Downloadable audio files, transcripts and sample scripts for use by journalists. Contact Dirk Martin for more information.Ìý

Two CU-Boulder Researchers Win Coveted American Geophysical Union Awards In 2002

Dec. 4, 2002

Two University of Colorado at Boulder researchers have received prestigious 2002 Fellowship awards from the American Geophysical Union. Roger Bilham, a CU-Boulder geography professor at the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, or CIRES, and David Fahey, a CIRES research associate, both were named fellows. CIRES is a joint center of CU-Boulder and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

CU-Boulder Leeds School Professor Receives Lifetime Achievement Award

Dec. 4, 2002

Charles Goeldner, emeritus professor of tourism and marketing at the CU-Boulder Leeds School of Business, has received the International Society of Travel and Tourism Educators' Martin Oppermann Memorial Award for Lifetime Achievement. The worldwide organization consists of travel and tourism educators from numerous countries including the United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Great Britain, Korea, China and Taiwan.

CU-Boulder Outlines $11 Million Budget Cut For Fiscal 2003

Dec. 3, 2002

Chancellor Richard L. Byyny today announced a basic outline for the University of Colorado at Boulder's $11 million general fund budget cut to cover revenue shortfalls for fiscal year 2003.

CU-Boulder Leeds School Of Business Presents Economic Forecast Dec. 16

Dec. 2, 2002

The University of Colorado at Boulder Leeds School of Business will present its 38th annual Colorado Business Economic Outlook Forum at 1:15 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 16, at the Denver Marriott City Center. The event at 18th and California streets is free and open to the public. No reservations are required. The comprehensive state outlook features trends and forecasts prepared by more than 80 key business, government and industry professionals and is compiled by the Business Research Division at the Leeds School of Business.

New CU-NASA Research Belies Previous Idea That Mars Was Once Warm, Wet Planet

Dec. 2, 2002

A new study led by University of Colorado at Boulder researchers indicates Mars has been primarily a cold, dry planet following its formation some 4 billion years ago, making the possibility of the evolution of life there challenging at best. Led by CU-Boulder doctoral candidate Teresa Segura and her adviser, Professor Owen B. Toon, the team used Mars photos and computer models to show that large asteroids or comets hit the planet some 3.5 billion years ago. These impacts apparently occurred about the time major river channels were formed on the Red Planet, said Segura.

CU-Boulder Announces Faculty IMPART, Big 12 Fellowship Awards

Dec. 2, 2002

The Office of Diversity and Equity at the University of Colorado at Boulder has selected six faculty recipients of two fellowship programs for the fall semester, according to Associate Vice Chancellor Ofelia Miramontes. There are four winners of the Implementation of Multicultural Perspectives and Approaches in Research and Teaching grants and two winners of the Big 12 Faculty Fellowships. IMPART awardees are Asuncion Horno-Delgado of the department of Spanish and Portuguese, Suzanne Magnanini of French and Italian and Kay Miller and Yumi Janairo Roth, both of fine arts.

Modern Language Association Awards Prize For A First Book To CU's Bruce W. Holsinger

Dec. 2, 2002

The CU-Boulder Office of News Services is forwarding this release, received today from the Modern Language Association of America. New York, NY - November 27, 2002 - The Modern Language Association of America today announced it is awarding its ninth annual Prize for a First Book to Bruce W. Holsinger, assistant professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, for "Music, Body, and Desire in Medieval Culture: Hildegaard of Bingen to Chaucer," published by Stanford University Press.

Scorsese's "Gangs Of New York" Sought Help From CU-Boulder Music Research Center

Dec. 1, 2002

When the producers of "Gangs of New York," the new Martin Scorsese blockbuster starring Leonardo DiCaprio, needed to figure out what music was appropriate for the movie's setting in 1800s New York City, they called the American Music Research Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder. So when the movie opens Dec. 20, CU-Boulder College of Music Professor Tom Riis, who provided the answers, will be in a theater listening closely and watching for a line in the end credits thanking the University of Colorado Libraries.

CU-Boulder Career Transition Center Awards Six Scholarships

Nov. 25, 2002

Six students, including a nontraditional student age 30 or older, will receive scholarship awards of $1,000 or $500 courtesy of the Center for Educational and Career Transition at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Undergraduate student Christina Zigler won a $1,000 scholarship and fellow undergraduates Tawnya Parker and Melissa Spannuth received scholarships for $500. Graduate students Manoela Borges and Maria Tsukernik and nontraditional student Katalin Lustyik all received $1,000 scholarships.

Fiske Planetarium To Offer Special Viewing of Saturn On Dec. 6

Nov. 24, 2002

The University of Colorado at Boulder's Fiske Planetarium and Sommers-Bausch Observatory will be open to the public for a special viewing of Saturn on Friday, Dec. 6, from 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., weather permitting. The free event is the first in a series planned for the upcoming year to celebrate the Cassini spacecraft mission to explore Saturn. After a seven-year journey, the spacecraft will arrive at the planet in July 2004.

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