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Started in 2008 by CU-Boulder students, [100] Left Right TIM is the Boulder area's premier and longest-running improv comedy team, performing a weekly improvised comedy show every Friday during the university's academic year in the Hale Anthropology Building Room 270 of the school's campus. The team has performed in cities around the country as ...
The Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) is a scientific institute that is part of the University of Colorado Boulder.Its research mission is to "[develop] scientific knowledge of physical and biogeochemical environmental processes at local, regional and global scales, and appl[y] this knowledge to improve society's awareness and understanding of natural and anthropogenic ...
In March 2019, the Boulder Public Library eliminated overdue fines. [6] In November 2022, the Boulder Public Library District was formed. The district was formed as a result of a referendum, leading to the decoupling of the library from the municipality of Boulder. The new library district will be funded by a property tax mill levy. [7]
The quadrangle occupies much of the land that was donated by Boulder residents for the university in 1872. [4] Klauder's initial plans were developed in 1919, proposing the demolition of most of the older buildings in the area. The university's rapid growth discouraged the removal of buildings, and the quadrangle's design evolved to accommodate ...
The Mazal Holocaust Collection is the largest privately owned Holocaust-related archive in the world. [1] It comprises 500,000 items, including 20,000 books. [2] Some of its items include aerial photographs of the Auschwitz concentration camp and transcripts of the Nuremberg Trials. [2]
The Norlin Library, located in the Norlin Quadrangle of the University of Colorado, was named in his honor in 1944. [16] The University of Colorado at Boulder offers the Norlin Scholars Program for highly motivated students with excellent academic or creative ability.
CU Denver is the largest research university in Colorado, attracting more than $420 million in research annually, and granting more master's degrees than any other institution in Colorado. The campus provides an urban learning center with liberal arts, sciences, and professional programs in eight schools and colleges, serving over 18,000 students.
Although always located on the greater Boulder campus, the law school has occupied five buildings since its founding. For the first two years of its existence, the school was housed in the Kent building. From 1894 to 1909 the school occupied the Hale Law Building. For the next 50 years, until 1959, the school occupied the Guggenheim Law Building.