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Winter 2011

U N I V E R S I T Y

O F

MAGAZINE

N I V E R S I T Y A G A Z I N E

O F

UN I V ER S I T Y O F MAGAZINE

UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

Setting the Stage

DU readies to host Colorados first-ever presidential debate.

Give a gift that speaks volumes


The University of Denver is transforming Penrose Library to meet the evolving needs of faculty and students.

For as little as $250, you can be a part of this transformation and pay lasting tribute to the Pioneer in your life. With the purchase of a commemorative book binding, destined to hang in the new Academic Commons at Penrose Library, you can: celebrate a beloved relative, a favorite professor or a good friend show your support for the students and faculty whose work is changing our world in countless ways

Order your book binding today at www.du.edu/academiccommons/gift


The three-dimensional book bindings, constructed of fine metals, will have a prominent and permanent home inside the new Academic Commons at Penrose Library.

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Contents
Features

28 32 38 42

Straight Shooter
By Rob Jordan

Compromise and common sense mark the career of Wyoming Senator Mike Enzi.

Corps Values
By Laurie Budgar

For half a century, the Peace Corps has provided DU alumni and students with a life-changing chance to serve.

Stoked

Alumna Keri Herman is at the top of her game as one of the best female freeskiers in the world.

By Nathan Solheim

Blame the Banks?


By Mike Cote

Professor George DeMartino says economists also had a hand in causing Americas Great Recession.

Departments

44 45 47

Editors Note Feedback DU Update 8 News Presidential debate 11 History Tuskegee Airmen 14 Arts DUs modern artists 17 People Student actress 18 Views Campus architecture 19 Research Ballistics lab 20 Q&A Presidential candidate Fred Karger 23 Academics Educating tomorrows lawyers 25 Sports Skier and golfer Lindsay Cone 27 Poetry Seed Starters Alumni Connections

45

On the cover: DU will host the first presidential debate of the 2012 election on Oct. 3; read the story on page 8. Illustration by Craig Korn and James Steidl/Shutterstock. This page: The DU-based Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System has proposed an innovative new way to train future lawyers; read the story on page 23. Photo by Wayne Armstrong.

University of Denver Magazine Update

U N I V E R S I T Y

O F

Editors Note

MAGAZINE

w w w. d u . e d u / m a g a z i n e
U N I V E R S I T Y Number 2 Volume 12, O F M A G A Z I N E

UN I V ER S I T Y O F MAGAZINE UNIV Publisher E R S I T Y O F


MAGAZINE

Kevin A. Carroll

Managing Editor

On Oct. 3, 2012, millions of people will turn their attention to the University of Denver as DU hosts a U.S. presidential debate in advance of the November general election. Were one of only three schools nationwide selected to host a presidential debatethe first in Colorados history (see story on page 8). To say that were excited is an understatement. DU is planning a number of educational programs and events in the months leading up to the debate. One of the first will be on Feb. 2, when the 201112 Bridges to the Future lecture seriesUndercurrents of the 2012 Electioncontinues with Anne-Marie Slaughter, former director of policy planning for the U.S. State Department (RSVP at www.du.edu/bridges). During fall quarter, the lecture series brought former White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles to campus (read more about his talk on page 24). The University is committed to helping students, alumni and the community learn about and engage in the political process, and well be sure to keep you posted about all of the debate activities. Start by visiting www.du.edu/debate2012 to learn more. Civic engagement and leading through action are central to DUs mission, and our faculty, students and alumni embody that spirit of DU-ing. In this issue, political science Associate Professor Seth Masket shares his list of the most important issues affecting the outcome of the 2012 election (page 9), and international studies Professor George DeMartino discusses the role of economists in causing Americas Great Recession (page 42). DU alumnus Mike Enzi, a Republican senator from Wyoming, imparts lessons on bipartisanship (page 28), while alumnus Fred Karger discusses his run for the Republican presidential nomination (page 20). And starting on page 32, DUs Peace Corps alumni share stories of service in action. I hope youll attend some of the upcoming debate events or participate online. And please share your own stories of engagement and action. What are you doing to effect change in your corner of the world? Email us at du-magazine@du.edu.

Chelsey Baker-Hauck (BA 96)


Assistant Managing Editor

Greg Glasgow
Associate Editor

Tamara Chapman
Editorial Assistant

Justin Edmonds

Amber DAngelo Na (BA 06)


Art Director

Craig Korn, VeggieGraphics


Photographer

Wayne Armstrong
Contributors

Jordan Ames (BA 02, MPS 10) Katy Armstrong Laurie Budgar Mike Cote Kim DeVigil Justin Edmonds (BSBA 08) Andrew Fielding Brenda Gillen (MLS, CERT 06) Meghan Howes Kristal Griffith (MBA 10) Rob Jordan Lisa Marshall Seth Masket Doug McPherson Pat Rooney Chase Squires (MPS 10) Nathan Solheim David McKay Wilson
Editorial Board

Chelsey Baker-Hauck, editorial director Kevin A. Carroll, vice chancellor/chief marketing officer Thomas Douglis (BA 86) Jeffrey Howard, executive director of alumni relations Sarah Satterwhite, senior director of advancement communications Amber Scott (MA 02) Laura Stevens (BA 69), director of parent relations

Printed on 10% PCW recycled paper

The University of Denver Magazine (USPS 022-177) is published quarterlyfall, winter, spring and summerby the University of Denver, University Communications, 2199 S. University Blvd., Denver, CO 80208-4816. The University of Denver (Colorado Seminary) is an Equal Opportunity Institution. Periodicals postage paid at Denver, CO. Postmaster: Send address changes to University of Denver Magazine, University of Denver, University Advancement, 2190 E. Asbury Ave., Denver, CO 80208-4816.

Chelsey Baker-Hauck Managing Editor 4


University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Feedback
that she doesnt teach!) to get involved with her research, outreach, and practice. I would not be where I am right now without Kim. I doubt I am the only one to say that about her, as well. Spectacular images! The photography speaks louder than the text. Amazing creativity. Inspiring! Thank you for making my morning.
Bob Payne

On the fall 2011 profile of high school theater teacher and donor Florence (Dunning) Sikes (BA 55, MA 60)
Florence Dunning made an amazing contribution to many of us at West High in Denver during the late 1950s. Plays, drama class, vaudeville and a real interest in the lives of her students made all the difference. A wonderful sense of humor, coupled with an academic demand she made the student believe was within his capability, separated her from most teachers and human beings. I was one of the lucky ones.
Gary Mullennix

Comments from our online readers


On Brain Power [fall 2011], about Clinical Associate Professor Kim Gorgens and her research on brain injuries
Kim truly is a rock star! What I missed in this article is Kims staunch belief in getting her students (or even DU students

Adam ONeil, student Graduate School of Professional Psychology

On The Nature of Sound [fall 2011], Wayne Armstrongs portraits of Lamont School of Music Students
WONDERFUL photos Mr. Armstrong! You are an incredible talent!
Scott Gordon

Great article! The photos are so dynamic and really speak to the text! Its really refreshing to see photographs that actually tell a story. Thanks for this reminder.
Emily McCleod

Excellent creativity and depth. Very insightful reflections regarding each individuals personality. Bravo Wayne!
Ben Pewthers

Join the discussion! Read stories and post comments of your own at www.du.edu/magazine

The University of Denver Magazine won several awards for editorial excellence in 2011.
Managing Editor Chelsey Baker-Hauck (BA 96) received two first-place awards from the National Federation of Press Women: one for magazine editing and one for profile writing for her spring 2010 story about Steve Shaffer (BSBA 72), a volunteer at the WOLF rescue organization and sanctuary for captive-bred wolves and wolf dogs. Former Production Editor Kathryn Mayer (BA 07, MA 10) received a first-place award from the federation for her work editing the magazines DU Update section. Baker-Hauck and Mayer won the same awards from the affiliate Colorado Press Women prior to the national awards. Baker-Hauck also won a bronze award from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) Region VI for her essay Homeplace, from the winter 2009 issue. The magazine won CASEs regional bronze award for overall excellence. Finally, photographer Wayne Armstrong won a bronze Mercury Awardan international recognitionfor his portrait of Eva Hakansson that appeared in the fall 2010 issue.

Building a better DU

I am a proud graduate of the University of Denver. My undergraduate degree served as an excellent base upon which I built two masters degrees and a doctorate. For this, I shall always be grateful to DU. However, there is no way on Gods green earth that I would recommend anyone attend DU these days due to its ridiculous costs. Chancellor Robert Coombe matter-of-factly noted in the fall 2011 issue that one year of room, board, tuition, books and other expenses adds up to $52,770 per year! In good conscience, how can anyone encourage an undergraduate, her parents and various donors to contribute to such an outlay, which is supposedly made more palatable, according to the chancellor, by being substantially lower than the sticker price of our private competitors across the nation? As my Jersey Shore friends would say about spending more than $200,000 over four years at DU: Forget about it!

It saddens me that DU administration has drunk the same business model Kool-Aid that has coursed through the veins of academia forever. Essentially, the chancellor is saying, Despite all the accumulated brain power on campus, we have yet to figure out how to offer a $50,000 education for only $25,000. Frankly, I doubt that such a thought has ever occurred to administration. The result is that the University is cranking out students too stupid to have realized the folly of college-loan enslavement. Please, Chancellor Coombe, spend some of your grant money on hiring IDEO, the design consultancy (with which I have zero affiliation), and turn academia on its ear by revolutionizing educational costs without governmental subsidy. Then you would truly be a Pioneer and students would flock to the better-built mousetrap at the corner of University Boulevard and Evans Avenue.
Don Burgess (BA 67) Fort Worth, Texas

University of Denver Magazine Feedback

UNivErSiTY OF DENvEr BOOkSTOrE

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When it comes to showing your Pioneer pride, theres no better place to start than the DU Bookstore. Youll find all your favorite brandsChampion, JanSport, Under Armour, Nike, Adidas and morein all your favorite styles. So whether youre shopping for yourself or looking for a great gift, youre sure to find the perfect fit at the DU Bookstore.
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University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

12 13 16 21 22 24

Car-sharing program Colorado budget fix Government reform Convocation address Ban Ki-moon speech $1.4 million grant

Wayne Armstrong

Students take part in the Pioneers Homecoming parade on Oct 22. The day also included a family fall festival, a Taste of DU event featuring food from neighborhood and alumni-operated restaurants, and a hockey game. As part of the Homecoming celebration, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper and Denver Mayor Michael Hancock declared Oct. 22, 2011, University of Denver Pioneer Athletics Day. They issued proclamations celebrating DUs outstanding athletics performance during the 201011 academic year. >>See more pictures of DUs Homecoming and Pioneer Athletics Day celebration at bit.ly/DUMagPAD
University of Denver Magazine Update

TOP NEWS
By Media Relations Staff

DU to host first presidential debate of 2012

Wayne Armstrong

he Commission on Presidential Debates has selected the University of Denver as the host site for the first 2012 U.S. presidential debate. The debate will be held on Oct. 3 in Magness Arena at DUs Daniel L. Ritchie Center for Sports and Wellness. The University of Denver is excited for this opportunity to partner with the Commission on Presidential Debates to bring this historic event to our campus, our city and our state, says DU Chancellor Robert Coombe (pictured at right). Debates are an important part of our nations election process, and as this is the first-ever presidential debate to be hosted in Colorado, the national and international spotlight will be on the University of Denver and the entire Rocky Mountain region. DU has hosted many prominent events and speakers over the years, including
University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

then-presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain in 2008, former vicepresidential candidate Sarah Palin in 2010 and current presidential candidate Mitt Romney in 2007. University officials announced the event at an Oct. 31 news conference, which also featured Denver Mayor Michael Hancock (pictured at left), who congratulated DU on behalf of the city. We will do whatever we can to help you pull off a very successful presidential debate here, Hancock said. We know youre ready to do it, but you have a partner in the city of Denver. We are awfully proud of you and we will, as a city, stand with you to showcase our great city to the rest of the world. Coombe says DU was one of 12 universities around the country vying for a chance to host one of four nationally televised

debates that will occur just before the November 2012 general election. This is the first time the University has applied for host consideration. With todays announcement, DU will focus its attention on building a world-class event that will engage our campus and community in educational opportunities that will last long after the debate and election have passed, Coombe said at the news conference. The University is seeking sponsors to help cover the $1.65 million cost of the debate, Coombe said. The University is planning a number of educational programs and events that will be held in the months leading up to the debate, inviting students and the larger community to learn about and engage in the political process. >>www.du.edu/debate2012

Pioneers Top 10

Issues impacting the 2012 election


1 The economy. If it recovers,
Obamas in. If it goes into another recession, hes toast.
Oceanwide Images

Shutterstock.com

the death toll rises substantially anywhere, that hurts Obama.

2 Wars. If

Student law clinic sues feds to protect sharks


In August, DUs Sturm College of Law Environmental Law Clinic filed a federal lawsuit to protect the porbeagle sharka relative to the great white sharkfrom overfishing that has pushed the species to the brink of extinction. The suit, filed by the student law clinic on behalf of WildEarth Guardians, asks a federal court in Washington, D.C., to overturn a ruling by the Department of Commerce that denied WildEarth Guardians 2010 bid to list the species as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The species is known to be highly intelligenteven seen engaging in playful behaviorand researchers say the shark plays an important environmental role, ensuring natural balance in its ecosystem. The porbeagle has a slow reproductive rate and is not rebounding from overfishing. By refusing to consider the petition to protect the porbeagle shark, the government has again arbitrarily refused to follow the law when it comes to species prized by the commercial fishing industry, says DU Environmental Law Clinic director and lead attorney Michael Harris. But the ESA is not merely intended to only protect cute, fuzzy species with no commercial value; the law should protect all species in order to maintain diverse and healthy ecosystems.
Chase Squires

3 The ideological extremism of the


Republican nominee

4 The Supreme Courts ruling on


health care reform

5 Voter turnout efforts 6 Redistricting. This will affect quite


a few House members chances.

7 Voter eligibility rules 8 The price of gas 9 Illegal immigration 10 Social Security
Seth Masket, associate professor of political science

DU ranks with the best


DU was ranked

No. 82

up from 86th last yearin U.S.News & World Reports annual

college rankings for undergraduate education. U.S.News & World Reports 2011 grad school rankings put the Sturm College of Law at

No. 77

on the list of top American law schools and the

Professional MBA (PMBA) program at the Daniels College of Business at

166 part-time MBA programs. The Daniels College of Business was ranked

No. 59 No. 15

out of on a list

of the worlds top 100 business schools in the Aspen Institutes 201112 edition of Beyond Grey Pinstripes, a biennial survey and alternative ranking of business schools. And DUs creative writing PhD program was ranked the

No. 1

creative writing PhD program in the country by Poets & Writers magazine.

