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Local Corporations Fund Scholarship To CU-Boulder Business School

April 2, 2003

Corporex, Bank One's Colorado Commercial Real Estate Group and GE Real Estate have donated $13,500 to establish a scholarship to the CU-Boulder Leeds School of Business. L.C. Fulenwider Inc., Milender White Construction and Pahl Pahl Pahl Architects-Planners also contributed to the scholarship fund. The scholarship will be awarded to a student from the Denver Public School District to attend the Leeds School.

'Sounds Of Music' To Be Explored At April 19 CU-Boulder Wizards Show

April 2, 2003

The sounds of music, along with descriptions of how they are created and the rules of physics they follow, will be the subject of the April 19 CU Wizards show "The Physics of Music." Jim Faller, a physicist at the University of Colorado at Boulder, will present the show at 9:30 a.m. in Duane Physics, room G1B30. The show, aimed at students in grades five through nine, is free and open to the public.

CU-Boulder Fares Well In Graduate Specialty Rankings

April 2, 2003

Two University of Colorado at Boulder graduate school specialty programs were ranked in the top 10 in the nation and a third in the top 20 in the annual U.S. News & World Report graduate school rankings released today. The magazine's annual graduate school issue ranks roughly 10 graduate disciplines each year and ranks more than a dozen other graduate programs on a sporadic basis. U.S. News also ranks a number of specialty programs within particular disciplines.

Can Elephants Really Run? Yes And No, Say Researchers

April 1, 2003

For those who have ever wondered if elephants can run, the answer is yes and no, according to a new study by researchers at four institutions, including the University of Colorado at Boulder.

State Tax Bills Might Surprise, Says CU-Boulder Tax Expert

April 1, 2003

Colorado residents expecting smaller tax bills or bigger refunds this year may be in for a surprise, according to Betty Jackson, professor of accounting and chair of accounting and business law at the University of Colorado at Boulder's Leeds School of Business. "The bottom line is that state tax bills will be up this year," Jackson said, noting that deductions contingent on the state budget being in surplus have been eliminated.

Base Line Middle School And CU-Boulder Tackle Copenhagen Project, Events

March 31, 2003

Photographers: When visiting Base Line Middle School, please check-in at the main office. Jeanne Manning will be available for assistance. An outreach partnership between the University of Colorado at Boulder's Center for Humanities and the Arts, the Denver Center for the Performing Arts and Base Line Middle School comes to fruition this month as Base Line eighth graders dive into the Copenhagen Project.

Professor Richard A. McCray Scholarship Fund Set Up For CU-Boulder Undergraduates

March 31, 2003

When the McCrays journeyed to Hawaii last fall for Professor Richard McCray's surprise 65th birthday celebration, they hinted that the family gift was going to be significant. It was. The gift they gave him established the Richard A. McCray Scholarship Fund with the CU Foundation for the benefit of undergraduate scholarships at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

BU-Boulder Lab To Test HRT And Exercise Effects In Postmenopausal Women

March 31, 2003

The University Colorado at Boulder's kinesiology and applied physiology department is seeking healthy postmenopausal women 45 to 65 years old to participate in research involving hormone replacement therapy, or HRT. The goal is to test and see if estrogen and/or moderate exercise may improve body functions, said Associate Research Professor Kerrie Moreau of the kinesiology and applied physiology department.

Perspectives On Atomic Bomb Offered At CU-Boulder Symposium

March 31, 2003

"Copenhagen," a Tony Award-winning play about ethical, moral and personal dilemmas surrounding the creation of the first nuclear bomb, will provide the backdrop for a two-part symposium presented April 13-14 by the University of Colorado at Boulder and The Denver Center for the Performing Arts.

CU-Boulder Symposium To Address Safety Of Tall Buildings, WTC Collapse

March 30, 2003

Matthys Levy, co-author of a controversial study on why the World Trade Center collapsed in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, will present his findings as part of a public regional symposium sponsored by the National Academy of Engineering on April 10 at CU-Boulder. The symposium, "Tall Buildings: Are They Safe Enough?" will be held from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the new Discovery Learning Center at CU-Boulder's College of Engineering and Applied Science. The Discovery Learning Center is located on the southwest corner of Colorado Avenue and Regent Drive.

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