Posts by Claudine Moreau | Today at Ƶ | Ƶ /u/news Thu, 16 Apr 2026 20:03:42 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Physicist-Poet Claudine R. Moreau honored in 2025 Brockman-Campbell Book Award /u/news/2025/06/19/physicist-poet-claudine-r-moreau-honored-in-2025-brockman-campbell-book-award/ Thu, 19 Jun 2025 13:11:23 +0000 /u/news/?p=1020625 Claudine R. Moreau, a physics and astronomy lecturer and Historic Neighborhood Faculty Director at Ƶ, has received an Honorable Mention in the 2025 for her debut poetry collection, “Demise of Pangaea.” Published by Main Street Rag, the collection was recognized by the North Carolina Poetry Society.

The cover of the book Demise of Pangaea by Claudine R. Moreau features a dramatic close-up of a deep rock fissure in a barren, mountainous landscape.
Cover of Moreau’s first full-length poetry collection

This year’s judge, Martin Mitchell, who works at the Library of Congress and former editor of Poetry Daily, praised Moreau’s work:

“The scale of Claudine R. Moreau’s “Demise of Pangaea” is huge,” he said. “We range from the granular ‘keyed-in code’ of our cells, to lovemaking and childbirth, all the way to the eventual extinction of our galaxy, with its ‘spiral-armed bones’ descending towards Earth. Moreau beautifully renders humanity’s physical and emotional ‘fossil record.’ A surprising and inventive work.”

Combining scientific insight with emotional resonance, “Demise of Pangaea” explores themes of deep time, personal transformation and the layered fossil record of human experience.

The Brockman-Campbell Book Award is one of North Carolina’s most prestigious poetry honors, recognizing outstanding book-length poetry collections by North Carolina state residents.

“Demise of Pangaea” is available through

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Primavera Poetry Festival showcases student voices /u/news/2025/04/24/primavera-poetry-festival-showcases-student-voices/ Thu, 24 Apr 2025 13:10:03 +0000 /u/news/?p=1013749 On Tuesday, April 22, the Historic Neighborhood hosted its second annual Primavera Poetry Festival at The Oak House, drawing students, faculty and alumni together for an evening of literary celebration and artistic expression.

A group of people gathered in The Oak House
A full house gathered at The Oak House to listen to the winning poems.

The festival opened with remarks from Historic Neighborhood Faculty Director Claudine Moreau, who introduced this year’s contest judge, Ƶ alum Alexandra Schneider ’23. Schneider set the tone for the evening with a powerful reading of her original poem, “Vampire in the Shangri-La Hotel,” which captivated the audience.

A woman speaks into a microphone
Judge Alexandra Schneider ’23 reads the poem “Vampire in the Shangri La Hotel.”

Following the featured reading, the event transitioned into an open mic session, where students shared original poetry and music. The celebration highlighted the thriving poetry culture within the Ƶ community.

In addition to the readings, attendees enjoyed an open coffee bar and surprise raffle prizes, creating an energetic and inclusive environment that

A person speaks into a microphone
Third Place Winner, Allena Boddie-Chapman reads winning poem “A Letter to the Long Building”

encouraged both creative expression and community connection.

The Primavera Poetry Festival continues to grow as a signature event for Historic Neighborhood, celebrating the voices, talents, and passions of Ƶ students through poetry, performance, and shared experience.

This year’s poetry contest drew over 85 poem submissions from

A woman reads from a phone into a microphone
MacKenzie Smith reads the first-place poem

students across campus. Schneider selected the following winners:

First Place: “Sapphic Ghazal” by MacKenzie Smith
Second Place: “This Is Just My Love” by Lola Moore
Third Place:“A Letter to the Long Building” by Allena Boddie-Chapman

Honorable mentions:
“Untitled Love Poem” by Finn Wilkinson
“A Baby in the City” by Georgia Vaughn
“Not Me” by LoRell McLean

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Ƶ Lecturer Claudine R. Moreau earns multiple honors in 2025 NC Poetry Society Contests /u/news/2025/04/03/elon-lecturer-claudine-r-moreau-earns-multiple-honors-in-2025-nc-poetry-society-contests/ Thu, 03 Apr 2025 12:43:34 +0000 /u/news/?p=1011401 Claudine R. Moreau, a lecturer in the Department of Physics and Astronomy and faculty director of Historic Neighborhood at Ƶ, has been recognized for her poetic talent in the, which attracted over 700 entries.

