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TRANSCRIPT
Mercury Rising
Two for the Road to GoldAlums Mike Jankowski, ’98 B.S., and Michele Gleich, ’92 B.S., go Olympic in Torino p. 12
FALL 2006
THE MAGAZINE OF THE NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
NAU climate researchers work to make sense of soaring global temperatures
Behind the MikePhoenix radio personality and former class clown Tim Chelgren (attended) gets serious—sort of p. 14
ALSO: For NAU students who spent spring break rebuilding after Katrina, it was a labor of love. p. 16
Left to right: associate professors George Koch and Bruce Hungate
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In t
his
Iss
ue
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8Feeling the HeatNAU climate researchers
help unearth the mysteries of global warming and its effect on the planet.
12Olympic RingersMike Jankowski,
’98 B.S., and Michele Gleich, ’92 B.S., carry a torch for NAU—and the Olympic Winter Games in Torino.
14Top of the DialMeet Tim Chelgren,
aka Tim Hattrick (attended), the NAU half of Phoenix’s famous “Tim & Willy in the Morning” radio show on KNIX.
4 Thoughts What matters most? Sharing old—and
making new—memories. Join us for Homecoming and do both.
5 Links Casting calls, new faces, Fulbright Scholars and
all the newsletters fit to email.
16 Journeys NAU spring breakers help rebuild Mis-
sissippi after Hurricane Katrina.
18 Connections Find out what’s been happening
with your NAU classmates.
FEATURES
Lake Powell through the arch. —Photograph by Corbis International
Cover PhotoNAU was one of four universities selected by the U.S. Department of Energy to par-ticipate in The Climatic Change Research Project to study the effects global warming. NAU associate professors Bruce Hungate and George Koch are leading the charge.—Photograph by Michael Mertz
▲
DEPARTMENTS
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I t seems that we only realize what is truly important to us when we are faced with disaster. With the annual multitude of fires and other devastating weather in
the nation and around the world, I have entered a dialogue about what people would take if they had a limited amount of time to gather their most prized possessions. Evacuees take photos, artwork, childhood remembrances, jewelry, important papers and the like. It is not the “retail” goods that are important to us, but the things that evoke special times, places or people—our memories.
We hope you can join us this year for Homecoming, October 21, to solidify and rekindle your memories of NAU. We would love to see you, so make plans to join us
on the mountain campus. A great variety of events and activities are planned (see the back cover for listing).
In this issue of PINE, read about the tremendous role NAU’s faculty play in moni-toring climatic change (page 8). Live vicariously through two alums whose day jobs included the 2006 Olympic Games in Torino (page 12). And learn how the class clown became a successful radio personality (page 14). We are humbled to bring you photos and updates from the amazing work of NAU students in hurricane-ravaged Mississippi in Journeys (page 16). And as always, join us in celebrating your class-mates’ successes in Connections (page 18) and remember those whom we have lost in Memoirs (page 21). I leave you with a message from our PINE editor:
Whenever we offer a reader’s survey, there’s some nail biting as we wait for results. We want you to like us, really like us. Because so much of our work life is dedicated to creating the magazine, it’s wonderful to hear that you appreciate its subjects, style, and institutional message. We also hope your answers will convert into metrics that encourage continued funding for PINE and other related pro-grams. Most of all, your response means your relationship with NAU is reciprocal, and that by keeping connected you remain a dynamic participant in the university’s evolution (see results, page 7).
Please remember that you are always welcome to weigh in on PINE, alumni events, the Alumni Association in general, and the university’s present and future. Just email me at [email protected], or send your comments via our website, naualumni.com/feedback. We look forward to hearing your side of the story.
Until next time,
Krista Perkins, ’98Managing Editor
Anne WaldenEditor
MostWhat Matters
It has long been an axiom of mine that the little things are infinitely the most important. —Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
NAUThoughtsPUBLISHER, Molly Williams
MANAGING EDITOR, Krista Perkins, ’[email protected]
EDITOR, Anne [email protected]
NAU ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONNATIONAL BOARD OF DIRECTORSPRESIDENT, Sam Leyvas, ’97, Phoenix
VICE PRESIDENT, Clifford E. (Kip) Alexander III, ’94, Flagstaff
IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT Rhian Evans Allvin, ’94, Vail, Ariz.
TREASURERJohn M. Clark, ’77 & ’81, Oracle
PARLIAMENTARIANBarbara McCloud, ’78, Phoenix
Marc Atonna, ’95, Tempe
Mike Beatty, ’77, Prescott
LaTrice Brewster, ’92, Tucson
Wayne L. Connelley, ’76, Phoenix
Joy Gaeraths, ’98, Chandler
Ira Greenspan, ’71, Phoenix
José E. Herrera, ’96 & ’01, Gilbert
Debra Himes, ’75, Gilbert
Gerald P. (Jerry) Marchal, ’60, Fountain Hills
Yvette Martin, ’92, Phoenix
Dick Nothstein, ’59 & ’63, Palmerton, Pa.
Kimberly Ott, ’82, Flagstaff
Marvin Peterson, ’61 & ’70, Redding, Calif.
Paul J. Peterson, ’00, Phoenix
Heidi Shoen, ’72, Flagstaff
Daniel Slayton, ’78 & ’91, Flagstaff
Gary Tom, ’71 & ’75, Fredonia, Ariz.
EX OFFICIO
NAU PRESIDENT,Dr. John D. Haeger
VICE PRESIDENT FOR UNIVERSITYADVANCEMENT, Molly Williams
NAU ATHLETICS DIRECTOR, Jim Fallis
LIFETIME MEMBER, Dr. Joseph C. Rolle, ’41
LIFETIME MEMBER, Robert E. Crozier Jr., ’53 & ’71
STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT, Eric Norgard
NAU OFFICE OF ALUMNI & CONSTITUENT RELATIONSASSISTANT TO THE DIRECTOR, Krista Perkins, ’98
COMMUNICATIONS AND RECORDS, Anne Walden
VOLUNTEER AND STUDENT PROGRAMS, Julie Ward
REUNIONS AND EVENTS COORDINATOR,Beth Martin
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSOCIATE, Judith Burk
EVENTS COORDINATOR, SENIOR, Toni Fox
REUNION AND EVENTS COORDINATOR, SENIOR, Erin Bertelsen, ’01
PUBLISHING CONSULTANTSEDITOR, Allison Thomas
ART DIRECTOR, Lisa Altomare
PREP SPECIALIST, Julie S. Fong
PRODUCTION MANAGER, Laura Marlowe
V.P./CREATIVE SERVICES, Beth Tomkiw
ACCOUNT SUPERVISOR, Robyn LaMont ’96
MCMURRY CEO, Chris McMurry, ’87
PINE is published twice annually by McMurr y, 1010 E. Missouri Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85014. For more information about custom publishing, call McMurry at 888-626-8779. All editorial content © 2006 NAU Alumni Association. All rights reserved. PINE is a registered trademark of NAU Alumni Association.
Vol. 7, No. 4.
FALL 2006
PINE
Huddle up. NAU spring
breakers aid victims of Katrina.
