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Cosmo’s Oregon bachelor: Michael Neilson
Photo: Jeffrey Neilson |
Michael Neilson ’07 was surprised to find out this fall that he’d been declared one of Cosmopolitan magazine’s “Hottest Bachelors of 2009.” Why surprised? He was nominated in secret by a friend. The award-winning sculptor lives in Portland, Ore., where he also runs a fabric arts business and does fitness videos and modeling. At first, Neilson wasn’t entirely on board with his new, tantalizing status, but he remained good-humored—and came to realize that the contest wasn’t all frivolous. “It’s actually a pretty good group of guys,” Neilson said of his co-winners. “They are all really multitalented and mostly nice.” Since making the cut, along with 50 other single, sexy men across the country, Neilson has made appearances on The Today Show, Entertainment Tonight, and local television. That exposure has led to at least one TV-arranged date and dozens of e-mails from eligible women. But the 25-year-old seems to take all the resulting attention in stride, saying, “I don’t know what all this is doing for me really. I just keep putting my foot forward and I stay optimistic.” Since earning a degree in studio art at SCU, he’s been focused on his craft. He writes, “My intention as an artist is to explore the geometric curves in life and stretch beyond perceived limitations into a more beautiful and peaceful world.” You can see his work on campus in the Adobe Lodge.
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Pat Gelsinger ’83 has joined EMC, a leading developer and provider of information infrastructure technology and solutions, as president and chief operating officer for EMC Information Infrastructure Products. Gelsinger, 48, is responsible for the company’s product portfolio, including its Information Storage, RSA Information Security, Content Management and Archiving, and Ionix IT Management divisions. Previously, Gelsinger worked at Intel, “the ultimate executive proving ground,” he said, where he earned several pivotal leading roles in the corporation’s Digital Enterprise Group, Intel Labs, Corporate Technology Group, Intel Research, Desktop Products Group, and other divisions. The award-winner holds six patents in the areas of VLSI design, computer architecture, and communications.
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Kimberly Briggs J.D. ’87 and Paul Delucchi J.D. ’95 were both appointed by Gov. Schwarzenegger as Superior Court judges in Alameda County this past September. Briggs, a Democrat, formerly served as an Alameda County deputy district attorney and, since 1995, as a U.S. attorney. Since 1996, Delucchi, a Republican, had served as an Alameda County deputy district attorney.
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Tom Eichenberg ’76, M.S. ’77 made the pages of the Ripley’s Believe It Or Not! in 2009. What landed him amid the likes of skydiving Scrabble players, incredible icebergs, and crazy creatures? The recovery 33 years later of the wallet he lost on campus as an undergrad in 1975. Vigilant construction workers renovating the Benson Center found it. Read a profile of Eichenberg in the Fall 2008 SCM.
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Jay Leupp ’85 made the pages of Barron’s magazine in December with some good news: While the U.S. real estate market is a shadow of its former self, not so in China. Leupp is chief fund manager at Grubb & Ellis Alesco Global Advisors. Due to China’s massive stimulus package, tremendous bank-lending growth, and a hot stock market, real estate is booming. Since 2007, Leupp has rolled out three real estate–related mutual funds, all beating their benchmarks. Despite some governmental worries—reductions of loan availability for second and third homes and unaffordable housing prices for many citizens—Leupp remains optimistic. From his small firm’s base in San Mateo, he explains, “The important thing to know about China is that it has consistent and increasing demand. In Hong Kong, there are geographical land constraints, and on the mainland, local government bodies have strict control over development and control land leases.” Read the entire article at Barron’s Magazine here.
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