Moreau’s poem “The Atheist” won first place in the Carol Bessent Hayman Poetry of Love Award, honoring exceptional poetry about the theme of love, and earning her a $100 prize. Her piece “Lament of the Lunar Eclipse in Research Triangle Park” earned second place in the Poetry of Courage Award, which highlights works reflecting courage or crisis, along with a $50 prize. Additionally, her poem “Break the Hen” was named one of four finalists in the prestigious Poet Laureate Award category.

In recognition of her achievements, Moreau has been invited to present all three of her award-winning poems at the NCPS Sam Ragan Awards Day at the Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities on May 10, 2025. Her first and second place poems will also be published in the annual “Pinesong” awards journal, a distinguished collection celebrating the best poetry from the NCPS contests.

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Celestial mechanics on display as Ƶ hosts lunar eclipse viewing event /u/news/2025/03/17/celestial-mechanics-on-display-as-elon-hosts-lunar-eclipse-viewing-event/ Mon, 17 Mar 2025 14:00:16 +0000 /u/news/?p=1009707 Around 120 Ƶ students, faculty, and staff gathered under the star-strewn sky on the Young Commons lawn in front of Moseley Center at 1 a.m. on Friday, March 14 to witness a breathtaking total lunar eclipse—a celestial event where the Earth passes directly between the Sun and the Moon, casting its shadow across the lunar surface.

Photo of the moon in totality
The Moon in totality taken at 2:46 a.m. by Ƶ Astronomy Club member Sam Lindo using a Seestar S50 telescope.

Historic Neighborhood Faculty Director, Claudine Moreau, collaborated with the Ƶ Astronomy Club to host the late-night viewing party, complete with hot cocoa and Moon Pies—a playful nod to the moon’s temporary plunge into darkness on “Pi Day.” Sarah Ann Chapman, associate director of Residence Life for residential education and community development, also joined the moon-gazing festivities, handing out cocoa to attendees.

The Astronomy Club showcased an array of telescopes, offering attendees the chance to observe the eclipse up close and capture their own images through the eyepiece. Adding to the scientific intrigue, Tim Martin, an adjunct professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, set up advanced telescope-imaging systems—part of a decade-long project aimed at meticulously photographing lunar eclipses that outline Earth’s full umbral shadow.

The crowd settled onto blankets and adirondack chairs on the grass, buzzing with anticipation as the moon entered totality at 2:26 a.m.. During this phase, the moon adopted a striking dark red hue—a result of Rayleigh scattering, where shorter wavelengths of sunlight scatter in Earth’s atmosphere, allowing only the longer, red wavelengths to bend around the planet and illuminate the lunar surface.

For those who missed this awe-inspiring event, the next total lunar eclipse visible from Ƶ is already on the horizon, March 2026, but the eclipse will only be visible for a short time at moon set.

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Antonio Izzo leads campus mushroom hunt in Historic Neighborhood /u/news/2024/10/02/antonio-izzo-leads-campus-mushroom-hunt-in-historic-neighborhood/ Wed, 02 Oct 2024 17:50:19 +0000 /u/news/?p=997003 Over 20 enthusiastic students gathered in Ƶ’s Historic Neighborhood on Tuesday, Oct.1, for a unique adventure—a mushroom hunt led by Associate Professor of Biology and fungi expert, Antonio Izzo. The event, organized by Historic Neighborhood Faculty Director Claudine Moreau and Faculty in Residence Kevin Otos, kicked off with an engaging mini-lesson on the fascinating world of fungi.

A mushroom
An example of one of the tiny mushrooms right under our noses in Historic Neighborhood.

Armed with new knowledge, students set off to explore the campus grounds in front of the Carlton building, scouring the area for different types of mushrooms. After a short search, they reconvened to display their finds. Izzo organized the collection by appearance and color, explaining the important ecological roles mushrooms play in their habitats.

To keep the adventure going, Izzo encouraged students to widen their search perimeter and use the iNaturalist app to document their finds. The second round of mushroom discoveries popped with a vibrant array of colors — thanks to the recent rainfall that boosted the fungal growth on campus.

Collection of mushrooms
The final mushroom hunt haul–with an impressive variety of colors.

It was a fun and educational experience, leaving students with a deeper appreciation for the hidden world of fungi thriving around them. Historic Neighborhood plans to make this event an annual fall tradition.

