CU-Boulder Professor Explores Relationships Between Americans And Animals

Feb. 17, 2003

Chickens, dogs, cows and cats are all domesticated animals found in America today. While some sleep on personalized beds in our homes, others are packed by the hundreds under one roof awaiting a date with the dinner table. So why do we eat some and treat others as members of our families?

Perspectives On Atomic Bomb Offered At CU-Boulder Symposium

Feb. 17, 2003

"Copenhagen," a Tony Award winning play about ethical, moral and personal dilemmas surrounding the creation of the first nuclear bomb, will provide the backdrop for a two-part symposium presented April 13 and April 14 by the University of Colorado at Boulder and The Denver Center for the Performing Arts.

CU-Boulder Science Policy Expert To Lead Group Discussion On Politicization Of Science

Feb. 16, 2003

As science is increasingly used as a tool of advocacy and argument, what will be the consequences? Roger A. Pielke, Jr., director of the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research at the University of Colorado at Boulder, directed a discussion of the role of science in its social contexts and utility in decision-making Feb. 16 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Denver.

CU-Leeds School Receives $150,000 Gift From Microsoft

Feb. 16, 2003

Microsoft Corp. has donated $150,000 worth of technology support to the CU-Boulder Leeds School of Business to help enhance curriculum and technology systems. A software donation of $125,000 includes Visio 2002, a program for creating business diagrams; Office XP Developer Edition, which includes tools for programming and application development; and Publisher 2002, a desktop publishing suite. Other donated products include server software and maintenance tools.

Applications For New Williams Village Student Apartments Now Available

Feb. 16, 2003

Applications for new apartments at the University of Colorado at Boulder Williams Village housing community are now being accepted at the American Campus Communities office in room 227 at the University Memorial Center. The new facility, known as "Bear Creek Apartments at Williams Village," is specifically designed for upper-division students and is scheduled to be open for occupancy by fall semester 2003. It features a mix of private and shared bedroom accommodations with private and semiprivate bathrooms, academic support services and laundry and recreational facilities.

Aboriginal Religion Expert To Lecture At CU-Boulder

Feb. 16, 2003

An internationally known religion expert from Australia will present "Varieties of Religious Aesthetic," a series of four lectures starting Feb. 24, as part of the University of Colorado at Boulder department of religious studies' annual Robert C. Lester Lectureship on the Study of Religion.

Early Diagnosis Of Infants' Hearing Loss Improves Language Skills, Says CU-Boulder Expert

Feb. 16, 2003

Infants who are deaf or hard of hearing go through critical sensitive periods for the development of vocabulary, grammar and the sounds of spoken English, according to a University of Colorado at Boulder professor. Christine Yoshinaga-Itano, chair of the speech, language and hearing sciences department, presented "What the deaf child can't afford to miss: Language, Deafness and the Remarkable Infant" Feb. 17 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Misunderstanding The Prehistoric Southwest: What Happened At Chaco?

Feb. 16, 2003

Two University of Colorado at Boulder researchers have developed intriguing theories on the mysterious demise of the Chaco Canyon Pueblo people and the larger Chaco region that governed an area in the Southwest about the size of Ohio before it collapsed about 1125.

Village Depopulation In Prehispanic Southwest Reflects Successful Agriculture, Says CU-Boulder Anthropologist

Feb. 16, 2003

What often is described as abandonment of Southwestern village sites by ancient inhabitants is frequently inaccurate when the archaeological evidence is scrutinized, according to a University of Colorado at Boulder anthropologist.

Weather Cells Found To Form Around Magnetic Storms On Solar Surface

Feb. 13, 2003

Clusters of sunspots form their own weather patterns on the sun, according to new observations by a team of University of Colorado at Boulder researchers. Professor Juri Toomre of JILA said large complexes of magnetic sunspots cause downdrafts in their vicinity that are fed by winds flowing into the sun from the surface and dissipated by strong winds flowing out from deep below the sunspots.

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