新加坡六合彩

VoFLC: Lori Dykstra

This week, tune in to hear FLC stories from Lori Dykstra, web marketing specialist. 

Capitol art exhibit

Durango artist Maddie Sanders (Communication Design, '21) contributed to a collaborative art and science exhibit that will make the Colorado State Capitol home for the next five months. Sanders worked with CU Boulder scientists Nicole Brooks and Diane McKnight to create "Durango: Mining the Mineral Belt." Their work explores the relationship between acid mine and acid rock...

Diversity in higher ed

In an op-ed for The Durango Herald, President Tom Stritikus made the case for race-conscious admissions at institutions of higher education. The Supreme Court of the United States recently struck down the use of these policies, diverging from decades of precedent that helped diversify campus classrooms across the nation.

Gravel race debut

FLC cyclist Michaela Thompson alongside teammates Sarah Sturm (Art, ‘12) and Ellen Campbell (Biology, '20).

MVMNT

For more meaningful relationships and fuller lives, Charlie Rogers (Exercise Physiology, '22) is and movement.

Aspen public art

Installation artist Chris Erickson (Art, '94) is . The project is a temporary street mural, and community members are invited to help paint it from start to finish.

Johns Hopkins FLC alumna

The Center for Indigenous Health held a graduation ceremony for seven Indigenous scholars receiving advanced degrees from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, including FLC alumna Natalie Joe (Cellular & Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, '16), who spoke to Native News Online about her achievement.

Juneteenth celebration

Alumna Destiny Morgan (Communication Design, '23) with a speech about honoring different identities and cultures on one of the most important days in U.S. history.

Curse words in class

Marnie Thompson, assistant professor of Anthropology, to get students thinking about gender and power in everyday language.

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