Skip redundant pieces
Oread

Profs earn Higuchi research awards

Two professors from KU and two from Kansas State University have received Higuchi-KU Endowment Research Achievement Awards for 2008. The awards, now in their 26th year, honor outstanding accomplishments in research by faculty members at KU and other Kansas Board of Regents institutions.

The prestigious recognition program was established by Takeru Higuchi, a distinguished professor at KU from 1967 to 1983, and his late widow, Aya.

Four individual awards are given annually. They are named for former leaders of KU Endowment who played key roles in recruiting Higuchi to KU. Their longtime financial support of KU helped enhance university research throughout the state of Kansas.

Charles C. Eldredge

Charles R. Greenwood

Each award includes a plaque and a $10,000 grant for ongoing research efforts. The award money can be used for research materials, summer salaries, fellowship matching funds, research assistants or other support related to research.

The 2008 Higuchi Award winners will be formally recognized Nov. 6 at a ceremony and reception at the Adams Alumni Center in Lawrence. Balfour Jeffrey Award in Humanities and Social Sciences

Charles C. Eldredge is the Hall Distinguished Professor of American Art and Culture at KU. He was director of the Spencer Museum of Art at KU for 11 years, after which he spent six years in Washington, D.C., as director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American Art. He returned to KU in 1988.

During his career, he has taught and published extensively on such prominent American artists as Georgia O'Keeffe, Marsden Hartley and John Steuart Curry.

Irvin Youngberg Award for Applied Sciences

Charles R. Greenwood is a professor in the Department of Applied Behavioral Science, senior scientist in the Life Span Institute and director of the Juniper Gardens Children's Project in Kansas City, Kan., one of the Life Span Institute's 13 affiliated centers. He came to KU in 1978, and his research has focused on how certain environmental factors in the experiences of young children in poverty lead to poor academic performance and other social problems. He developed an innovative and successful set of classroom procedures -- Classwide Peer Tutoring -- designed to enhance student engagement and academic outcomes in reading, spelling and math.

Olin Petefish Award for Basic Science

Christopher M. Sorensen is a University Distinguished Professor of Physics at K-State.

Dolph Simons Award in Biomedical Sciences

Larry J. Takemoto is a University Distinguished Professor of Biology at K-State.

JOBS ONLINE:

For a current list and complete job announcements, visit jobs.ku.edu. For KU Medical Center jobs, visit jobs.kumc.edu. Search either by using the 8-digit code provided below (when available) or by department name. KU is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer.