Kudos

  • Cassandra Brooks posing for a photo in Antarctica with penguins behind her.
    Assistant professor Cassandra Brooks has received an NSF CAREER award, the organization recently announced.
  • Fireflies swarming in the woods.
    CU Boulder’s Orit Peleg will use the support to launch a novel, interdisciplinary probe of the physics of firefly communications.
  • Boettcher
    Two young faculty scientists at CU Boulder are among seven Colorado researchers who have won $1.41 million in total funding from the Boettcher Foundation’s Webb-Waring Awards program.
  • Marcos Steuernagel
    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.
  • Adam Bradley
    Adam Bradley is a study in contrasts: a hip-hop expert who grew up in Salt Lake City, dissecting the literary devices of Shakespeare in one breath and Slick Rick in the next. He teaches in English, but his RAP Lab is in the chemistry building.
  • Michelle Ellsworth, associate professor of dance, has been awarded a 2015 Doris Duke Impact Award. Ellsworth will receive an $80,000 grant with the award, to support her “radical experimentation” in unconventional displays of dance. Here, she appears in Clytigation: State of Exception. Photo by Satchel Spencer.
    You have to thank Carol Burnett for Michelle Ellsworth’s art. At least in part. Ellsworth, associate professor of dance at the University of Colorado Boulder, has been captivated by dance since she was 7, when she first saw the Ernest Flat Dancers on The Carol Burnett Show. In between the show’s segments, jazz-dance sequences functioned as segues. “I thought, ‘Oh, my gosh. That’s what I want to do for a living.’”
  • The food produced by unsustainable agricultural practices may be just as harmful as the practices themselves, one of the college’s outstanding graduates argued in her honors’ thesis.
    Melanie Sarah Adams had a hunch: Maybe today’s conventional agricultural practices not only degrade the Earth’s environment and threaten future food security but also produce nutritionally imbalanced foods that harm human health.
  • Courtnie Paschall is the Outstanding Graduate for the College of Arts and Sciences for spring 2015. Photo by Laura Kriho.
    Before coming to CU, Courtnie Paschall had graduated from the Naval Academy, attained the rank of lieutenant and undergone years of flight training. Now, she’s graduating summa cum laude with a degree in neuroscience and a minor in electrical engineering. She is also the Outstanding Graduate for the College of Arts and Sciences for spring 2015.
  • Marcia Douglas
    Marcia Douglas, associate professor of English, has been awarded a prestigious fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts to pen a novel extrapolated from a minute, almost tossed-off, detail in Tell My Horse, a work by Zora Neale Hurston, written while Hurston was on a Guggenheim Fellowship.
  • Elizabeth Fenn
    The news of a lifetime reached Elizabeth Fenn, chair of CU-Boulder’s history department, around 1 p.m. on April 20, just as she sat at her desk to eat her lunch from the University Memorial Center. An email from a New York Times reporter caught her attention: It said she’d won a Pulitzer Prize.
Subscribe to Kudos