³LauraLee Carter’s(AsianSt; MHist’88)career as an academiclibrarian ended in 2004,she became a freelancewriter. She’s sincepublished four bookson midlife psychology.Four years ago, she andher husband moved torural southern Colorado,where she writes a blog,“Adventures of the newold farts,” and wroteAMemoir of Retirement:From Suburbia to Solar inSouthern Colorado.

Posted Mar. 1, 2018

In September,Judge Christine Arguello (Edu) receivedone of Harvard Law School’s “Celebration 65 Awards” (65 years of women at Harvard Law) for her outstanding contribution to the legal profession and to public welfare. Christine,a U.S. District Court judge for the District of Colorado, writes that it is an honor to have received the award, especially in light of the fact that prior recipients include such luminaries as Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Pat Schroeder. Christineis a previous nominee to the United States Courtof Appeals for the Tenth Circuit and is currentlya tenured professor atthe University of Kansas School of Law. She is a first-generation college graduate and grew up in Buena Vista, Colo.

Posted Nov. 30, 2018

Susan Eastman (Jour’77) has begun a new career with Live West Realty in Boulder as a real estate agent specializing in residential sales. She writes that living in the Boulder Valley for many years and raising three children has given her a deeper understanding of Colorado’s neighborhoods, schools and lifestyle, and that her time as a journalist served her well in communicating and helping clients determine what they are looking for in a home.

Posted Mar. 1, 2019

After two years of “semi-retirement” and consulting with the startup Craft Distillers, Paul T. Criscuolo (Econ) joined Broken Shed Distillery USA as vice president, specializing in branding and marketing. The craft distillery is based in New Zealand and currently produces vodka and plans to expand into other spirits.

Posted Jun. 3, 2019

Gary Porter (MBA’74; PhDBusAd’77) and wife Melissa Komisar Porter (Mktg) fell in love at CU in 1976. The couple, who celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary last year, write that they traveled to Boulder in 2017 for their first Homecoming weekend since graduation. After leaving CU, Gary taught accounting at various universities and Melissa embarked on a 32-year career in marketing and business development at IBM. Gary is the author of several accounting textbooks, as well as the fiction book Duffy: The Tale of a Terrier and a new collection of essays, Town Kid: Reflections of a Midwestern Boyhood. Earlier this year, the couple attended Western Art Week in Great Falls, Mont., where they met up with former Buffs running back and artist Shay Davis (A&S ex’97). “It was fun to reminisce about the 1994Fiesta Bowl that we attended and he played in,” Melissa wrote. The couple currently lives in Hudson, Wis.

Posted Jun. 3, 2019

Carol Callan (MPE;MBA’87) was elected president of theInternational Federationof Basketball, AmericasChapter. She is thefirst female to fill theposition for any FIBAregion. Carol is alsothe USA BasketballWomen’s National Teamdirector, a post she hasheld since 1996. Prior tojoining USA Basketball,she was athletic directorand assistant principalfor Boulder’s FairviewHigh School. She livesin Boulder.

Posted Oct. 1, 2019

Pronghorn Press published Jamie Lisa Forbes' (Engl, Phil) third book, Eden, a story of small town life in 1950's North Carolina. Her first novel, Unbroken, won the 2011 WILLA award for contemporary fiction. Her collection of short stories, The Widow Smalls & Other Stories, won the 2015 High Plains Book Awards for a short collection. She lives in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Posted Nov. 11, 2020

After 43 years teaching English and writing at various universities across New York, Maureen King Cassidy (Edu) still keeps in touch with her college friends. Maureen transferred to CU after a trip to Aspen, Colorado, her sophomore year of college. “Aspen was like another universe to me,” she wrote. “I became totally enchanted with the Rocky Mountains, the people and, of course, skiing.” She arrived at CU having never seen the campus in fall 1975 and enjoyed every moment on campus. She lives in Oyster Bay, New York.

Posted Nov. 11, 2020

Perkins & Will Denver is an architectural design firm that specializes in sports, recreation and entertainment facility design. The firm, which employs the talent of Don Dethlefs (EnvDes; March’79) and Joseph Dyer (March’08), recently landed on the Sports Business Journal’s “Power Players List.”

Posted Mar. 4, 2021

After completing her master’s degree at CU, Melody Moore (Soc; MPubAdmin’87) studied protocol at the White House during the Carter administration, then began her career as a research scientist and managing associate for U.S. and international research and training projects. She also served as interim director at the National Evaluation Data and Technical Assistance Center and as an adjunct faculty member at Georgetown University. She retired in 2017 from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Posted Mar. 4, 2021

Each year, the towns around the D-Day landing beaches hold the D-Day Festival, during which participants from dozens of countries commemorate the event with a mass parachute drop honoring the American and Allied paratroopers who jumped into Normandy on June 6, 1944. Major Brian Campbell (IntlAf) led his California-based army reserve team for parachute and aircraft training in Florida as preparation for this June’s 77th anniversary commemoration in France.

Posted Jul. 2, 2021

After being the USA Basketball women's national team director for seven Olympics, Carol Callan (MPE’77; MBA’87) stepped down following the Tokyo Olympics. Carol serves as the first female president of FIBA Americas, the International Basketball Federation. She was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame 2021.

Posted Mar. 11, 2022

As a licensed esthetician and makeup artist, Jamie Gordon (Psych’77) — known from her time at CU as Dianne Jamie Loewy — launched the Jamie Gordon Skin Care Studio in Boulder in 1986. The business was the city’s first stand-alone skin care studio. Jamie managed the company for more than three decades before closing it during the pandemic to pursue art. Since then, she has been invited to show her work at numerous art exhibitions. Her most celebrated piece is a rendition of a banyan tree called "Our Tree," which has been published in several online galleries, has won awards and was printed as a flag as part of the “Joysome” art show produced by Boulder’s Dairy Center for the Arts and East Window this spring. View her art at ArtbyJamieGordon.com.

Posted Jul. 10, 2023

Author and historianGregoryHinton (Bus’77) won theSociety for AmericanArchivists 2023 DiversityAward for his reading of“A Sissy in Wyoming,”a story based on thelife of Larry “Sissy”Goodwin, a prominentactivist and cross-dress-er from Wyoming.For his Wyoming tourreadings of “A Sissy inWyoming,” Gregory alsowon the 2023 Awardof Excellence by theAmerican Associationfor State and LocalHistory. In 2009 Gregorycreated an educationalprogram called “OutWest,” which taught thehistory and culture ofLGBTQ+ in the AmericanWest, a theme that hasbeen a continual focusof his work.

Posted Nov. 6, 2023

In January H. Gregory Nelch (Mktg’77) joined the San Francisco branch of law firm Hinshaw & Culbertson LLC as senior counsel. He has more than three decades of experience advising national corporations, government entities and individuals in a wide range of litigation matters, including personal injury, product liability, construction defect, premises liability and professional negligence. After graduating from CU Boulder, he received his law degree from the University of Baltimore School of Law.

Posted Mar. 4, 2024

Nancy Ball Weil’s (Russ’77) short stories have appeared in the anthology Electric Grace and the online journal ArLiJo. She has served as the Women’s National Book Association’s (WNBA) award chair, national co-vice president, national website co-chair and Washington, D.C., chapter newsletter editor. The WNBA has been devoted to books and literacy since 1917. Nancy is also the author of two novels: Karmafornia and Superball.

Posted Mar. 4, 2024

Erica Elliott (MEdu’77; MD’83) is a medical doctor in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She wrote a book, From Mountains to Medicine: Scaling the Heights in Search of My Calling, about searching for her life’s purpose.

Posted Mar. 4, 2024

Mark Masters (IntlAf’77) is a veteran band announcer and a former drum major for the 1977–78 season of the CU Golden Buffalo Marching Band. Last fall, after 33 years of volunteering, he served as stadium announcer for the marching band for the final time. He lives in Denver.

Posted Mar. 4, 2024

Mariko Tatsumoto (Psych'74; Law'77) immigrated to the U.S. from Japan when she was 8 years old and became the first Asian woman attorney to be admitted to the Colorado Bar before becoming a novelist. Tatsumoto recently published a historical fiction novel, Blossoms on a Poisoned Sea, through Northampton House Press. Set in Japan, the book is based on the true events of one of history's most shocking corporate betrayals and industrial disasters. Tatsumoto explains: "Blossoms is about environmental pollution, politics, corporate cover-up, social injustice and ethics, along with romance and murders.

Posted Jul. 15, 2024

Gregory Hinton (PerMgmt'77) wrote A Sissy in Wyoming, a play about Larry Goodwin, a notable Wyoming resident who dressed in feminine clothing and faced discrimination for his self-expression. The play tells the story of his life and the trials he faced throughout it. Hinton's work has earned three national awards for diversity, excellence and fine art.

Posted Jul. 15, 2024

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