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Claudine Moreau mixes STEM and poetry on Asheville’s 103.3 FM ‘Wordplay’ /u/news/2024/09/24/claudine-moreau-mixes-stem-and-poetry-on-ashevilles-103-3-fm-wordplay/ Tue, 24 Sep 2024 12:31:04 +0000 /u/news/?p=995653 Claudine Moreau
Claudine Moreau (left), lecturer in the Department of Physics and Astronomy.

Claudine Moreau, a lecturer in the Department of Physics and Astronomy and faculty director of Historic Neighborhood, was featured live on Asheville’s 103.3 FM show “Wordplay” on Sunday, Sept. 23, 2024. is a weekly radio show where poets and writers of creative prose share their work and engage in discussions about their craft and creative processes with hosts Jeff Davis and Lockie Hart.

This week’s episode spotlighted two women poets working in STEM fields. Moreau read from her poetry collection “ and Britt Kaufmann, who teaches math, presented selections from her collection “” The show offered a fascinating conversation on the intersection of math, physics, and poetry.

You can listen to the recording of Moreau and Kaufmann’s insightful and lively discussion

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Claudine R. Moreau earns honorable mention in prestigious poetry fellowship /u/news/2024/08/19/claudine-r-moreau-earns-honorable-mention-in-prestigious-poetry-fellowship/ Mon, 19 Aug 2024 12:59:58 +0000 /u/news/?p=991597 Claudine R. Moreau, a lecturer in the Department of Physics and Astronomy and Faculty Director of Historic Neighborhood, has been recognized with an Honorable Mention for her poem “Break the Hen” in the 2024 Susan Laughter Meyers Poetry Fellowship competition. This fellowship, co-sponsored by the North Carolina Poetry Society (NCPS) and the Weymouth Center for the Arts and Humanities, honors the life and work of the late Susan Laughter Meyers and supports the creative endeavors of writers from North and South Carolina.

As part of the recognition, she has been invited to present her poem at the upcoming North Carolina Poetry Society meeting. The event will take place on September 14, 2024, at the North Carolina Arboretum in Asheville, North Carolina.

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From Stars to Stanzas: Physics Lecturer Claudine R. Moreau Unveils Celestial Poetry Collection /u/news/2024/04/29/from-stars-to-stanzas-physics-lecturer-claudine-r-moreau-unveils-celestial-poetry-collection/ Mon, 29 Apr 2024 20:48:48 +0000 /u/news/?p=980353 Claudine R. Moreau, Lecturer in Physics and Faculty Director of Historic Neighborhood announces her debut full-length poetry collection, “.”

Cover of “Demise of Pangaea” by Physics Department Lecturer, Claudine Moreau.

Published by the Charlotte-based in April 2024, Moreau’s book seamlessly merges themes of astronomy, physics and geology into stunning and often stark tapestries of verse. The collection was praised by , founder and editor of

“In the collection, the fragile humans are like continents pulled apart by the gravity of their appetites and circumstances. Claudine Moreau negotiates her orbit around and through her life’s collisions and mergers with a mixture of wonder and hard-won truth in rhythmic sentences that oscillate as they sing us forward. Her lines reverberate with scientific themes that ebb and flow like the tides, folding their edges into the reader’s taut subconscious, foaming with quiet surprises over and over.”

Moreau is set to share her cosmos-inspired poems with audiences across the state in the coming year with readings scheduled at bookstores and various venues.

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Inspiring mentorship and poetry shine at Historic Neighborhood’s Primavera Poetry Festival /u/news/2024/04/29/inspiring-mentorship-and-poetry-shine-at-historic-neighborhoods-primavera-poetry-festival/ Mon, 29 Apr 2024 20:46:18 +0000 /u/news/?p=980292 In celebration of National Poetry Month and the profound impact of mentorship, students, faculty, retired faculty and alumni congregated in Hunt Atrium inside Founders Hall’s on April 23 for Historic Neighborhood’s inaugural Primavera Poetry Festival and Contest.

Lane Fields, Ƶ alumnus of 2011, reads from his body of poetry.

Hosted by Historic Faculty Director Claudine Moreau and Faculty in Residence Kevin Otos the festival kicked off with a warm welcome from Living Learning Assistant Kendall Somol. Moreau, also a lecturer in the Physics Department, unveiled her first full-length poetry book titled, “” a collection of science-inspired verses published by Main Street Rag Publications. She then introduced alumnus Lane Fields ’11, whose poetic journey was nurtured during his time at the university by mentors Kevin Boyle, a retired Ƶ English professor, and Moreau who saw the poetic supernova flaring in Lane’s center.

