CU Â鶹ӰԺ's summer startup accelerator Catalyze CU welcomed its fourth round of participants in May. Now the teams are set to give five-minute pitches at Demo Day.
At a free event in Denver, teams of students, city and state employees will pitch solutions to a panel of judges, addressing some of Colorado and the nation's most pressing issues from homelessness to the opioid epidemic.
Middle and high school students in the CIRES Lens on Climate Change summer program, designed to influence a new wave of environmental scientists, will present their films on campus June 23 and July 22 and in Salida, Colorado, July 15.
On May 31, Ruthe Farmer, former senior policy advisor for tech inclusion in the Obama Administration, will share the story of her unconventional 16-year career as an advocate for tech and engineering education and equity.
When the CU Global Ambassadors convene in Â鶹ӰԺ on May 6, they will host a student event focused on building a global career, developing global leadership skills and promoting social good worldwide.
An Academic Review and Planning Advisory Committee task force will present recommendations on the university's Residential Academic Programs (RAPs) with opportunity for community feedback May 2 and 5. Click through to read more and find answers to frequently asked questions.
On May 3, LASP space physics research scientist Allison Jaynes will present early results from the NASA Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) Mission, launched in 2015 to study the little-understood phenomenon magnetic reconnection.
Tonight, a presentation and panel response titled "Agency in the Midst of Oppression: Jewish Doctors, Ghettos and Public Health" is being held in honor of the 70th anniversary of the Nuremberg doctors’ trial and national Week of Remembrance of the Victims of the Holocaust.
On April 26, Caltech professor Jay Famiglietti will discuss the convergence of climate models and decades of satellite data that suggest an unfortunate reality: Earth's water cycle is changing.