Gallery

  • fire-fighting plane
    Wildfires burned about 2 million acres in the United States in the early months of 2017.
  • slackliner
    Don’t let the club’s name fool you: Slackers at CU is not for the idle or undisciplined. It’s for slackliners.
  • Monarch butterflies
    In April “Becoming Butterflies” opened at the CU Museum of Natural History.
  • Olympics 1968
    CU-Boulder Olympian William Toomey
  • Michael Grab is a stone balancer in Boulder.
    Michael Grab (Soc'07) creates stunning rock art, practicing at least three to five hours a day, often in moving water. It’s more than a hobby: Grab has given live stone-balancing performances at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland and at music festivals in Stockholm and in the Netherlands. He's also published a book of his work...
  • Calliandra haematocephala
    About 1,000 plant species, mostly exotic, thrive inside CU-Boulder's 30th Street greenhouse.
  • Two young women in the early 1900s
    By 1911 CU-Boulder’s women had decided the time was right for a major campus building of their own, one with parlors, bedrooms, a dining room and a gymnasium.
  • Boulder Flatirons
    They’re Boulder’s icon and hard to miss.
  • Innocents on the Ice
    It’s been a banner year for the University Press of Colorado, the nonprofit book publisher co-founded by CU-Boulder in 1965.
  • Mountains and skiing graphic
    Over decades CU-Boulder has earned a supreme reputation in skiing, starting with its first national championship, in 1959.
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