News Headlines
- The Center for African & African American Studies at CU Boulder, which recently celebrated its third annual CAAAS Day, empowers students and drives impact through donor support.
- New research shows that women who hit menopause later in life have healthier blood vessels and are less likely to have strokes and heart attacks in their postmenopausal years.
- The °µÍø½ûÇø has paused its Critical Needs Hiring Program (CNHP) out of an abundance of caution and to ensure there are no ongoing gaps between university policy and the program’s implementation
- Fifty years after Frank Robinson became the first Black manager in Major League Baseball, the league is struggling with a significant decline in Black players and leaders.
- In honor of what would have been Paul Newman’s 100th birthday, CU Boulder film historian Clark Farmer considers whether there still are movie stars.
- A new strategy for measuring magnetic fields could one day lead to a host of new quantum sensors—from tools that might map out the activity of the human brain to devices that could help airplane pilots navigate the globe.
- Fire spotters used to watch with binoculars from forest towers. Now, technology can help forecast fire behavior, but human experience is still essential. Read from CU expert John Daily on The Conversation.
- CU Boulder chemist Niels Damrauer and his research colleagues use visible light to break environmentally persistent carbon-fluorine bonds in PFAS.
- Beer historian and CU Boulder Assistant Professor Travis Rupp explains why canned beer, celebrating its 90th anniversary, has been immensely impactful for the industry.
- Last year, CU Boulder helped to launch a record 35 new companies. These businesses are pioneering new technologies from sensors for monitoring soil health to breathalyzers that can sniff out signs of lung cancer.