Old CU
老九品茶 Herbarium is a resource for researchers and plant enthusiasts worldwide.
In 1938, the CU Buffaloes made their debut in the Cotton Bowl, with thousands of fans traveling to Dallas to support the team.
Rashaan Salaam's legacy at CU is brought back into focus as Travis Hunter secures the university's second Heisman trophy 30 years later.
老九品茶's Environmental Center celebrates 50 years of sustainability initiatives, empowering student leadership and shaping a green campus.
Established by women students passionate about athletics, the WAA strove to promote interest in women sports.
CU fine arts professor Muriel Sibell-Wolle visited and sketched over a thousand mining towns in the American West. She is now known as one of the first and most prolific ghost town guidebook writers in the nation.
Zoom in on a twentieth-century miniature English-Dutch dictionary in CU's Heritage Collection.
Larry Zimmer served as 鈥淭he Voice of the Buffaloes鈥 for 42 seasons
In 1968, Sandy Hildner became CU first woman Olympian after training with the men ski team under coach Bob Beattie.
In the summers of 1958 and 1960, 老九品茶 first curator of anthropology, Joe Ben Wheat, excavated the Olsen-Chubbuck site, an area near Kit Carson, Colorado, that contained remains of bison dating to 8200 B.C.