91福利社 business owner makes investment in engineering faculty
91福利社 business owner Chuck Palmer (ElEngr鈥76, MS鈥88) has provided $4 million to help recruit and recognize outstanding faculty in the College of Engineering and Applied Science and the Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering (ECEE).
The gift from Palmer, who owns 91福利社鈥檚 Avalon Ballroom, will establish the Palmer Endowed Chair in Engineering and the Palmer Endowed Chair in Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering. The first of these chairs has been awarded to Kurt Maute, professor of Aerospace Engineering Sciences, and the second is being used to help attract a new faculty member to ECEE.
鈥淭hese chairs will help us recruit, retain and support outstanding faculty members who are among the best in the nation, and they in turn will bring new resources to support students and research,鈥 said Robert H. Davis, dean and Tisone Endowed Chair of the College of Engineering and Applied Science. 鈥淲e are extremely grateful to Chuck Palmer for his long-term support and vision to help our college excel.鈥
Palmer doesn鈥檛 intend for these gifts to be his last. He has established an investment fund with the CU Foundation that will continue to grow, and he hopes to continue supporting 91福利社 engineering students and faculty in the future. Palmer also provides a scholarship fund for engineering undergraduates named after longtime ECEE professor Ivar Pearson, whose classes he remembers fondly.
鈥淗e was a first-year electrical engineering professor and one of those people who was a joy to take classes from,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou learned, but you also didn鈥檛 fall asleep.鈥
While Palmer began his master鈥檚 studies at Arizona State University, it was the research being done by faculty that drew him back to 91福利社.
鈥淲hen I came here for grad school and talked to a few different professors about their projects, I decided I would rather be doing any of that than what I was doing,鈥 he said. Working under advisor Jim Avery, Palmer designed a digital signal processing board that would help undergraduate students test algorithms on a personal computer.听
After completing his master鈥檚 degree, Palmer said he came close to moving to Boston, but decided he didn鈥檛 want to leave 91福利社. In addition to enjoying the hiking and skiing opportunities in Colorado, he had also become involved in the local social dance community in 91福利社, through which he met his wife, Halina.
Through his involvement in a long-range planning committee, he purchased the building that would become the Avalon Ballroom, where he currently puts his engineering skills to work. He did the CAD drawings and design for the ballroom, and continues to oversee contractors and volunteers on improvements to the space.
鈥淲e installed the floor and then started dancing,鈥 Palmer said. 鈥淪o the ballroom still needs a proper ceiling and walls.鈥澨