Features

March Madness Illustration

March Math-ness

Tim Chartier shines during the NCAA Division I College Basketball Tournament, AKA March Madness: He's one of the nation's top bracketologists. And also a mime.

Rob Shearon on his scooter

Recovery Road

The CU Collegiate Recovery Center helped Rob Shearon set his life straight. To pay it forward, he traveled 6,000 miles to Alaska on a motor scooter.

Ted Mulcahey tunes a CU piano

Piano Man

CU Â鶹ӰԺ owns more than 100 pianos. Steinway & Sons veteran Ted Mulcahey keeps them in tune.

man looking through a magnifying glass

Planted Evidence

For decades Jane Bock and David Norris have been using plant science to help solve murders.

Rebecca Safran

Bird's-Eye View

A CU biologist and her students invent new ways to trace evolution in action.

U.S. map

Swing State

A recent CU-Â鶹ӰԺ graduate and political junkie from Germany travels America in a beat-up Saab trying to understand the places where presidential elections are decided.

Departments

Michael Grab is a stone balancer in Â鶹ӰԺ.

NOW – Stones

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...

Karen Chin reconstructs the physical and social world of the big dinosaurs.

Inquiry: Dinosaur Diets

CU paleontologist Karen Chin reconstructs the physical and social world of the big dinosaurs — in part by teasing out who ate whom.

Hawk in Â鶹ӰԺ

Animal Control

CU-Â鶹ӰԺ attracts all kinds of visitors

Roof of CU building

Paul Danish: Naming Rights

How did some of the CU buildings get their names?

Ed Snowden

Campus News Briefs – Spring 2016

Edward Snowden appears at Macky.

Female graduate in Â鶹ӰԺ

Sun Sets on Winter Commencement

CU-Â鶹ӰԺ to hold one full-campus graduation ceremony in May

Calliandra haematocephala

Look: Plants

Â鶹ӰԺ 1,000 plant species, mostly exotic, thrive inside CU-Â鶹ӰԺ's 30th Street greenhouse.

Patty Limerick

You’ll Be Hearing More from Patty Limerick

CU-Â鶹ӰԺ scholar of the West tapped as Colorado’s state historian

Temporary Building No. 1

Origins: Temporary Building No. 1

Temporary Building No. 1 has been a hospital, offices and classroom space. One thing it’s never been is temporary.

Â鶹ӰԺ Flatirons

Infographic: Flatirons

They’re Â鶹ӰԺ’s icon and hard to miss.

Steve Wozniak

Return of the Woz

Apple co-founder to headline 68th Conference on World Affairs

Africa

Events – Spring 2016

Happenings at the Alumni Association.

Bell in UMC

CU Around: Soundings

A 800-pound brass bell, cast in 1856 for the USS Colorado, settled in its new home at CU-Â鶹ӰԺ’s University Memorial Center just before Veterans Day.

Bruce Benson

Q&A with the President: Bruce D. Benson – Spring 2016

Amid vigorous national debate about diversity on college campuses, CU has reaffirmed its commitment to provide a welcoming environment for all students.

Jesse Mahoney

A Lawyer on the Court

New head volleyball coach chose the sporting life over the law

Skier

Sports Briefs – Spring 2016

Highlights and tidbits from Fall 2016

Josh Scott

Sports Q&A: Josh Scott

Josh Scott (Soc'16) takes his role as a leader seriously.

Mark Campbell

Opera Librettist Mark Campbell

It’s a rare thing to be a full-time librettist today. Mark Campbell (Thtr’75) would like to make it less so.

Tracy Wahl

NPR's Tracy Wahl

For Tracy Wahl (Comm’90), keeping up with changes in digital media is more than a pastime. It’s part of her job.

Lilibet Snellings

How Lilibet Snellings Saw Los Angeles

When Lilibet Snellings (Jour'04) moved to Los Angeles, she served as the "Box Girl" at the Standard hotel in West Hollywood.

Spring scenic

In Memoriam – Spring 2016

A list of our Forever Buffs who have passed.

Mountain Research Station

Letters – Spring 2016

Soundings from our readers.

Two young women in the early 1900s

Then – May 1925

By 1911 CU-Â鶹ӰԺ’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.