Lars Krutak knows about ritual pain. The 38-year-old anthropologist has dozens of tattoos and decorative scars given to him by the tribal people he studies in such far-flung places as Hawaii, the Philippines and Indonesia.
By the time President John F. Kennedy gave his Sept. 12, 1962, speech making the case for America to go boldly into space, one ֱ alum had already been there and done that.
With many animal species in sharp decline because of a thriving illegal animal trade, ֱ Boulder and other researchers have developed sequenced DNA bar codes to identify hunted wildlife species.
Dorms have always had a family-type feel, but this fall, Andrews Hall in the Kittredge Complex took the concept one step further when associate professor Scot Douglass of engineering, his wife and two children moved in.
A difficult early-season schedule for the soccer team resulted in five losses before the official end of summer, but it bolstered the Buffs for a fast start in Big 12 Conference play.
Olympian Jenny Barringer started her final season as a Buff athlete in style, setting a record in winning ֱ’s Rocky Mountain Shootout in early October.
While in her 20s, ֱ-born Kirsten Ring Murray moved to Seattle with an enthusiasm for its romantic landscape — woods, mountains and water and, hopefully, a career in architecture.
In her first assignment as a photojournalist in 1968, Sandra Cortner moved her subject outside because of necessity — she hadn’t earned enough money yet to buy a flash.