force,
:''Along her steadfast way,
:''May we along life's devious course
:''Grow stronger day by day.
:''And may our hearts, where'er we roam,
:''Forever loyal be
:''To our beloved college home
:''Beside the Genesee.

Traditionally only the first and third verses are sung at University functions.

Student life


Residences

The majority of undergraduate students at the university live and take classes on the River Campus. Underclassmen are generally required to live on campus while upperclassmen have the option to live off campus. Some graduate housing is provided by the university, but a significant number also live off campus. Housing is provided at multiple locations spread across the several campuses.[26]
River Campus

River Campus residences house primarily undergraduates, with some graduate students serving as Graduate Head Residents (GHRs). Residences include:

★ 'Fraternity Quad' - Made up of nine houses, seven fraternities (Delta Kappa Epsilon, Alpha Delta Phi, Theta Chi, Psi Upsilon, Sigma Chi, Sigma Alpha Mu, and Delta Upsilon) and special interest housing groups, such as the Community Learning Center and Drama House, maintain housing here.

★ 'Freshmen Housing' - Consists of Susan B. Anthony Halls (Gannett, Gates, Hollister, and Morgan), located near Rush Rhees Library; and Hoeing Hall and Gilbert Hall, which are located on the Residence Quad. Freshmen live together in these specially designated residences that tend to feature increased supervision, regulation, and residence-related activities by inclusion of upperclassmen D'Lions and Freshmen Fellows along with Residential Advisers in living areas.

★ 'Hill Court' - Upperclass housing consisting of Chambers, Fairchild, Gale, Kendrick, Munro, and Slater houses, which are connected by underground tunnels. This residence area is colloquially known as "Phase" and is the newest residential area on the River Campus (opened in 1969).

★ 'Residence Quad (ResQuad)' - Consists of Burton, Crosby, Lovejoy, and Tiernan Halls for upperclassmen, as well as Hoeing and Gilbert Halls for freshmen. Burton and Crosby were the original dormitories on the River Campus, constructed in 1930, while the other four were built during the 1950s. All ResQuad buildings were fully renovated in the 1990s.

★ 'River Campus Towers' - Consists of Anderson and Wilder Towers and houses upperclassmen and several Special Interest Housing groups. The formal name for the area is 'Founders Court', but it is simply called "Towers" by most students.

★ 'Southside' - Formerly and colloquially known as the Graduate Living Center (GLC - pronounced "glick"), Southside consists of Valentine and deKiewiet Towers, as well as several "maisonettes," which offer apartment style living to upperclassmen. The residences tend to serve as overflow space for student housing. The residences are located south of the River Campus near the medical center, but house mostly River Campus undergraduate students.
Special Interest Housing floors and Fraternity floors also exist within the residence halls. Special interest housing floors include the International Living Center (ILC), Interclass Living Center (ICLC - Crosby 1), Music Interest Floor (MIF - Wilder 9), Health and Home (Valentine 6), Computer Interest Floor (CIF - Anderson 3), Tiernan Project (Burton 2), and the Film Interest Floor (FIF - Kendrick 1).
Eastman School of Music Campus

Housing is provided at the Eastman School of Music campus at the 'Eastman Student Living Center' at 100 Gibbs Street in downtown Rochester. The new building was opened at the corner of Main and Gibbs Streets, replacing the University Avenue dormitories built nearly 70 years earlier. It is a four-story quadrangle and 16-story tower surrounding a landscaped inner courtyard.
URMC and Mount Hope Campuses

Graduate student housing is provided at 4 locations near the URMC and Mount Hope.

★ The 'George Washington Goler House' ('GHS') immediately adjacent to the grounds of the URMC. It is a high rise apartment building with 321 apartments. The building also houses university community members, including faculty and staff.

★ The 'University Towne House' ('UTH') is a group-living style, two story building located on the Mount Hope Campus with 60 studios. The building is adjacent to Mount Hope businesses as well as university offices.

★ The 'University Park' ('UPK') is a complex of two story buildings that include 40 studio, 86 one-bedroom, and 80 two-bedroom unfurnished apartments. UPK is located near the URMC off of Kendrick Road.

★ The 'Graduate Living Center Maisonettes' ('GLC Maisonettes') are located adjacent to the Southside Apartments (formerly and frequently still called the Graduate Living Center or "Glick") off of Kendrick Road. There are 22 apartments in 7 single story buildings. As of Fall 2007, the GLC Maisonettes are also available to third- and fourth-year undergraduate students.
South Campus

The South Campus has graduate student housing at the 'Whipple Park' ('WPK') complex, which features 250 garden apartments and townhouses with ample storage space. WPK also features a park-like setting with large wooded and lawn areas, playgrounds, areas for gardens and low street noise. Some housing is also provided at the 'River Road' complex, which tends to serve as overflow housing for both undergraduate and graduate students.
Students' Association

The interior of Wilson Commons, the primary student union at UR.

The 'Students' Association' ('SA') is the primary student governing body and includes most of the student groups at UR. The SA is governed by the SA Senate, President and Vice President, all of whom are elected by the student body. The SA President is advised by a cabinet, which is a volunteer group of students. There is also a judicial branch, composed of the All Campus Judicial Council (ACJC), the members of whom are nominated by an interview committee and approved by the SA Senate. The offices of the SA are located in the Wilson Commons student union. [27]
The Campus Club Connection maintains a full list of all registered student activities groups at UR.
Athletics

UR's athletics teams are called the Yellowjackets. They participate in the Division III of the NCAA and in the University Athletic Association. One exception to this is the squash team, which plays in Division I.[28] There are also numerous club and intramural athletics groups.
The main athletics facilities of the university are in the Robert B. Goergen Athletic Center and Fauver Stadium on the River Campus, with other facilities located in the Spurrier building (River Campus) and the URMC.[29][30]
Campus & area transportation

The UR campuses are served by several bus lines of the Rochester-Genesee Regional Transportation Authority (RTS). Students with school-issued IDs ride free on a few designated bus lines, including the dedicated campus transportation routes that serve the River Campus, URMC, South Campus and the Eastman Campus. There are also lines that run between the River Campus and local shopping and entertainment in Henrietta and Pittsford.
Rochester is also served by the Greater Rochester International Airport, which is located a short distance from the River Campus, Amtrak and Greyhound Lines, the latter two located in downtown Rochester.

Notable alumni


Nobel laureates


Steven Chu (B.A. math and B.S. physics 1970), Nobel laureate (1997, physics)

Vincent du Vigneaud (Ph.D. 1927), Nobel laureate (1955, chemistry)

Daniel Carleton Gajdusek (B.S. 1943), Nobel laureate (1976, physiology or medicine)

Arthur Kornberg (M.D. 1941, D.Sc. 1962), Nobel laureate (1959, physiology or medicine)

Masatoshi Koshiba (Ph.D 1955), Nobel laureate (2002, physics)
Academia


William T. Bianco (Ph.D. 1987), political scientist. Dissertation on non-cooperative co-operation. Author of the book ''American Politics: Strategy and Choice''

Kenneth French (M.B.A 1978, M.S. 1981, Ph.D. 1983), M. Heidt Professor of Finance at Dartmouth College and efficient markets theorist (along with Eugene Fama)

Jerry Green (B.A. 1967, Ph.D. 1970), John Leverette Professor of Economics and former Provost of Harvard University

N. Katherine Hayles, (Ph.D. 1977), critical literary theorist

Zvi Hercowitz (Ph.D. 1980), macroeconomist at Tel Aviv University

Karen Hitchcock (Ph.D), Principal and Vice Chancellor of Queen's University, Canada

Susan Hockfield (B.A. 1973), Current President of MIT

Barbara E. Kahn (B.A. 1974), Vice Dean, Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania

Brian C. Mitchell (Ph.D), President of Bucknell University

Ivan Sag (B.A. 1971), Professor of Linguistics at Stanford University

Jose Scheinkman (Ph.D. 1974), Theodore A. Wells '29 Professor of Economics at Princeton University

Hugo Sonnenschein (B.A. 1961), President Emeritus and Adam Smith Professor of Economics at University of Chicago

Richard Thaler (Ph.D. 1974), Economist known for pioneering behavioral finance

Nils Y. Wessell (Ph.D. 1938), President of Tufts University 1953-1966

Joseph Boyd Martin (Ph.D. 1971), Dean of Harvard Medical School

Robert J. Dolan (Ph.D. 1977), Dean of University of Michigan Business School (Ross)
Performing arts


George Abbott (B.A. 1911), Broadway showman who wrote, produced, and directed Broadway plays, including ''The Pajama Game'' (directed), ''A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum'' (directed), and ''Damn Yankees'' (co-wrote)

Frederick Fennell (B.A. 1937, M.A. 1939), conductor, primary figure in promoting the wind ensemble as a performing group

Renee Fleming (M.A.S. 1983) Grammy winning soprano opera singer

Robert Forster (B.A. 1964) Academy Award Nominated Actor

Debra Jo Rupp (B.A. 1974), actress ''That '70s Show''
Government


Ruth B. Balser, (A.B. 1969), member of the Mass. House of Representatives (''served'' 1998 - ''present'')

