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Debi Thomas, (born March 25, 1967)
was a figure skater and the first African American to win a medal at the
Winter Olympics. She won the bronze medal at the 1988 Winter Games in
Calgary in the year that Katarina Witt won the gold; both skated to the
music of Bizet's Carmen. While a pre-med student at Stanford
University, Thomas won both the 1986 U.S. National and World Figure
Skating titles, defeating Tiffany Chin and Witt respectively, becoming the
first and only African American to hold those titles. She was inducted into
the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 2000.
After her figure
skating career, Thomas went back to school to become an orthopedic
surgeon. She graduated from Stanford in 1991 with a degree in
engineering and from Northwestern University Medical School in 1997.
Thomas followed this with a surgical residency at the University of
Arkansas Medical Sciences Hospital and an orthopedic surgery residency at
the Martin Luther King Jr./Charles Drew University Medical Center in South
Central Los Angeles.
She still remains involved in the figure
skating world as a frequent committee member and judge.
* ESPN.com:
Where are they now? Debi Thomas * Stanford Magazine: Good-Bye Skates,
Hello Scrubs
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