Graduate Student Edition - Feb. 5, 2025
Campus Community
5 essentials of healthy relationships
Whether you’re thinking about friendships, dating, long-term romantic relationships or just figuring it out, here are a few things important to creating healthy relationships.
Tips for next year’s housing search
It may seem early, but now is the time to start thinking about where you'd like to live next year. Whether you’re moving off campus for the first time or you’ve lived in Boulder for a while, review these tips from Off-Campus Housing & Neighborhood Relations.
How philanthropy fuels success—with the CAAAS
The Center for African & African American Studies at ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú´«Ã½ÎÄ»¯×÷Æ·, which recently celebrated its third annual CAAAS Day, empowers students and drives impact through donor support.
5 tips to make winter biking a breeze
Biking to campus is a great way to stay active and eco-friendly, even in the winter. With Bike to Work Day coming up on Feb. 14, here are some tips for biking this season.
Get OIT software announcements through Microsoft Teams
Join the Office of Information Technology's newest Microsoft Team—OIT Software Announcements—for news, release notes and training opportunities from Adobe Creative Cloud and other software providers.
Events & Exhibits
Mark April 5 for TEDxCU: Anomaly
Experience powerful talks that highlight innovation, resilience and creativity. Whether you’re seeking motivation or new ideas to enrich your academic journey, TEDxCU offers a unique experience that encourages intellectual growth.
Safety
Learn best practices for active harmer response
A short, virtual course, offered by the ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú´«Ã½ÎÄ»¯×÷Æ· Division of Public Safety, teaches valuable skills and can be viewed anytime. Join and learn best practices for active harmer response.
Research Updates
The upside of late menopause: Better heart health
New research shows that women who hit menopause later in life have healthier blood vessels and are less likely to have strokes and heart attacks in their postmenopausal years.
CUriosity: What is the smallest thing in the universe?
One popular theory suggests that elementary particles like electrons, which make up everything in the universe, could be infinitely small—you could zoom in and in on them and never see anything.
Newsletter Block TitleWhat We’re Reading
Newsletter Block Title
What We’re Reading
Newsletter Block TitleEvents Calendar
Newsletter Block Title
Events Calendar
Newsletter Block Text
2/6:
2/7:
2/8:
Ìý