Faculty-Staff Edition - June 16, 2022
Buff Bulletin Board
Campus Community
CU Boulder leaders visit Vail Valley
Chancellor Philip DiStefano, Athletic Director Rick George and faculty leaders visited with ForeverGold alumni and community members from the Vail Valley for a campus update and a preview of the Right Here, Right Now Global Climate Summit.
5 things to know about Juneteenth
Ashleigh Lawrence Sanders, a professor of African American history, shares insights on the significance of Juneteenth and how celebrations and observances have evolved since its recognition as a national holiday.
Young biochemist wins prestigious Boettcher award
Aaron Whiteley, CU Boulder assistant professor of biochemistry, is one of eight to win this year’s Boettcher Foundation Webb-Waring Biomedical Research Award.
CU dance professor wins grant to ‘heal and unite’
Assistant Professor Helanius Wilkins has won a $10,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for a choreographed duet. The CU College of Arts and Sciences matched the grant with another $10,000. With the funding, Wilkins and the CU dance division will collaborate with several presenter-partners, including Basin Arts and the Acadiana Center for the Arts in Louisiana and Keshet Center for the Arts in New Mexico.
Researcher earns major award to study water quality challenges in rural Canadian communities
CU Boulder Professor Karl Linden has landed a major fellowship to research solutions to water pollution in rural and First Nations communities in Canada.
News Headlines
A trailblazer in the science of slumber
Integrative physiology Professor Ken Wright is breaking new ground in the burgeoning field of sleep research, and bringing his students along for the ride, all of which has won him the Mary A. Carskadon Outstanding Educator Award.
Inspired by palm trees, scientists develop hurricane-resilient wind turbines
New results from real-world tests of a downwind turbine could inform and improve the wind energy industry in a world with intensifying hurricanes and a greater demand for renewable energy.
Privacy isn’t in the Constitution—but it’s everywhere in constitutional law
The Supreme Court has found protections for people’s privacy in several constitutional amendments—and used it as a basis for some pretty fundamental protections. CU expert Scott Skinner-Thompson shares on The Conversation.
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