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  • With the end of the semester and final exams right around the corner, it is a great time to think about how you can enhance your academic experience over the summer and to touch base with your academic advisor about your plans for next fall. Your advisor can help guide you toward courses, internships, research opportunities and much, much more.
  • <p>Distinguished Professor Kristi Anseth of the ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß’s chemical and biological engineering department has been selected to receive the 2013 Hazel Barnes Prize, the highest faculty recognition for teaching and research awarded by the university.</p>
  • <p><span>Students from the real estate program at the Leeds School of Business, ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß, successfully made the sale to a panel of judges and became grand-prize winners of the 2013 International Real Estate Case Competition hosted by the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.</span></p>
  • <p>Engineering students at the ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß are gearing up for several days of intensive activity next week, when they will celebrate Engineering Days and display their hands-on design projects at the annual spring Engineering Design Expo.</p>
    <p>Engineering Days, or E-Days, is an annual celebration of the engineering profession organized by the University of Colorado Engineering Council, or UCEC, and student honor societies. Activities include a water rocket launch, high school and college egg drops, a carnival and other fun activities for students.</p>
  • <p>Two ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß undergraduate student teams have been named among the 11 top winners from a field of 5,636 teams that entered the 2013 international Mathematical Contest in Modeling this spring.</p>
    <p>Only 375 teams, or 6 percent of those entering the contest, were from the United States. The others were from Canada, China, Finland, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Mexico, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Sweden and the United Kingdom.</p>
  • <p>As much as dog owners love their children, they tend to share more of themselves, at least in terms of bacteria, with their canine cohorts rather than their kids.</p>
  • <p>Aerobic exercise may help prevent and perhaps even reverse some of the brain damage associated with heavy alcohol consumption, according to a new ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß study.</p>
  • <p>Beginning in fall 2013, a new 12-hour minor will be available to non-business majors at CU-¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß. The new <a href="http://leeds.colorado.edu/minor">business minor,</a> housed in the Leeds School of Business, has been uniquely designed for non-business students so that they can effectively perform in an emerging global business environment.</p>
  • <p>Sex apparently is like income: People are generally happy when they keep pace with the Joneses and they’re even happier if they get a bit more.</p>
    <p>That’s one finding of Tim Wadsworth, an associate professor of sociology at the ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß, who recently published the results of a study of how sexual frequency corresponds with happiness.</p>
    <p>As has been well documented with income, the happiness linked with having more sex can rise or fall depending on how individuals believe they measure up to their peers, Wadsworth found.</p>
  • <p>The ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß will receive roughly $36 million from NASA to build and operate a space instrument for a mission led by the University of Central Florida that will study Earth’s upper atmosphere to learn more about the disruptive effects of space weather.</p>
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