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Computer Science Senior Puts Coda on College Career

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
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Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

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303 871-2660

Elisabeth Bristol pursued passions in tech and music in her three years at 91桃色

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Elisabeth Bristol

Just looking at Elisabeth Bristol鈥檚 college resume can be a bit exhausting.

When she graduates from the in June (with a near perfect 3.96 GPA), she will have completed a computer science degree and minors in music and math after a mere three years. Then there鈥檚 the handful of jobs she has worked to afford college 鈥 professional seamstress, teaching assistant, consultant to a Los Angeles music dealer, sewing instructor 鈥 and the hours of time she spent commuting on RTD to and from her home in Aurora. And the professional symphony she played in. And the Christian youth ministry where she volunteered. And the 91桃色 Tango Club, of which she was president.

鈥淢y family likes to say that when I was born, I hit the ground running and never stopped,鈥 Bristol says. 鈥淚 look at the world and see everything there is in it 鈥 all the skills you can learn, the places you can see, the people you can meet and the things that you can do 鈥 and it鈥檚 like, why would you waste a minute?鈥

That鈥檚 the mindset that put Bristol on the 91桃色 campus in the first place. A French hornist and self-described 鈥渂and geek鈥 who was heavily involved in Smoky Hill High School鈥檚 engineering club, she wanted a university where she could pursue both of her passions. 91桃色, she realized, not only had the but also a soon-to-be-brand-new engineering building with state-of-the-art resources.

After her first quarter, she decided to major in computer science. Despite having no coding experience, she began to scale a steep learning curve. Her professors chalk it up to a knack for the field and an uncanny ability to manage her time.

鈥淪he鈥檚 obviously really bright and intelligent,鈥 says associate professor who taught several of Bristol鈥檚 classes. 鈥淏ut she鈥檚 intellectually unafraid to ask questions鈥 and unafraid to follow up if the answer doesn鈥檛 satisfy her.

The persistence has paid off. Two months before Commencement, she had already secured and started her first post-grad job. In Western Union鈥檚 cybersecurity department, Bristol听holds the title of information security analyst, ensuring the right people have access to the right things.

In a way, the job description sums up her college experience, too. Bristol didn鈥檛 do everything 鈥 never lived in the dorm, never had a roommate, didn鈥檛 have time to engage in many extracurriculars, never rushed a sorority house, 鈥渙r whatever it is that normal people do鈥 at a university.

But Bristol feels she did the right things to make her experience valuable and find her place on campus, staying true to her passion for music and discovering a new passion for ballroom dance. She forged strong connections with her classmates and her faculty.听

鈥淪he has this broad education that all students receive at 91桃色, and it will serve her well,鈥 says professor Bristol鈥檚 advisor and fellow musician. 鈥淲hen an employer looks at her resume, they鈥檒l see she can do other things.鈥

Investing so much outside of her classes, Bristol says, was her biggest struggle.

鈥淏ut looking back and realizing everything I鈥檝e learned despite all of that stuff is [also] my proudest accomplishment.鈥 she adds. 鈥淚 was able to maintain my life and do the things I love and at the same time I was able to build a really awesome skill set. It set me up to leap into the professional playing field.鈥

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