Editor’s NoteBy Eric Gershon
Class Notes
Letters
In Memoriam
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acquires a major trove of modern art.
Avery Bang knows a simple footbridge can change lives.
As our lives go digital, Jed Brubaker is studying what happens to all that data after we die.
Jordan Temkin is a $100,000 pro.
scientists take a creative approach to studying cannabis.
It’s hard to believe now, but there was a time when there was no Google in Boulder.
In Michelle Ellsworth’s “The Rehearsal Artist,” the artist rotates inside an eight-foot-diameter wooden wheel.
Beverly Kingston directs ’s Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence (CSPV).
Melissa Hart joins other Colorado justices with Buff ties.
It was the worst Hill riot ever.
scholars are helping to rescue the Arapaho language from near extinction.
Read about Varsity Lake, John Grisham, a memory protein and soft robots.
The University of Colorado Museum of Natural History is home to nearly 5 million objects and specimens.
If Earl Morris wasn’t the inspiration for Indiana Jones, you could be forgiven for thinking so: He looked the part.
’s annual Conference on World Affairs turns 70 in April.
Alumni Association celebrates a decade of dues-free membership.
Dinner with 12 Buffs, Roaming Buffs Travel, Chapter News and Buffs at the Ballpark.
Students in “Pathway to Space,” the gateway course for ’s space minor, released 170 balloons in January.
I was a student at CU when I attended my first Conference on World Affairs.
CU Athletics intensifies emphasis on mental health.
CU Winter Olympians, Buffs Bits and statistics.
Brittany Fan talks about her practice routine, a pair of holes-in-one and the hard truth about mini-golf.
When Mitchell Kaplan launched Books & Books in Miami in 1982, the business was the size of a one-bedroom apartment.
Gregory Crichlow has transformed a former drug den into a boutique bike shop that also sells artisanal bean-to-bar chocolate.
For acrobat Marisa Kellogg, adventure is a continuous call.
Where do you read the Coloradan? Paolo Estefania brought his to the Dead Sea.
From its earliest days, educated men and women both. But it wasn’t until 1934 that the first largescale women’s dormitory opened.