logo
2025 Commencement ceremonies for Rochester colleges and universities

2025 Commencement ceremonies for Rochester colleges and universities

Yahoo14-04-2025

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) — Graduating students from colleges and universities are preparing to walk the stage next month.
Below is a list of the graduation dates for Rochester-area colleges and universities:
The Rochester area campuses will be honoring its local graduates on Friday, May 30 at 7 p.m at the Kodak Center.
Empire State University's Rochester ceremony will be held at the Kodak Center on Thursday, May 29. The university announced it will release more information about the ceremony as it gets closer.
The 2025 commencement ceremony will be held at CMAC on Saturday, May 17. Graduating students are ordered to report to the second floor of the main campus at noon. Guests must be in their seats at 12:45 p.m.
Admission to the graduation is free and there are no limits to the number of guests.
Hobart and William Smith's commencement will be held on the Quad on Sunday, May 18 at 9 a.m.
The college will reveal more details in the upcoming months.
MCC's annual commencement will be held at the Blue Cross Arena at the War Memorial at 7 p.m. to honor the Class of 2025 on Thursday, May 29.
The ceremony will be live-streamed on the college's YouTube channel.
Nazareth's graduate ceremony will be held on Friday, May 16, from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Two undergraduate ceremonies will be held on Saturday, May 17. The Bachelor of Science ceremony will be from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m., and the ceremony for the other degrees will be from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
The commencement speaker is Chris Hilderbrant (Class of '99), a disability rights activist, policy strategist, non-profit executive, and wheelchair rugby player.
RIT's academic convocation will kick off on Friday, May 9 from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., with the lineup beginning at 9 a.m. The keynote speaker of the convocation is entrepreneur and engineer Astro Teller.
The ceremonies will soon follow the rest of the day and into Saturday, May 10. Families traveling for the ceremony are advised to book a hotel as soon as possible.
Roberts Wesleyan will have two ceremonies on Saturday, May 10 — the Graduate, Professional Studies & Northeastern Seminary will be at 9:30 a.m., and the traditional undergraduate and B.E.L.L. ceremony will be at 2 p.m. Students at the 9:30 ceremony may request up to six guest tickets, and those at the 2 p.m. ceremony may request up to nine tickets.
Former Corporate Vice President of Xerox Emerson Fullwood will be the commencement speaker.
Undergraduate ceremonies will be held on Friday, May 9, after a baccalaureate mass, and graduate ceremonies will be held Saturday, May 10. Specific times for graduating majors can be found here.
Two ceremonies will be held on Friday, May 16 — the 9:30 a.m. ceremony will be for the School of Education, Health & Human Services, and the 2 p.m. ceremony will be for the School of Arts & Sciences and the School of Business & Management.
There will be two undergraduate commencement ceremonies, one at 9 a.m. and the other at 1 p.m. on Saturday, May 17 — both will be held at the Wilson Ice Arena in Merritt Athletic Center.
UR's commencement ceremony will kick off at 8:45 a.m. on Friday, May 16, at the Fauver Stadium at the Brian F. Prince Athletic Complex. The commencement speaker is award-winning journalist and NPR editor Tommy Evans (Class of '99).
After the ceremony, a food truck lunch and celebration will be held at the Wilson Quadrangle from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
There will be multiple graduation ceremonies for different schools, such as the School of Nursing, School of Medicine and Dentistry, Warner School of Education, etc. The full list of ceremonies can be found here.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New TV Shows This Week (June 8 - 14)
New TV Shows This Week (June 8 - 14)

Geek Girl Authority

timean hour ago

  • Geek Girl Authority

New TV Shows This Week (June 8 - 14)

