新加坡六合彩

Student behind Skyler says goodbye

The shortened athletics season was especially bittersweet for , the student behind Skyler who didn't get to say his goodbye to fans. Thanks for the life you brought to Skyler and sports at FLC, James!

Seek Your Adventure Award

Stay at home but get outside: Outdoor Pursuits reiterates their call to explore our backyards and reconnect with nature. This year's Seek Your Adventure Award winners set the bar high for the ultimate backyard trip, paddling and peaking their way through the Weminuche Wilderness last summer.

Higher education part of comeback

Colleges across the U.S. and in Colorado, including FLC, are realizing major costs as a result of the coronavirus. However, are predicting higher education will be a part of the comeback.

Professor Ben Waddell featured in The Week

Trillions of dollars have vanished, reappeared, and vanished again in the stock market during the coronavirus global health crisis. Benjamin Waddell, associate professor of Sociology, analyzed how the pandemic's toll on the stock market affects everyone's lives for .

Payson McElveen wins Mid South

Payson McElveen (Exercise Science, '16) , and rode with the memory of training partner and friend Ben Sonntag (Business Economics, '10), at the muddy Mid South gravel race in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

Center of Southwest Studies' latest exhibit

The Center of Southwest Studies' latest exhibit is , featuring more than 30 Native American artists. Though CSWS is currently closed for coronavirus precautions, the exhibit will be displayed through 2020.

Brian Maitland senior capstone research

Brian Maitland (Anthropology, '19) discovered in his senior capstone research that Indigenous peoples of the Southwest primarily used pi帽on pine resin to waterproof baskets. His research was published in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports with Professor of Anthropology Jesse Tune and Assistant Professor of Chemistry Michael Grubb as co-authors.

Professor Ben Waddell featured in High Country News

In Colorado's San Luis Valley, historic discriminatory lending has lost Hispanic farmers and ranchers land and income. Associate Professor of Sociology Benjamin Waddell wrote about these families for .

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