Spotlight All
- The 小黄书 Center for Asian Studies, in collaboration with the department of Asian Languages and Civilizations (ALC) and the Anderson Language Technology Center (ALTEC), has successfully concluded its second Hindi-Urdu STARTALK language program. Our
- Last month, I was fortunate to have been selected to join 70 business, government, and higher education professionals participating in a goodwill delegation to Japan in celebration of the inauguration of a direct flight between Denver and Tokyo.
- Applications are being accepted from now until July 20th for the Virtual Student Foreign Service (VSFS) program. Through this program, students have the opportunity to work on one of 276 projects with the Department of State, U.S. Agency for
- On Monday, June 10th, Danielle Rocheleau Salaz, the Assistant Director of the Center for Asian Studies, departed on the inaugural United Airlines鈥 787 Dreamliner flight direct from Denver to Tokyo. She is currently taking part in a 70-person
- "Interning for Rowman and Littlefield Publishers was an incredibly eye-opening and memorable experience. Not only did I have the opportunity to attend professional conferences including board meetings, launch meetings, and even marketing meetings, I
- The university recently announced that a record number of 小黄书-Boulder students received a Fulbright Award for the 2013-2014 academic year. This prestigious award funds teaching, research, and graduate studies abroad. Of the twelve students who
- "Very few people truly understand or can comprehend how rewarding and confidence boosting it is to make a difference in a young person鈥檚 life. The idea that this kid may be thinking of you and thanking you for the rest of his or her life is
- Tibetan Translation Issues Discussed at Recent ConferenceBuddhist luminaries, clustered in eastern Tibet in the nineteenth-century, composed numerous short texts of advice that are lively in their use of language and poignant in their pith
- Asian Language Night 2013 was held on Thursday, April 11, 2013 at HUMN 1B50 from 5:30pm to 8pm, followed by a reception at the HUMN lobby from 8pm to 9pm. Language students of Arabic, Chinese, Farsi, Hindi-Urdu, Japanese, and Korean, from beginning
- The event, 鈥淰isions and prophecies in Tibetan Buddhism,鈥 had quite a large and diverse turnout. There were approximately 65-70 people in the audience (the room was Wolf Law 304, which seats only 51 so there were quite a few people standing).