Faculty-Staff Edition—Oct. 1, 2025
Campus Community
4 ways to join Banned Books Week
Banned Books Week is Oct. 5–11, and the University Libraries will have four opportunities for you to pick up a banned book and chat with a librarian about censorship.
A fan of comics? Don't miss out on these 4 library collections
CU Boulder students, faculty and staff can access thousands of digital comics, graphic novels and manga through the University Libraries collections.
5 ways faculty, staff put CU Boulder on map at NYC Climate Week
Multiple CU Boulder sustainability leaders helped raise the visibility of campus efforts during New York City Climate Week in September, including a keynote address, climate comedy and more.
We Are Art Buffs building an arts community
At a Sept. 17 gathering, representatives of the arts at CU Boulder, in Boulder and across the Front Range built connections in the nascent We Are Art Buffs initiative.
Events & Exhibits
Supporting Student Resiliency: Supporting Survivors on Oct. 9
Trauma can affect anyone, and how we respond matters. This session explores how to support someone who shares a traumatic experience, with tips for promoting healing and encouraging further help. Responsible employees will also learn how to meet reporting requirements in a trauma-informed way.
The Couple Connection: Tools for a Stronger Relationship series starts Oct. 14
This six-week couples skills group, hosted by FSAP, is designed to help partners build stronger, healthier and more connected relationships using research-based principles. Participants will learn practical tools to cultivate appreciation and connection, improve communication, manage conflict and increase friendship and intimacy.
Research Corner
Building the quantum workforce of the future: A new study seeks the way
In the largest study of its kind, researchers are exploring how the United States can prepare students to enter into the rapidly growing quantum technology industry.
Corals might be adapting to climate change
A new study of corals up to 200 years old suggests that the organisms are showing signs of resilience to the impacts of an increasingly acidic ocean.
The Conversation
Why aren't companies speeding up investment? New theory offers an answer to the economic paradox
The pace of U.S. business investment has fallen by about 50% over the past 50 years. Idle capacity, not cautious executives, explains the decline, research suggests. Read from CU expert David Ikenberry on The Conversation.
Newsletter Block TitleWhat We're Reading
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What We're Reading
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Research & Innovation Office: Latest updates on the federal government shutdown
Matt Eichenfield named inaugural Karl Gustafson Endowed Chair of Quantum Engineering
Hope Saska named director of CU Art Museum
Expanding career horizons through classroom outreach
Education scholars earn prestigious National Academy of Education/Spencer dissertation fellowships
Engineering program helps launch 3D plastic recycling program
Student Anastasia Gallegos-Roque receives Newman Civic Fellowship
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Events Calendar
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