CU-Boulder Geology Team Traces Origins, Uplift Of California's Highest Mountains

July 26, 2004

Editors: Contents embargoed until July 29 at 2 p.m. EDT. A new study of California's southern Sierra Nevada range by a University of Colorado at Boulder research team has located a massive body of rock that sank into Earth's mantle some 3.5 million years ago, allowing the mountains to pop up. Undertaken with a high-tech suite of instruments designed to probe the geology to roughly 125 miles below Earth's surface, the study illustrated the mountain building process in the southern Sierras with unprecedented detail.

CU-Boulder Police Arrest CU Employee For Alleged Misappropriation Of Funds

July 26, 2004

An internal investigation of financial transactions in the linguistics department at the University of Colorado at Boulder has led to the arrest of a staff member on charges related to alleged misappropriation of university funds. Ruth Ann Cameron, an administrative staff member in the department since 1995, was arrested by the University of Colorado Police Department Tuesday, July 27, on the Boulder campus. She was arrested under a warrant following a meeting at the university internal auditor's office.

CU-Boulder Satellite Measures Sun's Radiation Using Venus

July 25, 2004

A satellite designed, built and controlled at the University of Colorado at Boulder for NASA has returned data indicating both Venus and sunspots have something in common -- they block some of the sun's energy going to Earth. Data from The Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment, or SORCE, satellite show when the shadow of Venus tracked across the face of the sun June 8 as the planet passed between Earth and the sun, the amount of sunlight reaching Earth decreased by 0.1 percent, said CU-Boulder's Gary Rottman.

Horizon High School Student Awarded CU Parents Association Scholarship

July 25, 2004

Kyle Reinholt, a senior at Horizon High School in Thornton, is the 2004 recipient of the University of Colorado at Boulder Parents Association CU-LEAD Scholarship. The CU Leadership, Excellence, Achievement and Diversity scholarship consists of $10,000 divided into four annual supplements of $2,500. The award was presented to Reinholt at a July 23 banquet for high school students who successfully completed the CU-Boulder Pre-Collegiate Development Summer Residential Program.

CU-Boulder Theater And Dance Professor Wins National Award

July 21, 2004

Professor Jim Symons of the University of Colorado at Boulder department of theater and dance will receive a national award from the Association for Theater in Higher Education on July 29 in Toronto, Canada. Symons is the winner of the association's "Outstanding Teacher of Theater in Higher Education" award, given once a year. With a membership of 2,000, the ATHE is the principal professional organization for theater professors in American colleges and universities.

CU-Boulder College Of Engineering Receives Gift Of Equipment, Fellowships From Agilent Technologies

July 21, 2004

The University of Colorado at Boulder announced today it has received a donation of $250,000 worth of advanced equipment and five $30,000 graduate student fellowships from Agilent Technologies. The gift supports education and research in several engineering departments and programs related to Agilent's strategic interest areas of communications, electronics and life sciences, and further establishes the company as one of the College of Engineering and Applied Science's key corporate partners.

CU Law Professor Appointed Interim Director Of Natural Resources Law Center

July 20, 2004

Associate Law Professor Sarah Krakoff has been named interim director of the University of Colorado at Boulder School of Law's Natural Resources Law Center. Krakoff replaces Jim Martin, who left the center to become executive director of Western Resource Advocates, a Boulder-based environmental law and policy group focused on the Interior West. Martin had served as NRLC director since 2002.

CU Genome Teaching Center Event July 29 To Feature Nobel Laureate Thomas Cech

July 19, 2004

University of Colorado Nobel laureate Thomas Cech will speak at the July 29-30 public grand opening of a teaching laboratory on the Boulder campus to train CU students, faculty and K-12 students and teachers on the latest genetic research techniques.

$8.7 Million CU-Boulder Instrument To Fly On High-tech Mercury Mission

July 19, 2004

A small, powerful University of Colorado at Boulder instrument will fly on NASA's MESSENGER mission, slated for launch Aug. 2 from Cape Kennedy, Fla., to probe Mercury's searing surface, oddball atmosphere and bizarre magnetic field.

Pet Intelligence Can Be Proven Using Data On Human Infants, Says CU-Boulder Sociologist

July 18, 2004

University of Colorado at Boulder sociologist and author Leslie Irvine is using what is known about human infants to prove a point many scientists won't formally examine - that domesticated dogs and cats each have unique personalities and are smarter than we think. Irvine explores animals' sense of self and their interactions with humans in her new book, "If You Tame Me: Human Identity and the Value of Animals' Lives." She used a new approach to illustrating pet intelligence.

Pages