Seeking students for paid psychology study

University of Colorado Boulder
The Buff Bulletin Board, a listing of campus announcements, is a service of Campus Communications.
Discover the power of Shakespeare in performance! In this 8-week acting class for adults, you can reap the benefits of Colorado Shakespeare Festival actor Anne Sandoe and Shakespeare scholar Shirley Carnahan’s extensive experience.
The class focuses on voice, text and movement techniques that professional actors use to create compelling Shakespeare performances, culminating in a final performance for friends and family on the last day of class.
Open to students of all experience levels and abilities; students from previous sessions of this class are welcome to return. Ages 21 and up. CU Boulder faculty and staff should use promo code BUFFBARDC17 to save 10 percent.
Tuesdays, Sep. 12 to Nov. 14, 6 to 7:50 p.m.
No class Oct. 10, 31
Wesley Fellowship, Upstairs Theatre
BSI (Biological Sciences Initiative) Scholars is a funding and professional development program for current CU Boulder undergraduates.
Eligible students conducting original STEM research are paid to work in a laboratory on the CU Boulder or CU Anschutz Medical Campus. Students also attend seminars to enhance the research experience, and summarize their findings through a presentation at the end of the term.
Applications for the 2017–18 academic year are due Monday, Sept. 18, for students who have not previously received funding through BSI.
For more information, please visit the BSI website.
Interested in helping plan one of the largest student-led events on campus? Check out the International Festival Committee. Gain leadership skills and work with some great students! Free pizza provided at the interest meeting.
Thursday, Sept. 7, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Center for Community (C4C)
Put on your poker face and see if Lady Luck is with you! Sign up 6 p.m. at The Connection front desk; cards fly at 7 p.m. All skill levels are welcome. Entry is free, and there's a chance to win prizes!
Fall 2017 dates
Sept. 5, 19
Oct. 3, 17, 31
Nov. 14, 28
Dec. 12: Grand Championship (winners playoff)
Check out all of The Connection’s weekly events | The Connection Bowling, Billiards & Games, UMC first floor
Check out what's new for you at the CU Book Store!
There are tons of textbooks for rent and more used books than ever. And now you can charge your textbook course materials, school supplies and technology accessories purchased at the CU Book Store to your student tuition and fee bill.
Visit www.cubookstore.com/bill for more information. Open for extended hours during back to school.
Make Mondays special with two hours of unlimited bowling for just $8 per person (shoes and a fountain drink included). Come alone or with friends or family. Everyone is welcome!
Fall 2017 dates
Every Monday, Aug. 28 to Dec. 18, 6–11 p.m.
Except Sept. 4, Nov. 20
The Connection Bowling, Billiards & Games, UMC first floor
Join CU Boulder researchers Carol Ann Kearns and Diana Oliveras for a free event at the Museum of Natural History: Bumblebees of Boulder County. They will discuss the life history of bumblebees, their role as pollinators and their conservation status in Colorado.
Come learn how to recognize and identify some of the more common bumblebees found in Boulder and how undergraduates from CU Boulder's Residential Academic Programs (RAPs) help conduct insect surveys.
Tuesday, Sept. 5, 7 p.m.
Museum of Natural History, Paleontology Hall
This Friday, Taste of CU will give new students a tasty sampling of what Housing & Dining Services has to offer and an introduction to Zero Waste on campus.
CU Boulder has set a campus-wide goal of 90 percent diversion of our waste from landfills by 2020. One of the most visible ways we’re moving toward that goal is with compost and recycling bins all over campus.
New students will learn how to use those bins all over Farrand Field at Taste of CU, as every dish will be served with compostable dining ware. Zero Waste is a shared goal on campus that students can be a part of as soon as they move in!
Hourly student-employees working for CU Boulder are limited to a maximum of 25 hours per week (or 50 hours per bi-weekly pay period) during the fall and spring semesters and to 40 hours per week (or 80 hours per bi-weekly pay period) in the summer.
Please note existing policies limit graduate and international students to 20 hours per week during the academic year. The policy does not affect students working in non-university off-campus jobs.
In light of Professor Emeritus and former associate dean Jim Avery's recent diagnosis of MDS, a bone marrow disorder, the College of Engineering and Applied Science is encouraging everyone who can to donate blood and register as a bone marrow donor in honor of Avery, who will need a bone marrow transplant.
Walk-ins are welcome, or schedule an appointment by emailing sydney_bernzott@bonfils.org. Individuals ages 18 to 44 will be eligible to join the national donor registry during this live drive. Learn more about the bone marrow donation process from Bonfils.
Friday, Sept. 1, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Engineering Center Lobby
On Sept. 7, CU’s Vietnam War Commemoration lecture series will feature William Adams—Vietnam veteran, Senior Fellow at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and former chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities—will reflect on his experiences in the Mekong Delta in 1968-69.
The lecture, titled "Comradeship, Moral Injury, and the Legacy of the Vietnam War: The Need for the Humanities to Close the Gap between the Veterans and their Nation" is free and open to the public.
In a difficult reckoning with their experiences in war, Adams knows from his own experience, many veterans also steer by the treasured memory of comradeship in facing risk and danger. Adams has led initiatives to put the humanities to work in bridging the gap between the individual experiences of veterans and the nation’s involvement in a war that divided the nation, and may divide it still. He will also reflect on his recent return visit to Vietnam as a parable of memory and return.
Thursday, Sept. 7, 6:30 p.m.
Eaton Humanities, room 150
International Coffee Hour is a weekly social event held Friday afternoons at the University Memorial Center. All students, scholars, staff and faculty are invited to connect with the international community on campus. Free coffee, tea and snacks will be provided.
Friday, Sept. 1, 4 to 5:30 p.m.
Across from the UMC Grill
See the Campus Events Calendar for the full series of meetings.