CU-Boulder Conference Addresses Y2K Impact On Investments

Aug. 29, 1999

Editors: The conference is open by invitation only but is open to reporters. An investment conference on Sept. 10-11, sponsored by the University of Colorado at Boulder's Burridge Center, will study the impact of a company's size on investment strategy -- including the dramatic effect Y2K may have on smaller firms' stock performance. Unlike their larger counterparts, small firms' stocks typically fluctuate dramatically during the first week of the year. Conference participants will explore potential ramifications fueled by Y2K uncertainties.

CU Hosts Community Meeting In Response To Weekend Assault Of Student Off Campus

Aug. 29, 1999

CU-Boulder students, faculty and staff are invited to attend a Community Meeting at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 31, at the University Memorial Center on campus to answer questions about the rape of a student off campus early Sunday morning and to learn more about campus counseling and other services available to the university community. The meeting will be in the Glenn Miller Ballroom of the UMC and is open to all interested members of the campus community.

Committee On Women At ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú´«Ã½ÎÄ»¯×÷Æ· Produces Second Annual Report

Aug. 26, 1999

Richard L. Byyny, chancellor of the University of Colorado at Boulder, will deliver his annual address on the status of women at CU-Boulder next Thursday, Sept.2. The address takes place at 3 p.m. in room 235 of the University Memorial Center, at the corner of Broadway and Euclid Avenue. Members of the public are invited to attend the address and the reception afterwards. The event is being hosted by the chancellor, the universityÂ’s Office of Diversity and Equity and the ChancellorÂ’s Committee on Women.

CU Professor Believes Some Colonial Conflicts Due To Differences Over Domestic Animals

Aug. 26, 1999

Wandering barnyard animals may have sparked some of this nationÂ’s bloodiest conflicts between early English settlers and American Indians, according to Virginia DeJohn Anderson, associate professor of American History at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Anderson has begun writing a book that will examine people and animals in 17th century America, focusing on New England and the Chesapeake colonies of Virginia and Maryland.

Freshmen Given A Helping Hand As CU-Boulder Embarks On Special Computer Loan Program

Aug. 26, 1999

Editors: A list of parents and students available for comment is attached. ItÂ’s no secret that education can be an expensive item these days but the University of Colorado at Boulder is doing its best to help ease that burden. For the first time starting this fall, CU-Boulder is launching a computer loan program that will provide free computers for about 160 freshmen to use over the next four years.

ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú´«Ã½ÎÄ»¯×÷Æ· Bids Farewell To Former Faculty Member Ray Cuzzort

Aug. 25, 1999

Ray Cuzzort, professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Colorado at Boulder, died at his home in Boulder on Monday. He was 72. A memorial service will be held at the Old Main Chapel on campus on Tuesday, Aug. 31, starting at 11 a.m. This will be followed by an informal reception at his home, 1300 Elder Ave., at 12:30 p.m. Cuzzort, who was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and received his doctorate from the University of Minnesota, began working at CU-Boulder in 1966, was chair of sociology in the early 1980s and retired in 1988.

CU-Boulder Adds Registrar's Office To Enrollment Management Group

Aug. 24, 1999

The Office of the Registrar at the University of Colorado at Boulder will join the other enrollment departments--Admissions, Financial Aid, and Orientation--in the division of academic affairs on Sept. 1, according to Phil DiStefano, vice chancellor for academic affairs. The Registrar's Office works closely with enrollment services and all of the colleges and schools to provide registration, academic scheduling, record-keeping, information services and academic support to students, faculty and the campus community.

Chancellor's Community Lecture Series Features CU Natural Resources Scholars

Aug. 24, 1999

Charles Wilkinson, a distinguished CU-Boulder professor of law who is recognized as a champion of the American West through his decades of writing and legal work, will be the first featured speaker in a CU-Boulder lecture series hosted at The Academy beginning Wednesday, Sept. 8. This fall, the series will highlight faculty from CU-BoulderÂ’s Center of the American West, including its co-founders Wilkinson and Patricia Limerick, and the Natural Resources Law Center. All talks will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Chapel at The Academy, located at 970 Aurora Ave. in Boulder.

CU-Boulder To Institute Fall Break In Year 2000

Aug. 24, 1999

Editors: A revised academic calendar is attached. The University of Colorado at Boulder is moving ahead with plans to implement a fall break and some other changes to its academic calendar, according to William Kaempfer, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs for budget and planning. The first Fall Break will occur on Oct. 5 and Oct. 6, 2000. "Over the years we have gradually moved to starting the year earlier and ending it later," Kaempfer said. "This has created a long, unbroken and stressful fall semester for everyone -- students, faculty and staff.

CU-Boulder Sponsored Research Awards Top $200 Million For The First Time

Aug. 23, 1999

The University of Colorado at Boulder received more than $204 million in sponsored research awards for the 1998-99 fiscal year, a 12.4 percent increase over last year and the first time the campus has topped the $200 million mark. Of the 1,596 grant proposals made in 1998-99, about half were winners, despite increasing competition for funds by universities and other research institutions across the nation.

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