Faculty-Staff Edition - April 21, 2023
Campus Community
Photos: 7 faculty members honored for excellence
The annual Boulder Faculty Assembly Excellence Awards took place April 19, recognizing seven CU Boulder faculty for their outstanding work and efforts to make advances in the academy.
Adam Holewinski receives Fulbright to synthesize renewable fuels, chemicals
Adam Holewinski, an assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering, has been awarded a prestigious fellowship to research efficient ways to produce sustainable chemical products and fuels using electricity from renewable sources such as solar and wind.
5 decades after starting college, tenacious student to graduate
Rita Garson, now 76, will celebrate her special day at CU Boulder with her sister, adult children and grandchildren, two of whom are also alumni.
Events & Exhibits
Staff Council hosting kids day April 27; RSVP soon
Register by noon on April 25 for CU Boulder Campus Kids Day, and bring your youngsters for a meet-and-greet with Chip—the costumed mascot—pizza, ice skating and more.
A music extravaganza: CU at Boettcher series returns May 2
CU at Boettcher is back for the first time since 2020, with the symphony orchestra and all choirs set to perform Carl Orff’s formidable Carmina Burana. The concert also will feature the world premiere of Carter Pann’s symphony, On The Importance of Our Democracy, and a collaboration with the youth music-training program El Sistema.
Research in Your Backyard
Study shows personal disinfection device safe for use in public spaces
Imagine carrying a UV device in your backpack and pulling it out to disinfect your bus seat or restaurant table. A new CU Boulder study shows that using a technology called Far UV-C kills almost 100% of pathogens within a few seconds, without risk to human bystanders.
Chili peppers more deeply rooted in Colorado than previously thought
Recently identified chili pepper fossils from Boulder and Denver museums challenge 50 million years of global evolutionary history. Now, that’s some spicy science!
World’s largest grammar database reveals accelerating loss of language diversity
A new grammatical database documents the enormous diversity of current languages on the planet, which ones are at risk and why they're worth saving.
Grad student helps design ‘artificial muscles’ you can toss in the compost bin
Mechanical engineering student Ellen Rumley was part of a robotics club in high school, but she could never get over the clunkiness of rigid, metal machines. Now, she's designing soft robotic actuators that work like animal muscles. They're also completely biodegradable.
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