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Recent News About N / a
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Faculty and Staff Grants From June 2022
Jonathan Moyer, David Bohl, Anajulia Barney and Taylor Hanna, faculty and staff at the Pardee Center for International Futures at the Josef Korbel School of International Studies
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Director of Payne Institute for Public Policy named to U.S. Climate Security Roundtable
Morgan Bazilian, director of the Payne Institute for Public Policy at Colorado School of Mines, has been named to the Climate Security Roundtable.
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Mines alumni use engineering background to restore historic house
In the past couple of years, it’s been common to try out some new do-it-yourself home projects or even some larger-scale renovation projects. Maybe you decided to hammer out a new deck to give yourself a more enjoyable outdoor oasis or perhaps you updated your home office while working more hours from home. But while the rest of us were figuring out which paint colors worked the best in our updated spaces, Becky Brown ’92 and Paul Williams ’89 were finishing up a much bigger—and much more complex—project.
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Soccer Teams Earn Academic Award from United Soccer Coaches
The Colorado College men's and women's soccer teams earned the Team Academic Award from the United Soccer Coaches for their superior performance in the classroom during the 2021-22 academic year.
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Discovery of a Potential Parkinson's Trigger Could Lead to New Treatments
Currently, there are no disease modifying therapies for Parkinson’s disease that can change the progression of the disease. An international team of scientists led by faculty at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus is hoping to change that.
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Broncos PR legend reflects on a storied career and a new era for Denver football
In 1978, Jim Saccomano got a call that would change his life: The Denver Broncos wanted to hire him. He spent 30-plus years working for the team, witnessing multiple Super Bowl wins, and retired as public relations vice president in 2013. This summer, Saccomano was honored as one of the best in the business as an inaugural winner of the National Football League Hall of Fame’s Award of Excellence.
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Community Night Out
Join us for a night of fun with family, friends and neighbors as we build police-community partnerships and neighborhood camaraderie to make our community a safe place to live.
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CU Anschutz Researchers Identify a New Mechanism Responsible for Controlling Auditory Sensitivity
A new study published in PNAS highlights a newly identified mechanism of how auditory sensitivity is regulated that could temporarily reduce sensitivity of the auditory system to protect itself from loud sounds that can cause irreversible damage.
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Scheduled Water Shutoff – 3rd Street
In order to repair service lines in the area, there will be a scheduled water shutoff on Monday, July 25, 2022 from 9 a.m. – Noon.
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Free Over the Counter COVID-19 Test Kits
The Town of Bennett is supplying free over the counter test kits for Bennett residents.
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Pain and Behavior
Pain and Behavior
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Protein Discovered in Parkinson’s Disease Could Lead to New Treatments
Currently, there are no disease modifying therapies for Parkinson’s disease that can change the progression of the disease. An international team of scientists led by faculty at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus is hoping to change that.
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Community Night Out
Join us for a night of fun with family, friends and neighbors as we build police-community partnerships and neighborhood camaraderie to make our community a safe place to live.
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Scientists Identify What Makes the Delta Variant Dangerous and Explain the Recent Surge in COVID-19 Infections
Since June, the number of COVID-19 infections started rising again, as the most transmissible omicron variant started picking up delta variant mutations leading to new subvariants BA.4/BA.5 and Deltacron variants. Out of all the five known variants of concern, which have been shown to evade therapeutic antibodies and vaccines developed against unmutated, original SARS-CoV-2 virus, delta is the most virulent leading to severe symptoms and increased mortality among infected people. A new peer-reviewed study provides answers to why delta is the most lethal variant of SARS-CoV-2.
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Braelin Pantel named Vice President of Student Life at Colorado School of Mines
A new geoscience makerspace has opened on the Mines campus, giving undergraduate and graduate students a place where they can experiment with novel forms of instrumentation and try out their designs related to Earth observation.
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Bioengineering and nursing students collaborate to test devices, improve patient outcomes
When University of Colorado College of Nursing student Rebecca Feldman was delivering hydromorphone through an intravenous drip to an injured patient, the new medical device she was using started flashing “Occluded! Occluded!” For a moment, she didn’t know what to do. Fortunately, it was just a test. Feldman was taking part in an exercise with other nursing and bioengineering students at the University of Colorado to test medical devices and improve healthcare.
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New geoscience makerspace opens on campus
Colorado School of Mines has selected Braelin Pantel as its next vice president of student life.
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Dog (Training) Days of Summer: CU Anschutz Hosts K-9 Explosion-Detection Exercise
Their names could fill in the most adorable starting nine in a baseball lineup – Rony, Scout, Oly, Kaiser, Max, Lani, Jet, Reece and Wolfgang.
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Resurfacing and Culvert Work on CO Highway 79 full closure
The Colorado Department of Transportation will be replacing a culvert on Colorado Highway 79.