Awards
- Lisa Hardaway's family accepts her Engineer of Distinction Award during the Engineering Alumni Awards Banquet.Without Lisa Hardaway (PhDAeroEngr’00), our picture of the universe wouldn’t be nearly as clear.Before she passed away
- Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity (CoNECD) honored The BOLD Center as Program of the Year at their inaugural conference in Washington D.C. on May 1. The BOLD Center was honored for developing programs that have significantly enhanced the participation of students from diverse populations that are historically underserved in engineering and computing, while enriching the students’ learning experience  in engineering and computer science.Â
- Through The Caruso Foundation, the couple is giving $1 million toward the future connection between the business and engineering buildings, and another $1 million to support entrepreneurial activities that foster new business creation, diversity and inclusion.
- The engineering design competition enlists university teams from across the nation to develop creative solutions to some of the agency’s most relevant challenges.
- Two national fellowship programs are honoring CU Engineering students.The Brooke Owens Fellowship Program and Matthew Isakowitz Fellowship Program each provide industry internships and mentoring opportunities to promising engineering students and
- Congratulations to Shankini Doraisingam for receiving the Silver Snoopy Award for her work with astronauts aboard the International Space Station!Doraisingam is an engineer with the ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß's Bioserve Space Technologies, a
- Aaron McCusker (center, in polo shirt) holds high an oversized prize check for Team REPTAR winning first place in the International Student Competition team division.¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß aerospace senior design Team
- The team with professor Kyri Baker (center).Wanted: college students to help NASA get to Mars. No prior Martian experience necessary.The space agency is turning to an unlikely resource in its quest to conquer the red planet, and
- Pushing the boundaries of science requires flexibility. Allowing scientists to follow where their research takes them, even if that is into areas that may seem illogical to some, often is what leads to the most remarkable breakthroughs. For some