NAME AND ADDRESS CHANGESTo submit address and name/marital status
changes, call the NAU Office of Alumni Relations
toll-free at 888-628-2586 (888-NAU-ALUM),
or email [email protected].
Send your letters to the editor to:PINEBox 6034Flagstaff, AZ 86011-6034Or email [email protected]
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Fulbright Scholars, Pharaohs and Far Away Stars
NAULinks
Corrections• In the spring 2006 PINE,
we printed the wrong grad
year for Dorothy Jean “Dee”
Strickland Johnson. The
correct year is 1956.
• The AIS article on page 6
misidentified graduate
students Shawn Kelley and
Ferrell Secakuku’s funding,
which was actually from
Hooper Environmental
Research awards.
• In response to our recap of
the 1965 Blue and Gold Class
Reunion, ’64 grad Paul Dodds
and several others reminded us
that NAU wasn’t Arizona State
Teachers College back then, but
rather Arizona State College.
For the record, the university’s
name changes are as follows:
Northern Arizona University,
May 1, 1966
Arizona State College,
July 1, 1945
Arizona State Teachers College
at Flagstaff, July 1, 1929
Northern Arizona State Teachers
College, July 1, 1925
Northern Arizona Normal
School, March 11, 1899
Paul was kind enough to forgive
our goof: “I suspect that we old
timers have made mistakes
now and then—but we have, of
course, forgotten about them.”
L ong ago and far away. This phrase aptly describes the research targets of NAU’s 2006-2007 Fulbright scholars, Professors
Kathy DeGioia Eastwood and Eugene Cruz-Uribe.Eastwood’s telescopic sights will take her to
the University of La Serena in Chile, where she’ll teach a stellar astronomy course for the fall semes-ter and continue her work: measuring massive stars only visible from the Southern Hemisphere.
Eastwood’s research determines the mass of stars by measuring their orbit around one another. Theoretical models are then compared to her research, which determines whether or not the theories were modeled correctly.
Phil Massey of Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff collaborates with Eastwood in her research. “A
theoretical understanding of these unusual stars is
important to under-standing the evolu-tion of our galaxy and of the universe as a whole,”
Eastwood says.The layout of the
stars surprised Eastwood the first time she visited South America.
“My favorite constellations were upside down,” she laughs.
Cruz-Uribe will teach ancient history at Egypt’s South Valley University, while recording and translating Egyptian graffiti from historic sites dating back from 600 B.C. until A.D. 300. Written in demotic, the vernacular of the day, these writ-ings reveal Egypt’s reaction to its loss of internal control and suppression by the Persians and later the Greeks and Romans. “The discovered texts provide the framework for analysis of social struc-tures and change over time,” Cruz-Uribe says.
Popularly known as “The Egypt Guy,” Cruz-Uribe integrates the results of his research into the courses to bring the concepts to life for stu-dents. His ability to vivify history has brought him international acclaim; he was recently quoted in a Discovery News article on the recovery of the Tut mummy’s sex organ.
While in Egypt, Cruz-Uribe also hopes to host a study tour as part of NAUAA’s Travel Program. Those lucky enough to recall his guest turn at last year’s King Tut Exhibit event—he had the Tut crowd rocking, leading them in spelling out the hieroglyphic version of N-A-U: “Water! Vulture Sign! Quail Chick!”—will be eager to join him on another spirited quest.
To Be or Not to Be? Definitely to BePreliminary casting calls are out for the 30-year Theatre Reunion, set to premiere in spring or
summer 2007. A variety of roles are available (Revelers, Reminiscers, Leading Ladies, Characters);
stage managers and supernumeraries (beer-carriers?) are welcome. Have your agent contact reunion
coordinator Erin Bertelsen, [email protected] or Rev. Curt Miner, ’77, [email protected].
UPDATE: Check in with the Alumni Office for details on a special trip to Egypt with Eugene Cruz-Uribe. It will fill up fast! 888-NAU-ALUM
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T he NAUAA National
Board of Directors is
pleased to welcome
four new members as of July 1,
2006. Each member will serve
three years, with an option to re-
up for a second three-year term:
•Kimberly A. Ott, ’82, Mass
Communications, Flagstaff. Kim
serves as Public Information
Officer for the City of Flagstaff.
She says, “I loved the quality edu-
cation I received at NAU – the
best university in the State of
Arizona. Being a proud graduate
and working to get other alumni
involved and active is a great way
for me to give back to NAU.”
•Marvin Peterson, ’61 & ’70,
Elementary Education, Redding,
Calif. Marvin retired in 2001 as
Superintendent/Principal of
the Igo-Ono-Platina School
District. “I was born and raised
in Flagstaff, and probably spent
more time on campus than
some of the staff. No matter
which organization I was in
at NAU, we spent most of our
time on traditions and service,
helping others.”
•The Honorable Daniel Slayton,
’78 & ’91, Sociology and Justice
Studies, Flagstaff. Dan is a
Judge for the Coconino County
Superior Court. “As a fourth-
generation native of Flagstaff
and third-generation graduate
of NAU, I believe I bring a very
deep sense of history and com-
mitment...and would endeavor
to encourage and reinforce that
same sense of excitement,
ownership and commitment
to NAU in other alumni.”
•Gary L. Tom, ’71 & ’75, Music
and Education, Fredonia, Ariz.
Gary is Chairman of the Kaibab
Band of Paiute Indians. “Educa-
tion has always been a priority,
and NAU has been a big part
of that process to me. I have a
particular concern that Indian
students who attended NAU
should be active and informed.”
We’d also like to take this
opportunity to thank our out-
going board members for their
outstanding service and invalu-
able friendship: Mark D. Popejoy
’93, Harry W. Sloan, Jr. ’72, The
Honorable John T. Sprott ’59,
and John A. Trujillo ’92.
of 2006
NAULinks New Faces
Ph
th
bA
dW
d/L
ifFi
l
Even though the PINE is now a quarterly publication, we know that’s not enough for your
inquiring minds. Fortunately, our access to new technology is allowing the NAUAA to keep
pace with news on the gallop, through our cutting edge e-newsletters:
• Now in its fifth year, the inimitable LouiE-News is a fast, timely, and occasionally playful monthly
e-newsletter dedicated to alumni events, university news and athletics, spotlights on university
initiatives and reflections on the people and ideas that create NAU’s remarkable community. Get
on the inside track at naualumni.com/LouieNewsSignup.
• NAU Alumni Who’s News is our new monthly online publication,
dedicated to the latest alumni happenings—weddings, births, alumni
gatherings, new jobs, job promotions and more—from NAU alumni
around the world. Compiled in an easy-to-read format (no ads or edi-
torials) and organized by class year, Who’s News keeps you informed
about the friends and classmates who made your college years
extraordinary. Sign up now at naualumni.com/wn.
The NAUAA online newsletters are available free, in both
graphic and text formats. Stay connected with friends and
classmates and the dynamic NAU universe. Subscribe today!
CALLING ALL NEWSHOUNDS
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I n a dead cert, fair dinkum trip Down Under, the NAU Shrine of the Ages Choir, under the direction of Dr. Edith A. Copley, will tour Australia and New Zealand in May 2007. Alumni and friends are invited to accompany their “mates” on this incredible adventure.
The tour begins on the North Island of New Zealand, with concerts in Auckland and Napier. NZ stops include Kelly Tarlton’s Underwater World & Antarctic Encounter, the Auckland Museum, the Sky Tower, the Wairakei Thermal area in Rotorua, Huka Falls, the glowworm caves and a Maori Hangi Feast and Concert.
Next stop is Sydney, Australia, where the group will perform with a local university choir and chamber orchestra. They’ll tour the famous Sydney Opera House, with the option of buying operatickets for an unforgettable evening. In Melbourne they’ll visit Healesville Wildlife Sanctuary, St. Paul’s and St. Patrick’s Cathedrals, Parliament House, the Botanical Gardens, and Victoria Market, ending on a harmonious note with a second concert accompanied by chamber orchestra. Shrine and University Chorale alumni are invited to sing the final set of the concert.
Cost per person is $3,450, including round-trip airfare from Phoenix, internal flights to and from Australia, full breakfast and dinner every day, motor coaches in New Zealand and Australia, and all tips and entrance fees.
Pack your kit and call today—the wonders of Oz await!
Many thanks to all who responded to our spring
2006 PINE Reader’s Survey. Congratulations to
Chris Brooks, ’99 B.A.I.L.S., who won the $100
Amazon gift card. The survey results were both
interesting and helpful, as we strategize the
direction of future communications:
95.7% of respondents rated PINE articles
interesting to very interesting.
Travel OpportunitiesChina Discovery April 25 - May 5, 2007
Experience the magic that has
drawn travelers to “the mysteri-
ous East” for centuries. Begin
in Beijing and journey to Xi’an;
then cruise for three nights on
the Yangtze River and explore
exotic Shanghai.
Alumni Campus Abroad: Italy May 25 - June 5, 2007
Bella Italia beckons with la
dolce vita! Spend five days in
both Sorrento and Orvieto—an
exclusive educational, cultural
and travel experience.
Scandinavia Discovery July 26 - August 5, 2007
Experience the romance and
drama of the Nordic lands.
Enjoy first-class accommoda-
tions while visiting Norway’s
most beautiful cities, Bergen
and maritime Oslo, and then it’s
on to cosmopolitan Stockholm.
Alumni Campus Abroad: Rhine River CruiseSeptember 19 - 27, 2007
Sail the legendary Rhine River
from historic Bonn, Germany
to the beautiful French city of
Strasbourg aboard the Dutch
river cruiser MS Heinrich Heine.
Special lectures at unique loca-
tions will enhance your insight
into this remarkable region.
You Said It82.5% say that PINE has positively
influenced their opinion of NAU.
42.2% keep PINE for future refer-
ence, and 41.1% pass along information
from the magazine.
43.8% apparently haven’t visited the
website, naualumni.com—and we’re thinkin’
it’s time you did!
To learn more, please contact the NAU Choral Studies office at 928-523-2642.
For more information on these or future travel programs, please call 888-NAU-ALUM (628-2586) or email [email protected].
the Didgeridoo?But Will They Learn to Play P
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T he way Bruce Hungate sees it, global warming is more than a discussion for politicians or just
another item on the six o’clock news. “It has the potential to radically change life on earth and impact plants and animals in a profound way,” says the associate pro-fessor in the Department of Biological Sciences at NAU. “It’s important that we understand how global warming affects precipitation, changes in the atmosphere and how plants, animals and microorgan-isms respond and react.”
Hungate is determined to find answers to today’s vexing questions. He and fellow NAU associate professor George Koch have spent years investi-gating how greenhouse gases impact atmospheric and climatic change. Now, they’re leading a broader initiative to
make sense of today’s rising global temperatures, melting ice packs and changing temperature and precipitation patterns. NAU is one of four national universities—along with Duke, Penn State and Michigan Tech—that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has selected as a regional center for the National Institute for Climatic Change Research (NICCR).
The climate study promises to influ-ence both scientific understanding and public policy. Sponsored by the DOE’s Office of Biological and Environmental Research, The Climatic Change Research Project will fund approximately $42 million in grants over the next five years. Scientists will examine the effects of potential climatic changes on U.S. ter-restrial ecosystems and how terrestrial
How much hotter can it really get? NAU climate researchers help unearth the mysteries of global warming by Samuel Greengard
Feeling the
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tBRUCE HUNGATETitle: Associate Professor,
Department of Biological
Sciences.
Education: A B.A. in music
and English from Stanford
University, a B.S. in biological
sciences and a Ph.D. from
University of California,
Berkeley.
Expertise: Ecosystem
processes, particularly
biogeochemical responses
to global changes, such as
rising atmospheric carbon
dioxide, climate change and
altered land use.
On his work: “It’s rewarding
to shape the future of
climatic research.”
GEORGE KOCHTitle: Associate Professor,
Department of Biological
Sciences.
Education: A B.S. and Ph.D.
in Biological Sciences from
Stanford University.
Expertise: Over the last 14
years, he has studied the
effects of carbon dioxide on
plants and terrestrial eco-
systems—having worked for
Swedish research institute
International Geosphere-
Biosphere Programme
before coming to NAU.
On his work: “This initia-
tive will help us understand
how ongoing and predicted
changes in climate will affect
the distribution of forests,
grasslands and deserts.”
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years, powerful hurricanes, extreme temperature variations and marked differences in precipitation patterns have become commonplace. Retreat-ing ice caps and changing ocean currents have forced scientists and policymakers to examine possible outcomes. “There’s a need to better understand changes in terrestrial ecosystems,” says Jeffrey S. Amthor, Program Manager for the NICCR.
ecosystems affect climatic systems. NAU’s regional office will oversee approximately $8 million in grants, which cover a 13-state Western region, including Alaska and Hawaii.
Says Hungate: “There is a tremen-dous amount of climatic change research going on in the U.S. The challenge is for everyone to pull the data together and figure out what it means. This project goes a long way toward making the goal
a reality.” Adds Koch, who specializes in plant ecophysiology: “This project has the potential to make a significant impact. It is a coordinated effort among the scientific community.”
Winds of ChangeAlthough global warming is a contro-versial topic, the disagreement isn’t over whether it exists but how it is changing the planet. Over the last few
Unless you’ve been living in the storm cellar for
the last decade, you’ve encountered headlines
about extreme weather and climatic shifts. It’s
changes of this nature that make the work of NAU
weather researchers and others so important.
“Ecological and environmental research could
prove invaluable as global warming takes hold,”
says George Koch.
Here are a few sobering weather stats:
• Storm Warning Last year, 28 tropical storms pounded the
Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico, an all-time record. Fifteen
developed into hurricanes, including three “superstorms” that
reached Category 3 (111 to 130 miles per hour). The worst,
Katrina, briefly reached Category 5 and destroyed much of
New Orleans and parts of the Gulf Coast. Likewise, record
numbers of tornadoes have hit the U.S. in recent years.
• Heat Wave Temperatures have shattered records in the U.S.,
Europe and elsewhere. Scientists say that the ongoing release
of “greenhouse gases” has increased global temperatures to
record levels and led to the melting of ice at the poles…and
beyond. In fact, Greenland’s glaciers are melting twice as fast
as in the mid-1980s. Researchers at UC Berkeley report that
the average worldwide temperature could spike by nearly
14 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the 21st century.
