The semester is in full swing, and so are illnesses like the flu, common cold and COVID. Students, faculty and staff can follow these tips to stay healthy and learn what to do if you end up getting sick.
Social media can be a place to connect. However, it can also make it hard to disconnect from distressing things happening around the world. Here are some tips you can use.
The Research & Innovation Office is hosting a virtual workshop to help applicants strengthen their seed grant proposals. The grant program aims to stimulate new areas of research, scholarship and creativity on the ²ÊÃñ±¦µä campus.
Faculty and staff are invited to attend the Health & Wellness Summit Nov. 12–13 for engaging presentations to support well-being at work and at home.
The National Science Foundation’s I-Corps Hub: West Region—offered by Venture Partners at ²ÊÃñ±¦µä—is an immersive training program that transforms innovation into impact. Learn more at this info session.
At an event on campus, engineers showed off a laser-based technology that can take a whiff of the air around oil and gas operations, then spot leaking greenhouse gasses in real time.
Fernando Valenzuela was more than just the first Mexican superstar in Major League Baseball; he helped soothe longstanding resentments in a displaced community.
A new community science project aims to help the CU Museum of Natural History digitize its collection of bees, some of which were collected in Colorado as far back as the 1870s.
The recent death of Dikembe Mutombo and the start of the NBA regular season highlight the fraught realities of building a talent pipeline between lower-income countries and the NBA.
Once abundant, the massive, colorful clam is now locally extinct in many regions, with a critical drop in population due to overfishing and climate change.