With her seemingly inexhaustible reservoir of ideas, Michelle Ellsworth leaps over creative boundaries. Recognized for her distinctive and compelling artistic works in contemporary dance, Ellsworth is a winner of a 2019 Doris Duke Artist Award.
A small team of CU Â鶹ӰԺ students designed and built a fully autonomous robotic boat and took it on the road to an autonomous surface vehicle competition held June 17–23 in South Daytona, Florida.
Hallie Adams is returning to grad school for a PhD in geography and ecohydrology. This year she received a Graduate Research Fellowship Program award from the National Science Foundation.
The Design for America organization brings together CU Â鶹ӰԺ students in a variety of disciplines to collaborate with community partners in creating innovative solutions to their challenges.
Experts say aquaculture will play an important role in feeding the world’s burgeoning population, which is why CU Â鶹ӰԺ alumnus Markos Scheer is launching a new career in kelp farming.
The second annual Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition was held at the Graduate School in February. Using only one slide, competitors were challenged to describe their research in three minutes to a panel of judges and an audience from the community.
The SpaceTime Underpass, a permanent public art installation inside the Regent pedestrian underpass, pays homage to the significant contributions CU Â鶹ӰԺ has made to space exploration.
Wars tend to be remembered for their battlefield glory, not for soldiers’ recovery and reintegration into civilian life. A CU Â鶹ӰԺ senior, however, is using theater and veterans’ own words to change that.
Elspeth Schulze, Haley Takahashi and Thomas Yi tell their stories of becoming artists. Plus, check out their artwork in the Emerging Artists Open Studios on April 12 at the Visual Arts Complex.
On her journey toward independence, first-generation student Bhavna Chhabra found the courage to believe in herself and discovered a world of opportunities; 25 years later she’s a director at Google.