Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Dave Curtin (Jour) retired this summer. After working a senior year internship at the Â鶹ąŮÍř Daily Camera, Dave jumped around various newspapers in Colorado, living in Greeley, Durango, Colorado Springs and Denver. In 2007, he came back to CU as executive communicator for campus. In retirement, Dave will transition from climbing fourteeners to lake kayaking. He told CU Â鶹ąŮÍř Today that his favorite thing about working at CU was “the people of the university community.” Read more about Dave in this issue.

Posted Nov. 5, 2021

µţ´ÇłÜ±ô»ĺ±đ°ů’s Stan Garnett (Hist; Law’82), shareholder in the Denver office of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, joined the board of directors of the International Academy of Trial Lawyers. Garnett was elevated to the board in recognition of his work as the chair of the academy’s Latin American Task Force and to further strengthen its presence and relations with the legal community in the region. Prior to rejoining his firm, Stan served as district attorney for Colorado’s 20th Judicial District for nearly 10 years. 

Posted Jul. 2, 2021

In 1983, at the age of 28, Doug Larson (Fin) and two of his oldest friends bought Eldorado Artesian Springs Resort, which opened in 1905 and was described by many as the “Coney Island of the West.” From scratch, they have made it the thriving business it is today. Doug is married to Kathy Larson (Bio’85) and lives in Eldorado Springs, Colorado. 

Posted Jul. 2, 2021

Enterprise Bank in Lowell, Massachusetts, named Daniel Laplante (Fin) chief investment officer and director of investments. He has more than 30 years of investment management experience. He lives in Hancock, New Hampshire. 

Posted Nov. 11, 2020

Jeff Mehan (Econ) of Stamford, Connecticut, has been resurrecting dual-slalom professional ski racing, taking it back to the days of Billy Kidd (Econ’69) and Spider Sabich (A&S’71). Some of his more recent competitions included races in Vail, Steamboat and Eldora, Colorado. Jeff works on Wall Street in the international financial derivatives markets.

Posted Jun. 1, 2020

Composer and multi-media artist Pamela Z (MusEdu) was awarded the Frederic A. Juilliard/Walter Damrosch Rome Prize for musical composition last April. The prize includes an 11-month fellowship in the Italian capital. Pamela is considered a pioneer of digital looping, and won a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2004.

Posted Oct. 1, 2019

Bill Green (MechEngr’78), president of the Denver-based mechanical engineering company RMH Group, was named one of 20 industry leaders chosen as a 2018 inaugural class of Design-Build Institute of America Fellows. The fellowship is the highest level of DBIA certification and acknowledges the achievements of the nation’s most accomplished design-build professionals. Bill was inducted during a ceremony held on Nov. 8 in New Orleans.

Posted Mar. 1, 2019

Stan Garnett (Hist; Law’82) was named co-chair of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck’s government investigations and white collar defense group, based in Denver. Stan served as district attorney for Colorado’s 20th Judicial District (Â鶹ąŮÍř County) for nearly 10 years, serving three terms. He also served as president of the Colorado District Attorneys Council in 2017 and on the board of directors of the National District Attorneys Association. 

Posted Nov. 30, 2018

Susan Cooke Barfield (MEdu), professor emerita at Montana State University Billings, has dedicated her life to advocating for and educating the public about international minorities. A previous Fulbright Scholar in Chile and Slovakia, Susan is working with three Mapuche elders in rural Patagonia, Chile, to create a trilingual (English, Spanish, Mapundungun) book based on a Mapuche folktale. The book, which will be illustrated by Mapuche students, is supported by a National Geographic Society Explorer Grant. In fall 2018, Susan will travel to the University of Vilnius in Lithuania to work as a Fulbright Specialist.

Posted Sep. 1, 2018

After more than 32 years, Robert Garcia (Art) retired in May from his position as graphics editor at the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel, the largest newspaper between Denver and Salt Lake City. Robert has received more than three dozen awards for newspaper design and graphics from the Colorado Press Association and the Colorado Associated Press Editors and Reporters organization. He writes that his mid- 1970s experience in Â鶹ąŮÍř with the campus minority student newspaper El Diario de la Gente was the foundation for his success. In 1995, Robert, a fifth-generation Coloradan, was designated a CU Hispanic Alumni Association Distinguished Alum.

Posted Sep. 1, 2017

In April, Katherine Leonard (Chem, MCDBio) presented results of her research study “The Meaning of Touch to Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy” at the United Health Services 25th Annual Oncology Teaching Day in Owego, N.Y. The research was previously published in the Oncology Nursing Forum in September 2015. Katherine is a nurse practitioner with SUNY Upstate’s adult oncology medicine group’s outpatient clinics. She retired from Upstate Hospital in 2012.

Posted Sep. 1, 2017

For more than 40 years, Bill Lerner (Comm) has helped grow and develop iPark, his family’s parking garage business (previously known as Imperial Parking Systems), into New York’s largest garage and parking facilities operator. Bill also started the organization Billy4Kids to provide shoes for underprivileged children around the world.

Posted Sep. 1, 2017

Â鶹ąŮÍř County district attorney Stan Garnett (Hist; Law’82) has decided not to make a second run for Colorado Attorney General. He ran unsuccessfully in 2010. Stan is now in his third term as µţ´ÇłÜ±ô»ĺ±đ°ů’s DA. In March, he and his wife, Brenda, celebrated their 39th anniversary. The couple lives in Â鶹ąŮÍř.

Posted Jun. 1, 2017

At the Lippin Group, a brand communications firm, Pamela Ruben Golum (Comm) has managed notable client accounts, including Dick Wolf and his Law & Order franchise, various projects for the Disney Channel and the Emmy Awards. Previously Pam worked as a journalist with Fairchild Publications and at radio station KBOL in Â鶹ąŮÍř. She and husband Rob live in Los Angeles, Calif., with their two daughters, Caroline and Jennifer.

Posted Jun. 1, 2017

In December Cardno, Inc., an infrastructure and environmental services company based in Australia, named Ted Tomasi (Econ; MA’79) vice president and director of national practices. He is based at the company’s Newark, Del., office. Ted, who has more than 30 years’ experience as a natural resource economist, also has worked as professor at the University of Michigan, University of Minnesota and Michigan State University.

Posted Mar. 1, 2017

In November William A. Baltz (Hist) published a book, Spiritual Nexus: Discovery in America’s Heartland. It’s about five spiritual centers with connected histories nestled in southwest Michigan on the outskirts of Three Rivers. The co-founder of one of the retreats, Nancy Hector (A&S’58), is also a Forever Buff, as is Nancy’s sister, Joan Hector (A&S’52), an artist and teacher known for her stained slab glass installations.

Posted Mar. 1, 2017

Kim Rothstein (Advert) writes that she is happily retired from a successful career in food advertising and marketing. She lives in Sebastopol, Calif.

Posted Mar. 1, 2017

In honor of Leonard Mermel’s (EPOBio) 60th birthday and his commitment to patient care for the citizens of Rhode Island, Governor Gina Raimondo proclaimed June 15 “Dr. Leonard Alan Mermel Day” in the state. Leonard has spent his career advocating for patient safety by preventing infections in hospitals through national and international teaching and his extensive research. Leonard is a professor at Brown University, an adjunct professor at the University of Rhode Island College of Pharmacy and has been published in numerous peer-reviewed journals.

Posted Sep. 1, 2016

Earlier this year, Joel Berger (PhDBio) was named one of six finalists for the 2016 Indianapolis Prize, the world’s leading award for animal conservation; Jane Goodall is a past recipient. A scholar at Colorado State University, Joel studies why populations of tundra land animals, such as muskoxen and wild yaks, are declining and what can be done about it. He helped lead the creation of America’s first federally sanctioned wildlife migration corridor, the Path of the Pronghorn, in Yellowstone National Park. Joel has also helped reevaluate rhino conservation tactics in Africa and aided efforts to conserve Mongolia’s saiga antelope populations. He lives in Colorado with his wife and daughter.

Posted Jun. 1, 2016

Jack Turner (Bus) was elected to the Explorers Club, a renowned organization whose members include the adventurers who were the first to reach the poles, the summit of Mount Everest and the moon. Jack’s grandfather Ansel F. Hall was the first chief naturalist of the National Park Service and also a member of the club. Jack is the founding director of California-based Rainbow Bridge-Monument Valley Expedition Onward. The project is completing fieldwork in Arizona and Utah and working on 3D modeling techniques and virtual-reality tools to recreate the experience and surroundings of the expedition, including what was discovered and by whom. The result will be a museum exhibition at multiple U.S. venues.

Posted Jun. 1, 2016

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