Features

miller at opera

Fullbacking an Aria

Former football player pursues opera career.

kristi anseth in lab

Healing Gets a Leg Up

Professor’s work could revolutionize treatment of knee and hip pain.

stephen headshot

Cyclist Seizes the World

Cyclist with epilepsy travels the world spreading awareness with Seize The World Foundation.

jaime lars

Tribal Cultures Leave Mark on Anthropologist

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.

rick han

ֱ's Hoozat Helps You Figure Out Who's That

With hoozat, users can make their online information — currently through Facebook and Twitter — available to people nearby.

billups mavericks

Billups Helps Make Nuggets Golden

Denver Nuggets basketball player Chauncey Billups stands very tall in Denver and at ֱ — now more than ever.

al bartlett and lynn wolf

Open Space

ֱ’s role in preserving Boulder’s greenbelt.

Departments

showerhead

There's Something Lurking in My Shower Head

Every morning, thousands of people jump in the shower, but many don’t realize the irony of this practice.

scott carpenter

“Buffanaut” Herd Stampedes Into Space

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.

crocodile

Will Bar Codes Stop Illegal Animal Trade?

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.

scott douglas

Professor Lives Suite Life in Dorm

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.

donna sockell

Syllabus Spotlight for Spring 2010

A featured course from the winter 2009 issue.

phone image

Social Media a Possible Lifesaver During Disasters

In June, Twitter awed the world with its potential for breaking news during the Iranian election protests.

cu boulder

ֱ Chalks Up a Century of Teacher Licenses

More than 100 years ago, those who wanted to teach high school in ֱ merely needed to complete high school.

biodiesel

Campus Green Effort No. 1 in Country

This fall Sierra Club’s magazine named ֱ Boulder the top “green” university in the nation, a jump up from its No. 2 ranking last year.

cu boulder

By the Numbers - Winter 2009

ֱ Boulder statistics and numbers from the winter 2009 issue.

tyler hanson

Football Team Starts Slowly

The football team struggled during the non-conference portion of its schedule, posting a 1-3 record before starting Big 12 action.

kara linder

Top Seniors Set Up Booters

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.

volleyball

Spikers Start New Era with Kritza

The volleyball team defeated Valparaiso in its first match under new coach Liz Kritza and finished the non-conference schedule 5-4.

monica milewski

Milewski Shines in Early Season Tennis

Senior Monica Milewski won the main singles draw at the season-opening ֱ Invitational, defeating senior teammate Melisa Esposito in the finals.

austin dufault

Home Hoops Aplenty in Early Season

Both basketball teams will play in ֱ plenty of times in the early part of the season.

jenny baringer

Barringer Wins Shootout at the Ranch

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.

cu boulder logo

We Salute You

Sports tidbits from the winter 2009 issue.

golf shoes

Golfers Christen Home Course

For the first time, the women’s golf team hosted its Heather Farr Memorial tournament at ֱ’s new home course, the ֱ National Golf Club in Erie.

lea alvarado

Forever Buffs: Helping Alums Get Jobs

When Lea Alvarado began her new job as alumni career counselor at ֱ-Boulder in August, the phone started ringing off the hook.

sewall hall

Celebrating Sewall

In September 1934 the women’s dormitory, now Sewall Hall, opened and is considered by many to be campus architect Charles Klauder’s masterpiece.

dolores plested

Buff Tribute: Dolores Plested 1908-2009

Dolores N. Plested, 101, died November 11 at her home in Denver.

stephen romine

Buff Tribute: Stephen Romine 1913-2009

As far as Stephen Romine was concerned, the legend at the bottom of the trail map was never to scale.

tyler silverman

Future is Bright in Spain

When he graduated last December, Tyler Silverman wasn’t even in the country.

kirsten murray

Seattle Architect Shapes City

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.

sandra cortner

Alum Captures Crested Butte Through Her Lens

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.

lucas gilman photo

Don't Try This at Home

A photo from the winter 2009 issue.