In Tents: CU Engineering to graduate 1,100+ students
The summarizes the occasion best: "Yahoo for school! Yahoo for me!"
For the first time in recent memory, the College of Engineering and Applied Science is hosting individual department and program ceremonies, instead of one recognition ceremony for the entire college. To make space for every department, several of those ceremonies will be held outdoors, under the big top. Graduates can expect a more personal (and refreshingly shorter) ceremony among the peers and faculty they’ve studied with most closely.
The department ceremonies follow the main University Commencement at 8:30 a.m. at Folsom Field. (Can’t make it to Folsom? Watch the livestream on or ).
If you still don’t know your way around campus—no judgment—we’ve created a helpful map to find your way to your department ceremony. You can also .
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During the department ceremonies Friday, we’ll recognize the Outstanding Graduates of the College of Engineering and Applied Science. These students are among the best of the best in international engagement, service, research and academics — smart cookies, to say the least.
- Jay Arehart (Architectural Engineering) Outstanding Graduate for International Engagement
- Christopher Kohl (Mechanical Engineering) Outstanding Graduate for Service
- Derek Driggs (Applied Math) Outstanding Graduate for Research
- Matthew Winchester (Engineering Physics) Outstanding Graduate for Research
- Jonathan Reichanadter (Applied Math and Engineering Physics) Outstanding Graduate for Academic Achievement
- Matthew Hurst (Aerospace Engineering Sciences and Applied Math) Outstanding Graduate for Academic Achievement
- Alexandra Okeson (Computer Science) Outstanding Graduate for Academic Achievement
- Scott Wurst (Aerospace Engineering Sciences) Outstanding Graduate for Academic Achievement
- Chip Bollendonk (Mechanical Engineering) Outstanding Graduate of the College
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