Campus Community
- <p>Folsom Field hasn't hosted concerts since 2001. The sonic drought ends this summer with back-to-back shows by Dead & Company.聽</p>
- <p><em>Taking the Lede: Colorado Edition</em>鈥攁 45-minute documentary produced by聽<a href="http://cunewscorps.com/about-us/">CU News Corps</a>聽students and faculty members鈥攚ill air on Colorado Public Television (Channel 12) on聽Wednesday, June 29, at 8:30 p.m.聽The documentary details stories of Colorado high school journalism in the wake of the the 1988 Hazelwood Supreme Court decision, which ruled that school administrators could exercise restraint of school-sponsored expression.</p>
- <p dir="ltr">Diego Fierro, 13, hopes to be a mechanical engineer someday. And thanks to a LEGO Robotics: Space Challenge camp at the 彩民宝典, Diego took one step closer to that dream this week.</p>
<p dir="ltr">鈥淚鈥檝e never built anything with LEGO Mindstorms before,鈥 Diego explained, as he programmed the robot鈥檚 next move. 鈥淚t鈥檚 cool because it gives me an idea of how a machine works, how every piece is important and has a job.鈥</p> - <p>Every few years, CU-Boulder's Office of Strategic Relations takes aerial photos of the campus for archiving and marketing purposes. On June 15, campus photographer Glenn Asakawa and videographers Alana Murphy and Zach Ornitz ascended above campus in a helicopter to capture the current look and feel of campus.</p>
- <p>Did you know that as a University of Colorado employee, you can receive one-on-one investment advice and guidance on CU鈥檚 retirement investment plan options? TIAA financial consultants will be on campus in June and July to do just that.</p>
- <p>Summer brings plenty of opportunities to get outdoors, get some vitamin D and to stay active. Click through for some summer health tips.</p>
- Environmental policy leader Alice Madden has been named executive director of Colorado Law's Getches-Wilkinson Center for Natural Resources, Energy, and the Environment, effective July 11.
- <p>Summer is getaway season, but even if you鈥檙e low on time or funds, you don鈥檛 have to miss out! Set aside a day or two for microtravel. Make a list of all the things you鈥檝e been dying to do in town, find a new restaurant to try, or just pack a lunch and hit the trails. Make it happen with this month鈥檚 issue of聽Student Health 101聽online magazine.</p>
- After five years and the hard work of nearly 200 students, faculty and community members, Geometry Point at Romero Park in Lafayette is now open. Filled with colorful geometric shapes, math equations and artful displays of arithmetic, the park was designed to make math fun.
- For Professor Sarah Krakoff and students from CU-Boulder, spring marks a transition from the halls of the Wolf Law Building to the fields of the San Luis Valley. Since 2012, Krakoff and her law students have regularly trekked to one of the largest high altitude deserts in the world, where they clear debris from irrigation ditches or acequias and provide free legal assistance to farmers whose water rights are in question.