CU In Residence To Begin In Chaffee County This Month

Aug. 12, 1999

The chancellor of the University of Colorado at Boulder and CUÂ’s BugMobile officially kicked off the CU in Residence community education program in Chaffee County on Friday, Aug. 13. CU-Boulder Chancellor Richard Byyny outlined the details of the innovative educational program at a luncheon he hosted for 65 business, education and community leaders at the Mt. Princeton Conference Center. Byyny noted that CU in Residence will bring a wide range of educational programs and special events to Buena Vista, Salida and Poncha Springs throughout the coming year.

"Words To Stir The Soul" At CU-Boulder Aug. 31, LoDo Tattered Cover On Sept. 3

Aug. 12, 1999

"Words to Stir the Soul: Readings from the American West," will be hosted by the CU-Boulder Center of the American West at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 31, in the Old Main Chapel on the Boulder campus. The program also will be held, with different readers and reading selections, at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 3, at the LoDo Tattered Cover Bookstore at 1628 16th St. in Denver. Both programs are free and open to the public.

Community Is Invited To Open House On CU-Boulder Master Plan Aug. 18

Aug. 11, 1999

Key elements of the University of Colorado at Boulder Master Plan will be described to campus and community members in an open house on Wednesday, Aug. 18, hosted by Paul Tabolt, CU-Boulder's vice chancellor for administration, and the Department of Facilities Management.

CU Prof Explains Elvis Mystique 22 Years After His Death

Aug. 11, 1999

He died 22 years ago this month and yet Elvis Presley is as popular in death as he was in life. Since his death, Elvis has risen from pop idol to religious icon. People make pilgrimages to his house in Memphis. They build shrines to him in their homes, covet his pictures, paintings and figurines -- actions suggesting a spiritual figure of importance for many people.

College Of Engineering Publishes Biography Of Roland Rautenstraus

Aug. 11, 1999

The College of Engineering and Applied Science at CU-Boulder has published a new book on the life and contributions of former CU president and civil engineering professor Roland Rautenstraus. "RAUT: Teacher, Leader, Engineer," by Richard Weingardt, traces the life of CU's 12th president from his roots as a minister's son growing up in small town Nebraska and Kansas to his tremendous impact on the University of Colorado and on the state, through its transportation and educational systems, and land-use policies.

CU Students Donate Used Textbooks To Groups Across Colorado

Aug. 10, 1999

CU-Boulder’s Office of Community Relations and the CU Bookstore joined forces last spring to collect used textbooks from CU students as they prepared to leave campus for the summer. At the end of each semester, students have the option of selling their textbooks back to the bookstore, although many books do not meet the criteria for "buy back." At the end of the spring ‘99 semester, however, more than 1,500 books fell into that category.

CU-Boulder Announces New Student Affairs Appointments

Aug. 8, 1999

Leadership changes are underway in two student services areas at the University of Colorado at Boulder, according to Ron Stump, interim vice chancellor for student affairs. A. Eldridge Greer was named director of Counseling and Psychological Services: A Multicultural Center, effective Sept. 1. Greer succeeds Darcy Sease, who will retire from the university after 32 years of service on Aug. 31. Terri Bodhaine was named permanent director of Disability Services. The appointments were approved at the Board of Regents meeting on Aug. 5.

Pioneering Counseling Services Director Retiring From CU-Boulder

Aug. 8, 1999

Darcy Sease, director of Counseling and Psychological Services: A Multicultural Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder, is retiring on Aug. 31 after 32 years of service, according to Ron Stump, interim vice chancellor for student affairs. "We will miss Darcy's efforts and wise insight regarding diversity and her enhancement of the learning environment for students in general. She has been a valued colleague who has not received the wide recognition that she truly deserves," said Stump.

CU-Boulder Selected By Prestigious Postdoctoral Fellowship Foundation

Aug. 5, 1999

The University of Colorado at Boulder is one of just 15 institutions nationwide chosen to take part in a new program of postdoctoral fellowships in the humanities. The two-year fellowships, each worth a minimum of $30,000 per year, were recently announced by the Princeton-based Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. CU-Boulder shares the honor of hosting the fellowships with such institutions as Harvard, Yale, the University of California, Berkeley, Northwestern University and New York University.

Gore's Announcement To Release Arctic Reconnaisance Data To Benefit CU-Boulder

Aug. 5, 1999

Vice President Al Gore announced this week the declassification of 59 reconnaissance images of the Arctic Ocean for use by scientists studying climate change, including teams from the University of Colorado at Boulder and the University of Washington.

Pages