Fields, now a distinguished poet in his own right, graced the audience with readings from his poignant and introspective work–intensely personal, vulnerable, visceral. These were narrative works of longing and ultimately of love of oneself.

Anabelle Sumera-Decorat won First Place in the Primavera Poetry Contest.

Serving as the judge for the Primavera Poetry Contest, Fields bestowed accolades upon the winners: Anabelle Sumera-Decorat for “Fanfic” (1st place), Grady Cooke for “Cataclysmic Gimmicks” (2nd place), and Claire Lancaster for “A Broken Curtal Sonnet About Eye Cream” (3rd place). Honorable mentions were awarded to Megan Duckworth for “Body Dysmorphia,” and Carissa Pallander for “Abecedarian about a 20-year-old virgin kiss” and “with the lights off.”

Grady Cooke reads “Cataclysmic Gimmicks” in the Primavera Poetry Contest. Photo by Claudine Moreau.
Megan Duckworth reads the poem, “Body Dysmorphia” at the Primavera Poetry Festival on Tuesday. Photo by Claudine Moreau.

The penultimate reading of the night was the invited guest poet Dr. Patrick Bizzaro, who retired as a full professor from Indiana University of Pennsylvania’s doctoral program in Composition and TESOL and is at work on a new a novel, Draft Dodging in the Sixties, which takes place in Bethel, NY in 1969 during the cleanup of Max Yasgur’s farm after the Woodstock concert. (Bizzaro attended Woodstock, y’all!) Bizzaro, Moreau’s original poetry mentor, read from “Fog at the Manassas Battlefield,” accompanied by striking photography from his wife Resa Crane Bizzaro. Dr. Bizzaro’s work begs us to ask, “Who owns history?”

Dr. Patrick Bizzaro reads from his collection, “Fog at the Manassas Battlefield.” Photo by Claudine Moreau.

Through the prism of poetry, the festival illuminated the vibrant creative spirit thriving on campus–between the walls of engineering and physics to theatre to sociology to English– and underscored the transformative power of mentorship in nurturing aspiring writers across disciplines.

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Starry Skies and Serenity: Campus unites for stargazing event /u/news/2024/04/29/starry-skies-and-serenity-campus-unites-for-stargazing-event/ Mon, 29 Apr 2024 20:41:20 +0000 /u/news/?p=980245 In celebration of Earth Week, a harmonious convergence of students and faculty from Historic and Danieley Neighborhoods along with the Office of Sustainability and Counseling Services met at Lake Verona for the “Stargazing for Mental Health” event on Thursday, April 25. With over 80 enthusiasts in attendance, the event marked the second collaborative effort to foster sustainability, mindfulness and cosmic connection.

First year astrophysics major, Matthew Rieck, sets up the Seestar S50 telescope at Lake Verona. Photo by Kevin Otos.

Met by Danieley Faculty Director Evan Small and Associate Director of Sustainability for Education and Outreach Kelly Harer, attendees gathered at Daniel Common at 9 p.m., indulging in celestial-themed snacks and beverages before embarking on a journey of inner peace. Itumeleng Shadrek from Counseling Services led a serene meditation circle, preparing minds for the wonders of the night sky.

On the shores of Lake Verona, blankets were spread beneath the stars, accompanied by a melodic blend of tunes emanating from a portable speaker. Astrophysics and astronomy majors and astronomy minors, including Jonathan Berkson, Myka Thomas, Matthew Rieck, Sam Lindo, Jaylem Cheek and Isabelle English along with Physics Department Lecturer/Historic Faculty Director Claudine Moreau and Historic Faculty in Residence Kevin Otos manned three telescopes and gave breathtaking “Winter Circle” constellation green laser star tours. Colin Vernon, an Environmental Engineering major, treated attendees to real-time views of the Orion Nebula and several globular clusters through the Seestar S50 telescope.

Astronomy major, Myka Thomas, and astrophysics major, Jonathan Berkson, align the 8″ Meade SCT LX-90 telescope for stargazing event on Thursday. Photo by Claudine Moreau.
Image of the Great Orion Nebula taken by Sam Lindo, a first year astrophysics major, with the Seestar S50 on Thursday night.

Danieley and Historic neighborhood Faculty Directors ran raffles to give away prizes including telescopes, galaxy light projectors, and a nebula tapestry. With the resounding success of the event, the prospect of future stargazing gatherings seems pretty stellar, promising a tradition that may well become a cornerstone of campus life at Ƶ.

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