News
- Disaster preparedness is the focus of the next Social Sciences Today Forum at CUBoulder. The event, titled 鈥淒isasters: Can We Be Prepared?鈥 features three experts and is scheduled for Sept. 26, at noon in Old Main Chapel.
- After a highly successful mission, the Cassini spacecraft will give up Saturn's last secrets to 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 scientists before disintegrating in the planet's dense atmosphere Sept. 15.
- 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 researchers have been awarded $2.9 million from the NSF to create a comprehensive digital archive of native plants in the southern Rocky Mountain region.
- On Sept. 15, Instructor Galina Siergiejczyk will present an hour-long concert by Boulder chorus Planina: Songs of Eastern Europe preceded and followed by dialogue with students.
- Certificates in social innovation and care, health and resilience aim to help students help others.
- Some undergraduate students "absolutely are at the same level as our graduate students," professor says.
- 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 scientists, who designed and built identical instruments for Voyager 1 and Voyager 2, were as stunned as anyone when the spacecraft began sending back data to Earth.
- Postdoctoral researchers and doctoral students to increase their knowledge of demography and genetics in one of the first programs of its kind.
- Students and faculty alike have new opportunities to engage with Southeast AsiaSoutheastern Asia significantly influences world politics, economics and culture, and students at the University of Colorado Boulder will soon enjoy more options to learn
- Low levels of inorganic arsenic, thought safe, might be harming American Indian communities in the western United States.