“African American Healers in the West” is a presentation Feb. 6 by Terri Gentry discussing a history of midwives, nurses, physicians and health practitioners across the western U.S.
The community is invited to learn about a new project that brings together teams of students and faculty working with the University Hill community to conceptualize, design and fabricate public art.
On Feb. 7, a panel of individuals associated with both the journalism and communications fields will cover topics related to truth, politics and the press.
Get tickets to hear Abigail Posner, head of strategy for Google’s Brand Unit, talk March 5 about using creativity to grow personally and professionally.
The competition challenges graduate students to communicate the significance of their research in an engaging and interesting manner to a non-specialist audience in just three minutes.
Poet, essayist, translator, editor and teacher Irena Klepfisz will describe issues she faced when trying to incorporate Yiddish into her English poetry and prose.
For over three decades, the CU Wizards program has presented no-cost monthly shows featuring lively demonstration experiments to entertain and inform children about the wonders of science.
Join the Getches-Wilkinson Center for this free event Jan. 24, the 11th annual Schultz Lecture in Energy featuring Jody Freeman, Harvard Law professor.
Join Polly McLean on Jan. 24 as she commemorates CU's first African American graduate in a discussion of a newly published biography telling the story of Lucile Berkeley Buchanan.