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

CU-Boulder Professor Elected President Of Education Association

July 17, 2001

Robert L. Linn, distinguished professor of education at the University of Colorado at Boulder, has been named president-elect of the 23,000-member American Educational Research Association (AERA). Linn will begin a one-year term as president in the spring of 2002 following incumbent president Andrew Porter of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

NIH Training Grant Establishes 12 New Fellowships In Pharmaceutical Biotechnology

July 16, 2001

The Center for Pharmaceutical Biotechnology at the University of Colorado has received a five-year, $1.4 million training grant from the National Institutes of Health, which will support graduate education and 12 new fellowships in the emerging, interdisciplinary field.

Chemical Engineering Professor Wins National Award For Excellence

July 15, 2001

Christopher Bowman, professor of chemical engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder, has been selected to receive the 2001 Allan P. Colburn Award for Excellence in Publications from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. The award, given to one leading researcher under the age of 36 each year, is the most important and prestigious award in the field of chemical engineering, according to chemical engineering department Chair Rob Davis. A $5,000 prize will be presented with the award at the annual AIChE meeting Nov. 5 in Reno, Nev.

CU-Boulder Joins National Leadership Alliance

July 12, 2001

The University of Colorado at Boulder has become the 29th member of the Leadership Alliance, the premiere coalition of the nation's top research and teaching institutions seeking to increase the numbers of traditionally underrepresented students in graduate study. James H. Wyche, executive director of the Alliance and associate provost at Brown University, will visit the Boulder campus Monday and Tuesday July 16th and 17th. He will meet with CU-Boulder faculty Monday afternoon.

Elementary School Teachers Try Engineering To Integrate Math, Science In Classrooms

July 11, 2001

Elementary school teachers looking for ways to integrate math and science concepts in their classrooms will build pencil rockets and experiment with slingshot-propelled cars at a workshop sponsored by CU-Boulder's Integrated Teaching and Learning Laboratory July 16 through July 19. The "Kinetics for Kids" workshop introduces engineering to kindergarten through fifth-grade teachers from around Colorado through fun, hands-on activities that teachers can use in their own classrooms with a minimum of expense.

21 Years Of Upward Bound Going Strong At CU-Boulder

July 11, 2001

The Upward Bound program, now in its 21st year of operation at the University of Colorado at Boulder, is experiencing its highest attendance ever this year with two summer programs that began June 15th and end July 27th. Hailing from nine states, including California, Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, Washington, Oregon and North Carolina, 131 students are taking part in the original summer Upward Bound program and the more recently established Math and Science Center, now in its third year.

CU-Boulder's Pre-Collegiate Program Continues To Expand

July 11, 2001

Editors: Construction of the electric/rocket-powered land vehicle is still in progress. Contact Janet DeGrazia, (303) 735-4763, to arrange photos or for information. With two new scholarships and several new partnerships, the Pre-Collegiate Development Programs at the University of Colorado at Boulder are continuing to expand their services.

New Great White Shark Study Has Conservation Implications

July 10, 2001

A new study spearheaded by a University of Colorado at Boulder researcher that indicates male great white sharks roam Earth's oceans much more widely than females has implications for future conservation strategies for the storied and threatened fish.

Physicists On Wall Street To Be Discussed At CU Lecture

July 9, 2001

The ups and downs of the financial industry from a physicist's perspective will be one of the topics explored during the July 23 lecture "My Manhattan Project: A Physicist's Adventures on Wall Street" at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Nigel Goldenfeld, a physics professor and diversity scholar at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and participating faculty member in a summer physics institute at CU-Boulder, will present the free lecture at 7:30 p.m. in Duane Physics room G1B30 on the CU-Boulder campus.

Modern American Indian Leadership Is Topic Of July 19 Lecture At CU-Boulder

July 8, 2001

The long history of changes in American Indian leadership due to inter-tribal and Indian-white relations will be discussed during a lecture on the University of Colorado at Boulder campus on Thursday, July 19, from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. University of Kansas Professor Donald L. Fixico, a recognized leader in American Indian communities, will present the lecture "The Challenge for Modern American Indian Leadership," at the Benson Earth Sciences Building, room 185. The talk is free and open to the public.

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