University of Denver Magazine Update

@ DU Today
University of Denver surpasses $300 million in fundraising campaign

Look for these stories and more news at www.du.edu/today


Manamana / Shutterstock.com Jason and Bonnie Grower / Shutterstock.com

Law bar passage rate hits 90 percent


Professor brings students, homeless women together through writing
Grad student Eva Hakansson speeds her way to world record

Research focuses on psychology of Burning Man attendees

New emergent digital practices degree to focus on technology and innovation

Visiting astronaut tells DU students theres a place in space program for all disciplines
Students camp out for hockey tickets

Shutterstock.com

Wayne Armstrong

Student saves a life in Colorado high country


Scott Larson, a 21-year-old senior international business major, is credited with saving a mans life on June 18 near Buena Vista, Colo. That afternoon, as Larson was returning to his car after hiking Mount Antero, a man ran toward him, screaming for help. That man, Jim Denton, told Larson that his friend was drowning. Larson and Denton ran to the nearfreezing Baldwin Creek, where 69-year-old Jim Taylor was trapped under an all-terrain vehicle. He had been driving the ATV when he hit a snow bank, lost control and rolled into the creek. Taylor was stuck on his back, facing downstream, and couldnt get his head above water. After exerting all of their strength for several minutes, Larson and Denton eventually lifted the vehicle and freed Taylor from the rushing water. Larson removed Taylors wet clothes and wrapped him in a fleece blanket to prevent hypothermia. He did a memory check to make sure Taylor was coherent. Several men who had arrived at the scene helped load Taylor into Larsons SUV. Larson drove as fast as he could down a treacherous backcountry trail to the main road for cellphone reception. He called 911 just before Taylor went into shock. By the time the paramedics got to us he was visibly shaking, says Larson, who received certifications in first aid and CPR as part of his student job at the Ritchie Center. He also is an Eagle Scout and has extensive outdoors survival training. As a result of his efforts, Larson received the Chaffee County Sheriffs Citizen Citation for Distinguished Service.
Amber DAngelo Na

10

Courtesy of Scott Larson

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

HISTORy
By Greg Glasgow

Taking flight
Photo illustration by Wayne Armstrong

t took communication majors Shane Carrick (BA 08) and Bobby Deline (BA 07) a few tries to find the right subject for their documentary film, but when they met Lt. Col. James Harvey they knew they had their man. Harvey, who lives in Denver, was a member of the Tuskegee Airmen, an elite group of black pilots who fought in World War II. It was something I think people dont know a lot about, says Deline, pictured at left. A lot of people know the blurb in the history book thats, Oh, by the way, the Tuskegee Airmen were an all-black fighter pilot squadron in World War II. Thats literally about all I knew. He and Carrick (pictured at right) learned a lot more about the group in 2007, when they made The Black Birdman, a 13-minute documentary on Harvey, for their documentary film production class. They interviewed the pilot in front of a green screen, onto which they later superimposed historic photos and old video footage of the Tuskegee Airmen. In the film, Harvey, who grew up in a small town in Pennsylvania, says his first experience with racism came when he was drafted into the Army. At home he had been class president and captain of the basketball team, but on his way to basic training he was forced to sit in the back car of a train with the other black soldiers. They classified us in the category of the ape and the baboon. We were nothing, he says in the film. Thats why a lot of people said, Why send them to flying school, why teach them to fly? They cant learn; theyre nothing. In fact, Harvey says, the Tuskegee experiment originally was set up to prove that black pilots were inferior to white pilots, but the exacting specifications to which the Tuskegee pilots were expected to perform actually made them even better in the end. When we graduated, we were better than the instructors, he says in the film.

Carrick and Deline received praise from their classmates on the film, but once they graduated they moved on. Deline started a film and video production company in Denver, and Carrick worked in television. When Carrick had the idea to format The Black Birdman to run on the station he was working for, he called Deline, who recut the film with new historic footage and new music. They liked the improved version so much they decided to submit it to a pair of film festivals. Birdman won the best historical short award at the International Black Film Festival in Nashville, Tenn., in October 2010

and was an official selection at the San Diego Black Film Festival in January 2011. But the films most important audience was Harvey himself. When Shane and I went over to show it to him, I was scared to death of what he was going to think about it, says Deline, who is now producing The Aviation Cocktail, a 50sset dramatic thriller filmed in and around Denver. This is his story. I just remember that once the movie ended, he was silent, then he looked over at us and said, Thats the best thing Ive ever seen. It was pretty powerful. >>www.tuskegeetopgun.com

Watch the Black Birdman trailer online at bit.ly/DUMagBirdman

University of Denver Magazine Update

11

Car sharing arrives on campus


The University of Denver partnered with Enterprise Rent-ACarwhich is led by CEO Andrew Taylor (BSBA 70)to bring the companys WeCar car-sharing program to campus in September. WeCar offers 24-hour access to hourly, daily and overnight rentals, allowing members to maintain the benefits of a personal car while paying for the vehicle only when they use it. WeCars national campus car-sharing program is especially popular with students because it provides a solution to car rental age restrictions and to financial concerns associated with having a car on campus. DU students 18 and older, faculty and staff are eligible for membership, as are 21-and-older drivers in the surrounding community. Once members register online, signing up to use the car is entirely automated. Hourly rates start at $7.50 and daily rates start at $55. >>wecar.com/du
Chase Squires
Chase Squires

Undercurrentsofthe2012Election

Presents

Anne-Marie Slaughter
Former Director of Policy Planning for the U.S. State Department and Professor at Princeton University

Gates Concert Hall Newman Center for the Performing Arts 2344 East Illiff Ave.

Thursday, February 2, 2012 at 7 p.m.

In 201112, Bridges to the Future will explore the Undercurrents of the 2012 Election in a series of lectures on the economic, domestic and international issues shaping voter perspectives during the 2012 presidential campaign.

RSVP at du.edu/slaughter or 303.871.2357

ADMISSION IS FREE

12

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Law grad dedicates statue in memory of his slain family


On Nov. 10, 2006, University of Denver law graduate Frank Bingham endured his greatest personal tragedy when a drunk driver crashed into his family, killing his wife and two young children as they walked across a downtown Denver street. On May 10, 2011, Bingham stood before civic leaders and supporters on a warm afternoon and presented the city of Denver with a massive kinetic statue that reflected spring sunshine off shining blades of titanium. From his tragedy, he said, comes a symbol of strength and light. The huge project, the work of artist Robert Pietruszewski and a team of donors, is titled Connections and is dedicated to the memory of Binghams family: wife Rebecca and children Macie, 4, and Garrison, 2. Speaking briefly to the assembled crowd, Bingham recalled early talks with city leaders and how they led him to want to give something to the city that transformed the intersection at 15th and Arapahoe streets from a place of darkness to a place of movement and light. With the statues glistening blades drifting in slow circles behind him, Bingham said, In my mind, its a total success. Bingham, who graduated from DUs Sturm College of Law in 2010, closed the brief ceremony by reading from a work by poet Maya Angelou. When great souls die, after a period peace blooms, slowly and always irregularly, he read. Spaces fill with a kind of soothing electric vibration. Our senses, restored, never to be the same, whisper to us. They existed. They existed. We can be. Be and be better. For they existed.
Watch a video of Frank Binghams speech at bit.ly/DUMagBingham

Panel says state budget fix may require cuts, taxes


Without taking definitive action, Colorado in 12 years will generate only enough sales, income and other general-purpose tax revenue to pay for the three largest programs in the general fund: public schools, health care and prisons, according to a new report by the University of Denver Center for Colorados Economic Future (CCEF). Phase two of a study requested by the Colorado Legislature finds that by 2025 there will be no tax revenue for public colleges and universities, the state court system, child-protection services, youth corrections, state crime labs and other core services of state government. The entire budget will be consumed by what center Director Charlie Brown calls the big three. The nonpartisan center undertook the study last year at the request of the Legislature. The CCEFs first reportissued in Februarydemonstrated how the current balance of expenditures and revenues is unsustainable. Phase two finds the situation is more dire than earlier forecast. It also details the extent of a looming structural gap as costs for the three biggest budget items rise beyond the capacity of existing revenue streams. Models developed by the CCEF show projected spending for all programs in the general fund will exceed projected revenues by nearly $3.5 billion by fiscal year 202425. The enormity of this gap suggests that Coloradans consider tax increases and spending cuts, the center finds. Attempting to dig out of the hole solely through cuts is problematic. Many state functions are mandated by law, Medicaid spending is regulated by the federal government, and extreme cuts to K-12 education may not be acceptable to residents and lawmakers. But, the center finds, there is hope for balance through a combination of cuts and increased revenue. The solutions are going to be very difficult, Brown says. Some very tough choices lie ahead, but doing nothing is not an option. The center modeled several options for raising revenue. Among those with the most potency to address the long-term problem: restructuring and rebalancing the state/local partnership in financing K-12 education; a graduated income tax; and expanding the state sales tax to more services. Cuts could include the elimination of subsidies to state college tuition or even entire state services. The center is only offering each proposal as an option for lawmakers to consider and has not taken a position on which specific actions must be taken. CCEF instead takes the stance that something must be done, and the only workable solution may be a combination of cuts and revenue enhancement. What were hoping is this kind of information can get out to local leaders, civic leaders and the general public, and that they will recognize this cliff that were heading toward, Brown says. >>www.du.edu/economicfuture
Chase Squires

Chase Squires

University of Denver Magazine Update

13

ARTS

Power of 15
By Greg Glasgow

n 2011, when pretty much anything goes in the world of visual art, its hard to imagine what a big deal it was 60 years ago when a handful of Colorado artists left the realm of the real behind to go in a more abstract, modern direction. With 10 DU art instructorsincluding Vance Kirkland (BA 25) and William Sanderson (BA 26)in its ranks, a collective calling itself simply 15 Colorado Artists split from the Denver Artists Guild in 1948 to follow its modernist muse. We are not trying to break up the guild, Kirkland told The Denver Post in November 1948. We are simply interested in progressive ideas in art and the guild isnt. In December 1948, the two groups held side-by-side exhibitions at the Denver Art Museum, and people came from all over the city to see the schism, which the newspapers covered extensively. This summer the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver featured work by the rebel group in the exhibit 15 Colorado Artists: Breaking With Tradition. Co-curated by Hugh Grant and Deb Wadsworth, the show featured more than 100 pieces from the artists who were once at the forefront of modern art in the state. Its hard for us today to put ourselves back in 1948 and really imagine these pieces being as controversial as they were, says Maya Wright, membership and events manager at the Kirkland Museum. People wrote scandalous things in the paper about the work [of the] 15, but to us they dont actually look so cutting edge because now were in an era where art can be really, really crazy. Artwork in the exhibit ranged from purely abstract works by Kirkland, John Billmyer and Eo Kirchner to representational, if nonrealistic, pieces by artists such as Paul Smith and Mina Conant (BFA 49), who specialized in whimsical paintings of characters drawn from the worlds of fairy tales and childhood. Married couple Conant and Billmyer met as art students at DU in

John Billmyer, Abstract No. 5 (1954). Kirkland Museum collection

the 1930s and later came back to teach at the University. Other DU art faculty who were part of the original 15 were Marion Buchan, Kirchner, Duard Marshall, Louise Emerson Ronnebeck, J. Richard Sorby and Frank Vavra. Ten of the 15 worked at DU and were friends and worked together that way, so some people see DU as part of that energy that helped create the 15, says Wright, who is working on a masters degree in art history with a concentration in museum studies from the University of Denver. This summers show also included a collection of newspaper articles from the late 1940s that detail the rise of the 15 and Denvers differing views on modern art. A February 1948 editorial by Lee Casey in the Rocky Mountain News opines that within a few years an original Picasso or Cezanne will be valued mainly for the frame.

In Western art, Western literature and bourbon, Casey wrote, Ill take mine straight. The 15 Colorado Artists collective (membership was by invitation only) lasted until the 1970s and ended up with far more than 15 artists in its ranks. But the Kirkland exhibit dealt only with the original 15 and the impact they had on modern art in Colorado. It was a magical, seminal moment in Colorado art and emblematic that modern art was becoming widespread in America, Grant says. Just as regionalism became a truly American art form, modern art by regional artists in different parts of our country created truly American art forms. This pivotal moment in the history of Colorado art strengthened and is integral to the development and expansion of American art.

Watch a video documentary about the 15 Colorado Artists collective at bit.ly/DUMagArtists

14

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Frank Vavra, Colorado Mountain Town (late 1940s). Kirkland Museum collection

J. Richard Sorby, The Thorns (c. 1954). Courtesy of the William Sanderson, The Transfigured Night (1952). On loan from the Sanderson Art Collection, Northeastern Junior College Foundation, Sterling, Colo. Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center; gift of the Denver Art Museum

Mina Conant, Birthday Party (1974). Kirkland Museum collection

Eo Kirchner, Flight of the Squares (1963). Wayne Yaffee collection

University of Denver Magazine Update

15

Strategic Issues Panel calls for changes to Colorado government


In a report issued Oct. 3, the University of Denver Strategic Issues Program finds that Coloradolike many other statessuffers from a cyclical and structural fiscal imbalance that undermines the states fiscal stability over the long term. The Strategic Issues Program (SIP) panel says that while Colorados budget situation may slowly improve as the economy recovers, the state is poised to founder once again at the next economic downturn. Given Colorados fragile financial situation, the panel concludes that achieving a strong and sustainable fiscal environment requires a fundamental rethinking of traditional governmental practices. The nonpartisan SIP panel of 20 experts in business, governance and academia heard from 34 speakers who bluntly assessed the states problems funding and operating nearly every aspect of government. The SIP , which was started in 2005, has authored reports on other issues, including immigration, water rights and the Colorado constitution. In the end, panelists agreed by consensus to recommendations and conclusions that include calls for using private contractors to provide services where appropriate and to foster competition. Furthermore, the panel recommends the state focus on residents rather than institutions when allocating resources, a principle that is evident in the panels call for redefining how K-12 and higher education are funded. In higher education, students could receive a stipend or voucher to be used at the state institution of their choosing, rather than allowing the state to determine how much each school receives annually. The panel also recommends the state consider repealing the restrictive K-12 school funding rule known as Amendment 23 and suggests substantial changes to the Taxpayers Bill of Rights. >>www.du.edu/issues
Chase Squires

FOR OUR STUDENTS


The Academic Commons at Penrose Library: A Contemporary Library for a 21st Century University
The Academic Commons at Penrose Library is getting a muchneeded facelift, providing significant renovations and new construction to the existing complex, including: quiet study suites with comfortable seating, enhanced academic support clusters for students, group study and presentation practice rooms equipped with media technology, and lively gathering spaces, including a caf. DU has designated the Academic Commons as one of its highest fundraising priorities. Honor your commitment to this vital initiative. DU is offering personalized commemorative book bindings for gifts $250 and above that will be displayed within the renovated Penrose Library. Gifts of any size will provide endless opportunities. Make your online gift today!

our COMMON GOAL


giving.du.edu 16
University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

800.448.3238

PEOPlE
By Brenda Gillen

Stage fight
enna Bainbridge auditioned at schools across the country and found the best fit practically in her backyard. Bainbridgea sophomore voice major from Castle Rock, Colo.received a DU Provost Scholarship, a scholarship from DUs Lamont School of Music and a private scholarship. While DU made good financial sense, the University also was a good fit for Bainbridge for its willingness to accept her as she is. An actor. A singer. And a person with a disability. The whole reason I am going to school is to try and bring awareness to the fact that disabled actors and performers are [often] not cast and to try and break down those barriers, Bainbridge says. I want to go into major theater and movie companies and convince them that just because a part isnt written as disabled doesnt mean you cant have a disabled person act it. In every aspect of life you are going to meet people with disabilities and theyre doing all sorts of jobs and doing all kinds of things. So who is to say that they cant be in a movie or a stage play? Bainbridge became paralyzed from the shoulders down at just 16 months. To this day, doctors are unsure what caused the paralysis. Today it hardly seems the energetic Bainbridge could be slowed down, but she is still partially paralyzed from the waist down and has a limp. Her disability didnt stop her from making her theater debut at age 10, and it hasnt kept her from excelling in numerous roles. Bainbridge has performed in tick, tick BOOM! and Side Show at the University of Denver and in seven productions by the Denver-based PHAMALY (Physically Handicapped Actors and Musical Artists League), including How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Urinetown and Beauty and the Beast.

But Bainbridge also has seen opportunities pass her by. Shes been told that she wasnt cast for several roles because they didnt think they could make a limp work. In her junior year of high school, Bainbridge auditioned for colleges at a national thespian conference in Lincoln, Neb. She asked representatives from the schools that didnt call her back what she could do differently at her next audition. I had two or three schools tell me that the reason I didnt get a callback was because they had a heavy dance emphasis at their school and they didnt think I could do the

dancing. Or they didnt want to accept someone that couldnt do the dancing and have to change the program for them, Bainbridge recalls. Besides her roles as student and performer, Bainbridge recently was named Miss Castle Rock 2011. She placed in the top 15 in the Miss Colorado pageant in June 2011 and plans to compete again next year. Long term, Bainbridge says shes waiting to see where life takes her, and she has some idea of where shed like that to be. My dream would be to be on Broadway one day or to be a major actress and singer in movies, she says.
Wayne Armstrong

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University of Denver Magazine Update

17

VIEWS

Where in the world?


Photographs by Wayne Armstrong

an you match these architectural details to the DU buildings on which they appear?

1. Craig Hall 2. Daniels College of Business 3. Newman Center for the Performing Arts 4. Nagel Hall 5. Chambers Center for the Advancement of Women 6. Mary Reed Building 7. F. W. Olin Hall 8. Ricketson law Building 9. University Hall 10. University of Denver Soccer Stadium C D A B

H
18
University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

J
Answers: 1:F, 2:I, 3:C, 4:H, 5:A, 6:E, 7:G, 8:J, 9:D, 10:B

RESEARCH
By Chase Squires

Having a blast
T
he University of Denver blows up, shoots at and blasts holes in more stuff before noon than most universities do all day. Measuring and documenting havoc wreaked by .50-caliber bullets, cannon blasts of ball bearings and dozens of explosive concoctions, researchers at DUs Applied Research and Technology Institute toil at a remote ballistics lab tucked between hillsides on the rolling prairie east of Aurora, Colo. A lot of what we do, we do for small businesses, says Steven Ford, who manages the ballistics lab. Theyre working on a material and need to test some properties. They can come to us and get extremely accurate measurements and work done to their specifications. One reason people come to us is that they have some proprietary stuff, and that proprietary stuff stays proprietary. So a company working on a new type of armor for a vehicle might send stacks of plates made of composite materials. Ford and others at the facility can blast bullets as thick as a mans thumb at the plates and record detailed data, including X-rays and photos taken by an imaging tool that records at a rate of up to 100,000 frames per second. That data goes back to the manufacturer, and the DU lab never needs to know what the samples were made from. Need to know what a pea-sized pellet will do to material that could one day form the skin of NASAs next-generation space vehicle? The facility has a huge gun that can propel that pellet up to 7,000 feet per second to simulate speeding space debris. Research associate Justin Wiley shows off silver-colored plates with holes blown through them by the device. In the lab, accurate test results are vital. In space, those same holes could kill a crew of astronauts. Clients have included the computational physicists at Corvid Technologies; the U.S. Missile Defense Agency; emissions control researchers at Neumann Systems Group; and the Littleton, Colo., division of ARA, a company that has done research for the Army on weapons effectiveness and target vulnerabilities. The capabilities they have out here are really useful for a company like ours, says Fred Sandstrom, an ARA scientist. Its better turnaround time, and its cost effective. Capping a day of demonstrations and exhibits on the prairie, research engineer Donald New showed off two sticks of explosivesone dynamite, the other a concoction similar to the materials used in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. Without a blasting cap, the materials are safe to handle. But once New attached the detonators and flipped the switch, the resulting blasts shook the ground and sent a shock wave guests could feel 200 yards away. Not many people would be eager to have such a facility next door. Fortunately, the nearest neighbors to DUs range are barely visible in the distance. ARA researcher Scott Hardesty says the company used to have access to its own range, but suburban sprawl encroached on the facility and has made ranges such as DUs increasingly rare. There just arent many places like this left, he says. This is one of the few sites on the Front Range. Its very useful.

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University of Denver Magazine Update

19

Q&A

A conversation with presidential candidate Fred Karger


Interview by Greg Glasgow

Courtesy of the Fred Karger campaign

you want; feel good about yourself; youre just fine; you can even run for president. I said on The Rachel Maddow Show that Im doing this for younger people and I got a wonderful Facebook message that night from a gentleman who said, Just know, Fred, that youre not doing this just for younger people. Im 82 years old, Ive been in the closet most of my life, and youre an inspiration to me. Thank you. I hadnt thought of that, that there are so many people struggling and who have struggled. Do you think the novelty factor of being an openly gay Republican candidate has also helped you in some regards?

Q A

Since announcing his intention to run for president in 2012, longtime campaign consultant Fred Karger (BA speech communication 72) has made a name for himself as the openly gay, Jewish, Republican candidate whose platform includes reforming education, lowering the voting age and bringing a spirit of cooperation back to Washington.

It makes for a good headline, Ill tell you that. I understand that because of the novelty, it gets me the story in The Washington Post, it gets me a lot of the early coverage, but Im starting to move beyond that. Its an interesting story because of my personal situation and having been in the closet for so long, having been involved in a lot of high-level campaigns. But I want to talk about the issues, and thats what my main goal is, is to talk about how I can help transform this country.

Does it dismay you at all that in 2011, sexual orientation is still such a big factor when it comes to something like running for president? Theres a generation out there to whom its far less important, but as were seeing in polls, there are still a lot of people who are very concerned about it. I go into meetings and I can tell whether people are at ease or notit was a lot easier when I was in the closet. Ive been in thousands of meetings and Ive never had anyone act uncomfortably around me or anything. Well, now I do sometimes. And Im thinking, Gee, what am I doing this for? Why am I out there? I have to remind myself that I really want to do this to make it easier for younger people, so if I can help in that respect then I can take some more bruises.

Q A

In addition to working on the campaigns of Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush, you worked for Ronald Reagan on his initial campaign and on his re-election campaign in 84. What lessons can you take away from his campaigns or his presidency?

Q A

Q A
20

What do you mean when you say youre doing this to make it easier for young people?

As the first out gay candidate to run for president of the United States, it sends a very powerful message to young LGBT people around the country: You can do anything

What he did was very unique. Heres a very conservative Republican from California, but he went to Washington and the speaker of the House of Representatives was Tip ONeill, a very liberal Democrat who had been there for many terms, and Reagan invited him to the White House right off the bat and they became friends. Miles apart philosophically, but they forged this alliance and they got a lot done based on friendship. When President Obama came into office, he didnt invite the Republican leader of the Senate to the White House for a similar one-on-one meeting for 18 months. One of my first actions would be to invite all the leadership, Republican and Democrat, for one-on-one meetings. Have them over, watch football, have dinner. I want to bring back a cordial feeling and getting along in Washington.
Read the full interview online at bit.ly/DUMagKarger

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Coombe highlights financial aid, diversity in annual Convocation speech


Chancellor Robert Coombe outlined strategic goals for the coming year at the annual University Convocation on Oct. 5. Chief among those goals is continuing to recruit outstanding students and helping those students cover the cost of their education. Coombe said that DU now competes with the nations top private universities, many of which have larger endowments from which to draw student financial aid. DU is committed to attracting a bright, engaged and diverse group of students, and building resources to help students meet financial needs is key, he said. Other goals include a renewed focus on campus diversity. That means more than just recruiting a diverse student body and faculty, but also integrating those elements into campus life. Coombe said diversity must be built on inclusion if the campus is to grow and benefit from a variety of viewpoints, beliefs, perspectives and cultures. There also will be a renewed focus on the sciences in the coming year, he said. The nation is turning out a new generation of scientists and engineers, and DU needs to be ready to offer excellent programs for students seeking new skills in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

Courtesy of DU Athletics

$5.2 million gift makes DU owner of the Highlands Ranch Golf Club
In November, the family of late DU Trustee Ron Moore (BS finance 54) made a gift of the Highlands Ranch Golf Club to the University of Denver Division of Athletics and Recreation. DU athletics will take over complete control of the club on Jan. 1. The semi-private facility, which was named the official home of the DU mens and womens golf teams on Aug. 24, is the second largest gift to athletics in University history. The Highlands Ranch Golf Club gift, with a book value of $5.2 million, will be matched dollar-for-dollar with funds allocated as part of the Universitys ASCEND campaign in order to provide tuition scholarship endowments for mens and womens golf student-athletes. A member of the University of Denver Board of Trustees from 1986 until his passing in 2003, Moore served as chairman of the boards investment committee and gave time and financial support to the University. Moorewho earned a golf scholarship to the University of Denver in 1951was inducted into the University of Denver Athletic Hall of Fame in 2002. He was a member of two Skyline Conference Championship teams and advanced to the NCAA tournament in 1952, 53 and 54. Moore credited his time on the Pioneers golf team as one of the turning points in his life.
Media Relations Staff

Watch a video of Chancellor Coombes Convocation speech at bit.ly/DUMagConvocation

Chase Squires

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It's easy to unsubscribe from the print edition. Just click the button at www.du.edu/magazine

University of Denver Magazine Update

21

U.N. leader speaks at DUs Korbel Dinner


In one of his first major U.S. trips since his re-appointment in June as United Nations secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon told an audience of about 700 at the 14th annual Korbel Dinner in August that a revolution in thinking and action is needed in sustainable development, and that now is the time to think big. The University of Denver honored Ban Ki-moon at the event with its Global Advancement Award. These issues are relevant for every country, including this one, said Ban Ki-moon, who is known for his passionate agenda on human rights, climate change and efforts to engage world leaders in protecting people. We now live in a world where no country, no matter how powerful, can solve problems on its own. No global challenge, no matter how pressing, can be addressed in isolation, he said. The essence of leadership, and our collective challenge, is to step up and work together. He noted that DU students are making an impactnow and in the future. Your students are shaping our world. They are making a difference throughout the ranks of the diplomatic corps, in the United Nations, in nongovernmental organizations, in businesses and civil society across the country and around the world, he said. The Korbel Dinner also honored Timothy and Bernadette Marquez with the Josef Korbel Humanitarian Award. NBA star and former Denver Nugget Chauncey Billups received the University of Denver Bridge Builder Award.
Watch a video of Ban Ki-moons speech at bit.ly/DUMagKorbel

Wayne Armstrong

Kim DeVigil

Double your impact with DUs matching program!


Twin sisters and DU scholarship recipients Katie and Elizabeth Bhappu (Class of 2012) are about to tackle the challenges of the world, equipped with a DU education. Scholarships enable the University to attract talented students from all walks of life regardless of their economic resources. As part of DUs ASCEND campaign, the University will immediately match your bequest commitment for an endowed scholarship that will benefit students right away! By letting DU match your estate gift, you will see first-hand how your future generosity can impact students lives in a meaningful way now. Call for details.
Office of Gift Planning 303.871.2739 or 800.448.3238 E-mail: gift-planning@du.edu

Why Wait ?

Katie Bhappu, 12, and Elizabeth Bhappu, 12, DU seniors

I love the smaller class sizes and know that my professors care about my success. Katie DU provided us with endless opportunities to get involved and with an eye-opening study abroad experience that we will treasure for a lifetime. Elizabeth

22

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

ACADEMICS
By Chase Squires

Tomorrows lawyers, today


T
he University of Denver is leading a charge that will change the way todays lawyers are taught to navigate tomorrows legal world, battle-testing students while they are still in the classroom and challenging them to think like lawyers instead of law students. In August, the DU-based Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System (IAALS) launched an initiative with 15 law school partnersincluding DUs Sturm College of Lawcalling for innovation that bucks years of traditional law school education. Called Educating Tomorrows Lawyers, the initiative is being promoted nationally and provides a platform to encourage law schools to showcase innovative teaching. Instead of graduating lawyers with an understanding that they will continue to learn on the job as associates in big firms or at government posts, the initiative recognizes that tomorrows jobs will require students to be practice-ready from the moment they pass the bar exam. Educating Tomorrows Lawyers leverages the Carnegie model of learning, says Rebecca Love Kourlis, executive director of IAALS and a former Colorado Supreme Court justice. Our project provides support for shared learning, innovation, ongoing measurement and collective implementation. We are very excited to launch this project to encourage new ways to train law students and to measure innovation in the years to come. Key to the program is a website that provides a forum for educators to exchange ideas and share resources. At its heart, Educating Tomorrows Lawyers calls for teaching that forces second- and third-year students to put all that casework theyve been memorizing to work, applying it in classroom exercises that are more like real-world legal practice than theoretical discussion. William Sullivan, lead author of a 2007 Carnegie Foundation report titled Educating Lawyers, will direct the initiative. Kourlis and Sturm College of Law Dean Martin Katz will serve with Sullivan on the Educating Tomorrows Lawyers executive committee. Our goal is to encourage law schools that are already committed to innovation to share what they know in a structured, collaborative place so that other law professors may discuss and develop new teaching techniques, Sullivan says. At DU, Katz has been an advocate of reinventing the law school experience to produce lawyers ready to work from day one. We want to help law schools integrate three sets of values, or what the Carnegie Foundation calls apprenticeships, Katz says. They are knowledge, practice and professionalism. We believe this initiative can change how law professors and deans, students and ultimately the legal profession respond to our changing world. >>www.educatingtomorrowslawyers. du.edu
Wayne Armstrong

University of Denver Magazine Update

23

DONOR SPOTLIGHT

Tiffani Lennon
Carmella Lucia Fredo Lennon was a tenacious woman who made a lasting impact on many people, especially her granddaughter, Tiffani Lennon, chair of the law and society program at the University of Denver Womens College. Ive never known a stronger, more powerful woman, Tiffani Lennon says. In her grandmothers memory, Lennon recently donated $25,000 to the Womens College to endow a scholarship for undergraduate law and society majors. DU will match her $25,000 gift. Carmella Lennon, who was born in 1904 in Calabria, Italy, was 85 when she took on the task of raising then10-year-old Tiffani. She grew up in a time when women couldnt vote and couldnt drive. She entered into an arranged marriage at 16, Tiffani says. By traditional markers, she wouldnt be considered a woman leaderbut she was deeply respected, extraordinarily selfless and incredibly driven. She saved my life in a lot of ways. Lennon sees many parallels between her grandmother and the women she teaches in the interdisciplinary law and society program. Students in the program are headed for law school, the public sector or advocacy work, she says, and they are attracted to the programs strong focus on social justice. Lennon says administrators from the Womens College will select scholarship recipients based on criteria she has established. My grandmother taught me how to succeed in life, so Im looking for students who have all the skills necessary to be a leader, who are academically strong, deeply professional and driven to achieve, she says. Lennon intends to continue to donate to the scholarship fund over the years, and she dreams of being able to fully fund a number of Womens College students. Professor Lennons expression of support for her students sets a leadership example among the members of the DU community, says Womens College Dean Lynn Gangone. Through her deeply generous gift in establishing the Carmella Lucia Fredo Lennon Endowed Scholarship, Professor Lennon epitomizes the colleges mission of bold leadership in celebration of and on behalf of women.
Jordan Ames

Bridges to the Future series kicks off with former White House chief of staff
Erskine Bowles says the U.S. deficit is like a cancer that will destroy the country from within. Bowlesa former White House chief of staffspoke to a crowd of more than 1,300 people at DUs Magness Arena Oct. 10 as the first speaker in the 201112 Bridges to the Future season. This years theme is Undercurrents of the 2012 Election. Bowles talk, American Politics and Issues: The Economic Outlook, addressed the work he did in 2010 as co-chair of the Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform. We cannot solely grow our way out of this, Bowles said of the deficit. We cannot solely tax our way out of this, and we cant solely cut our way out of it. Bowles said he and his co-chair on the commission, former Sen. Alan Simpson of Wyoming, tried to make recommendations that were reasonable, responsible and bipartisan. Their goal was to reduce the deficit by $4 trillion over the next 10 years. To do that, Bowles said Congress had to get serious about budget cuts, including cutting Social Security and military spending. We spend more on our defense than the next 14 largest countries combined, he said. We need to take strong steps to reduce military spending; we cannot afford to be the worlds policeman.
Kristal Griffith
Watch a video of Bowles speech at bit.ly/DUMagBowles

Wayne Armstrong

Professor receives grant to study cell development


In June, University of Denver biology Professor Todd Blankenship learned he had landed a $1.4 million National Institutes of Health grant to pay for five years of research. The money, he says, will keep his laboratory funded and stocked with necessary research tools. It also will help him supply graduate students with stipends and scholarships. Blankenship and his students study how cells line up in the correct places to make us look likeand function likethe beings we become, using a benign breed of fruit fly as a model. Because of the flies rapid life cycle, blooming from egg to fly in little more than a week, researchers always have plenty of embryos, which they watch through a powerful, high-speed microscope to see how cells are arranged as the embryos develop. With the grant, Blankenship says the lab will acquire a super-precise laser that can target tiny proteins within individual cells and study how they react when stimulated. Their findings could someday help other scientists understand the ramifications of developmental malfunctions and perhaps unlock cures for diseases such as cancer.
Chase Squires
Watch a video about Todd Blankenships work at bit.ly/DUMagBlankenship
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24

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

SPORTS
By Pat Rooney

Double duty
o one would give it a second thought if Lindsay Cone decided to pack away her golf bag to spend more time honing her skills on the ski slopes. Cone, after all, has won a pair of All-America honors since joining DUs ski program, and she has emerged as one of the top athletes in all of collegiate skiing. Cones golf skills may not measure up to her feats on the slopes, but those skills are good enough for her to occupy a place on the high-performing DU womens golf team. Cones participation on the ski team and womens golf team make her one of the most distinctive two-sport athletes in collegiate athletics today. They are two extremely different sports. But the pressure you get when youre golfing is similar to the pressure you get in an important ski race, Cone says. They take different talents and abilities to perform in each, but at the end of the day, it is the mental toughness that lets you deal with that pressure. Cone grew up on the slopes in her native Killington, Vt., learning to weave her way down a snowy mountain not long after she took her first steps. In September 2011, she made national news when she had to hike out of a Hurricane Irene-damaged Killington to make her flight to Denver to start her senior year. Cone boasted a burning competitive drive in skiing pretty much from the beginning, but her golf game evolved a little less deliberately. Cone began golfing at 7, firing rounds mostly for fun on weekends and during the summers. Before long, though, Cone began entering golf tournaments and discovered her competitive edge was just as focused on the links as it was when she lined up at the starting gate. [Golf] started to be a little more competitive, and I started to do a couple tournaments here and there, Cone says. I found that the better my golf game got during the summer, the better I was able to compete

Wayne Armstrong

the next year in skiing. I found that they correlate really well mentally. Cone began her collegiate career at St. Lawrence University, where she won the 2009 NCAA championship in the giant slalom. Her success continued as soon as she transferred to DU, where she finished second in the slalom during each of the past two NCAAs. Cone also finished second in the giant slalom in 2010 to help lead DU to its 21st national championship, and she has earned first team All-America honors in each of her two seasons. I went to a ski academy, so in my high school years I skied competitively all through the wintertraveling all over Europe and throughout the world to compete. It sort of became my life, says Cone, a

finance major who was named to the NCAA all-academic team in skiing in spring 2011. I think the biggest thing is just practicing and preparing and teaching yourself. You are out there alone, whether you are on the golf course or on the ski hill. Your teammates can help you, but at the end of the day, it is all about you being able to perform. DUs head ski coach, Andy LeRoy, is quick to credit Cones sharp mind for much of her success. Lindsay is a very bright individual, and she has used that intelligence to excel past most of her peers in the sport of ski racing, LeRoy says. I am not much of a golfer, but I believe golf rewards some intelligence too, so Ive never been surprised at her success on the links.
University of Denver Magazine Update

25

ONE TO WATCH

Joseph Zhang, international business


If you saw a dollar on the ground, would you pick it up? In his winning entry for the University of Denver Magazine Communities of Change video contest, junior international business major Joseph Zhang asks this question to explore the issue of community change through the value of a dollar. A buck doesnt buy much in the U.S., but in Ethiopia it can buy food, clothes and education for one student for a day, Zhang says. At Pine Creek High School in Colorado Springs, Colo., Zhang was involved with the Cunningham Foundation a nonprofit that promotes sustainability and education in Ethiopiaand he became enamored with the cause. He co-founded a DU chapter of the foundation last year with fellow Pioneer Leadership Program student Hannah Merten. Leadership is serious business for Zhang, a Boettcher Scholar who started DUs mock trial club and is part of the Asian Student Alliance and several University honor societies. He has an uncanny ability to quietly rally a group around an important issue or project, organizing them into a productive team of collaboration, says Linda Olson, director of the Pioneer Leadership Program. This is a true mark of a citizen leader. Zhang plans to pursue an MBA at DU, then a law degree on the East Coast. In fall 2011 he began studying transnational law in a yearlong study abroad program at Kings College in London. Zhang was born in Harbin, China, where, he says, the law didnt benefit the people. Thats changed a lot, but human rights is still an issue over there, Zhang says. He immigrated to the U.S. when he was 5 years old but visits China every year. He doesnt have Internet access when hes there, which he finds refreshing. Youre forced to talk to people, play card games with people, Zhang says. I think its better to make faceto-face connections. He strives to make personal connections at home in the U.S. as well. Ive never had Facebook. I always miss out on parties because of that, he jokes. I only have 100 texts [on my cellphone plan] and I dont want more because once I run out, Im forced to call people. And I only have 200 cellphone minutes because when I run out Im forced to go see people. If youre forced to do something like that, you will eventually make those connections a lot more real.
Visit bit.ly/DUMagDollar to watch The Value of $1.

DU by the Numbers

Greek life
Sororities

7 9

Percentage of undergraduate students who are members of Greek chapters

22

New members recruited in fall 2011

420

Hours volunteered in 201011 during two Greek Service Days

1,500 3.33 10

Average GPA of DU sorority and fraternity members Community service hours performed by each member per quarter

Wayne Armstrong

Fraternities

Amber DAngelo Na

GREEN DU
The University of Denvers three-year overhaul and energy upgrade at Johnson-McFarlane residence hallcommonly known as J-Machas earned the

Compiled by Katy Armstrong, graduate assistant in DUs Office of Campus Activities

certification, placing the facility in the top 25 percent of college residence halls nationwide. Buildings that earn the
certification typically use an average of 35 percent less energy and release 35 percent less carbon dioxide. The University replaced existing windows with better insulated windows, upgraded the heating system, installed more efficient hot water exchangers, upgraded lighting and painted the roof white to better reflect summertime sun. The EPA Energy Star program measures buildings against similar facilities nationwide. The program was instituted in 1992 as a voluntary partnership to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through energy efficiency.

Environmental Protection Agencys Energy Star

26

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

POETRy

Seed Starters
By Meghan Howes

Strange how the rain comes on days like this, when blue in any context is a lie, a scratch on the skys socked-in surface, and the gutters on the house next door leak like sieves, cracked and bowed, dropping water into sidewalk ponds. We let the sound in when it suits us, note the downpour but cannot feel the storm. Cities wrestle for sky, jostle for land. Every single tree in this western town was planned and planted by hand, century-old wood sentries still standing despite fickle Front Range weather. And each spring in North Denver amidst jungles of broken glass, brownfields and bindweed, backyard Edens wake from their Superfund-site slumber and prove the naysayers wrong. We order starter kits, lower the downspouts, sift our compost and shed our socks. Next weekend well turn the raised bed, let it rest a spell. And before we know it were parents, standing over our bright seedlings, cooing. The tomatoes wake first. We cannot stop smiling.
Yazmin Coveney

Meghan Howes is the director of communications at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law. She has a BA in English from the College of Woosterwhere she received the Academy of American Poets Prize and the Vonna Hicks Adrian Poetry Prize for an outstanding body of poetryand an MFA from the University of Montana, where she was a poetry fellow and served as poetry editor of Cutbank. She has been published in numerous magazines and journals, including Ascent, Artful Dodge and High Grade. Seed Starters won the blue ribbon at the inaugural Denver County Fair poetry competition in summer 2011.

University of Denver Magazine Update

27

Compromise and common sense mark the career of Wyoming Senator Mike Enzi.

Straight Shooter
By Rob Jordan

Mike Enzi, Wyomings plain-spoken senior senator, doesnt exactly fit the part of love guru. H The 67-year-old grandfather is a straight-arrow Eagle Scout and one-time aspiring minister. He serves root-beer floats at campaign events and revels in paleontology. H Despite appearances, Enzi (MSBA 68) knows his stuff when it comes to human relations. His advice to couples is simple and effective. The secret to his happy 42-year marriage is the same philosophy that guides his legislative approach. He calls it the 80-percent rule. H Put simply, it means focusing on the approximately 80 percent of any given issue that most people will agree on. Bypassing the other 20 percent fosters harmony and occasional breakthroughs. H There are some things you dont bring up unless you want to spend a lot of time haggling over them, and probably reaching no conclusion, and having some hurt feelings when its over, Enzi says. H The 80-percent rule explains the Republicans knack for working across the aisle. Consistently ranked among the Senates most conservative members, Enzi nevertheless has made a career of finding common ground with his political opposites. H Enzi worked particularly closely with the late liberal Sen. Ted Kennedy. The unlikely pair was instrumental in passing, among other legislation, the Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act of 2000, which increased on-the-job protection for health workers, and the Mine Improvement and New Emergency Response Act of 2006, the first significant improvement of mine safety regulations in 30 years. In his 2009 memoir, True Compass, Kennedy wrote admiringly of Enzi. H It wasnt what we compromised on, it was what we left out, Enzi says of his negotiations with Kennedy. You had these two extremes, and yet we were able to come together.
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University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011
Roll Call/Getty Images

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

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nzi is no stranger to extremes. Growing up amid Wyomings dramatic expanses and often harsh climate instilled in him a love of the outdoors and an abiding spirit of individualism and idealism. Although he had only ventured out of Wyoming once to a Boy Scout jamboree in Valley Forge, Pa.the teenaged Enzi envisioned a future in the foreign service. He had been deeply influenced by the 1958 story collection The Ugly American, by Eugene Burdick and William Lederer, and wanted to improve the U.S. image abroad. Shortly after arriving in Washington to attend George Washington University (GWU), Enzi had a change of heart. I got there and found out it was a big city, he recalls. I didnt like big cities, so I figured I wouldnt like big cities in foreign countries. Enzi changed his major from international affairs to accounting and started plotting a business career. He passed up a GWU business school scholarship, however, because of a stipulation that he perform two years of government service after earning a graduate degree. I knew I wasnt going to do that, he says with a laugh. Back West, Enzi enrolled at the University of Denver College of Business Administration (since renamed the Daniels College of Business) in 1966. He was fascinated by the Universitys mainframe computer and used it to work through equations from a statistics class. The computer would accept punch cards one day, process them the next and spit out answers on the third day. Alonzo May, a professor of complex enterprise, made a bigger impression than the room-sized computer. The professor required his students to keep a journal of ideas they gathered from class readings. The journal was a revelation for Enzi, who says he discovered that the whole world functions on ideas. Since then, Enzi has written a report on every book he reads. At a rate Enzi claims to be one book per week, that amounts to more than 2,000 reports. His favorites include anything by C.J. Box (BA 81) and Homer Hickam, The Last Trail by Zane Grey, and Two Hands and a Knife by Terry Gibson. I read everything from the aspect of seeing if theres an idea that will work, Enzi says. Often he stays up half the night reading and typing up thoughts. His staffers are accustomed to 2 a.m. brainstorm emails from the boss. Significant as it is, Enzi says his ideas journal wasnt the best thing to come out of his time at DU. On the last night of school, in the midst of a final book assignment, Enzi made a fateful choice: He went on a blind date with a 19-year-old University of Wyoming student named Diana. She was in town visiting a mutual friend. He is really straightforward, Diana says of her husband. He never has an ulterior motive. In the early days of their marriage, Diana says, Enzis no-conflict personality was hard to get accustomed to: For two years, I would have the fight on both sides.

Since then, the Enzis have raised three children and become grandparents to four. Enzi has been present at each grandchilds birth. year after earning his masters degree in retail marketing, Enzi was back home in Wyoming. He opened and ran a successful chain of shoe stores and volunteered with a local Jaycees group. Life felt settled, but it was about to change drastically. The turning point came when Enzi gave a speech about a young mens leadership training program at a Jaycees event. Wyoming state legislator and future U.S. Sen. Alan Simpson approached him afterward. He took me by the elbow, took me over in the corner and said, I dont even know which party youre in, but its time you put your money where your mouth is on this stuff, Enzi remembers. Simpson urged the young businessman to run for mayor. In the years that followed, Enzi served two terms as mayor of Gillette, Wyo., presiding over an economic boom powered by coal and natural gas extraction and a tripling of the towns population. Enzi went on to serve in the Wyoming state legislature before life took another dramatic turn. When Simpson announced his plans to step down as Wyomings senior senator in 1996, friends and colleagues lobbied Enzi to run. He wasnt convinced. He had just undergone openheart surgery and had little interest in what promised to be a grueling primary campaign against eight other Republican candidates. Sitting in church one Sunday morning, Enzi had an epiphany. I was thinking about how Id like to hunt and fish, and I got this little nudge that I wasnt kept alive to hunt and fish. Enzi went home crying and asked his wife and three children to help him decide what to do. With his familys support, Enzi threw his hat in the ring. He won the primary by only 1 percent of the vote before taking the general election. Voters liked the certified public accountants commonsense approach. I sold legislation the same way I sold shoes, Enzi says. That means you have to know who the customer is. You have to listen to what they want and see how that matches up with your inventory. At any given time, Enzi is working on about 35 different bills for his Wyoming constituents. Mining and natural resources are major points of focus. Enzi is proud of his work to secure coal bed methane royalties for Wyoming communities and health care for miners whose employers go out of business. Enzis causes are far-ranging and sometimes surprising. He has pushed to simplify the college loan application process and ensure that accountants arent unduly punished by financial regulations. In typical Enzi fashion, he stayed up all night reading and writing down ideas before a high-level discussion of AIDS funding. When the Senate delegation arrived for the meeting, the

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University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Courtesy of Mike Enzis office

Senate majority leader turned to Enzi unexpectedly. Well, Enzi, you know a lot about this, Enzi recalls him saying. Take it away. During his three terms in the U.S. Senate, Enzi has made a name for himself as a champion of bipartisanship. Heres a guy that just wants to get things done, Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.) says of Enzi. Hes not partisan. Hes not a demagogue. Hes just results-oriented. Of Enzis 80-percent rule, Carper says, If more people in the Senate took that as their attitude, we could be a whole lot more productive. Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) describes Enzi as thoughtful, pragmatic and willing to reach across the aisle. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) calls Enzi a reasonable negotiator with a small business owners valuable perspective. Even when we have differing views on the best way to resolve issues, he has shown a willingness to come to the table and discuss the areas that we can agree on, Durbin says. nzis high-ceilinged office is a veritable museum of Wyoming artifacts and personal mementoes. Theres the DU ceremonial doctoral hood, a photo of Enzi as a 14-year-old Boy Scout, a moose antler, a duck carved from a weathered fence post, a photo of Enzi and his son, Brad, with the gleaming wooden canoe they built together. If Enzi is anxious to keep his office, he doesnt let on. Hes coy about what he will do when his current term ends in 2014. People spend too much time thinking about re-election instead of thinking about doing whats right, he says. Only the ninth Wyoming senator to serve as chairman of a standing committee, Enzi headed the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) from 2005 to 2007. As chairman, he guided a committee full of outsize personalities (seven former presidential candidates among them) to a surprising number of legislative agreements. Under Enzis leadership, the committee formulated the Genetic Nondiscrimination Actthe first civil rights bill of the 21st century, Enzi says. But he is quicker to trumpet the committees success in passing a pension-protection bill in record time. The 2,000-page bill was subject to only an hour of floor debate and two amendments. At the time, the Senate parliamentarian of more than 30 years told Enzi he had never seen a bill that big pass so quickly. Because we were so diverse, people figured if we could come together, it was OK, Enzi says of the HELP committee. The secret to the committees success? The 80-percent rule, of course. If it works for political relationships among U.S. senators, it can work for relationships between work colleagues, friends, and even couples, Enzi says. Its just a good rule everywhere.
University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Mike Enzis Guide to Leadership


Look for the common ground, and build on the common ground. Its not the compromise that works, its what you leave out. Most people are busy thinking about what theyre going to say next rather than actually taking in what the other person is saying. Listening is an underrated art. There should be a purpose to every meeting. Know that every action has a customer. Know who that customer is. Listen to the customer. Even when they arent talking about their needs, they are talking about their wants. See if your inventory matches their wants. People dont really listen to your floor speeches, so it helps if you talk with them one-on-one. If you have the possibility of a really heated town meeting, you want to hold it in the biggest building you can find. If you pack them into a small room, youre going to have a lot of trouble. People really get hot over that. Make sure theres a standing microphone not behind a podium. People dont get quite as heated if theyre exposed. If they can hide behind something, the temperature goes up.

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Donald Uhrbrock, Time and LIFE Images

Values F
or most of todays students, the Peace Corps has always existed. But when President John Kennedy launched the program in 1961, it was considered visionaryand not a little risky. We were sending our nations youth into service to promote global peace and intercultural awarenesslaudable ambitions by most standardsbut often to regions of the world where war, famine and unsanitary conditions posed real dangers. Now, as the Peace Corps celebrates its 50th anniversary, much has changed in the world. And much has not. Volunteers continue to work on pressing issues like poverty and hunger and preserving the environment, says Janice Laurente, a spokeswoman for the organization. According to its website, the Peace Corps has three goals: helping the people of interested countries in meeting their need for trained men and women; helping promote a better understanding of Americans on the part of the peoples served; and helping promote a better understanding of other peoples on the part of Americans. Serving in the Peace Corps always has required courage, compassion and commitment. From the start, University of Denver students have stepped up to the challenge. Beginning with Kevin Dixon (BA 62), more than 400 DU students and alumni have participated in projects all over the world; todays students have worked in countries ranging from Burkina Faso to Ukraine. In 2011, DU ranked No. 2 among colleges and universities participating in the Peace Corps Paul D. Coverdell Fellows program, which permits returned volunteers to pursue masters or doctorate degrees in more than 60 universities around the country at a reduced cost. The Josef Korbel School of International Studies also sponsors students in the Masters International program, which allows students to begin coursework on campus, serve in the Peace Corps for two years on projects related to their studies, then return to campus to finish their degrees. No matter when or why they joined, or where they went, one theme stands out among Peace Corps volunteers: The experience helped shape the direction and flavor of their lives. I think I told myself that it was something I couldnt do; it was something too exciting that I wouldnt be able to be a part of, says Sandra Meek (PhD 95), who taught English in Botswana from 198991 as a Peace Corps volunteer. You just go and figure it out when you go. It really changed me as a teacher, a writer, an editor and a person.

Corps

For half a century, the Peace Corps has provided DU alumni and students with a lifechanging chance to serve.
By Laurie Budgar

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Judy Bennett

DU experience: BA sociology 69 Peace Corps assignment: Advising nongovernmental


organizations in Ignalina, Lithuania, from 19992001

Hometown: East Bloomfield, N.Y. Current position: Retired director of the West Ontario County
American Red Cross, now living in Rochester, N.Y.

Judy Bennett is proof positive that the Peace Corps isnt just for twentysomethings. At the age of 52, and with a lifetime of experience in nonprofits, she began serving in Ignalina, Lithuania, in 1999 as an adviser to nongovernmental organizations. On the side, she also helped develop tourism there and taught English to adults. Though she had toyed with the idea of joining the Peace Corps when she was younger, Bennett says she wasnt prepared then to commit to the two-year obligation. But when she turned 50, I rented a little cabin on the coast of Maine for a few days and decided to divorce my husband, sell my house and do some kind of international service work, she says. I [still] liked the philosophy of the Peace Corps, the support that it gave, and I was ready for the commitment. Bennett says she reapplied for another two-year stint about three years ago, but she did not clear medically. Instead, she and her current husband now work on water projects in the Dominican Republic with the Rotary Club. We talk about ways we could do something similar to the Peace Corps. Hes up for the challenge, and I would love to live in another country again. Now that Im 64, Id like to be somewhere where I have running water. Im not as adventurous as I used to be.
Laurie Budgar

Youre never too old

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Shutterstock.com

Tony Carrolls determination to join the Peace Corps grew in part out of a family tragedy. In 1968, his older sister was killed in a car accident. One week after the funeral, her acceptance letter from the Peace Corps arrived. That gave me more inspiration, he says. I was old enough to remember the creation of the Peace Corps and how much it meant to my older siblings generation. In 1976, he found himself standing on a dusty African airstrip in the fourth poorest country in the world, tasked with helping newly independent Botswana rebuild after Tony Carroll decades of neglect. DU experience: BA economics 75; JD 84 They had a Peace Corps assignment: District officer in terrific shortfall in Botswana from 197678 human capacity and Hometown: Albany, N.Y. they realized they were Current position: Managing director of going to have to fill it Manchester Trade Ltd., an international with outsiders. They trade consulting firm in Washington, D.C., could either borrow and adjunct professor in the Johns Hopkins money from the World School of Advanced International Studies Bank and hire expats, or take a chance on young American volunteers, says Carroll, who served as district officer, spearheading a multimillion-dollar development aid program, including construction of schools, hospitals, roads and clean water systems. Here I am, 23, and being asked to right a ship that had been sinking for decades. Today, Carroll uses the skills he learned at DU and in Botswana in his work as an international trade and investment adviser specializing in sub-Saharan Africa. He also has dedicated countless pro bono hours to nonprofit organizations working to improve health, ease trade and deter corruption in Africa. In August, Carroll left for Botswana to take his daughter, a freshman at Vassar College, to the village where it all began for him. Her plans after college? Shes thinking of joining the Peace Corps.
Lisa Marshall

Rebuilding in Botswana

Second-year graduate student Theresa Munanga has volunteered in different capacities since she was 14. I love helping peopleits one of the things Im most passionate about, she says. Her other great passion is computer programming. At DU, she is pursuing a degree in digital media studies; as a Peace Corps volunteer, she created a program that helps people learn to use a computer without needing a teacher. It was life-changing, and I decided I want to do that as a career, she says. Set to graduate in March 2012, Munanga also wrote and published a book, No Hurry in Africa: Life as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Kenya (iUniverse.com, 2010), about her Peace Corps experience. Basically, its the emailed newsletters I sent home once a month, plus my journal entries during the time, she says. It may not be the best book in the world, but its the type of book I was looking for to read before I left for the Peace Corps. In the book, Munanga writes Theresa Munanga of the Kenyan DU experience: Currently a second-year graduate concept of time: student in digital media studies, with an emphasis in They have a instructional design saying in Kenya Peace Corps assignment: Information communications that the watch technology volunteer in Kenya from 200407 is yours, but the Hometown: Kauai, Hawaii time is mine. In the Peace Corps, we were trained that if we want to set up a meeting we must keep in mind that they will be late. Kenyans are very polite people and wont want to disappoint you, so theyll say, Yes, Ill be there at noon, but what they dont tell you is that at noon they first have to feed their children, hang the wash on the line, etc., before they can leave their homes. So they will come when they can.
Laurie Budgar

Adjusting to Kenyan standard time

Anna Omelchenko / Shutterstock.com

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Mary Jane Parmentier was already hooked on international travel by the time she was 20. She had spent her junior year (at Southern Connecticut State University) abroad in Spain. My year there sort of woke me up politically, and this propelled me on into graduate school focusing on international studies, she says. So it didnt take much to convince her to join the Peace Corps when the opportunity arose. She spent two years teaching English to 11th and 12th graders in a rural village outside of Marrakesh, Morocco. Thats also where she met her husband, Bill, a fellow Peace Corps volunteer. When she returned to the U.S., she joined the DU community, first as a study-abroad coordinator, then as a PhD student. Since earning her PhD in 1999 she has been on staff at Arizona State University, where she teaches graduate-level courses in international development at the schools Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes. In her classes, Parmentier focuses on the role of technology in international development, which she says is just as important as basic needs like food, shelter, clothing and medicine. If you ignore new information and communication technologies, then countries are going to move further and further behind the rest of the world, she says. In Mary Jane Parmentier Malawi, infant mortality began decreasing just because DU experience: Study-abroad coordinator from 198995; PhD of a program that would allow women to text when they international studies 99 were going into labor, and an ambulance would come and Peace Corps assignment: Teaching high school English in Morocco get them. Education is the real key to bringing a society from 198688 ahead. You also cant go into a village without clean water Hometown: Cheshire, Conn. and food and say, Here is a computer. You need both. Current position: Senior lecturer in international development and
international politics at Arizona State University, with a focus on technology and socioeconomic and political development, particularly in Latin America and the Middle East Laurie Budgar

Helping developing countries move forward

Shutterstock.com

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Kevin Dixon
recreation 62

DU experience: BA physical education and Peace Corps assignment: Established physical


education programs and coached basketball and baseball in Medellin, Colombia, 196264

Hometown: Norwood, Mass. Current position: Retired property manager,


now living in Spokane, Wash.

Kevin Dixon (BA 62) is pretty sure hes the first Peace Corps volunteer from the University of Denver. He didnt know that when he signed up in 1962, but about a decade after he returned from service, he was in town for a conference. I went to DU and talked to my old basketball coach, Hoyt Brawner. He was so enthusiastic that I was the first volunteer, Dixon says. He went into great detail about how the FBI had come out and interviewed people at the school about mewhether there was anything negative about me that would embarrass the United States if they sent me overseas. Dixon wasnt an obvious choice for the Peace Corps. He had never traveled outside the U.S. He attended DU on a basketball scholarship and played on the baseball team, and he majored in physical education and recreationnot English or pre-med or any of the other skills that were in high demand in developing nations. He was an all-star first baseman in an amateur league, but nobody was knocking on my door, he says. So he applied for the Peace Corps, and in the early summer of 1962 he was accepted, with an assignment to set up sports programs at the University of Antioquia in Medellin, Colombia. When the university was on break, Dixon and his fellow volunteers traveled elsewhere in Colombia, hosting basketball clinics and exhibition games. Today, Dixons family has deep connections to Colombia. He met his wifealso a Peace Corps volunteerin a barrio there. And his now-grown daughters are returned volunteers themselves. The experience, he says, opened up a lot for me in the world, including a lucrative job in Saudi Arabia, where he set up womens programs and Little League teams to help retain contractors. I didnt think anything of going didnt even give it a second thought, he says. I knew how easy it was to travel, and how to be a guest in a foreign country.
Laurie Budgar
Shutterstock.com

Blazing a trail for Pioneers

Read stories of more DU Peace Corps volunteers at bit.ly/DUMagPeaceCorps

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Alumna Keri Herman is at the top of her game as one of the best female freeskiers in the world.

By Nathan Solheim Photography by Justin Edmonds

Keri Herman raced toward the jump going backward. She hit it fast and launched into the air. Herman whipped her body to the right, spun around 720 degrees (two complete revolutions) and grabbed one of her skis. She glided back to earth, landed backward and sped off to the next feature. In slopestyle skiing, the move is called a switch-cork-7. And until Herman nailed it at the 2011 Winter X Games in Aspen, she was mired in last place. But by completing a snow stunt only a few women in the world can pull off, Herman vaulted into second place and earned an X Games silver medal in slopestyle skiing for the second year in a row. 2011 has been a good year for 29-year-old Herman, whose slopestyle exploits make her one of the best freeskiers in the world. Herman (BSBA 05) won her second consecutive silver in the European Winter X Games and turned in a couple of podium finishes on the Dew Tour, the main competitive slopestyle skiing circuit in North America. By seasons end, Herman was ranked the No. 2 womens slopestyle skier in the world by the Association of Freeskiing Professionals. To top it off, shes been named to the U.S. national freeskiing team and hopes to compete in the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. I was pretty stoked with everything I did this year, Herman says.
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raditional skiers have been doing flips, catching air and jumping over stuff for more than a century, but Hermans brand of freeskiing was born on the slopes of Whistler, B.C., in the mid-1990s. Tired of moguls, some two-plankers decided to start hitting the rails, tabletops and half-pipes that started showing up on the slopes after snowboarding became cool. The activity they called freeskiing eventually joined snowboarding in the category of competitive winter sports known as slopestyle. The idea is simple: Freeskiersor trickstersski down a terrain park dotted with jumps and other features and use them as launching points to show off a stable of moves, or tricks. Breaking the laws of gravity is strongly encouraged. What makes her story all the more incredible is that Herman didnt get an early start in the sport like a lot of other successful athletes. The 5-foot-7-inch, 130-pound skier first tried slopestyle in her early 20s, when she was an undergraduate at the University of Denver. Like many DU students, Herman studied abroad. She chose Australia, where the seasons run opposite of the Northern Hemisphere. As a result, she ended up having an entire year of summer. When she returned to DU, shed had enough of high temperatures and too much light, so she promptly moved to Breckenridge, Colo., to balance things out with some winter. Thats when she hit her first rail. It was scary, Herman recalls. I fell quite a bit. I completely

bruised my legs and butt. But I wanted to keep going. Progressing and learning new tricks gives you a rush like no other. Growing up in Bloomington, Minn., Herman had skied on local hills most Coloradans would think were prairie dog mounds. She also skied on family trips out West. But in Minnesota, land of hockey, Herman focused on skating rather than skiing, even starring on her middle and high school girls hockey teams and holding her own with a few teammates who went on to play the college game. Bonnie Blaylock, who coached Herman in youth hockey, credits Hermans success to above-average athletic ability. She picks things up quickly and was the kind of person that has a certain grace about their movement, Blaylock says. Things look easy for her even when they arent. Hermans mom, Diana Herman, says her daughters athleticism is only part of what makes her a slopestyle force. At a very young age, Diana says, Keris daredevil streak became evident. Keri always had to climb the highest tree in the backyard, jump off the balcony of their home onto a couch, or launch herself off their deck onto a trampoline when her parents werent home. Diana also says her daughter didnt exactly go along with all the other neighborhood girls when it came to sports. She liked to do things other girls werent doing, Diana says. She wanted to play hockey when no girls were playing hockey. She wasnt interested in figure skating.

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SheS rarely the

n a typical season, Herman headquarters in Breckenridge for most of the winter. When the Colorado snow begins to melt, shell head out to ski areas in California or Oregon to keep honing her tricks. She spends a portion of her spring competing in European events, then heads to New Zealand to practice during the North American summer. In her downtime, Herman bikes and hikes Colorados mountains and hangs out with friends. This summer, Herman also took a job waiting tables. Given her status as a top international athlete, thats like John Elway taking a summer gig washing cars. I do it because I enjoy talking to people, says Herman, who likes to high-five people so much she got the words tattooed on her palm. Its boring sitting around doing nothing. I like to keep active. This season, Herman plans to compete in the Winter X and European Winter X Games, the World Ski Invitational in Whistler, the Nine Queens big-air competition in Serfauz, Austria, and several Dew Tour events. Her sponsors include Monster energy drinks, Under Armour outerwear and Scott ski gear. In 2014, Herman could add the biggest event of her sporting life to her schedule. Over the summer, the International Olympic Committee added slopestyle skiing and snowboarding to the slate of events at the 2014 Winter Games. As the top-rated womens trickster in the United States, Herman is considered by many to be the countrys best threat to win a medal in the sports initial Olympic outing.

one who putS down the flaShy MoveS, but SheS alwayS aMong the top gIrlS. SheS got a good Style and good flow and a good attItude to top It off.

ike Douglasknown as the godfather of freeskiingwas one of those Canadian skiers who helped found the sport back in the mid-1990s. Nowadays, he broadcasts for ESPN during the Winter X Games. Hes watched Herman compete and says shes the top American right now. Keri is someone who is really consistent, Douglas says. Shes rarely the one who puts down the flashy moves, but shes always among the top girls. Shes got a good style and good flow and a good attitude to top it off. What makes her stand out is that she can throw tricks in both directions. There arent a lot of girls doing that well now. With Hermans globetrotting lifestyle and stupendous success, itd be easy for her to get caught up in all the hype. But for Herman, life is still about doing what she doesgetting outside every day and playing with friends. It just so happens that while shes doing it, shes perfecting some of the worlds most dazzling air ballet, as her mom describes it. With another season of competition getting started in December, Herman is taking it all in stride. Its all about having fun and having a good time, Herman says. Im lucky to live the life I live.
Watch video of Keri Herman at www.coldasice.tv

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blame the

Wayne Armstrong

banks?
By Mike Cote

Professor George DeMartino says economists also had a hand in causing Americas Great Recession.

The financial crisis that erupted in 2008and shows no sign of ending any time soonhas prompted a debate among economists: How much were they to blame? Considering how many scapegoats have been maligned for their role in the Great RecessionWall Street bankers, Washington regulators, overextended homeownersit seems fair game to point the finger at the professionals who predict where the economy is heading and advocate policies that influence its direction. Its the first time in my generation that the economics profession has started to ask the question, How did we get it so wrong, and what responsibilities do we bear for not having predicted or warned about the crisis? says George DeMartino, professor of international economics at DUs Josef Korbel School of International Studies. The crisis opened a window of opportunity to promote discussion of a subject DeMartino says his profession has not only neglected, but purposely avoided: the ethical responsibilities of economists. Building from a paper he wrote in 2006, the professor tackled the subject in book-length form in The Economists Oath: On the Need for and Content of Professional Economic Ethics, published in January 2011 by Oxford University Press. While conducting research, DeMartino learned that professional groups, including the American Economic

Association (AEA), have consistently rejected the idea of professional economic ethics. It wasnt an oversight. This was done by design. Over the last 100 years there had been a number of times when individual economists had proposed to the AEA the need for the organization to adopt a code of ethics or other ethics initiatives, DeMartino says. Since the release of his book DeMartino has traveled widely, advocating that economists embrace ethical discussions and that ethics become part of the economics curriculum, especially at the graduate level. Most recently he was invited to join the World Economic Forums global agenda council on Values in Decision Making, which took him in October to the councils meetings in Abu Dhabi. He also has been invited to attend the World Economic Forums annual meeting this January in Davos, Switzerland. DeMartino says he tries to make it clear in his talks that he is proposing ethics training, not a code of conduct. You dont need a binding code to get people to think differently about what they do, but you do need to give them some help, says DeMartino, who has served on the Korbel School faculty since 1993. You need to give them instruction and support to help them think carefully about their role in the world. In economics, for the new students coming up, we dont give them anything whatsoever.

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The path that led to the Great Recession can be traced in part to policy decisions by the Federal Reserve, driven by the belief that markets would operate optimally if left unrestrained by regulations, DeMartino says. Economists not only pressed for the removal of existing financial regulation but also resisted new government oversight of the financial assets and market contracts that proliferated from the 1990s onward, DeMartino writes in The Economists Oath. In the face of concern by members of the U.S. Congress regarding subprime and collateralized lending practices and other financial innovations, Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan consistently reassured policymakers and the public about the sufficiency of market mediation to discipline financial markets. DeMartino argues that economists advocated policies based on assumptions that proved to be faulty. They actually contributed to the crisis through the theories they teach: essentially the efficient-markets hypothesis, which says that the markets always get it right, and thats the model that economists have been teaching for 30 years at least, DeMartino says. If you believe that theory and you teach that theory, youre not inclined to think that theres a financial bubble because bubbles dont exist in that model. If prices are going up really fast, it must mean that something is happening to the underlying fundamentals that is driving the price increase, and you dont have to worry about it. The subprime lending marketmarked by the bundling of loans that were repackaged and soldultimately led to a housing market collapse and chaos in the financial markets as the inability of homeowners to pay their mortgages caught up with the byzantine chain of investors. Economists and businesspeople underestimated the viciousness of the debt cycle, says William Greiner, president and chief investment officer for Scout Investments, a division of Kansas City-based UMB Financial Corp. Economists who dont look at the variables from a monetary standpoint would really shrug off debt as not a major issue, he says. I think that concept led usnot just the government, but us as a societyto accept more and more debt and not really ask those cutting-edge questions, such as, What happens when this merry-go-round stops going around? I think that led to some real problems. Greiner, who is working with UMB to present a series of economic lectures at his alma mater, Washburn University, says graduate programs for economics students need to present a wider variety of theory. I think diversity of opinion and diversity of economic thought is really something that is important for people to

I think that concept led usnot just the government, but us as a societyto accept more and more debt and not really ask those cutting-edge questions, such as, What happens when this merry-goround stops going around? I think that led to some real problems.
understand, he says. Not just one general theory in economics, but a number of different theories because they all bring some meat to the table. DeMartino wants to take it a step further: Doctoral students who focus their attention primarily on economic models are unprepared for the political ramifications of their jobs, he says. Economics at that level is just applied mathematics, he says. Within two or three years they might be working at the World Bank and traveling around the world and finding themselves in extraordinarily complex situations for which they have not had any training whatsoever by the profession.

Tucker Hart Adams, a Colorado Springs, Colo., economics consultant who has taught with DeMartino, remembers her first encounter with politics as a young intern. She had been instructed to evaluate the economic impact of a project that involved persuading businesses to set up shop in other locales around the state rather than in Denver. It didnt take me very long to realize that if you did that, that they would just say, Never mind, Ill just go to Santa Fe or Salt Lake City, Adams says. Adams soon got a dose of political reality when an assistant to the state official who commissioned the report bluntly told her that its goal was support for his position, not facts. I think it would be a really good idea for graduate students, even those who have no intention of doing anything but work in academics, to have an internship and have some hands-on time, she says. Economists should not be addressing ethical dilemmas in isolation, says DeMartino, who will continue the conversation in his forthcoming book for Oxford University Press: a handbook featuring articles about ethics by nearly three dozen leading economists. I dont think we should leave it to each individual economist to just sort out what it means to be a good guy, he says. The economics profession has to face up to the fact that it has an ethical duty to begin to train economists and to begin to have a conversation about what it means to be an ethical economist.

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Class of 56 Alumni Symposium Book bin Pioneer pics Announcements

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University of Denver students go caroling at a campus dorm in this photo taken sometime in the 1950s. If you have any information about this photo, or photos of your own to share, please let us know.
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The classes
1946
lowell Duffner (BSBA 46) of Billings, Mont., received the Montana Society of Certified Public Accountants highest honor, the George D. Anderson Distinguished Service Award, on June 23, 2011, at the organizations 98th annual meeting. The award recognizes Lowells contributions to the accounting profession and his involvement in community, charitable and civic activities.

Nation. Irvin has been married to his wife, Norma Jean, for 50 years. They have three adult children and five grandchildren. Ruth Manning (BA 62) of Aurora, Colo., worked at the Colorado Department of Human Services as an accountant. She is retired and enjoys visiting her two grandchildren in California. Ruth also collects dolls and has more than 2,000 in her collection.

Paul Wahlstrom (BSBA 69) of Irving, Texas, recently was elected the 61st president of the Press Club of Dallas. He previously was executive producer for the Irving Community Television Network. Paul, now retired, worked in the television production industry for more than 40 years.

1969

1971

1948

Victor Weidensee (MA 48) of Rapid City, S.D., received the Outstanding Service in Arts Education Award at the 20th annual Governors Awards in the Arts ceremony on March 16, 2011. South Dakota Gov. Dennis Daugaard presented the award, which honors Victors work as an organizer, fundraiser and performer in music outreach projects.

1953

Robert Smith (JD 53) of Del Mar, Calif., has authored four publications about his maritime interests, including boating and cruising guides, a guide to maritime museums in North America and a history of the Erie Canal. He was elected to the San Diego Maritime Museum board of trustees in 2002. Robert spent his career in higher education fundraising. He is married to his former high school classmate Helen and has four children.

Robert Perito (BA 64) of McLean, Va., co-wrote a book, Police in War: Fighting Insurgency, Terrorism and Violent Crime (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2010). Robert (pictured at right) directs the Center for Security Sector Governance at the U.S. Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C. He previously was a United States Foreign Service officer with the state department and director of the Office of International Criminal Justice, where he chaired the task force on combating international alien smuggling.

1964

Tom Malmgren (BSBA 71) of Frisco, Colo., was honored as Realtor of the Year by the Summit Association of Realtors. Tom is a booster of the Copper Mountain Ski Resort. He was on DUs ski team for four years and was a candidate for the U.S. Olympic team.

1965

1957

Irwin Keinon (BA 57, MA 60) of Orinda, Calif., taught in the Denver Public Schools for 32 years. He taught at the elementary level for seven years and at the high school level for 25 years.

Susan Clarke-Battenburg (BA 65) of El Paso, Texas, is a physical therapist at Providence Memorial Hospital. She is involved with the hospitals altered mental status program, which works with patients experiencing brain injuries, dementia, Alzheimers disease, chemical and electrical changes, and seizures. She previously was involved with the Wounded Warrior Project.

Sidway McKay (BA 73, MA 78) of Boulder, Colo., on May 14, 2011, received the Outstanding Physical Therapy Professional Award from the University of Connecticuts Neag School of Education Alumni Society. Sidway is a physical therapist at Concentra Medical Centers in Denver and a lecturer and adjunct faculty member at the University of Colorado School of Physical Therapy. She previously was an athletic trainer for the University of Connecticut womens field hockey, basketball and softball teams.

1973

1974

1962

1967
Irvin Jones (BA 62) of Gallup, N.M., is a consumer relations specialist with the Navajo Tribal Utility Authority, where he promotes energy efficiency conservation in the Navajo

libby Bortz (MSW 67) of Littleton, Colo., was honored on May 19 at the 2011 conference of the National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials in Breckenridge, Colo. Libby helped create the Littleton Housing Authority in 1971. She has served as board chairperson for the authority for 40 years.

Jim leventhal (JD 74) of Denver was invited to join the Inner Circle of Advocates, an invitation-only group of the nations 100 best trial lawyers. Jim is the founder and senior partner of Leventhal, Brown & Puga, a medical malpractice and personal injury law firm. Jim became chairperson of the American Association of Justices professional negligence section in July 2011. In 2010, he was named the best medical malpractice lawyer and best personal injury lawyer in Colorado by Best Lawyers in America.

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University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Reunion: Class of 56
A few years ago, a group of alumni from the tight-knit Class of 1956 decided the standard 10-year reunions werent cutting it. Now they reconvene every five. We were having such a good time that we said, We ought to get together more often. Were getting older. Wed better step up the parties, says Ann (Richardson) Stolfus (BA mass communications 56). More than 160 members of the Class of 56 celebrated their 55-year reunion at DU Aug. 12. University officials welcomed the alumni and provided campus updates at the reunion, which included coffee hours, campus tours, luncheons and dinners. Attendees also got a backstage tour and a private piano and organ recital at the Newman Center. Returning alumni recalled that DU was drastically different in the 1950s. A streetcar line connected the main campus to DUs downtown campus, where the business and law schools were located, earning the University the nickname Tramway Tech. The main campus included University Hall, the Mary Reed Building, Marjorie Reed Hall, student dorms and apartments, a student union and Buchtel Chapel which burned down in 1983. For students who lived a sheltered childhood during World War II, college meant a bright new opportunity. It was a very freeing time, says Ralph Wheeler (BA mathematics 56). During the war you had rationing; you couldnt go places. Most DU students worked their way through school to pay for tuition, which cost $11 per credit hour in 1955. You could work a 36-hour week and still have your weekends off to study, says Bob Moorehead (BSBA statistics 56). You didnt have to miss any parties. While alumni remember the 50s as a time of innocence, one campus scandal was an exception: a panty raid in the womens dorms. I dont think sex was very common among students when I was in college, so this was a big, bold thing that the guys would run through the womens dorms, get into their underwear and run across campus, Wheeler says. Men and women had separate dorms then, and female students had a 10:30 p.m. curfew. They couldnt live in their sorority houses, which were for chapter meetings only, but men could live in the fraternity houses. Attire was different, too. Unlike today, students wouldnt dare attend class in T-shirts and sweatpants. Females donned skirts and cardigan sweaters and mens threads included corduroys and nice shirts, Stolfus says. Women wore fancy dresses for school dances. DU had a football team in 1956 and a marching band, too. The Parakeets pep squad cheered for every DU sports game. While reminiscing at their reunion dinner, Jean (Low) Hussong (BA humanities 56, MA education 60) says she and former classmates sang the DU cheer for old times sake: D-Rah, E-Rah, N-Rah, VER-Boom. Most of us still remembered the words, she says. >>If you have memories of the 1950s at DU to share, email us at du-magazine@du.edu or send a letter to University of Denver Magazine, 2199 S. University Blvd., Denver, CO 80208-4816
Amber DAngelo Na

University of Denver Magazine Connections

DU Archives One Focus Production DU Archives

47

Marc Meyers (PhD 74) of Del Mar, Calif., is a distinguished professor of materials science at the University of California, San Diego. He is an expert in explosives and set up the first explosives lab for the Brazilian military. Marc also has written three science and engineering books, including a textbook, Dynamic Behavior of Materials (Wiley-Interscience, 1994), and has penned two novels, Chechnya Jihad (Sunbelt Publications, 2010) and Mayan Mars (Sunbelt Publications, 2005).

(Headwaters Publications, 2011). In the book, Mike examines how people achieve success in sports and business.

1979

1978

1976

John Medbury (BSBA 76) of Worcester, Mass., was awarded the Alexis de Toqueville Award by the United Way of Central Massachusetts. The award recognized John for his outstanding leadership, inspiration to others, volunteer spirit and philanthropic values. He serves in leadership roles for several nonprofits.

Bill Scarnato (BSBA 78) of Dallas joined MedSynergies Inc.a provider of hospital-physician alignment solutionsas managing director of business development. Bill has more than 25 years of experience and previously was executive vice president of West Hudson Inc., a health care management consulting firm. He also was vice president of business development at Quorum Health Resources and senior vice president of operations and business development at Compirion Healthcare Solutions. Roy Wilson (MA 78, MS 83) of Pittsburgh has worked, consulted, researched and taught in the areas of sociology, computing and education. He posted a blog entry, Anger Management, Anyone?, on the Working-Class Perspectives blog at Youngstown State University.

Michael Hettich (MA 79) of Miami Shores, Fla., has published 12 books and chapbooks of poetry since 1991, including Swimmer Dreams (Turning Point, 2004), Flock and Shadow: New and Selected Poems (New Rivers Press, 2005), Many Loves (Yellow Jacket Press, 2007) and Like Happiness (Anhinga Press, 2010). His most recent book of poems, The Animals Beyond Us, was published in October by New Rivers Press. Nancy Mervar (PhD 79) of Lyons, Colo., is a retired teacher and principal. She recently published her first childrens book, Nanas Silly Goats (Indian Gap Press, 2010). She and her husband raise goats and golden retrievers on their small ranch. linda Weis (MA 79) of Manhattan, Kan., was appointed chairman of the Kansas Arts Commission by Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback. Linda is the supervising broker-owner of Weis Realty Executives. She has worked as a public school teacher, professional musician, curriculum development and implementation facilitator and private school owner. Linda is married and has three children and six grandchildren.

1977

Mike Margolies (MA 77) of Issaquah, Wash., published a book, The Athlete Within You: A Mental Approach to Sports and Business

Alumni Symposium
More than 400 alumni and friends registered for DUs fifth annual Alumni Symposium Sept. 30Oct. 1. The event highlighted the Universitys rich academic tradition and connected alumni with the intellectual life at DU. This years keynote speakers were Peter Funt (BA mass communications 69), a syndicated newspaper columnist and former host of the TV show Candid Camera, and Cindy Courville (MA international studies 80, PhD international studies 88), former special assistant to President George W. Bush and U.S. ambassador to the African Union from 200608. At a dinner on Sept. 30, Funt reminisced about working at the Clarion and the KVDU radio station. He talked about the power of laughter as he showed video clips from Candid Camera. Speaking at a luncheon on Oct. 1, Courville (pictured) showed photos from her time in the White House and encouraged audience members to have passion and confidence in their dreams of making an impact on the world. The symposium also included five seminars in which DU faculty members taught 25 classes on a variety of subjects. Classes included a look at a book of historical photographs by DU Archivist Steve Fisher; a presentation by political science Associate Professor Seth Masket on how American political parties select presidential candidates; and a lecture by physics and astronomy Associate Professor Barry Zink about trends in nanotechnology. Ive attended all of [the Alumni Symposiums] over the years, and

Wayne Armstrong

they keep getting better every year, said alumnus Mike Sutherland (BSBA 81, JD 84). Ambassador Courvilles lunchtime talk was fascinating for me as an attorney. Our family has always been fans of Candid Camera, so [Funts] talk was great and definitely entertaining. I also attended Professor Martin Rhodes class, Crisis in the Eurozone. That helped me get a handle on whats going on in that part of the world. It was a tremendous presentation. Cheri Stanford, event coordinator at the Office of Alumni Relations, said attendance at the symposium increases every year. The event is a shining example of the University of Denver experienceseeing firsthand the issues that faculty and students are tackling and the amazing things DU alumni are doing in the world, Stanford said.
Amber DAngelo Na
Watch videos of the keynote speeches at bit.ly/DUMagSymposium

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University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

1982

Scott lowery (BSBA 82, JD 85) of Denver was appointed to the executive advisory board of DUs Daniels College of Business by Dean Christine Riordan. Scott is founder and chairman of SquareTwo Financial, an asset recovery and management industry firm. He has more than 20 years of experience building entrepreneurial companies and previously was an attorney. He is on the board of directors of several Colorado nonprofits and serves on DUs campaign steering committee.

