Enjoy electro-acoustic music, featuring Swiss-American guest composer Katharina Rosenberger, and vote for the winner of the fourth annual 64-Bit E-Music Competition Finals.
On Feb. 21, the Visiting Artist Program will feature a lecture by ceramic artist Tip Toland, whose sculptures give voice to vulnerable characters at the end of adulthood or beginning of childhood.
Tom Ikeda, the founder of Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project, is keynote speaker at an event commemorating Japanese American internment: “Remembering the Japanese-American Internment: 75 Years” from 4:30 to 7 p.m. Feb. 23 in the British and Irish Studies Room in Norlin Library. The event is hosted by the Boulder Center for Asian Studies.
Science Learner's Lunch is a workshop series designed to provide students with tools and information that complement the skills learned in the classroom. The upcoming Feb. 15 session will focus on BibTeX.
Join University of Colorado Law School for the final round of the Rothgerber Moot Court Competition on Tuesday, March 14, at 4 p.m. in Wittemyer Courtroom at the Wolf Law Building.
On Feb. 24, David Korevaar, the Helen and Peter Weil Professor of Piano, College of Music, will deliver a unique Distinguished Research Lecture, featuring a combination performance and talk entitled "The score is alive...with the sound of music."
Law faculty will discuss the legal context, implications and possible next steps regarding President Trump's recent immigration executive orders during a roundtable from 4 to 6 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 13, on campus. The event will be live-streamed for online viewing.
For its 69th season, the iconic Conference on World Affairs (CWA) will bring speakers from 18 countries to campus to discuss issues ranging from space exploration and nuclear policy to the long-term health impacts of professional sports. The conference, which is free and open to the public, will be held April 10 to 14.
The second annual Diverse Learners Awareness Week kicks off Monday, Feb. 20. The opening session will feature a roundtable discussion with Robert McRuer, Professor of English at The George Washington University.