• Growing Concerns As ocean levels rise, many prime agricul-
tural areas will be threatened and urban areas, from Manhattan
to Miami, could wind up under water. Already, global warming
is killing vineyards in southern Spain and forcing vintners to
move to cooler regions of the Pyrenees Mountains. In Africa,
crop failures have increased and the threat of famine is growing.
Weather’s Wrath
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naualumni.com I Fall 2006 11
GIVING TREENAU associate professor George Koch gathers research samples from a magnifi-cent redwood.
According to Hungate, the project will focus on four pri-mary areas: the actual changes taking place in climates; how various ecosystems will adapt, move or evolve; how changes in carbon dioxide (CO2) will affect plants, animals and microorganisms; and what all the data, information and knowledge mean when researchers examine the big picture. “It’s important to determine how big of a prob-lem global warming is and how it might affect food, water and resources,” Hungate says.
A key scientific concern lies in understanding the relation-ship between living organisms and global warming. “When we ask the question, ‘How much warmer will the earth become over the next 50 or 100 years?’ a lot of factors enter into the equation,” Hungate says. “Part of the puzzle is how much CO2 humans will release into the atmosphere. But the other component is how plants, animals and soils will react.”
NAU’s role in the project is central to its success. Each regional center is responsible for weighing grant applica-tions and making project funding deci-sions. Since the NAU regional center was established in August 2005, Hungate and Koch have sifted through more than 90 solicitations of interest from various uni-versities and research institutions and pored over 25 proposals. “Researchers have submitted many interesting and worthwhile projects,” Koch says.
In May, the center announced that it will award four major grants totaling about $350,000. Recipients include NAU biology professor Neil S. Cobb, who will study pinyon pine forests along the Colorado Plateau; University of Wyoming assistant professor of
botany Kina Ogle, who will explore desert ecosystems of the Southwestern U.S.; Russell K. Monson, a professor of biology at the University of Colorado, who will examine subalpine forest ecosystems; and Edward Schuur, an assistant professor of ecosystem ecol-ogy at the University of Florida, who will study black spruce forests.
Climate ControlWhen NICCR announced its climatic research project in 2005, Hungate and Koch decided that they wanted to take an active role in guiding its future. “It’s an opportunity to set a direction for an important area of research and science,” Koch explains. In May 2005, the pair submitted a proposal to make NAU one of the four regional centers and the NICCR selected the school through an open peer review and evaluation process. Today, the
two researchers review grant requests and oversee the selection process.
They also communicate with officials at the other regional centers. Says Rob Jackson, a professor in the department of biology at Duke University: “Although DOE split the U.S. into four regions of research, we know that questions about the environment don’t stop at state boundaries. We work closely to coordi-nate our research.” The peer-review research papers that result from the grants will play an important role in setting public policy in the future.
“The goal is to make the research results available to the scientific community and to the general public, mainly through peer-reviewed publi-cations,” says Amthor. While NICCR focuses only on the basic science, “The information is used by policymakers and the public as they see fit,” he says.
NAU has received funding to run the center through 2011. During that time span, Hungate and Koch hope to oversee somewhere between 20 and 30 projects. Concludes Koch: “It’s an exciting oppor-tunity and one that will pay dividends for years to come.”
Although global warming is a controversial topic, the disagreement isn’t over whether it exists but how it is changing the planet.
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Mike Jankowski doesn’t use snow-
boarding slang during our interview, but you can feel it lurking at the fringes. His laid-back delivery embodies this “sick” (cool, awesome)
sport, born of the freewheeling skate-board/surfing tradition. In the Torino games, Jankowski helped forge this joyous rogue element into a new Olympic tradition as assistant coach of U.S. Snowboarding, and now looks to keep the team “dialed-in”—tuned to perfection—as its head coach.
Jankowski was introduced to snow-boarding at Snowbowl’s Hart Prairie during his freshman year at NAU. Soon he was an instructor. At the same time, he immersed himself in the Outdoor Leadership track of NAU’s Parks and Recreation Management program. Helmed by Prof. Pam Foti, the program trains students to work as leaders, guides and educators in outdoor environments. “We had a great class at NAU. Leading outdoor trips with Pam, backpack trips, river trips, worked well for me. Because Flagstaff was such an athletic town, it helped my interest in coaching.”
After graduating in 1998, Jankowski was hired as head freestyle coach at the Stratton Mountain School in Vermont. A sort of Hogwarts for Alpine athletes,
the school gave him the opportunity to work with better and better riders—among them, a young Lindsey Jacobellis, who went on to silver medal fame in Torino’s grueling Snowboard Cross.
Road to Glory Runs DownhillEven though the ethos of snowboarding is very much outside the box, Jankowski has followed a neatly linear progression in his career. He worked with the Junior National and Junior Olympic teams, signing on as assistant halfpipe coach for U.S. Snowboarding in ’03.
“My life path has fortunately taken me to the Olympic experience. I’ve been able to gravitate towards it,” he says.
The Torino games were “a very dra-matic experience for everyone,” says Jankowski. “The team isn’t actually selected until three or four weeks before the Games, and it doesn’t seem like it’s actually going to happen. I remember Shaun White (aka the Flying Tomato) was in a fog, but when we got our uni-forms he said, ‘Now I really feel like I’m part of the team.’”
Jankowski notes that with so many extraordinary individuals on the roster, such as White and Danny Kass, who recently got President Bush to autograph a Bush bobblehead doll, “We definitely had a bit of status, and everybody was happy to meet us. We had a leadership role there, winning medals early on,
and setting a precedent for the whole country and the whole games.”
Upon head coach Robert “Bud” Keene’s retirement this year, Jankowski readily assumed his own key leadership role. Looking to Vancouver in 2010, he emphasizes a flexible strategy: “We’re going to have to change with the times, and keep the organization progressive.”
Still, for both coach and athletes, snowboarding is more than a sport. “It’s not about [orders] coming from the coaches or the CEO. It’s about the riders, their heart and soul. They’re the pilot, the masters of their fate, pushing it because they love it and want to take it to the next level.”
Jankowski grins, and you can almost hear him thinking, “Phat!”
Mike Jankowski, ’98 B.S.: Dialed In
RingersOlympic
Mike Jankowski
Fall 2006 I naualumni.com12
Mike personally tests the halfpipe in Torino.
Mike Jankowski, ’98 B.S., and Michele Gleich, ’92 B.S., carry a torch for NAU—and the Olympic Winter Games in Torino
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naualumni.com I Fall 2006 13
Signora Gleich tours Torino.
Michele Gleich, ’92 B.S.: A Family Business
by Anne Walden
The Center and the WorldThe U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC)
recently selected NAU as its sixth
Community Partner. As Director of
the Center for High Altitude Training
Natalie Harlan explains, this designa-
tion kept the Center’s staff traveling:
• The first U.S. Olympic Community
Partner meetings for all the desig-
nated cities was June 21-23 in La Jolla,
Calif. Harlan and alum and chair of
the Center’s National Advisory Board,
Chris Bavasi, learned about opportu-
nities to host Olympic events.
• Harlan and Assistant Director
Sean Anthony attended the Olympic
Assembly June 23-24, for updates on
the State of the Olympic Movement
and preparations for the Beijing
Olympic Games in 2008.
• The next USOC/NAU Altitude
Training Symposium will be held
September 27-29, 2006 in Colorado
Springs. The session will focus on
practical application issues associ-
ated with altitude training as a means
of performance enhancement.
When we ask Michele Gleich for sound bites, she understands
perfectly. A savvy veteran of the media trenches, Gleich has parlayed a longtime love of both sports and broadcasting into a thriving career as an Olympic announcer—a success made sweeter by her professional collaboration with husband Carl F. Roepke, III, a former member of the U.S. Luge team.
Gleich vividly recalls the instant of her professional genesis. “I was 10 years old, watching the Olympics, and I thought, ‘That is what I want to do with my life.’ I had to be involved some-how with this thing I barely under-stood, but I felt the passion in my gut and my heart.”
Her vision was intensified when she was a broadcast journalism major at NAU, as the university exposed her to a lifestyle that was to be the subtext of her work. “Flagstaff and NAU are about being out in the mountains. My friends and I found many outdoor activities and extreme sports…it was just a way to blow off stress. But it became a huge funda-mental part of how I live my life now.”
More “March of the Penguins” than CNN Gleich eagerly recalls her own maverick inclination and “the amalgamation of profs” who encouraged her reportorial
style. “They would assign us to shoot the news. My classmates would cover car accidents, robberies, domestic violence. But I would shoot a docu-mentary of my friends climbing or kayaking, or a nature reel on the red mountain squirrel.
“The professors would reprimand me in front of the class—‘That’s not exactly what
I assigned,’ but afterwards they would say, ‘You’re really onto something here. This is your vision, your personal passion. Stick with it. It’s going to take you far.’”
Sure enough, Gleich landed her first postgrad job working for National Geographic as production assistant, creating rock climbing, kayaking and backcountry skiing films. “My dream job was my first job,” muses Gleich. “You think, where do I go from here? But [the exposure] allowed me to pursue my goal of working with the Olympics.”
For Gleich, “The entire Torino Games were a highlight! My husband and I worked together in a tiny broadcasting booth announcing bobsled, luge and skeleton.” Next came the Paralympics (announcing alpine ski racing and sled hockey). But although the couple offered to stay and help with the setup, the Torino powers-that-be encouraged them to travel Italy during the interval: “They insisted, ‘You’re the talent!’ Definitely a high point in our career.”
A longtime volunteer, coach and personal friend of many Paralympic ath-letes, Gleich was thrilled to announce their medal-winning races. “They’re the real sports luminaries to me. Just the fact that they are going on with their lives make them role models. It’s not the big names, it’s the big spirits that are important.”
During the Games, Gleich and Roepke were pregnant with their first child. “It was amazing to know that my professional and personal goals were all being met at the same, exact moment.” Now, while awaiting their next-generationluge-champion-broadcaster at home in Park City, Utah, Gleich is writing a book on women in sports.
The NAU profs were right. Gleich’s career will take her far. Look for the entire Gleich-Roepke entourage in Vancouver in 2010.
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Tell me about your time at NAU.
I transferred to NAU in the early 1980s and spent 2 ½ years there. I loved it. It was far enough from home that I felt like I was away, and yet it wasn’t so far that
I couldn’t go home on the weekends and do laun-dry. I met a couple guys working at the public station in Phoenix who had gone through the pro-gram at NAU and highly recommended it. They sold me on the fact that NAU was the perfect
Perfecting Their Shtick
So, what really goes into
producing the “Tim & Willy”
radio show? Tim Hattrick
explains the behind-the-
scenes “work” that brings
their show to life:
A radio consultant
came to the sta-
tion years ago and
asked us how we come up
with our ideas. It was a star-
tling question since we had
never really thought about
it. Our answer was simple:
We entertain and amuse
ourselves and that seems
to translate into something
people have liked over the
years. We really just try to
crack each other up. Willy
is very musically gifted,
whereas I think in terms of
music—parody songs, funny
spins on stories. Willy is
great at a lot of things I am
not and vice versa, so we
have a good marriage of two
personalities.
NAUQ & A
14 Fall 2006 I naualumni.com
atmosphere for learning broadcasting; you could really get hands-on in the student station and receive a well-rounded education. That turned out to be true. I really couldn’t have had a better experience than going to NAU. I think all the time about stuff that I learned there.
From the 1980s to now, the broadcast landscape has changed quite a bit. What do you think has changed for better or worse
Pho
togr
aph
by M
icha
el M
ertz
Meet Tim Chelgren, aka Tim Hattrick (attended), the NAU half of Phoenix’s famous “Tim & Willy in the Morning” radio show on KNIX
Tuned In
‘‘
‘‘FdPNFA06_14-15_QnA.indd 14FdPNFA06_14-15_QnA.indd 14 8/22/06 10:14:29 AM8/22/06 10:14:29 AM
since you first began your career on the airwaves?
I work for KNIX, which is part of the biggest radio company in the world, Clear Channel Communications. When I first started, a single entity might own an FM and AM station. Now I work at a company that has more than 1,400 sta-tions around the world and eight here in Phoenix alone. Their interests are on a bigger scale and how they measure success is different. Then, it was an “all for one, one for all” mentality within our building and everyone you saw that day had something to do with the final product and how well the station did. Now, it is much more global with many departments, layers and aspects of the business within the building. I almost feel like instead of a radio station, we’re a department within a Super Wal-Mart.
How did you choose Hattrick as your on-air last name?
When I left NAU, I started at KDKB in Phoenix as an intern and worked my way up to the morning show. After two weeks on the air the boss said, “I can’t tell what your name is when you say it on air, so I want you to pick one of these three names and start using it.” I picked Hattrick because I always liked hockey. The most ironic part was the guy who told me he couldn’t understand my name had a really difficult name to say.
You and your partner Willy have such great on-air chemistry. How did you first begin working together?
Willy and I met at a dinner party through a mutual friend who thought we might find each other funny. At the time, I worked at a station in Phoenix and needed a new radio partner because mine was leaving, and Willy had worked with a
naualumni.com I Fall 2006 15
It is funny how I used to get yelled at in school for being the class clown, and I turned that into being the guy who gets paid to be a smart aleck. It is awesome.
guy I was a big fan of, Jonathan Brandmeier, who had been in Phoenix a few years before that. We found out all of this during the dinner party, and I felt like we already knew each other a long time. From that night, we became golfing buddies and worked our way into being partners through a few different odd turns in the business. We’ve been working together since 1990.
You’ve been able to meet many country music legends. Who stands out in your mind?
We got to golf with Garth Brooks, I got to sing a duet with Wynonna [Judd] at one of our live shows, something I never expected. We also got to play guitar with Keith Urban, who has been great to us. Probably the biggest star and the nicest guy—and the biggest surprise to me—was Kenny Rogers. He came into the studio and hung out with us. He’s been a big star since I was in high school, and if there was anyone entitled to divalike behavior, it would be him. But he couldn’t have been cooler. He even said, “Make as much fun of me as you want, you can’t hurt me or take anything away from me, so have fun with it.”
You’ve won several major industry awards for your work. Is there one that’s particularly meaningful to you?
Right after Willy and I started on country radio in 1994, we won the Academy of Country Music award for Deejays of the Year. It is given to one radio show in the entire country and we wondered, “How on earth did we win this?” But it was eye opening. They had given us the award the night before the actual show. If you ever go to an awards show, get your hands on an award before you go. It is amazing what a kind of VIP pass that is! We won the same award last year, too.
If you weren’t a radio personality, what else could you see yourself doing?
I would be either a doctor or a fighter pilot—really, I have no idea. It is funny how I used to get yelled at in school for being the class clown, and I turned that into being the guy who gets paid to be a smart aleck. It is awesome.
Kid StuffWhen it comes to the Tim
& Willy Kids Fun-Dation,
self-proclaimed wiseguy
Tim Hattrick gets serious:
“Every year we do a
Christmas performance
and compile highlights
from the show on a
CD to sell and raise
money. We formed the
501(c)(3) to improve
the quality of life for
children and use it to
concentrate on charities
that matter to us. In addi-
tion, two dental offices in
town are donating all the
money they receive from
whitening procedures to
our foundation.
“Since its inception
in February 2001, more
than $700,000 has been
raised. Our Fun-Dation
board gets together to
decide where the money
goes. We have been lucky
to be able to do this for
so long and we don’t want
to ruin our karma. It has
been a great vehicle to
give back.”
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16 Fall 2006 I naualumni.com
A New Take on Spring
W hile many students opt for a sun-and-sand-
filled spring break, 40 NAU students traveled to Hancock County, Miss., last March to help rebuild after Hurricane Katrina. For one week, stu-dents participating in NAU’s “Alternative Spring Break” worked from dawn to dusk gut-ting houses and moving debris and trash that was covered in thick mud and black mold. The group handled home demoli-tion, drywalling, carpentry, roofing, and trash collection.
The visit was inspired by similar trips led by other univer-sities. Ann Halbach, leadership coordinator of Associated
Students of NAU, contacted Community Collaborations International (CCI), a non-profit agency that works with universities and high schools on aid projects, and together they orchestrated the spring break excursion.
For all involved, it was a fulfilling and life-changing adventure.
“This was a humbling, self-less experience that has taught me something about the impor-tance of the universal man,” says Kristin Morrison, a junior visual communications major. “If one person suffers, we all do. When we left they said they never had a group that showed as much initiative as ours. They loved the Arizona kids.”
The impact of these students’ efforts is felt campus-wide. “Our students are embracing
one of the things that makes a democracy successful—the inclusion of volunteerism,” says Molly Williams, vice president of University Advancement. “We talk about civic responsi-bility and good citizenship on campus, and here is a good example of our students embracing that concept and doing something.”
Many students documented the experience in memoirs and photographs. Senior pho-tography major Tyanna Burton captured the trip visually, and her work, some of which is seen here, was showcased at the School of Communications.
Students plan to visit again and more funding is needed to cover expenses. If you would like to help fund this effort, call the NAU Foundation at 928-523-2012.
NAUJourneys
Break
NAU student volunteers
Stacie Leach and Trent Shumway remove debris
Tamara McBride removes old tree roots
Photography by NAU student Tyanna Burton
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naualumni.com I Fall 2006 17
Mike Davis tears out the
interior of a home
Students and AmeriCorps volunteers gut an entire home
Volunteers’ lodging
Resting on the road
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18 Fall 2006 I naualumni.com
Submissions to Connections are published in order of receipt and are edited for length; accompanying high-resolution photographs are welcome.
1940sWesley A. Darby, attended, is Pastor Emeritus of West High Baptist Church in Phoenix. Author of a history of the Arizona Baptist Convention, he particularly recalls Prof. Downum’s teaching of the history of Western civilization. “It really turned me on to history, and I used it as I taught the history of English literature at Southwestern College for some 23 years.”
1950sLarry Schnebly, ’52 B.S., a past president of the NAUAA, reports that Jim Cook, ’58 B.S., often sends him reminiscences from his Journal of Prevarication. Jim’s title, incidentally, is Offi cial State Liar of Arizona. To read some of Jim’s yarns, visit http://www.wickenburg-az.com/?cat=14.
1960sDennis D. Murray, ’68 B.S., superintendent of the Perris Union (Calif.) High School District, received the Marcus Foster Leadership Award, which recognizes outstanding leader-ship and signifi cant contributions to
tion into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame. Two of Neil and Barbara’s children have followed in their parents’ footsteps, earning degrees at NAU and working as educators.
Paul Broyles, ’73 B.S.F., a third-generation National Park Service employee, led the attack against the Brins Fire near Sedona, Ariz. For Incident Commander Broyles, fi ght-ing the fi re is much more than a job: it’s personal. Broyles was born in Yosemite National Park, and spent his youth in states throughout the West. He paid his way through NAU fi ghting fi res, working in the Kaibab and Coconino national forests. On his off time, he would take his college girlfriend Gini—now his wife of 35 years—on dates to Slide Rock State Park. “It’s like coming home,” said Broyles of returning to Arizona to
LumberjacksLinking Up With Former
fi ght this fi re. “We all love the red rocks of Sedona, and I love fi refi ghting.”
Jon Reyhner, ’73 M.ED., ’77 ED.D., the author of American Indian Education: A History (University of Oklahoma Press) with Jeanne Eder, has recently completed Education and Language Revitalization (Chelsea House). Reyhner also maintains www2.nau.edu/~jar/AIE/index.html, the #1 website on American Indian education according to Yahoo. He is a professor at NAU’s College of Education.
Archie Beauvais, ’74 B.S.ED., ‘76 M.A.ED., was honored in March by Harvard University, where he received his ’82 ED.D., with an “Alumni of Color Conference Award.” He has recently published new articles in
education by a California school administrator. Dennis, who can give the $5,000 award to any California high school graduating senior in 2007, says, “I am always proud to relate to others that my basic educational foundation began with my training at ASC/NAU!”
1970sC. Neil DeWitt, ’71 B.S., ’76 M.A. and wife Barbara DeWitt, ’80 B.S.ED., ’87 M.A.ED., are retiring to their farm in Safford, Ariz. A public school administrator for 28 years, Neil has worked as principal at every school level in the state, and recently served as superintendent of the Whiteriver Unifi ed School District. He has also earned a plethora of honors in athletics, with a stint as coach of Junior Olympic wrestling and induc-
What’s NuIt was wonderful to hear from alumnus Tom Pyle, ’64 B.S., ’68 M.ED., who
bridged the technological gap between his Mac and our PCs to file this report:
In late October 2005, many of the earliest initiates into the Eta Iota
chapter of ASC/NAU’s Sigma Nu fraternity gathered in Laughlin, Nev. We
were thrilled to renew old acquaintances and share memories of our college
and fraternity-building years. We had tried to contact initiates from 1962
(the chapter’s first year of existence) through 1967; 32 were able to attend the reunion of “Old Nus,”
along with a number of spouses and other alums with close ties to the fraternity.
Sigma Nu Eta Iota actives attending were: Tony Baker, Dennis Bender, Ken Bond, Frank
Cowdrey, Tom Dingman, Bill Ekstrom, Larry Grady, Dennis Hossfeld, Thomas “Skip” Hoyle,
Gary Johnson, David Klensin, Bill Lafferty, Tim Madigan, Bob McGuinn, Bob Meador, Dennis
Meador, Bill Moffitt, John Monsegur, Dale Mullen, Mark Mullen, Bill Neill, Bob O’Connor,
Max Peterson, Chad Porter, Jim Purtill, Tom Pyle, Jay Richey, Rex Schmid, Tim Shuey, and
Carl Winters. Former pledges Doug Knox and Sonny McDoniel also came, as did Ray Gillespie,
a former Sigma Nu roommate.
Spouses who attended and/or graduated from NAU included: Judy McClurg Baker, Sara
Redman Besser, Diane Duffy Cowdrey, Dianne Haydon Ekstrom, Kathleen Tath Maurer
Hossfeld, Jane Ann Shockley Hoyle, Toni Oonk Purtill, Amanda Butler Pyle and Barbara
Dirst Winters.
The old Nus hope to have another reunion each fall. For further information, please contact
the NAU Alumni Office, [email protected].
NAUConnections
Paul Broyles, ’73, worked to control the Brins Fire.
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the American Indian Graduate Center magazine, the Tribal College Journal and Indian Education Today. Beauvais worked for 20 years at Sinte Gleska University on the Rosebud Sioux reservation in South Dakota. He is currently a correspondent/columnist for the Lakota Country Times.
Joseph DeTevis, ’74 M.A., writes from Uvalde, Tex., “Although I’m now retired, I started a monthly art exhibit in our El Progreso Memorial Library in 1996. Each month I put up artwork by local and surrounding area artists, with great publicity in our Uvalde Leader News.”
Karen Butterfi eld, ’75 B.S.ED., ’80 M.A.ED., ’92 Hon., ’95 ED.D., is associate superintendent of aca-demic achievement at the Arizona Department of Education. She is charged with overseeing the largest division of ADE, including the federal entitlement areas of No Child Left Behind, and serves as state team leader for high school renewal. Husband Ernie Butterfi eld, ’76 B.S., remains busy in his career in Flagstaff, while daugh-ter Amanda Butterfi eld, ’04 B.S., is in NAU’s physical therapy doctoral program. Daughter Katie has fi nished her freshman year at U of A.
Blair Moody, ’75 B.S.F., has been elected a Fellow by the Society of American Foresters (SAF), an honor accorded to only an elite few. A forester for the Bureau of Land Management in Medford, Ore. specializing in small diameter trees and the development of biomass programs, Blair was rec-ognized for “strong continuing com-mitment through direct SAF volunteer
activities and his exemplary action, sustained leadership and advancement of the profession at the local, regional and national level.”
Richard Schell, ’75 B.S., retired in April as chief of fi re planning and engineering after nearly 30 years with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. He is providing consulting services in wildland fi re loss mitigation through his own com-pany, RWS Consulting and as a senior associate with The McMullen Com-pany in Davis, Calif. “My wife Alta and I still reside in Carmichael, and spend as much time as possible traveling this great nation in our motorhome and visiting our grandchildren.”
Carroll Klein, ’76 B.S., ’77 M.A., has been named CEO of Make-A-Wish Foundation of Arizona. He has also served as the executive director of Habitat for Humanity and executive director of Greater Phoenix Youth at Risk, and led a variety of fundrais-ing functions at the American Red Cross and St. Mary’s Food Bank. Before joining the nonprofi t world, Carroll spent nine years as associ-ate dean of students for DeVry Institute of Technology in Phoenix.
Alice Brew, ’78 M.M., recently re-turned from Ukraine where she was a Peace Corps volunteer. “While teach-ing art to severely mentally challenged children, I wrote a book, Art Recipes, Cooking Up Some Art With Things Around the Home. Although it was written for ‘special’ children, it is for all little children to play around with art.” The book sells for $12, and all monies go to sustain Center Nadiya (Hope). To fi nd out more, please contact Alice at [email protected].
1980sPat Meldrum, ’81 B.S., a Southwest Region sales leader for Allstate, received a 2005 Spirit of the Eagle Award in the Agency Consulting Leader category. The award honors
the top fi eld distribution leaders in the nation, “epitomizing the value Allstate places on professionalism and displaying the standard of excellence the company holds for its leaders.”
Kenneth R. Leeser, ’82 M.B.A., is marketing manager for Roche Diagnostics’ CoaguCheck system, which uses a fi nger-stick test to check PT/INRs on patients who take warfarin. “My wife and I have lived in the Indianapolis area since ’99, but my heart is still in Arizona.” The fam-ily includes Kirsten, an elementary school teacher, and Kyle, a college sophomore, both in Kansas; younger children Sasha and Victor are in fi rst and second grade.
Tim Propps, ’88 B.S.ED., owns an Allstate Insurance Agency in Chandler, Ariz. He lives in Ahwatukee with his wife, Michele Corabi Propps, ’88 B.S., who has taught in the Kyrene district for 17 years. With their daugh-ter, Bella, they enjoy spending time at Tim’s parents’ home in Munds Park and “driving through the NAU campus to reminisce.”
Kathy Sohn, ’89 M.A., writes that her book, Whistlin’ and Crowin’ Women of Appalachia (SIU Press), is now available online at both Amazon and Barnes and Noble. “Any reader can identify with the stories of these women; they overcame great adversity to get a college degree, and I am sure that NAU has many such students who have graduated and made a
naualumni.com I Fall 2006 19
difference in their lives and the lives of those around them.”
1990sPeter Fulé, ’90 M.S.F., ’96 PH.D., an associate professor at NAU’s School of Forestry and associate director of the Ecological Restoration Institute, recently traveled to Europe on sabbatical, where he saw Arthur Reinelt, ’91 M.S., and future alumni in the snow in “Arizona.”
Sue Sisley, ’91 B.S., recently performed the role of Lita Encore—“a razor-tongued, dragon lady of a theatre critic”—in a production of Ruthless! at Scottsdale (Ariz.) Desert Stages Theatre.
Andrew Fine, ’92 M.B.A., has been appointed vice president of member services for Boutique Hotels & Resorts International, a global alliance of independent boutique hotels. After 15 years of managing hotel and resort properties coast-to-coast, Andrew now oversees public relations, manages liaison responsibilities and program development and the Asian production division. He and wife Terra, an artist, live and kayak on serene Orcas Island, Wash.
Gayle L. Gemmill Mabery, ’92 B.S.B.A., received a $10,600 scholarship to attend a three-week seminar for senior management at the John F. Kennedy School of Govern-ment at Harvard University. Gayle has been Clarkdale (Ariz.) town manager since 1998. She is married to Scott Mabery, ’91 B.S.
Arthur Reinelt, ’91 M.S., and future alumni, in a European “Arizona.”
Carroll Klein, ’76, and Ian A., whose wish is to become a CEO.