ProfileEllen Winner SHAMAN


Most patent attorneys dont include shamanism in their list of hobbies, but for Ellen Winner, the combination is a natural fit. Winner (JD 81) says her interest started in 1984 when she read The Way of the Shaman by Michael Harner. She attended a seminar and took classes, then traveled to Katmandu, Nepal, for apprenticeships with indigenous shamans. Shamanism has been practiced around the world for more than 30,000 years. Shamans believe spirits reside outside of physical matter, beyond what humans can experience with ordinary senses. Several spirit worlds exist in shamanism. Upper and lower worlds contain compassionate human, animal and nature spirits. Two middle worlds also exist: the world of everyday reality and a spirit world containing both helpful and harmful spirits. Winner, who lives in Boulder, Colo., says she navigates the worlds and communicates with spirits to bring information and healing to her clients. She says she can clear negative energy and help clients find lost objects, gain insight into challenging situations and deal with fears of death and dying. Shamans operate in an altered state of consciousness. In native cultures, some shamans use psychedelic drugs to alter their consciousness, but in the Western world many shamans use a drumbeat instead. A drumbeat yields a more controllable experience, Winner says. Itll put your brain in the theta brainwave state, which is the one next to sleep, and it makes you less critical and more open to what youre experiencing. For a while, Winner hid her unconventional practice from co-workers and clients in her law firm. I thought my co-workers wouldnt feel that it reflected well on them to have somebody that was doing shamanism whos weird, she says. Winner now works from home, where she conducts shamanic work and hosts a weekly drumming group. She also teaches at the Foundation for Shamanic Studies. I really like when Im teaching somebody how to journey for the first time and they find an animal spirit and they get incredible information, she says. Theyre so excited its like the spirit was waiting to be able to communicate with them for years. She has experienced personal benefits from the practice, as well. Its given me a worldview thats more hopeful, like miracles are really possible, she says. And to the naysayers who doubt the legitimacy of shamanism, Winner shrugs. I say just try it; see if it works. >>www.worldshaman.org
Amber DAngelo Na

Shaunna (Forister) Howat (BA 84) is the academic coordinator for the Potters School, an online school that serves secondary students in 42 countries. Shaunna lives with her husband, Kyle Howat (BA 82), near Cincinnati.

1984

Courtesy of Ellen Winner

1986

Tim Buresh (JD 86) of Rolling Hills Estates, Calif., was hired as Southern California regional director for the California High Speed Rail Authority. He previously was chief operating officer for the Los Angeles Unified School District and vice president of special projects for Tutor-Perini, a civil engineering and building construction company.

1987 1988

Rich Kiesel (BSBA 87) of Kentfield, Calif., is a sales manager at InvestmentNews and was a finalist for Min magazines Sales Executive of the Year Award.

Ralph Hubregsen (MBA 88) of Denver became chief executive officer at DecisionPoint Systems Inc., an enterprise mobility and radio frequency identification systems integrator. Ralph previously was vice president of worldwide channels at Symplified. Ken lund (JD 88) of Littleton, Colo., became executive director of Colorados Office of Economic Development and International Trade on Aug. 1, 2011. Ken previously was the chief legal counsel in Colorado Gov. John Hickenloopers office. Prior to that, he was managing partner at Holme Roberts & Owen. Ken serves on the board of directors of the Metro Denver Sports Commission.

University of Denver Magazine Connections

49

Anna-Marie Rooney (BA 88) of San Diego is vice president of marketing and external relations for the San Diego Foundation. She also manages planning and development of the foundations eight regional charitable foundations. Anna-Marie recently was recognized as one of 20 women who rock San Diego by San Diego Metropolitan magazine.

lyricist and singer. His musical works have been showcased in concerts at churches and schools. He works as a business consultant and IT professional for a national aerospace company.

1994

1992 1993

Arjun Narayanamurti (BSBA 92) of Summit, N.J., was promoted by Goldman Sachs to be co-director of Goldmans research division in the Americas.

Marianne Goodland (MS 94) of Englewood, Colo., is the director of consumer education and the public information officer for the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies Division of Insurance. She previously was chief legislative reporter and social media manager at the Colorado Statesman newspaper. In the 1990s Marianne worked in DUs communications department, where she won several awards for news release writing and media placements.

1991

Pat Cordle (MBA 91) of Monroe, Conn., was inducted into the Convenience Store News Industry Hall of Fame in November 2011. The hall of fame recognizes conveniencestore industry professionals. Pat is vice president of field sales for BIC Corp. and has held sales management positions for the past 25 years. Patrick Dawson (MS 91, MRCM 91) of Highlands Ranch, Colo., wrote Lessons in the Journey (CreateSpace, 2011), a novel that highlights the importance of learning from lifes lessons. Patrick also is a composer,

Joseph Mudd (MT 93) of Westfield, N.J., was appointed as the national director of tax for Reznick Group, a certified public accounting and tax services firm. He previously was the founder and managing director of the Specialty Tax Services Group and has held several other leadership positions in the tax industry.

1995

Valerie Haynes (JD 95) of Pueblo, Colo., was appointed as a judge in Pueblo County Court by Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper in June 2011. Valerie has practiced law for 16 years and most recently was the assistant Pueblo County attorney. Prior to that, she was a prosecutor in three jurisdictions and practiced law at Petersen & Fonda. Todd Kaiser (BS 95, MS 99) of Aurora, Colo., is chief engineer for the command, control and communications unit of Raytheon Intelligence and Information Systems. In June 2011 Todd was named a Raytheon

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Engineering Fellow. The fellows program recognizes the top 4 percent of the companys technical employees. Brian Weaver (BA 95, MA 97) of Denver was inducted into the Colorado Academy of Educators for the Gifted, Talented, and Creative. He serves as a drama and debate teacher at the new Noel Community Arts School in the Denver Public Schools district.

Profile Damien Goddard SUPERFAN


Damien Goddard may be part rebel, but hes all Pioneer. The University of Denver graduate, blogger and DU hockey ber-fan doesnt always toe the school line, but his devotion to the hockey program, the fans, and ultimately to DU school spirit is unquestionable. Goddard, 46, graduated with a business management degree in 1988 and works in his familys Houston business producing patented plastic widgets for industrial application. But in his spare time, the lifelong bachelor pores over Pioneerhockey-related news stories, hunting up tidbits from sources around the country for his popular blog, LetsGoDU, and promotes activities that are aimed at pumping up fans and students. The blogs entire missionand its always been the missionis school spirit, Goddard says. The blog is about hockey, but its theme is school spirit. If you look at the blog any day, youre just as likely to see shots of the mascot or the band or students cheering or alumni having a good time as you are a hockey player. The blog got its start in 2005 and quickly went from 30 hits a day to 1,000 visitors daily during the season. Its a mixture of articles written by Goddard and Gene Lake (BA political science 78), sprinkled with links to stories others have written in newspapers and on websites around the country. Goddard leans heavily on DUs student paper, the Clarion, for contributions and has built a strong relationship with editors there. Goddards efforts to build school spirit go back to his college days, a time he refers to as the best five years of my life. It started in 1986 when, disappointed by lagging student attendance at games in the old arena, he created what came to be known as the Bleacher Creatures. With promotions and cheers and signs, he says he helped build student attendance from about 50 sitting in the student balcony per game to 500. More recently, he helped resurrect the pioneer character Boone as DUs unofficial student and alumni mascot. Schools that have high school spirit have very high alumni support, like Notre Dame, he says. Weve always felt that DU can and should have that kind of school spirit. >>letsgodu.blogspot.com
Chase Squires

Andrew Fielding

Richard levin (JD 96) of Denver joined Baker & Hostetler, where he represents early stage and publicly traded companies in the financial services industry. He represents clients before the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Congress and foreign regulators. Richard worked on Wall Street for the past 12 years. Most recently, he was director and global head of product development for compliance and operations for a large German investment bank.

1996

1997

Margaret Webb (JD 97) of Cambria, Calif., was named volunteer of the year for the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and was honored at an awards ceremony in Washington, D.C., by the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation. Margaret has served on the sanctuary advisory council since 2004. She also is involved with several organizations, programs and events that clean up and monitor beaches and marine life in Northern California.

1998

Michael Carroll (BFA 98, MA 04) of Broomfield, Colo., was selected as elementary art educator of the year by the Colorado Art Education Association. Michael is a teacher at Kyffin Elementary School in Golden, Colo., and an adjunct faculty member at the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design.

Will your chapter meet its goal?


Make a gift to the ASCEND campaign and help your alumni chapter raise the $25,000 it needs to have a study room named after it in the new Academic Commons at Penrose Library. giving.du.edu

University of Denver Magazine Connections

51

Profile ARTIST Morehshin Allahyari


Not long after artist Morehshin Allahyari came to the University of Denver from Iran in 2007 for her masters degree in digital media studies, she says she became uncomfortable and shocked by peoples perception of her native country. [Iran is] more than donkeys in villages, women in hijab, the poor and the angry Muslims chanting, Death to America, Allahyari (MA 09) says. But she also came to realize something more positive: Ive learned American people are very open-minded and willing to listen and learn, she says. That makes me want to try harder to present a more balanced view of Iran and the daily life in Iran. Much of her time since she arrived in the United States has been spent trying to achieve that balance, using art as her diplomatic tool. Her DU masters thesis, IRUS Art (IRUS as in Iran and the United States), was an intercultural collaborative art show between artists in the two countries. With help from friends in Iran, Allahyari and an art co-op called the Kinda Collective recruited a team of artists in Tehran and a team in Denver. They chose dialogue as their theme and then mailed incomplete artworks back and forth and eventually created a collection of finished pieces that includes paintings, video art, drawings, photographs, software, street art and design. I really think the process went great, says Allahyari, who spoke on the importance of cultural art projects at the 2011 TEDxDU event. It made all of us realize how we could use art as a global language to humanize each other. I remember how excited all of us were when we got the first works from Iran and realized how close our approaches and perspectives were. More recently, Allahyari co-curated another collaboration between Iranian and American artists called Your Night/My Day on the nature of the dysfunctional dialogue between Iranian and American governments.
Doug McPherson
To watch a video of Allahyaris TEDxDU talk, visit bit.ly/DUMagArt

Justin Constantine (JD 98) of Arlington, Va., was elected to the Wounded Warrior Projects board of directors in July 2011. He has worked as an attorney for 12 years and has broad U.S. military and federal experience. Justin works for the U.S. Department of Justice on counterterrorism issues and is the founder and president of Got Pride LLC, which raises awareness of veterans resources. He received the Purple Heart, the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal and the Combat Action Ribbon for his military contributions.

Courtesy of Morehshin Allahyari

2000

Glen Elias (MBA 00) of Amherst, N.H., was appointed executive vice president of finance at EBI Consulting. listiani Wijaya (MAcc 00) of Semarang, Indonesia, recently published two books in Canada: The Greatest Inspirationa book of poetryand Courageous, Considerate and Creative Cooking. Listiani is a business consultant and entrepreneur.

2001

Bharat Chowrira (JD 01) of Hillsborough, Calif., is the chief executive officer of Addex Pharmaceuticals. Bharat has more than 17 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry. He previously was senior vice president and chief operating officer at Nektar Therapeutics. He also is a registered U.S. patent attorney and a member of the Colorado Bar Association. Sean Menke (MBA 01) of Denver is president and chief executive officer of Pinnacle Airlines Corp. He previously was managing partner at Vista Strategic Group and has 20 years of airline management experience. from the military back then, Kron says. You had to be a totally different person with a split personality, Kron says. There were limited situations when you could be out. Someone could always see you or find you. Kronnow a lawyer in Lewisburg, Pa. says Dont Tell is the start of a series of books shes writing on the subject of gay relationships in the military. In her opinion, a lot of books in the gay and lesbian genre lack storylines and contain too much erotica, but Dont Tell is different. This is real life; theres nothing special or different about gay people, she says. Why cant you have women as main characters who like other women? It should be mainstream. The characters only have one difference.
Amber DAngelo Na

Book bin
Dedicated to those who serve in silence, Dont Tell (Lethe Press, 2011) chronicles a romantic relationship between two women in the military in the 1980s. Author Kathy Kron (JD 99) says the story was inspired by her own experiences in basic training and military service at Fort Carson, Colo., before the recently reversed dont ask, dont tell policy went into effect. Dont Tells protagonista woman named Gray Edwardsunexpectedly falls in love with Annie Randall during basic training. After

training ends, the two characters are stationed in different parts of the country and spend years trying to get back together. After Annie narrowly survives a deployment mission gone wrong, Gray decides to give up her military career so they can be together. The decision leads to a less-than-happy ending. Dont Tell isnt just a love story. Kron wrote the book to share the struggles that thousands of gay and lesbian soldiers were forced to keep quiet. Soldiers who didnt hide their sexual identities or whose identities were discovered were discharged

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University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Sean was executive vice president and chief marketing officer of Republic Airways Holdings Inc. and president and chief executive officer of Frontier Airlines. He also held management positions at Air Canada, United Airlines, Western Pacific Airlines and America West Airlines.

Profile HILL Mike Kaplan KING OF THE


A lifelong skier who learned the sport on a tiny ski hill in Wisconsin, Aspen Skiing Co. CEO and President Mike Kaplan (MBA 93) now runs one of the worlds top ski complexes. Aspen has four resorts offering a wide range of terrain: the beginners paradise at Buttermilk; the steeps at Aspen Mountain and Aspen Highlands; and the sprawling, family-friendly Snowmass. Kaplan set his heart on a career in the ski industry while ski bumming at New Mexicos Taos Ski Valley Resort, where he headed after earning his undergraduate degree from the University of Colorado. At Taos, he taught skiing, worked the graveyard shift running the snow guns and learned the science of avalanche control on the ski patrol. Needing a stronger foundation in management to make his next career move, he enrolled at DUs Daniels College of Business to earn his MBA. Id come to realize that most managers in the ski industry back then had come up through the ranks and had gotten on-the-job training, recalls Kaplan, who lives in Aspen with his wife, Laura, and four children. A business degree was a good next step. He started as director of Aspens ski school then moved up to operations. In 2005, he was named chief operating officer; a year later, he was appointed CEO and president. Five years later, Kaplan says Aspen is poised for renewed growth. Health-conscious baby boomers are reaching their 50s and 60s still in shape, with money to spend, and with legs strong enough to head down a run in a foot of fresh powder. Better mountain grooming and improved ski technology has also improved the on-mountain experience. Those years, however, wont last forever, and Kaplanlike the rest of the ski industryknows Aspen needs to reach out to the younger generation to get more skiers and snowboarders up on the mountain. Things are good right now, but down the road, we need to replace those baby boomers with Gen X and Gen Y, Kaplan says. We need to build and nurture Gen X, and Gen Y is a different generation. Its more diverse, and our business is not that diverse. We need to diversify our customer base to compete for those vacation dollars.
David McKay Wilson

2002

Martina (Pospisilova) Hamplova (BSBA 02) of Prague married her husband, Ales, on Aug. 14, 2010. She is the order-to-cash manager for SAP, one of the worlds largest business management software companies. TJ Karklins (MBA 02) of Little Rock, Ark., is chief executive officer of Clearview International. TJ previously led finance, strategy and planning for the organization. He also is a former Army aviator.
Courtesy of Aspen/Snowmass

2003

Jessica (Owens) lenhardt (BA 03) of Lakewood, Colo., and her husband, Brad, welcomed their second child, daughter Brielle Frances Lenhardt, on Feb. 28, 2011. Jessica is a billing production technician in DUs bursars office. Monica Narang (BSBA 03) of Sierra Madre, Calif., teaches English at a junior high school in New Delhi, India. She previously taught English to high school students in Osaka, Japan, as part of the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program. She was awarded the 201112 Fulbright Nehru English Teaching Assistantship. Monica also worked as a collaborative fellow at the National Endowment for Financial Education in Colorado and taught English to immigrants and refugees at Denvers Emily Griffith Opportunity School.

2004

Amy (Robinson) Daly (MBA 04) recently married Eric Daly (MA 10). The couple lives in Denver. Katherine lotz (BA 04, MA 09) moved to Pune, India, in July 2009. She works at a nonprofit that promotes social and cultural awareness through online film festivals.

Construction is under way


The new Academic Commons at Penrose Library is being transformed from the inside out. Learn more and show your support today. du.edu/academiccommons

2005

Derek Blass (JD 05) of Denver wrote Enemy in Blue (Rogue Books LLC, 2011), a novel about police brutality and racism. Derek is a civil litigator and received the Colorado Hispanic Bar Associations Outstanding New Hispanic Attorney Award in 2011.

University of Denver Magazine Connections

53

Anthony Schwairy (BSAC 05, MBA 05) of Lakewood, Colo., and his wife, Jenn, welcomed a daughter, Scarlett Anne Schwairy, on April 22, 2011. Alexis Sinex (BSBA 05) of Baltimore married Ashley John Stuart Thompson on June 18, 2011, at Ashleys parents home in Lutherville, Md. Wedding guests included Gabriel Tramiel (BSBA 06), Katherine Sollers (BA 06), Jona Goodman (BSBA 06) and Dana Cash (BSBA 05).

Ryan Moehring (MRLS 06) of Evergreen, Colo., released his first book, The Fried Twinkie Manifesto: and other tales of disaster and damnation (Gringo Tree Publishing, 2011). The book is a collection of humorous stories and essays. Adam Odekirk (BSBA 06) of Centennial, Colo., is director of management services for JSN Property Management. Adam recently married his wife, Keri.

Cristel Shepherd (JD 07) of Centennial, Colo., joined Polsinelli Shughart as an associate attorney in the law firms financial services department. She previously was with Castle Meinhold & Stawiarski. Cristel has legal experience in the areas of bankruptcy, residential foreclosure and creditors rights.

2006

Michael Comer (BSBA 06) of Englewood, Colo., joined IQNavigator as a consultant in professional services. Todd Martinez (BA 06) of Washington, D.C., received his masters degree in international economics from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, where he received the 2011 Christian A. Herter Award, the schools highest academic honor. Todd works at the Institute of International Finance, Latin America Department, where he conducts economic research and analysis.

Erin Perko (BS 07) of Scottsdale, Ariz., married Tyler Garvey in July 2010. Erin graduated from medical school at the University of Vermont in May 2011. She is a general surgery resident at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale. Kristine Poston (JD 07) of Lakewood, Colo., joined the real estate finance practice at the Polsinelli Shughart law firm. She represents real estate lending clients in financing transactions. Kristine previously worked at Rothgerber Johnson & Lyons.

2007

2008

Erin Chalmers (MPS 08) of Savannah, Ga., was appointed director of alumni relations and annual giving at Armstrong Atlantic State University. She previously was manager of alumni services and relations at DUs Daniels College of Business. Prior to that, Erin was director of career, alumni, internship and work-study programs at the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design.

Thank you for a great 2011....


Boston Miami n Washingto Minneapoli s DC Chicago Seattle New York

San Diego

Dallas

San Francis Houston

co

Tampa Phoenix

wood West Holly Fort Worth

watch for new cities in 2012!


54
University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Pioneer pics
Dewey long (BS 62), Debby long (BA 65) and Hilary Harty (BA 65) wore their DU T-shirts on a trip to Machu Picchu in Peru. After Machu Picchu, the trio traveled to the Galapagos Islands, where they observed splendid natural sights in and out of the water, Harty says. As you pioneer lands far and wide, be sure to pack your DU gear and strike a pose in front of a national monument, the fourth wonder of the world or your hometown hot spot. If we print your submission, youll receive some new DU paraphernalia to take on along on your travels. Send your print or high-resolution digital image and a description of the location to: Pioneer Pics, University of Denver Magazine, 2199 S. University Blvd., Denver, CO 80208-4816, or email du-magazine@du.edu. Be sure to include your full name, address, degree(s) and year(s) of graduation.

the

Denver Pioneer store


YouR Destination
foR offiCial, DenveR PioneeRs athletiC aPPaRel

Career Corner
During the holiday season, invitations to social events are abundant. Accepting them can advance your career or, if you are in jobsearch mode, can provide important networking opportunities. Whether you are a natural extrovert or find social gatherings painful, having a plan can make you more comfortable and the event more productive. Follow these tips: Define a goal in advance. This can be anything from talking with a particular person to meeting three new people. learn to balance a drink, enjoy the holiday food and shake hands. If you are only drinking, hold the glass in your left hand with a napkin around it. If you also need to balance a plate, hold it in your left hand, leaving a small space on your plate where you can set your drink when you need to shake hands. The napkin keeps your hand from becoming too cold to shake. Act like a host. Strive to make others feel comfortable. Introduce new acquaintances to others. Whom do you talk to? Seek out those standing on the sidelines. Alternatively, join a group of more than two people so you dont interrupt a private conversation. For business-related events, be sure to take business cards so others remember you. Have some ready discussion topics. Read the news before you attend so you can discuss current, noncontroversial subjects. When its time to exit the group, thank them. For example, I enjoyed talking with you; enjoy the rest of the evening.
Cindy Hyman is DUs associate director of alumni career programs. For more information on career resources available to alumni, visit bit.ly/DUMagCareers.

this holiday season, Give the Gift of Pioneer spirit!


Visit us online
DenverPioneers.com/store or stop by the Ritchie Center today!

University of Denver Magazine Connections

55

Marika Pappas (BSBA 08, IMBA 08) of Chicago was promoted to treasury manager at Treasury Strategies, where she works with large financial institutions on pricing, market penetration and product development strategies. She also is treasurer for the Hellenic Professional Society of Illinois, a professional networking and philanthropic organization.

Which alum has a blog that gets as many as 1,000 visitors per day? The answer can be found somewhere on pages 4558 of this issue. Send your answer to du-magazine@du.edu or University of Denver Magazine, 2199 S. University Blvd., Denver, CO 80208-4816. Be sure to include your full name and mailing address. Well select a winner from the correct entries; the winning entry will win a prize. Congratulations to Jim Bain (BA 65, MA 73) for winning the fall issues pop quiz.
Ryan Westberry (MBA 09) is the business manager of operations for Denver Healths Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center. He lives in Denver with his wife, Susan. Antoinette Gomez (MSW 10, CRTG 10) of Commerce City, Colo., is a functional family therapist at North Range Behavioral Health. She previously was an AmeriCorps volunteer and interned with the Denver Family Institute, where she provided counseling to low-income individuals and families. Antoinette serves in the graduate chapter of Zeta Phi Beta sorority and is a mentor with the Challenge Foundation. Marissa loken (BSBA 10) of Denver recently joined advertising agency Karsh\Hagan as an account coordinator. She interned with the agency her senior year. Sarah Taber (MS 10, MBA 10) is a marketing analyst for Avenue Capital Group in New York City.
Post your class note online at www.du.edu/alumni, email du-magazine@du.edu or mail in the form below.

2009

Stefanie Bednar (BA 09) of Omaha, Neb., completed 10 months of full-time service to communities in need with AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps. The programs projects support disaster relief, the environment, energy conservation, infrastructure improvement, and urban and rural development. Mark Jordan (MBA 09) of Aurora, Colo., is an associate recruiter of professional resources for Hudson in Denver. Jill Schroeder (MM 09) of Denver became director of the Summit Choral Societya volunteer group of 3540 singersin June 2011. Jills background is in French horn, and she has masters degrees in vocal performance and choral conducting. She is pursuing her doctorate in conducting at the University of Northern Colorado.

2010

Jamie Berg (BA 10) of San Antonio graduated from the Naval Hospital Corpsman School. She is stationed at Fort Sam Houston for six months as a lab technician with the U.S. Navy Medicine Training Center. Craig Branton (MS 10) of Denver is a commercial loan officer at Terrix Financial. Mila (Morgese) Gates (MA 10) of Aurora, Colo., married Jon Gates on March 18, 2011, in Parker, Colo.

Contact us
Tell us about your career and personal accomplishments, awards, births, life events or whatever else is keeping you busy. Do you support a cause? Do you have any hobbies? Did you just return from a vacation? Let us know! Dont forget to send a photo. (Include a self-addressed, postage-paid envelope if you would like your photo returned.)
Question of the hour: What student organizations or activities were you involved with on campus? Name (include maiden name) DU degree(s) and graduation year(s) Address City State Phone Email Employer Occupation ZIP code Country

What have you been up to? (Use a separate sheet if necessary.)

Post your class note online at www.alumni.du.edu, email du-magazine@du.edu or mail your note to: Class Notes, University of Denver Magazine, 2199 S. University Blvd., Denver, CO 80208-4816.

56

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

Deaths
1930s 1940s
Alberta (Iliff) Shattuck (BA 31, MS 32), Denver, 6-9-11 Charles Milligan (BA 39), Denver, 6-14-11 Margaret Spencer (attd. 39), Denver, 4-27-11 louis Clinton (attd. 40), Denver, 2-14-11 Marjorie Hands (BA 46), Amarillo, Texas, 7-21-11 Calvin lenhart (BS 46), Scottsbluff, Neb., 6-7-10 Robert Welborn (LLB 46), Franktown, Colo., 5-24-11 Celia (Brown) Townsend (BA 47), Highlands Ranch, Colo., 4-20-11 William Chapman (BS 48), Alpharetta, Ga., 3-19-11 Barbara (Beatty) Dellinger (BA 49), Garden Grove, Calif., 5-20-11 John Glover (BS 49), Arvada, Colo., 12-17-09 Curt lippoldt (BS 49), Pocomoke City, Md., 5-18-11 Jerry Reed (BA 49), Denver, 6-8-11 Milford Wilson (BS 49, MA 57), Edgewater, Colo., 6-26-11

1950s

John Chesnick (BS 50), Wheat Ridge, Colo., 5-14-07 Robert Phillips (BSBA 50), Las Vegas, 4-12-11 Paulino Zatica (BSBA 50), Homedale, Idaho, 6-18-11 Donald Brandon (BA 52), Bronxville, N.Y., 6-15-11 Dorothy (Boone) Dismuke (BA 52), Ballwin, Mo., 8-11-11 Fred Vote (BS 55), San Clemente, Calif., 3-22-11 Gunther Katz (BSBA 58), Encino, Calif., 2-13-11 Daniel Rothstein (PhD 58), Sherman Oaks, Calif., 5-25-11 Jasper Morris (attd. 59), Keyser, W.Va., 5-21-11

1980s 1990s 2000s

Paul Keilt (BSAC 84), Denver, 6-10-11 James lutey (MBA 86), Painesville, Ohio, 5-31-11 Corey Carlson (BSBA 93, MSS 95), Anchorage, Alaska, 7-30-11 Felecia Mahaffie (MSW 97), Denver, 7-26-11 Gina Salazar (MSS 97), Thornton, Colo., 8-10-11 Jorge Mora (MLIS 06), Pueblo, Colo., 5-31-11 Harold Hal Bloomenthal, former adjunct faculty member at the Sturm College of Law, Denver, 8-22-11 Martha (Eastman) Edwards (BA 36), former DU lab nursery school instructor, Denver, 5-14-11 Noel Jordan (MA 50), retired radio and television professor, Denver, 8-4-11 Gordon Milliken, retired economics professor, Centennial, Colo., 6-9-11 Myron Plooster, retired senior research engineer at DUs Denver Research Institute, Louisville, Colo., 5-14-11 William Slaichert, education professor emeritus, Denver, 7-28-11 Frank Stanley, faculty member and coach at DUs Ricks Center for Gifted Children, Englewood, Colo., July 2011

1960s

Eugene Hetland (BS 60), Denver, 8-5-10 lloyd Wilson (BA 60), Denver, 7-25-11 Faye (Kingsbury) Carey (MA 62), Louisville, Colo., 8-9-11 Dan Gossert (MSW 62), Westminster, Colo., 8-10-11 Florence Gail (Tippett) Schofield (MA 65), Denver, 12-30-10 Martha (Groening) Perry (BA 66), Bisbee, Ariz., 3-7-10 Pamela (Williams) Phillips (BA 68), Pearland, Texas, 5-2-10 Gail Reader (MSW 68), Fort Collins, Colo., 7-27-11

Faculty and Staff

1970s

larry littlefield (JD 70), Ault, Colo., 5-27-11 Eric Aspaas (BA 71), East Aurora, N.Y., 5-14-11 Marylu Casey (MA 72), Yucaipa, Calif., 5-29-11 Donna Selger (MA 74), Reading, Mass., 12-13-10

This is your magazine, and heres your chance to

TELL US wHAT yOU THINK.


Take the survey online at www.du.edu/magazine
University of Denver Magazine Connections

57

Winter ANNOUNCEMENTS
Alumni Connections Rocky Mountain Alumni Chapter
Join other Denver-area alumni for networking events each month. >>http://alumni.du.edu/PAN

Get Involved Ammi Hyde Interviews The Office of

DU on the Road Find out

what your alma mater has been doing since you left. See if DU is coming to a city near you. >>http://alumni.du.edu/DUontheRoad

Undergraduate Admission is looking for alumni volunteers to conduct interviews of prospective students in major cities throughout the country in late January. Contact Ammi Hyde Interview Coordinator Andy Losier at 303-871-7651 or alosier@du.edu. >>www.du.edu/hyde

events, sports, students and more at bit. ly/DUMagPhoto. DU videos are at bit.ly/ DUMagVideo.

On the web Media Find photographs of campus,

Alumni News Biweekly e-newsletter contains information on alumni events and news happening on campus and around the country. E-mail alumni@du.edu to sign up. Mark your Calendar Newman Center for the Performing Arts The 201112 Newman Center Presents

Mentoring Join the Professional Network and share your career experience and advice with current DU students and alumni. Email alumni@ du.edu for more information. Regional Chapters Join a regional alumni chapter: Atlanta; Boston; Northern California; Southern California; Chicago; Dallas; Houston; Minneapolis/St. Paul; New York; Phoenix; Portland; Seattle; and Washington, D.C. To find out how you can get involved, call 800-871-3822 or visit http://alumni.du.edu/chapters. Womens Library Association A group of DU alumni and friends regularly comes together to raise funds to benefit research scholarships at DU and Penrose Library. Programs include lectures, teas, special events and the Book Stack used book store in the Mary Reed Building. >>http://library.du.edu/site/about/wla/wla.php Summer Business Institute The Daniels
College of Business offers an intensive program designed exclusively for non-business majors who are interested in supplementing their education with critical topics in business and leadership. The program will run June 1329, 2012. For more information, contact Becca Mahoney, program manager, at 303-871-4833 or becca. mahoney@du.edu.

Apps Available for iPhone and Android, the DU app gives users access to campus news, an events calendar, DU videos and photos, the athletics website, maps and polls, a checklist for prospective students and more. Annual Report DUs 201011 annual report
is online at bit.ly/DUMagReport.

DU Today Find up-to-the-minute news on campus and community, academics, arts, history, athletics and more at bit.ly/DUMagToday Calling All Experts
Were trying to get to know our alumni better while developing possibilities for future articles. Please send us your ideas. We would especially like to hear about readers who: work or have worked in public radio work in the nuclear energy industry took a gap year in between high school and college have family members who went to Colorado College work in social media have been affected by the recession

season continues with Europe Galantes Vivaldi Pyrotechnics (Jan. 29), Chucho Valdes (Feb. 14) and L.A. Theatre Works production of The Rivalry (March 1). >>www.newmancenterpresents.com and the DU theater department team up to present Urinetown Feb. 2325 and March 14 at the Newman Center. >>www.du.edu/thea Pioneers excellence. The annual Founders Day Gala will be held on March 8, 2012, at the Seawell Grand Ballroom in the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. Contact Hallie Lorimer, hlorimer@du.edu, for details, or call 303-871-2701.

Winter Musical The Lamont School of Music

Founders Day Celebrate 148 years of

Stay in Touch Online Network Connect with other DU

courses, lectures, seminars and weekend intensives explore a wide range of subjects without exams, grades or admission requirements. >>http://universitycollege.du.edu/learning/ep

Lifelong Learning Enrichment Program Noncredit short

Pioneer Generations
How many generations of your family have attended DU? If you have stories and photos to share about your familys history with DU, please send them our way!

alumni and friends. Update your contact information, connect to your Facebook page, search the directory and post class notes. Online class note submissions will automatically be included in the University of Denver Magazine. >>http://alumni.du.edu

AHSS Faculty Lecture Series DUs

Nostalgia Needed
Please share your ideas for nostalgic topics we could cover in the magazine. Wed love to see your old DU photos as well.

Humanities Institute offers a free monthly lecture series to showcase the current research, creative endeavors or recently published works of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences faculty. >>www.du.edu/ahss
University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

University of Denver Magazine 2199 S. University Blvd. Denver, CO 80208-4816 303-871-2776 du-magazine@du.edu www.du.edu/magazine Twitter: DUMagazine

Contact us

58

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Dont Wait in Line... Buy tickets direct at DenverPioneers.com/tickets and PRINT AT HOME!
For full schedule information, call 303.871.2336 or go to DenverPioneers.com.

21 Means 21
University of Denver Magazine Connections
9/30/2011 2:02:17 PM

59

MISCEllANEA

Worldwide delivery
Wayne Armstrong

Using canceled stamps she got from international student applications, Betsy Pikenow an admission coordinator for University Collegemade this world map when she was a work-study student in the Office of International Student Admission. Pike (BA 03) says the recent increase in online applications results in far fewer exotic stamps making their way to the international admission mailbox. DU currently has 1,329 international students representing 93 countries; the University received almost 5,000 international applications for the 201112 school year.

60

University of Denver Magazine Winter 2011

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