Kenneth Keating, U.S. Representative and Senator from New York

Lawrence Kudlow (1969), Reagonomist of the Office of Management and Budget, CNBC host

★ R. Brooks LaPlante, (MBA) Founder/CEO of Doughmakers Gourmet Bakeware and former member of the Indiana House of Representatives

Dan Rosenthal, (B.A. 1988) Assistant to the President in the White House under Bill Clinton
Literature


Francis Bellamy, wrote the original Pledge of Allegiance, published in 1892

Galway Kinnell (M.A.) Pulitzer Prize winning poet and Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets

Janet Maslin, Film and Music critic for the New York Times
Science and technology


Jason Diamond (B.A., M.D. 1997), plastic surgeon who was featured on the E! Channel series, Dr. 90210

Robert Dicke (Ph.D. 1939), inventor of lock-in amplifier, and who made contributions to the fields of astrophysics, atomic physics, cosmology and gravity

Stan Frankel (Ph.D. 1942), Manhattan Project scientist and computer designer

Edward Gibson (B.S. 1959), former NASA astronaut

Donald Henderson, M.D. 1954, physician and epidemiologist

Jay Last (B.S. 1951), member of the Traitorous Eight that founded Silicon Valley

James A. Pawelczyk (B.S. 1982), NASA astronaut

Richard Rashid (M.S. 1977, Ph.D. 1980 Computer Science), invented the Mach operating system, currently head of Microsoft Research

Bruce Schneier (B.S. Physics), computer security expert

George Sudarshan (Ph.D. 1958 Physics), made contributions to the field of quantum optics and advanced the idea of the theoretical tachyon

Avie Tevanian (B.A. Math 1983), figure in the development of the NeXT Computer and its successor, Mac OS X at Apple
Other


Jeremy Glick, a passenger on United Flight 93 and widely considered to be a hero in the September 11 attacks

Robert Goergen, CEO of Blyth, Inc.

Zhe Zeng, a trained emergency technician who lost his life while trying to save others on September 11 attacks at the World Trade Center site

Gerald B. Zornow, former Chairman of the Board of Eastman Kodak Company

Notable faculty


Main articles: :Category:University of Rochester faculty


Stanley Engerman, Economist/Historian served as President of the Social Science History Association as well as President of the Economic History Association.

Richard Fenno, political scientist and former President of the American Political Science Association

C.R. Hagen, Professor of Physics

Robert L. Holmes, Secular pacifist and expert on nonviolent action.

Steven Landsburg, economist

Walter Oi, Labor economist, member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

H. Allen Orr, Shirley Cox Kearns Professor of Biology

Michael L. Scott, computer scientist and winner of the Edsger W. Dijkstra Prize in Distributed Computing

Points of interest



George Eastman House

University of Rochester Arboretum

References



1. The Eastman School campus is in downtown Rochester (urban), while the majority of the university is located in a more suburban environment.
2. UR Publications Services: Graphics Standards University Colors
3. 2006 Report on Endowment [1]
4. History of the University of Rochester [2]
5. University of Rochester: History and Distinctions
6. University of Rochester: Faculty Handbook
7. University of Rochester: Presidents of the University
8. [http://www.rochester.edu/maps/river_campus/index.html Interactive Map of the River Campus
9. UR Wireless Coverage[3]
10. Diversity at Rochester, Office of Admissions
11. Faculty and Students at UR
12. America's 25 New Elite 'Ivies' - Kaplan College Guide
13. ''U.S. News & World Report'' College Rankings[4]
14. Press Release: Funding for New BME Building [5]
15. URMC Press Release: Wilmot Launches Cancer Stem Cell Research Program
16. URMC: The New Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute
17. Association for University Technology Managers: FY2005 U.S. Licensing Survey
18. University of Rochester Seal
19. University of Rochester: Dandelion
20. University of Rochester Mascot: The Yellowjackets
21. University of Rochester Colors
22. UR Press Release:Meliora Weekend
23. Rochester Review:Interview with Bill Murphy]
24. UR Traditions, Events and Entertainment
25. Songs of the University of Rochester
26. University of Rochester Residential Life
27. SA Student Government
28. UR Athletics
29. UR Athletics Facilities
30. URMC Fitness & Wellness Center


External links


'Official Pages'

University Homepage

University of Rochester, Office of the President website

Admissions

The College Dean of Students Office
'Publications'

''Campus Times'' Student Newspaper

''Rochester Review''
'Community links'

Students' Association (SA)

RED (Rochester Every Day)
'Internet communities'

the University of Rochester LiveJournal Community

The Hive (UR's student association)

University of Rochester Xanga Blogring

URTV Online The University of Rochester's Student Television Channel

The College's Online Alumni Community

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves