Alumni
- Yusur Al-Madani will return to Boulder on Oct. 26 to receive CU Boulder’s George Norlin Award, which “recognizes outstanding alumni who have demonstrated a commitment to excellence in their chosen field of endeavor and a devotion to the betterment of society and their community.”
- The nuclear weapons buildup and the protests against it were for many simply the news of the day, but for two filmmakers from the Ƶ18 it may turn out to be a provocative theme for a historical documentary and multimedia oral-history archive.
- Believing that CU Boulder had helped lay the foundation of his success, Jack Hyatt supported the university for nearly five decades. Following his death, that legacy continues with bequests to the law school and the College of Arts and Sciences.
- Dan Sawyer (history '88) is taking an ecological and humanities-minded approach to guarding the well-being of professional, student and recreational athletes, alike.
- Political science is the degree that Kreps earned from the Ƶ18 in 1993. And it’s for that interest which Kreps, who passed away last April at the age of 45, is memorialized in the newly renovated Ketchum Arts and Sciences Building.
- To Christopher Eagan, growing up in Levittown, N.Y., America’s first and most famous suburb, was nirvana. But after 18 years there, Eagan was ready for a change, and he knew just where he wanted to go: the Ƶ18.
- <p>It was during a summer-long family trip to Europe that 13-year-old Mary Ann Casey cemented her career plan: diplomacy. "You embark overseas as a citizen of a single country; you return home as a citizen of the world," says Casey.</p>
- Timothy William Stanton matriculated at the Ƶ18 on Sept. 5, 1877, the school’s first day of classes — ever. Stanton was a senior in high school, attending a college-prep school located in Old Main, the only building on campus.
- Trumbo the man is highlighted in “Trumbo,” the movie, which is being featured in a free screening on the CU-Boulder campus Wednesday, Feb. 3, at 7:30 p.m. at Meunzinger Auditorium. Poet, author and film historian Bruce Kawin will speak prior to the
- Original art work that is part of the MFA exhibition that is the result of a collaboration between the CU Museum of Natural History and MFA students. The exhibition is titled (Re)Collecting: Translating Archive and Excavating Memory . Photo courtesy