Aug. 8, 2019
Meet U不良研究所鈥檚 most aspiring alumni
2019 Arch Awards recipients
Adrian Shellard
2019鈥檚 recipients are visionaries and innovators who aspired to greatness, transforming art and science, business, community, and education locally, nationally and around the globe.
The University of 不良研究所 is preparing to celebrate six remarkable alumni who are blazing trails in their fields while exhibiting unbridled talent, enthusiasm, spirit and drive. Each of these distinguished graduates will be honoured Sept. 5 at the annual Arch Awards, part of Alumni Weekend 2019.
- Photo above: Clockwise from top left: David Kendall, Scott Meikle, Grace Auger, Emily Hicks, Rob Allen and Mary Anne Moser are this year's Arch Awards recipients.
Since the U不良研究所 Alumni Association first began honouring extraordinary graduates back in 1985, the Arch Awards have highlighted what can be achieved by the university and its alumni.
Throughout their careers, these distinguished graduates have contributed significantly to their industries and communities, creating spaces for us to marvel at, championing legal rights for Indigenous people, leading colossal coalitions of people, innovating new tech platforms, building cultural bridges across global organizations 鈥 and their impact has even stretched beyond our world.
The University of 不良研究所 Alumni Association is proud to announce this year鈥檚 Arch Award recipients:
Dr. David Kendall, MSc鈥72, PhD鈥79
This year鈥檚 Distinguished Alumni Award for Lifetime Achievement recipient is a renowned atmospheric physicist who played a large role in putting Canada on the space exploration map with the Canadian Space Agency.
Kendall鈥檚 affinity for his alma mater has never wavered as U不良研究所 was where he says he learned 鈥 鈥渁nd never forgot鈥 鈥 about 鈥渢eamwork, transparency, openness, responsibility and consensus.鈥
Dr. Scott Meikle, BSc鈥84, PhD
With a home in Boise, Idaho, and an office in California, this year鈥檚 recipient of the International Career Achievement Award continues to hopscotch the globe for work. A global leader in the memory devices sector of the semiconductor industry, Meikle says that if you are going to work overseas, speaking a foreign language is critical.
鈥Mores, customs and nuance change in foreign lands, but the fundamentals of leadership are always the same,鈥 says the man who wrote his thesis in Japanese, obtained his PhD in Japan and has worked in Asia for 28 years.
Grace Auger, LLB鈥95
This year鈥檚 Career Achievement Award recipient has been a staff lawyer for Legal Aid Alberta on the Siksika Nation for 12 years. It鈥檚 a unique position, but then nothing about Auger鈥檚 career path has been typical. She was the only Indigenous law student in her cohort at U不良研究所, and the only student raising three kids under the age of eight.
Auger has spent decades breaking barriers and fighting extraordinary obstacles 鈥 all while building bridges between Indigenous people and Western society.
Dr. Mary Anne Moser, BSc鈥88, MA鈥92, PhD鈥05
Current president and CEO of TELUS Spark, co-founder of Beakerhead, award-winning designer and communications director 鈥 these are just a few of the positions held by Moser, roles that made her an ideal candidate for this year鈥檚 Community Commitment Award.
When asked how Beakerhead was created, Moser says: 鈥淲e wanted to bring worlds together, we wanted to rip down silos between science and art, and, in the process, all these beautiful things happened.鈥
Rob Allen, BComm鈥82
Currently the CEO of Aligned Outcomes and an active member of U不良研究所鈥檚 Board of Governors, the 2019 recipient of the Alumni Service Award has served on dozens of the university鈥檚 advisory councils and committees and has been active in numerous mentorship programs.
In the past few years, Allen has shifted from being an IBM executive, where he worked for 30 years, to being an entrepreneur, and that shift has forced him to question what skills he needed to develop.
Emily Hicks, BHSc鈥13
Parlaying her theatre background into persuasive pitching gives this year鈥檚 Early Career Achievement recipient, Emily Hicks, enormous joy. The co-founder and president of FREDsense, a biotechnology startup, cut her entrepreneurial chops at U不良研究所 when she landed a spot on the university鈥檚 International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition team back in 2009. This experience with iGEM eventually led to the development of FRED (Field Ready Electrochemical Detector) that combines biology and engineering to detect chemicals in water.
This bridge between 鈥渄oing鈥 science and 鈥減resenting鈥 science 鈥 that makes Hicks so extraordinary. At 29, Hicks and her team have already won dozens of awards, have spoken at numerous international conferences and, to date, have generated more than $2 million of investment and grant funding.
about each of the Arch Awards recipients.
Join us to honour the 2019 Arch Awards recipients on Sept. 5 from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. as part of . Alumni Weekend is a family-friendly event that brings sports, entertainment and one-of-a-kind experiences together in one fun weekend of festivities and runs from Sept. 5 to 8.