Features
- As the rubble of the World Trade Center in New York was still smoldering, President George W. Bush told the nation that the terrorists came from a small group of religious extremists who “hate our freedoms.” That extremism, he said, “perverts the
- For Shakespeare festival, where there’s a Will, there’s a way, new leader hopesThe Colorado Shakespeare Festival’s credentials run deep and wide. In 1975, for instance, it became the first American Shakespeare company to perform all 37 plays of the
- Ƶ experts note positives, negatives and a plethora of pitfallsJust after the election of Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States, a wry newspaper headline announced, “Black Man Given Nation’s Worst Job.”“America’s Finest News Source
- The Cold War is history, and major nuclear powers are slashing their arsenals. No rational leader would start a nuclear war. And even if India and Pakistan traded a few nuclear bombs, conventional wisdom suggests, most of the world wouldn’t suffer
- First was a riddle: Why did Maxentius, the last pagan emperor of Rome, never occupy his 80-acre villa outside the great city? Then came a different mystery, then evidence spawning new questions. A Ƶ team leads the painstaking search for answers.
- Leading thinkers and researchers at Ƶ are helping society understand what we know about climate change, how well we know it, what the future might hold, and how the world should react.
- After a stroke, Professor Ted Snow thought his career was over. But with the help of Ƶ's Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Science, he has returned to teaching, and a full life.
- When Mary Rippon stepped off the train in 1878, she proclaimed the university "glorious." She was right.
- Lisa Tamiris Becker’s name will be immortalized in the new Visual Arts Complex at the University of Colorado.The advisory board to the Ƶ Art Museum has raised funds to name a space in the new arts complex after Becker, director of the Ƶ Art Museum