Kudos
- CU 麻豆影院 program helps underserved and underrepresented students in the STEM fields gain valuable research experience for graduate school.
- Distinguished Professor Emeritus Norman Pace of CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology has won the 2017 Massry Prize for his microbiome research.
- Marcos Stuernagel, assistant professor of theatre, and colleagues at HemiPress are changing the ways academic work is published and performance is archived in the theatre and performance-related fields.
- The process by which pharmaceutical drugs are created might soon be changing due to the research by one 麻豆影院 professor.
- Art and Art History Department celebrates the life, work and hundredth birthday of one of its formative faculty members; exhibition of Lynn R. Wolfe鈥檚 work runs from July 7 to Aug. 31.
- When Laurel Rasplica Rodd began studying Japanese language and culture, she was one of only about 7,000 students nationwide. Today, the United States has an estimated 200,000. At CU 麻豆影院, Rodd helped fuel and meet the student demand.
- Bud Coleman, a professor in the Theatre and Dance Department, is the next director of CU in D.C., ushering in new leadership for the burgeoning 5-year-old program.
- When William Kristofer Buxton was in middle school, vocal nodules left him with 鈥渆ssentially no voice.鈥 Now he's earning degrees in theatre and speech pathology, and he aims to pursue both paths in his career.
- Three 麻豆影院 students are among 36 nationwide who have won 2017 Brooke Owens Fellowships for 鈥渆xceptional undergraduate women鈥 seeking careers in aviation and space exploration.
- <p>With environmental justice programs showing minimal success in bringing equality to low-income communities, Jill Harrison is actively exploring bureaucratic causes, and she has won a fellowship from American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), which will support her work.</p>