Archive

Study urban site analysis and design in Rome 

Spend six weeks in Rome while earning nine credits for your major. The Urban site analysis and design global seminar gives you an inside look at design in a dynamic global city. The program includes excursions in and around Rome, as well as one overnight excursion. Don’t miss this amazing opportunity! Interest meeting: Monday, Oct. 3, 12:30 to 1:30 p.m., ENVD 134.

Global seminar: Accounting in a global economy interest meeting

Spend two weeks next summer on this new global seminar in London and Amsterdam and complete ACCT 3700. Build an understanding of how the global economy affects financial reporting and legal transfer pricing strategies for multi-national corporations. Information meeting with the director, Josh Neil: Monday, Oct. 3, 5 p.m. in KOBL 355.

Global seminar: Accounting in a global economy interest meeting

Spend two weeks next summer on this new global seminar in London and Amsterdam and complete ACCT 3700. Build an understanding of how the global economy affects financial reporting and legal transfer pricing strategies for multi-national corporations. Information meeting with the director, Josh Neil: Monday, Oct. 3, 5 p.m. in KOBL 355.

CU Book Store open house and holiday sale

The 19th annual open house is Thursday, Dec. 1, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Enter to win prizes, create your own holiday ornament and, best of all, receive 20% off your entire purchase! (Restrictions apply; see store for details.) Refreshments will be served.

National Student Day: free stuff just for you

National Student Day is Thursday, Oct. 13. Stop by the CU Book Store between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. for free CU stuff, 30 seconds to pick a free item, and to enter for the chance to win a Bluetooth speaker. (While supplies last.)

Cross-border histories of mobility in relation to Nepal’s new constitution

Wednesday, Oct. 7, 4 p.m. HALE 230 Professor Shneiderman's research explores the relationships between political discourse, ritual action and cross-border mobility in producing ethnic identities and shaping social transformation. This event is co-sponsored by the Tibet Himalaya Initiative, the Center for Asian Studies and the Department of Anthropology. http://www.colorado.edu/cas/cross-border-histories-mobility-relation-ne…

For the Health of It: Cultivating food justice for health equity

Healthy communities allow access to healthy food. But is this true for our community? Join us in collaboration with Boulder Food Rescue in discussing how food justice movement is a critical part of social justice and achieving health equity. Sept. 30, 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. in UMC 384.

Calling performers

Are you an actor, comedian, public speaker, poet? Do you have a story to tell? Journal 2020 is seeking storytellers for a live experiment with creative nonfiction on stage at Innisfree Bookstore, Oct. 3 at 7 p.m. We would love to have you and your 2 to 8 minute story. It can be in any format as long as it is nonfiction. Email journal staff member Kelly Dinneen at kedi8342@colorado.edu if you want to perform.

The Pleistocene peopling of the Americas: What we know, don’t know, and argue about endlessly

Join David Meltzer on Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. in Hale 270 as he explores ongoing questions about the first people to arrive in the Americas: where they came from, how and when they made it here, and what they did once they reached this vast landscape. Meltzer shares evidence from archaeology, genetics and geology that points the way toward resolution of some still-disputed matters. This free lecture is sponsored by the CU Museum of Natural History and is being presented as part of the Unearthed: Ancient Life in the Boulder Valley exhibit.