Friends laughing together

12 things to do over fall break

Nov. 15, 2021

Are you staying in Boulder over fall break? Here are some activities to get you in the holiday spirit, enjoy the great outdoors and more.

Man installing solar panels on a house

Can startups be the vessel for solving climate change?

Nov. 15, 2021

A new study out of the Leeds School of Business shows that small businesses focused on climate-friendly goods and services may be more effective at addressing climate change because they can bridge the political divide by offering climate solutions.

campus community members walking on campus

The doctor is in: Embedded therapist specializes in graduate students

Nov. 15, 2021

To ensure graduate students receive the mental wellness support they need, Stacy Gerberich has joined the Graduate School as an embedded therapist with Counseling and Psychiatric Services.

person writing on sticky notes

3 tips for overcoming setbacks this semester

Nov. 15, 2021

No matter what goal you set out to achieve, chances are you’ll encounter a few obstacles along the way. Here are some tips you can use to manage and overcome setbacks this semester.

MIMIC Director Adrian Gestos

Meet MIMIC Director Adrian Gestos

Nov. 15, 2021

Since joining the Materials Instrumentation and Multimodal Imaging Core team, Adrian Gestos has been helping researchers solve problems with the facility’s state-of-the-art equipment, allowing scientists and engineers to characterize materials visually, mechanically and chemically, down to the submicron scale.

Students walking on campus

10 things to do this week: Goalball, career development workshops, more

Nov. 15, 2021

This week brings Brain Foods and Monday Moods, events to connect you with campus health resources, an info session on the Core Leadership Program, mindfulness practice at the CU Art Museum and more.

ocean crashing on rocks

Pacific Ocean, not ice sheet, shifted West Coast storms south

Nov. 12, 2021

A new CIRES-led study shows that ocean temperatures, not ice sheets themselves, were directly responsible for the southward shift in West Coast precipitation patterns during the last Ice Age.

illustration of four COVID-19 engineering research projects

Behind the masks: Student helpers in COVID-19 research

Nov. 12, 2021

Student lab technicians at Denver public schools, all from populations historically excluded from engineering, helped collect data during the height of the pandemic for environmental engineering Professor Mark Hernandez's air ventilation research. Read some of their stories.

Mourners place flowers in a fence surrounding the King Soopers parking lot after a shooting in March 2021

Healing Colorado’s Collective Trauma: A workshop Dec. 1–2

Nov. 12, 2021

In the last 20 years, Colorado has been disproportionately impacted by violence, and it ranks fourth in the U.S. in the number of mass shootings. Join this CU Boulder-Naropa University event to explore violence prevention and healing.

Stock image of NASA probe in space

Tiny grains, severe damage: How hypervelocity dust impacts can damage a spacecraft

Nov. 12, 2021

New research out of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics gives the most complete picture yet of how high-speed dust impacts may damage a spacecraft and disturb its operations.

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