Stories

An Internal Drive

An Internal Drive

Alumnae share their roads to success at KAR

Robin Leslie (T’84) doesn’t think of herself as a trailblazer. But when she enrolled in computer information technology at Purdue, the department was in its infancy. She was one of few women in the major — and one of few students of color.

“It was a new field,” Leslie says. “Not very many people looked like me. I just focused on my work and what I needed to learn. I knew I wanted to work in information technology (IT) for the rest of my life.”

Surviving the Storm

Surviving the Storm

Houston Boilers rally to aid family recovering from Hurricane Harvey

Steve and Cathy Gurnell were prepared to wait it out. They’d lived in their home in Katy, Texas, a western suburb of Houston, for 19 years. No strangers to bad storms, they’d stayed through Rita (2005), Ike (2008), and other smaller hurricanes and tropical storms. As rain from Hurricane Harvey pummeled Texas, friends and family called and texted the Gurnells to check on their safety. Among those concerned were the couple’s middle child, Carrie (LA’10), an assistant volleyball coach at Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, North Carolina.

Summer Party Rages On

Summer Party Rages On

Cary A unit friends celebrate 45th annual reunion

Ask any Cary Quad resident circa 1974, “Who was the biggest jerk who walked the halls?” and you were likely to hear the same answer: Chuck Harville (P’76, DP’89). It was a mantle he didn’t mind. It can be fun to be the instigator. In those days, orientation programs were less structured, and as leader of A unit orientation, it fell to Harville to assimilate the frosh.

An Arm for Yaretzi

An Arm for Yaretzi

Telescoping prosthesis enables 10-year-old girl to bow violin

It’s atypical to see a piano as part of a grade school orchestra ensemble, but that’s exactly what Zayra Vincent encountered when she visited the Burgin Elementary School music room this spring. There, in the back of the Arlignton, Texas, classroom, a smiling 10-year-old girl plucked out notes on the keyboard with one finger.

The Secret Garden

The Secret Garden

Alumnus renovates his sophomore landscape design 20 years later

The hidden light court encased within the walls of Duncan Hall in downtown Lafayette, Indiana, was neglected and overgrown when Aura Lee Emsweller was hired as the hall’s first executive director in 1996.

The Georgian, colonial-style building opened in 1931 as a meeting place for social, patriotic, charitable, educational, and cultural events. A 1958 addition created the inner courtyard, designed to allow light to pass through the stately ballroom windows. It was in this narrow, unkempt space with a mucky, untended pond and ivy climbing the brick walls that Emsweller’s 6-year-old son, Schuyler, discovered a wonderland for the imagination.

Radical Underground

Radical Underground

Honors course explores how zines fostered communities of resistance

In the aftermath of World War II, social critics in the United States grew increasingly pessimistic about the roles of mass media, consumerism, and bureaucracy in society, viewing them as instruments of authoritarian control. These counterculture voices frame the curriculum of Underground Networks, a new course offered through the Honors College that examines radical forms of social life that emerge within yet in opposition to oppressive institutions.

Lost Art of Sketching

Lost Art of Sketching

Teaching students how to pick up a pencil and communicate their ideas

One of the greatest inventors of all time created a lot of ugly design drawings. Thomas Edison’s sketches may not be pretty, but they communicated his ideas, and that’s essential to collaboration and innovation.

Todd Kelley, associate professor of technology leadership and innovation, is a former secondary school teacher who researches how young students learn design and how design improves STEM education. He uses Edison’s drawings to illustrate that design sketches do not need to be artistic or attractive to serve their purpose — clearly communicating an idea.

Red Planet Research

Red Planet Research

All-Purdue crew spent two weeks on mission to Mars habitat simulation

Seven Boilermakers formed the first all-Purdue crew to complete a two-week mission at the Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS) near Hanksville, Utah, from December 30 to January 14.

“The environment around the station is extremely accurate in its appearance,” says Max Fagin (MS AAE’15), an aerospace engineer at Made in Space and commander of the Boilers2Mars team. “The chemistry of the soil doesn’t mimic the chemistry of Mars, but the lack of vegetation and signs of human life create a landscape that is very Mars-like.”