News
In the wake of this week's leak about a private Supreme Court vote to strike down Roe v. Wade, CU Boulder sociologist Amanda Stevenson discusses how such a ruling could impact women's mortality and the way they live their lives.
Historian Alan S. Kahan, who has held the position this year, to continue in fall.
With Giving Games, CU Boulder sociologist Tim Wadsworth has helped hundreds of students donate thousands of dollars to effective charities, and imparted lifelong skills
Astrophysicists have discovered a 5.4 billion-year-old megamaser—a beam of laser-like light that emerged when two galaxies crashed into each other
Now with nine different routes—from short to long, flattish cruise to ‘epic’ climb, and on either road or gravel—Buffalo Bicycle Classic remains focused on the real prize: student scholarships.
New astronomy program features CU Boulder interns giving Rocky Mountain National Park visitors a tour of the night skies.
The environmental studies class, in partnership with Mission Zero, aims to reflect on the past to create a more equitable and responsible future.
A new assessment from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change brings a dire warning, but also good news
A sense of community is key to higher graduation rates and other measures of academic success, participants in MASP say.
A new bill that recently passed in the U.S. Senate would make daylight saving time permanent. But many in the scientific community are calling for the opposite approachâ —making standard time permanent.