Celebrate
- CU Athletics and the Environmental Center have received this year's GameDay Football Zero Waste Touchdown Challenge award in recognition of efforts to reduce and recycle waste generated during football games at Folsom Field.
- Tamara Lehman, assistant professor of computer engineering, has earned a CAREER award through the National Science Foundation to address hardware vulnerabilities in microarchitecture designs while exploring security metrics for future hardware designs.
- CU ÌÇÐÄVlogÆƽâ°æ relies on thousands of enthusiastic, dedicated student employees for its efficient operations. Each year, we honor undergraduate and graduate Buffs with the Student Employee of the Year award. Join us in celebrating this year’s recipients and nominees.
- The CU Board of Regents announced its selection of recipients of honorary degrees, distinguished service awards and university medals for 2025, including Joseph American Horse, David Chang, Yvonne DiStefano, Ashok Srivastava and Lynn Waelde.
- Noting Chancellor Emeritus Philip DiStefano’s longstanding tenure and impact on campus, Congressman Joe Neguse recently made remarks for the congressional record.
- Joining past awardees such as Jane Goodall, Stephen Hawking, Albert Einstein and Marie Curie, INSTAAR Faculty Fellow Katharine Suding is being recognized for her “transformative contributions to restoration ecology.“
- Kristen Ahner, a doctoral student, is advancing the science of autonomous space exploration and being honored as a leading engineering student worldwide.
- Briggs and Welner of the School of Education have been elected to the esteemed National Academy of Education. They join a group of just 22 colleagues, nationally and internationally, who provide outstanding scholarship and leadership related to education and who were elected.
- Ten graduate students participated in this year’s final competition for a chance at prize money and to represent CU ÌÇÐÄVlogÆƽâ°æ at the regional competition.
- Starbird was awarded the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, the U.S. government’s highest honor for early-career researchers. Now at the University of Washington, Starbird’s groundbreaking research in crisis informatics and disinformation highlights the value of interdisciplinary engineering and design.