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  • Lucky Vidmar and his wife Aubrey Ardema with Chip the Buffalo
    Lucky Vidmar (CompSci'94; M'97) is working to empower ethics-focused engineers and honor his friend and mentor through the Moulakis Lecture Series within the Herbst Program for Engineering, Ethics & Society.
  • Students at the ESCEND event on 2/17
    A new program guides engineering students on an “entrepreneurial journey to learn the business side of innovation." The ESCEND program combines entrepreneurship courses with experiences and resources that give ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ engineering students the chance to create a product and then pitch it to investors.
  • Masks with symbols of the hopes and dreams of the technicians behind them: A house, a lecturn, sign posts and a tree
    Lab technicians, all from populations historically excluded from engineering, collected data during the height of the pandemic at Denver public schools for environmental engineering professor Mark Hernandez's air ventilation research. Here are the stories of four of those technicans, Halle Sago, Sylvia Akol, Jeronimo Palacios Luna and Ximena Duenas Ibarra, and what they're working for.
  • Keith Molenaar
    Keith Molenaar is a first-generation college graduate and the acting dean of the College of Engineering and Applied science. His journey through college relied on the encouragement of his parents and the friends who supported him.
  • A black-and-white photo of two girls sitting next to one another, on a hammock, faces away from the viewer
    A digital wellness program funded by ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ’s Community Impact Grant is being developed to help middle-school girls counteract the negative psychological impacts of social media. Creative Technology and Design graduate student researchers in the program's Social Impact track will work with lead investigator Annie Margaret from the ATLAS Institute to design the program.
  • ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ campus seen from the air
    The 2021 Research & Innovation Seed Grants, announced by the ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ Office of the Provost and Research & Innovation Office (RIO), are funding 16 new proposals for up to $50,000, including two new ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ Grand Challenge projects.
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