Alumni

  • Dave Woodall and Alexis Martin Woodalll
    Dave Woodall, once an aspiring lawyer, says 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 education gave him the tools to open a from-scratch, comfort restaurant that 鈥榬ecalls glamour of mid-century Hollywood.鈥
  • John Warner at the USA Pro Cycling Challenge (USPCC) Time Trial Awards. Photo by Jenise Jensen.
    John Warner is a dentist who鈥檚 climbed and skied mountains in the United States, Canada, South America and Europe, raced motorcycles and mountain bikes, and, incidentally, served as a town mayor, search-and-rescue volunteer, orchestra backer, and dentist-of-mercy in Guatemala.
  • Alumni Center
    Five alumni and one student from 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 College of Arts and Sciences were recognized for their outstanding service to the campus and community at the 87th annual alumni award celebration of the Alumni Association of the University of Colorado Boulder.
  • Alum wins presidential early career award
    Tina Goldstein, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh and a 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 alumna, has won the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers. Goldstein is one of a select group of researchers chosen by President Barack Obama to receive this honor.
  • Jade Cooley
    蜜桃传媒破解版下载 alumna Jade Cooley begins her science talks to students throughout Washington by saying, 鈥淢y name is Jade, and I once set off explosives in Antarctica for science. Now I鈥檓 going to tell you about glaciology.鈥 Cooley, a physics graduate,聽spent six weeks conducting research and camping on Antarctica鈥檚 Ross Ice Shelf last November.
  • Teju Ravilochan
    Teju Ravilochan wants to solve the world鈥檚 biggest problems, one entrepreneur at a time, and he has helped create a global enterprise to advance that mission. The University of Colorado Boulder graduate is CEO and co-founder of the Unreasonable Institute, a non-profit international training center that provides business programs for early stage entrepreneurs focused on creating positive social and environmental change.
  • Gail Nelson
    Gail Nelson has advice for anyone pondering a career in intelligence in an extraordinarily complex 21st-century global landscape: Read, read, and then read some more, particularly classical literature and foreign-intelligence histories. And while you鈥檙e at it, become an expert in the geopolitics and cultures of one region in the world, says Nelson, who earned his PhD in political science in 1979 and has had a distinguished career in the intelligence community.
  • Building bridges between perilous homes and new horizons
    As part of her graduate studies, 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 alumna Jamie Pledger performed psychological testing and provided counseling for international refugees. Her observations do not fit neatly into popular narratives about refugees from war-torn places like Iraq
  • smart gun
    Margot Hirsch believes that Americans should be able to buy guns equipped with 鈥渟mart-gun鈥 technology鈥攚eapons that include a safety feature that allow them to fire only when activated by authorized users鈥攁nd the 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 alumna now leads a nonprofit organization dedicated to this free-market strategy.
  • Horsing around is serious business for this alum
    What can you do with a liberal-arts degree? Beth Cross, who graduated from CU-Boulder in 1986 with a BA in political science, has an answer: Become an entrepreneur. She did this in a big way, co-founding Ariat International, a company that specializes in high-performance equestrian footwear and apparel.
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