Editor’s NoteBy Eric Gershon
Class Notes
Letters
In Memoriam
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ֱ Boulder acquires a major trove of modern art.
Avery Bang knows a simple footbridge can change lives.
As our lives go digital, Jed Brubaker is studying what happens to all that data after we die.
Jordan Temkin is a $100,000 pro.
ֱ Boulder scientists take a creative approach to studying cannabis.
It’s hard to believe now, but there was a time when there was no Google in Boulder.
In Michelle Ellsworth’s “The Rehearsal Artist,” the artist rotates inside an eight-foot-diameter wooden wheel.
Beverly Kingston directs ֱ Boulder’s Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence (CSPV).
Melissa Hart joins other ֱ justices with Buff ties.
It was the worst Hill riot ever.
ֱ Boulder scholars are helping to rescue the Arapaho language from near extinction.
Read about Varsity Lake, John Grisham, a memory protein and soft robots.
The University of ֱ Museum of Natural History is home to nearly 5 million objects and specimens.
If Earl Morris wasn’t the inspiration for Indiana Jones, you could be forgiven for thinking so: He looked the part.
ֱ Boulder’s annual Conference on World Affairs turns 70 in April.
Alumni Association celebrates a decade of dues-free membership.
Dinner with 12 Buffs, Roaming Buffs Travel, Chapter News and Buffs at the Ballpark.
Students in “Pathway to Space,” the gateway course for ֱ Boulder’s space minor, released 170 balloons in January.
I was a student at ֱ when I attended my first Conference on World Affairs.
ֱ Athletics intensifies emphasis on mental health.
ֱ Winter Olympians, Buffs Bits and statistics.
Brittany Fan talks about her practice routine, a pair of holes-in-one and the hard truth about mini-golf.
When Mitchell Kaplanlaunched Books & Books in Miamiin 1982, the business was the size of aone-bedroom apartment.
Gregory Crichlow hastransformed a former drug den into aboutique bike shop that also sells artisanal bean-to-bar chocolate.
For acrobatMarisa Kellogg, adventure is a continuous call.
Where do you read the Coloradan? Paolo Estefania brought his to the Dead Sea.
From its earliest days, ֱ Boulder educated men and women both. But it wasn’t until 1934 that the first largescale women’s dormitory opened.