Manhattan Project Historian To Speak At CU-Boulder August Commencement

July 29, 1999

David Hawkins, distinguished professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Colorado at Boulder, will deliver the main address at CUÂ’s commencement ceremony on Aug. 7. Hawkins retired in 1982 after a 35-year teaching career at CU-Boulder during which he won numerous prestigious honors and awards. A year before his retirement he received a $300,000 grant from the MacArthur Foundation, the so-called "genius grant," the first awarded to a CU faculty member.

CU Residence Hall Sets Up Research Community For Undergraduates

July 29, 1999

The University of Colorado at BoulderÂ’s Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program and the Residential Academic Program in Baker Hall are teaming up this fall to facilitate undergraduate participation in faculty research.

Kosovo Conflict Only A Side Issue As The U.S., Europe Redefine Relationships

July 27, 1999

Fighting is far from over in that area of Eastern Europe generally referred to as the Balkans, according to Stephen Fischer-Galati, professor emeritus of history at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Fischer-Galati labeled the recent conflict in Kosovo a "disaster" and said that he viewed the future in that region with "profound pessimism." The level of destruction inflicted by western air strikes has resulted in a non-functional economy shackled to an antiquated industrial system which could not hope to compete economically with other nations.

CU-Boulder McNair Scholars Present Research Findings In Summer Colloquium

July 27, 1999

The work of two 1998-99 student groups will culminate within the span of a week as the scholars in the Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program at the University of Colorado at Boulder present their research discoveries in the 1999 Summer Colloquium. The presentations, with topics ranging from art history to molecular, cellular and developmental biology, will be held Thursday and Friday, July 29-30, from 9 a.m. to noon in Hale 270, and Aug. 5-6 in Duane Physics G1B20.

Seismic Researchers Hope For Good Vibration During Summer Of Rock

July 25, 1999

A team of research scientists working in the Rocky Mountains this summer hopes to find keys to unlock geological secrets buried deep underground for nearly two billion years. The University of Colorado at Boulder is among 14 American universities and one from Germany taking part in the project known as the Continental Dynamics -- Rocky Mountain Project, or CD-ROM.

Youth In Natural Resources Students To Visit CU-Boulder On July 28

July 22, 1999

Students from the state-wide Youth in Natural Resources program will participate in activities at both CU-BoulderÂ’s Mountain Research Station and the Integrated Teaching and Learning Laboratory (ITLL) on Wednesday, July 28. The students will begin the day by touring the Research Station site outside of Nederland and then visit campus for an admissions presentation and hands-on experiments at ITLL in the afternoon.

Campus Garden Project To Reap First Major Harvest Of The Summer

July 22, 1999

MEDIA ADVISORY WHO: University of Colorado at Boulder faculty, staff and student volunteer gardeners who are participating in the Campus Garden Project. WHAT: The project is a partnership between CU-Boulder and Community Food Share to grow food in former campus flowerbeds for needy families in Boulder County. WHEN: Monday, July 26, at 10 a.m. WHERE: Directly south of the front door of the CU Recreation Center.

Leading Authority On Glenn Miller Hits The Right Note With Honorary Degree

July 21, 1999

Alan Cass, regarded as a leading world authority on the life and legacy of big band leader Glenn Miller, will receive an honorary degree in recognition of his work from the University of Colorado at Boulder. Cass, who built the Glenn Miller archive at CU-Boulder, will receive the Doctor of Humane Letters award at the commencement ceremony on Saturday, Aug. 7.

CU-Boulder Professor Mark Meier To Receive International Award

July 20, 1999

University of Colorado at Boulder Emeritus Professor Mark Meier, one of the worldÂ’s leading glaciologists, has been named 1999 winner of the International Hydrology Prize by the International Association of Hydrological Sciences. Meier will be presented with a medal by the IAHS and the International Geophysical Union July 21 at a ceremony in Birmingham, England. Meier has spent nearly 50 years studying the worldÂ’s glaciers and ice sheets and pioneered the role they play in EarthÂ’s hydrological cycle, including sea level change.

Catastrophic Draining Of Huge Lakes Tied To Ancient Global Cooling Event

July 20, 1999

The catastrophic draining of two gigantic glacial lakes in CanadaÂ’s Hudson Bay region some 8,200 years ago appears to have caused the most abrupt, widespread cold spell on Earth during the last 10,000 years, according to a group of scientists.

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