Welcome to another edition of New TV Shows. This week, a father-daughter spy duo returns to Netflix. Mexican singer Lucero stars in Our Times , Nick Mohammed joins two Hollywood stars in a Prime Video movie and the continuation of To Barcelona, With Love comes to Hallmark Channel. Some exciting series, including one about journalists and exposure, are premiering this week. Get ready because things are about to get good. Here's what's new on TV for June 8-14. NEW ON TV, JUNE 8-14 June 10 – The Kollective After a plane crash, a group of young citizen journalists known as The Kollective get together to uncover what truly happened. The group believes the crash wasn't an accident, so they decide to investigate and discover a global conspiracy that includes government corruption. Hulu's newest series, The Kollective , stars Natascha McElhone, Celine Buckens, Felix Mayr, Grégory Montel, Karel Roden, Cassiopée Mayance, Martha Canga Antonio and Ralph Amoussou. The Kollective premieres Tuesday, June 10 at Midnight/11c on Hulu. RELATED: The Premise and How Star Trek Fans Created Fanfic as We Know It June 11 – Our Times Mexican singer Lucero stars in Netflix's newest Spanish-speaking movie, Our Times . The film tells the story of two physicists who, in 1966, discover time-travel and land in 2025. While Nora is happy because she can thrive in a world that celebrates women, Héctor can't find himself in this new reality. Now, Nora must decide if she goes back in time with the man she loves or stays in a time that empowers her. Our Times premieres Wednesday, June 11 at 3/2 am on Netflix. June 12 – Deep Cover Prime Video is releasing a new movie that includes Bryce Dallas Howard, Orlando Bloom and Nick Mohammed. The film, written by Derek Connolly, Colin Trevorrow and Ben Ashenden, follows three improv actors who are asked to go undercover in London's criminal underworld. Can they complete the task? Deep Cover premieres Thursday, June 12 at 3/2 am on Prime Video. RELATED: On Location: Es Saadi Marrakesh Resort on The Night Manager Season 1 June 12 – FUBAR Arnold Schwarzenegger and Monica Barbaro are back for FUBAR Season 2. After the ending of Season 1, Luke and his team will have to figure out who the rat is among them since their identities have been exposed. The cast still includes Travis Van Winkle, Fortune Feimster, Milan Carter, Scott Thompson, Fabiana Udenio, Andy Buckley, Jay Baruchel, Adam Pally, Tom Arnold, Aparna Brielle and Barbara Eve Harris. FUBAR Season 2 premieres Thursday, June 12 at 3/2 am on Netflix. June 13 – Echo Valley Julianne Moore and Sydney Sweeney star in Apple TV+'s newest film, Echo Valley . The movie tells the story of a mother and daughter with a complicated relationship. Things get more tense when Claire shows up at her mother's house covered in someone else's blood. As a mother, Kate pushes the limits to find out how far one can go to protect their child. Echo Valley premieres Friday, June 13 on Apple TV+. RELATED: Stranger Things : Netflix Announces Premiere Dates for Epic Final Season June 14 – To Barcelona, Forever If you enjoyed Hallmark's To Barcelona, With Love , you are bound to love its sequel, To Barcelona, Forever . This new film finds Anna traveling back to Barcelona to celebrate Erica and Nico's engagement. That is where she meets a farmer and ends up in a complicated engagement herself to save his family legacy. Alison Sweeney and Ashley Williams return for this movie. To Barcelona, Forever premieres Saturday, June 14 at 8/7c on Hallmark Channel. Check back next week for What's New on TV for June 15-21. Natasha Romanoff vs. Yelena Belova: The Value of Well-Written Women Characters By day, Lara Rosales (she/her) is a solo mom by choice and a bilingual writer with a BA in Latin-American Literature who works in PR. By night, she is a TV enjoyer who used to host a podcast (Cats, Milfs & Lesbian Things). You can find her work published on Tell-Tale TV, Eulalie Magazine, Collider, USA Wire, Mentors Collective, Instelite, Noodle, Dear Movies, Nicki Swift, and Flip Screened.

10 Of The Best-Looking Indie Games From 2025's Summer Showcases
10 Of The Best-Looking Indie Games From 2025's Summer Showcases

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

10 Of The Best-Looking Indie Games From 2025's Summer Showcases

You know it's a busy time for the industry when the first major console release for nearly five years is immediately overshadowed by days of showcases that throw brilliant game after brilliant game at your face. But with so many titles hitting you about the eyes, chin, and nose, it's hard to figure out what needs to be wishlisted. As a huge fan of smaller studios, which have smashed it out of the park this week, I've drawn together 10 releases that cannot be forgotten by anyone looking to play the next generation of indie darlings in 2025 and beyond. As with any list like this, especially for small studios, it won't capture all the greats, so be sure to share any that you love in the comments or reach out to me through my Linktree, because the little guys deserve our love more than ever. Developer: House HousePublisher: PanicRelease date: 2026 God knows we need more co-op games, but few seem quite as exciting as Big Walk, the latest project from House House (Untitled Goose Game). It's weird because Big Walk is largely unexciting as a premise, but its ideas and technology are so incredibly clever, you wonder why it hasn't been done before. The explainer trailer is one of the most fascinating things to come out of the 2025 gaming scene, and you'd be mad to miss out on it: So, yeah — in Big Walk, you go on a big walk with friends. There's a massive focus on communication; it employs a natural-sounding, proximity-based voice chat system that's governed by distance, while gestures and message boards can be used when you can't hear your friends, if they're on a faraway ridge or behind soundproof glass. Between House House's pedigree and the strength of the ideas, this could be one of the best indie games to arrive in 2026. Developer: Sans Strings StudioPublisher: TBDRelease date: TBA If Avenue Q met Punch-Out!!, it'd be Felt That: Boxing. This might be one of the most brilliant concepts of the last few years, and one superpowered by a ridiculously high visual potential, even if the trailer emphasises that it's rendered in the game engine, rather than being actual gameplay: You assume the role of the weedy Ezra 'Fuzz-E' Wright, a puppet 'with a heart of felt and fists of… also felt,' who enters the Tournament of a Million Punches to save his childhood orphanage from demolition. It's a story with well-trodden tropes, but that's part of its hilarious charm. The fact that Felt That: Boxing is yet to finalize a publisher can only be due to one of two reasons: either it's not actively courting anyone, or there are literally dozens of companies (fittingly) fighting one another for the rights to this, because it looks like a masterpiece in the making. Developer/publisher: NikkiJayRelease date: June 24 At least one of this list's games is coming sooner than you think — in fact, it drops in just over two weeks. Solo dev NikkiJay's Quantum Witch is a narrative, choice-driven adventure that draws on the point-and-click style perfected by LucasArts in the 90s. You enjoy the journey of Ren, a shepardess in her 20s who gets 'thrown into a multiversal conflict while on a fetch quest to find her lost flock.' This is a game of choices — difficult ones, at that — in which tasks range from finding your wife and offering gifts to friends, to speaking with a skeleton who can see through time and dethroning God. Quantum Witch is one of those games that doesn't give much away ahead of its release, but I'm glad NikkiJay has kept her cards close to her chest — this has all the hallmarks of a fantastic experience that'll thrive on surprises. Developer: Kong Orange, WiredFly, Morten SøndergaardPublisher: Epic Games PublishingRelease date: 2026 Out of Words is 'about the doubt and confusion that comes with communicating first-time love.' This two-player game, clearly inspired by Split Fiction, Unravel, and Harold Halibut, is among the most beautiful indie games showcased this week, and an instant wishlist addition for co-op fans. FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™ Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase Pinpoint By Linkedin Guess The Category Queens By Linkedin Crown Each Region Crossclimb By Linkedin Unlock A Trivia Ladder It's the result of a three-way collaboration between Kong Orange — the creator of Felix the Reaper — with stop-motion experts WiredFly and Danish poet Morten Søndergaard. The physical craft and sheer attention to detail it offers are off the scale; here's hoping it has the narrative to match its stablemates. Developer: Beethoven and DinosaurPublisher: Annapurna InteractiveRelease date: 2025 Mixtape has been on the cards for a long old time. This narrative-driven adventure from Beethoven and Dinosaur takes place at the end of high school, when a group of teens relive memories through vignettes inspired by mixtape songs — a coming-of-age tale built around a fantastic soundtrack. I'd put a solid chunk of my mortgage on this being a banger, but maybe I'm a little biased. I named the developer's debut, The Artful Escape, the best indie game of 2021, and I still stand by it; it might well be the best thing I played that year outright, even though I adored Deathloop. If anyone can do something well and differently, it's Beethoven and Dinosaur. Developer: Outerloop GamesPublisher: Annapurna InteractiveRelease date: Early 2026 Another big-hitter from Annapurna's game publishing division is Dosa Divas: One Last Meal, the follow-up to 2023's immortal Thirsty Suitors. This turn-based RPG sees 'two sisters and their trusty spirit-mech fighting corpos and reuniting with loved ones, one snack at a time.' With elements of its predecessor as well as the spectacular Venba, Dosa Divas sees Amani and Samara reconnect with loved ones in a weird dystopia as they fight against a fast food empire, cooking tasty food and reviving the local community. If it has the same humor and character depth as its predecessor, it'll be a sure-fire success. Developer/publisher: DORFteamRelease date: TBA Anything that aims to capture the magic of Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 deserves all of our time. D.O.R.F. goes one step further, combining this influence with the Fallout universe, making it one of the most irresistible real-time strategy games in years. Is it isometric? Check. Does its score sound like it's heavily inspired by Frank Klepacki? You betcha. Are bolts of electricity a common form of attack? You're goddamn right. Is it set in a universe you'd love to visit but would hate to live in? Yes yes yes yes yes. D.O.R.F. knows what it's doing; it's the perfect example of fan service. Developer: Vermila StudiosPublisher: Blumhouse GamesRelease date: 2025 Crisol: Theater of Idols, which I covered when Blumhouse Games launched its six-strong collection of debut horror titles, is an irresistible first-person game set in Spain that delves into folklore, religion, and creepy statues that are possessed by malicious flesh, and out to get you. You delve into Tormentosa, a tainted realm filled with legends and rituals, where monstrous saint statues come to life with the hope of ending yours. If that wasn't enough, you use your own blood as ammunition. It's the type of affair you can't wait to lose sleep over. Developer: Eyes OutPublisher: Blumhouse GamesRelease date: 2026 That's not all from Blumhouse, thanks to the sumptuous Sleep Awake, which combines A Nightmare on Elm Street with Control, Still Wakes the Deep, and plenty of other devilish influences. Its trailer makes you realize how much effort has gone into creating a hellish, haunting dreamscape. It's the brainchild of Spec Ops: The Line creator Cory Davis and Nine Inch Nails' Robin Finck, and places you in 'an unknown city where its denizens are disappearing in their sleep.' Anyone who has the strength to stay awake still needs to avoid death cults and fight off otherworldly forces. I can't wait to regret playing it in 2026. Developer: MetronomikPublisher: Shueisha GamesRelease date: 2026 Last but certainly not least is No Straight Roads 2, the follow-up to 2020's original NSR from Malaysian studio Metronomik. Given that its predecessor was arguably the coolest game of COVID times, there's every reason to believe this long-awaited sequel will raise the bar again. In this music-infused action-RPG, 'music is your power, your crew is your weapon, and your tour van is your HQ.' Mayday and Zuke, A.K.A. Bunk Bed Junction, return in their bid to climb the international charts by fighting fellow musical stars, but they're not alone, thanks to two new playable bandmates with their own styles and mechanics. If you've got any recommendations for indies that emerged this year, give me a shout via Linktree — I'm all ears.

Dying Light: The Beast turned me into a bloodthirsty animal
Dying Light: The Beast turned me into a bloodthirsty animal

Digital Trends

time9 hours ago

  • Digital Trends

Dying Light: The Beast turned me into a bloodthirsty animal

In real life, I'm not a violent man. I'd even go so far as to say that I'm a bit of a pacifist, though 2025 has really tested the limits of that day after day. It takes a special kind of game to really bring the animal out in me, leaving me to soak in some digital bloodshed with a smile. Dying Light: The Beast is very much that flavor of game. At this year's Summer Game Fest, I got 45 minutes of hands-on time with Techland's latest zombie survival game. I've only really experienced the series from a distance until now, so I walked into my demo unsure if its gory combat would hook me. As soon as I beat down an entire room full of monsters with Kyle Crane's beastly new powers, I felt like I had found the safe outlet for my repressed rage that I've really needed all year. Recommended Videos Despite being more of a spinoff, Dying Light: The Beast isn't so different from Dying Light 2: Stay Human. It takes place in a zombie filled world full of shambling monsters whose flesh can be torn up with barbed wire baseball bats and crowbars. Kyle Crane, the hero of the first Dying Light game, returns here in a revenge story as he tracks down the Baron, a villain who performed some kind of horrible experiment on Crane. That kicks off a quest for blood that features all of Dying Light's signature features, from rooftop parkour to deadly dropkicks. The one slight departure from Dying Light 2 is that The Beast leans more into survival horror territory this time. When the sun is out, I can easy get around sporadic patches of zombies who are easily felled by a few good bat bonks or fooled with a decoy grenade. The earliest part of my demo as me treating them like punching bags as I hack through their flesh, skin and blood flying everywhere. That changes when night falls and far more dangerous creatures fill up the streets. I need to go into stealth mode to survive, scrambling up abandoned train cars and hiding in thick forests to avoid getting chased down and beaten to death. Those are the rare moments where I feel powerless. Any other time? I'm the one in control. Techland goes to great lengths here to make sure that every one of Crane's weapons just feels morbidly satisfying to use. When I get a bow midway through my demo, I take pleasure in lining up headshots that take out wandering guards with laser precision. Shortly after that, I drop into a dark basement and get to blow through corridors full of zombies with a tremendously powerful shotgun. Even my dropkick is a weapon of mass destruction, sending weak zombies flying. Everything just hits. That idea gets taken to the next level here thanks to Kyle Crane's new trick. Due to the experiments inflicted upon him, Crane can now activate beast mode when building up enough power. When activated, it essentially turns him into an unstoppable killing machine for a brief moment. I first get to use it when I fix a fuse box in a basement and find myself trapped in a room with a dozen zombies. I unleash my inner animal, throwing out rapid punches without my stamina bar draining. Seconds later, the undead are back on the floor. It happens in an instant and I'm almost left panting when it's done. It's absolutely thrilling. Everything comes together in the demo's final boss fight, as I need to take down a hulking flesh monster in a junkyard filled with abandoned cars. I unload every bullet I have into it while dodging away from its charging attacks at the last second. I get to use another lethal tool there: a flamethrower that chars its skin until it looks like a well-done steak. It gets desperate in its second phase, grabbing hold of a shambling zombie and tossing it at me. I dodge, get some final shots in, and eventually tear my foes head clean off. It feels like I've just watched a battle between lions in the jungle, and I'm the one left with blood in my jaws. If bloodshed isn't your thing, there's a lot more to The Beast than its sheer brutality. I'm especially impressed by the environmental design here, a parkour playground that sends me running around densely detailed rooftops. One puzzle segment has me climbing my way up an abandoned water tower, pushing me to observe the intricate design to find loose pipes I can mantle up with the right timing. It all makes for a world full of pathways that feel like they exist naturally in the world, rather than heavily signposted platforming gauntlets. I'm sure I'll appreciate that even more in the final game, but I mostly look forward to swinging that baseball bat again and watching it cave in a zombie's face. It's grotesque, but I can be grotesque when a game is this good at turning me into a depraved little monster. Dying Light: The Beast launches on August 22 for PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store