IMPART Fellowships Awarded To Eight CU-Boulder Faculty

April 17, 2001

Eight faculty members have received awards from the Implementation of Multicultural Perspectives and Approaches in Research and Teaching program at the University of Colorado at Boulder for 2001, according to Ofelia Miramontes, associate vice chancellor of diversity and equity. The goal of the IMPART program is to further develop a campus environment that supports and encourages gender, ethnic and cultural diversity in approaches to scholarly work and teaching.

CU Student Experiments To Ride Balloon 17 Miles Above Colorado Plains

April 17, 2001

Four tiny University of Colorado at Boulder experiments will be lofted by a large helium balloon from Windsor, Colo., to a height of about 17 miles before drifting back to earth on the eastern plains via parachute on Saturday, April 21.

CU-Boulder History Professor Wins Prestigious Book Award

April 16, 2001

Susan Johnson, an assistant professor of history at the University of Colorado at Boulder, has won a 2001 Bancroft Prize - one of the most prestigious honors a scholarly work of American history can receive - for her first book "Roaring Camp: The Social World of the California Gold Rush." The Bancroft Prize, established at Columbia University in 1948, is awarded annually to authors of works in the categories of American History and Diplomacy.

Fiske Planetarium Presents "Seven Wonders"

April 16, 2001

Calendar Item Fiske Planetarium at the University of Colorado at Boulder will tour the seven wonders of the ancient world during "Seven Wonders" on Friday, April 27, at 7:30 p.m. at the planetarium. Burt Lancaster will guide the pre-recorded tour that also will take the audience on a search for the seven wonders of the solar system and universe.

CU Wizard Uses Dry Ice And Exploding Balloons To Show Chemistry In Action

April 16, 2001

The booms and bangs of chemical reactions will sound on the University of Colorado at Boulder campus on Saturday, April 28, when CU Wizard Tarek Sammakia presents his show about chemical reactions and pressure change at 9:30 a.m. in Cristol Chemistry room 140.

Miniature Unmanned Planes Descend On Arctic For Research

April 16, 2001

Three tiny unmanned airplanes equipped with sophisticated instruments are buzzing over the Arctic sea ice near Barrow, Alaska, providing University of Colorado at Boulder researchers with new atmospheric and environmental data.

20th Annual Colorado History Day To Bring 700 Â鶹ÒùÔº To CU-Boulder

April 16, 2001

Hundreds of students from throughout Colorado will converge on the University of Colorado at Boulder campus to present a slew of unique projects, many a year in the making, during the 20th annual Colorado History Day. About 700 students in grades six through 12 will compete in the event on Saturday, April 28, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on the CU-Boulder campus. The students will present projects, all stemming from a historical theme chosen by the program's national coordinators. This year the theme is "Frontiers in History: People, Places and Ideas."

CU-Boulder Business Professor Promotes Sustainable Environment And Economy

April 15, 2001

As environmental concerns have expanded from localized problems such as smog and toxic waste dumps to global issues such as climate change and species elimination, many view environmental challenges as an increasing threat to economic development. But where many see obstacles, Tom Dean sees opportunity.

Softbank Director To Speak To CU-Boulder Business Â鶹ÒùÔº

April 15, 2001

A director of the venture capital firm that funded Yahoo!, E*Trade and GeoCities will speak on Tuesday, April 24, to a University of Colorado at Boulder College of Business class. Bradley Feld, a managing director of Softbank Venture Capital, will speak at 3:30 p.m. in room 100 of the Mathematics Building, located at the corner of Colorado Avenue and Folsom Street. The talk, which is part of the college's Profiles in American Enterprise class, is free and open to the public.

CU-Boulder Working Toward Campus Wide Writing Program

April 15, 2001

Under the umbrella of a newly designed writing program, all freshmen entering the University of Colorado at Boulder will soon be required to enroll in a program in writing and rhetoric. While many CU-Boulder freshmen are currently required to enroll in a writing class their first year, nearly 70 percent bypass it by scoring high enough on their SAT or ACT tests, according to College of Arts and Sciences Dean Peter Spear, who will oversee the new program.

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