Secret Handshake: At a recent gathering, Ernie Calderón, ’79, and Beverly Bellwood Burns, ’50, compare their Gold Axe awards.
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NAUConnections
20 Fall 2006 I naualumni.com
Mike O’Donnell, ’93 B.S., has been in radio for over 10 years as an on-air host, in concert and event sales and currently as sales manager with the CBS Radio properties in Phoenix. Mike also owns and operates an off-road racing team as well as a marketing and advertising fi rm. With a second home in Flagstaff’s Continental, he can be found with wife Jaye and daughter Shea “grabbing a slice of pizza at NiMarco’s on any given Saturday.” Mike misses his NAU friends, and welcomes email at [email protected].
Bobby Yazzie, ’93 B.S.ACCY., and Marietta Rodriguez, ’96 B.S.ACCY., were spotted by NAU accounting professor Nancy Wilburn watching their daughter play soft-ball. Marietta works for Southwest Windpower, and Bobby was recently promoted to controller at Tuba City Regional Health Care.
Karen Buchan, ’94 M.ED., is the author of Visio Divina: A New Prayer Practice for Encounters with God (Crossroad Publishing). The book explains a new prayer technique that “can tap into and transform profound
currents of fear and woundedness into streams of divine acceptance and love.” Karen has been adjunct professor at Fuller Theological Seminary while also teaching various seminars on spiritual formation and healing.
Ruth Botwinik, ’95 M.A., has been awarded a prestigious Fulbright Scholar Grant to teach English and work with teacher trainers at the Uzbekistan State University of World Languages in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.
Brian Bond, ’97 B.S., and Karen Martin Bond, ’98 B.S., are enjoying life in Arizona. After working for fi ve years as a systems analyst for the City of Mesa GIS, Brian is doing Internet mapping and programming for Yavapai County MIS. Karen uses her teaching degree instructing four of their six (number seven due in September!) children at home.
Steve Yoder, ’97 M.A., has been appointed executive director of The Arboretum at Flagstaff. He has previ-ously served as education director, assistant director, vice president of operations and acting director. Steve has also been on the board of the
Flagstaff Festival of Science and was Festival president twice. “I am delighted to see Steve assume this new role,” says Arboretum benefactor Frances McAllister, ’02 Hon. “He has proven his dedication, and will provide solid leadership as we head into the next 25 years.”
Chuck Murray, ’98 B.S., lives in Hawaii and works with UHA, the state’s third largest commercial health carrier. “2005 was a great year for my wife and me. We welcomed our fi rst
child and I was named chief fi nancial offi cer by the board of directors. Hawaii is a beautiful place to live but I can’t wait to get back to visit Flagstaff and Sedona.”
William B. Zemblidge, ’99 B.A., is now a United States postal inspector in San Francisco, Calif.
2000sAdam Barrows, ’00 M.A., has accepted a tenure-track, assistant professor position in British Common-wealth and Postcolonial Literature at the English department of Salisbury University in Maryland.
Terence Mok, ’00 B.S.B.A., is work-ing for a mortgage broker fi rm in San Mateo, Calif., as a senior underwriting analyst. Before that he co-founded a mortgage company in San Jose. “Hon-estly, I still miss the studying life at NAU, and feel happy that I did not transfer to U of A as a sophomore.”
Lori Couture, ’01 B.S.B.A., ’04 M.ED., has formed an unusual and humorously scatological product line, shop.browntowns.com. She writes that she and the artists she hired to “make it all happen” are all NAU alumni. Lori currently teaches several web-based classes for the university.
Barton J. Boma, ’02 B.S., a KC-10 Extender pilot (USAF) with the 6th Aerial Refueling Squadron, recently enjoyed a perfectly normal Saturday biking through Los Posados Park in Napa Valley, Calif.—with his boss, President Bush. “It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and a great way to spend Earth Day.” Accompanied by a few fellow corpsmen and appropriate
Future NAU Alumni
Samuel BlackmoreMom is Stacie Blackmore Ruppert, ’01 B.M.E.
Jacob Matthew Sona Eriksen Mom is Erin Sona Eriksen, ’99 B.A.I.L.S., ’05 M.S.
Natalie Marie AukerParents are Joy Belisle Auker, ’99 B.S., and Chad Auker, ’99 B.S.E.
Logan Robert AllenParents are Michelle Allen, ’95 B.S.ED., ’97 M.ED., and Bob Allen, ’96 B.S.ED., ’05 M.ED.
Barton J. Boma, ’02 (second from right), with his boss, President Bush, who seems unbruised.
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Secret Service personnel, Boma recalls, “I kept telling myself, ‘Don’t pass him and defi nitely don’t take him out accidentally.’“
Mark Powell, ’02 B.S., who works for Brokers Choice of America in Englewood, Colo., has good advice for students anticipating a career in his industry: “My greatest experience at NAU was meeting people in my major and developing successful advertising campaigns that helped me in the real world…Make sure to allocate your time wisely. In the world of advertising and marketing you must be a sociable person—so have fun at NAU and balance your study time with extracurricular activities.”
Stefanie A. Murphy, ’03 B.S.B.A., was recently promoted to project manager for the Maricopa County Offi ce of the Board of Supervisors. She and husband Ryan Murphy, ’98 B.S.T., live in Ahwatukee, Ariz., with son Connor.
Pete Corbell, ’04 B.A.I.L.S., was recently promoted to general man-ager of Quality Inn in Flagstaff. A mem-ber of the Navajo Nation raised on his family’s sheep camp in Kaibeto, Pete worked for the Navajo Housing Authority as an internal auditor and as an accountant for Navajo Community Development. He and wife Dora have four children.
Peter M. Krahenbuhl, ’04 B.S.B.A., is in sales for a condominium conver-sion company and high-rise towers in downtown Phoenix and Scottsdale.
Matthew K. Galbraith, ’05 B.S., completed U.S. Navy basic training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Ill.
Chad Jans, ’05 B.S.B.A., began working for ISEC, Inc. as a project engineer assisting in the manage-ment of several projects with varying scopes throughout Arizona. He writes, “I don’t think I would have found that I wanted to call project management a career without Professor Williams’ BA 499 course.”
naualumni.com I Fall 2006 21
AlumniCatherine Jones Hall, ’26, April 3, 2006. Teacher in Cibecue, Ariz. from 1927-1929. Earned a B.S. in library science from University of Wash-ington, and worked as a librarian at University of Idaho and for the Los Angeles School System. Retired to Bandon, Ore. Life member of the Order of the Eastern Star.
Yale McFate, ’30 B.S.ED., January 28, 2006. Presided over cases of international importance, including the 1963 rape case that led to the U.S. Supreme Court’s Miranda decision. Successful self-educated lawyer and judge who did not attend law school, passing the Bar in 1934. Stationed at Pearl Harbor in WWII. Served on
Memoirs
James A. “Jim” Carr
They Will Be Missedboth Maricopa County Superior Court and the Arizona Court of Appeals.
William M. Hannah, ’55 B.S.ED., January 10, 2006. Outstanding athlete, excelling in football, basket-ball, and track; attended NAU on an athletic scholarship. U.S. Army M.P.; taught on the Navajo Reservation and
February 4, 2006. When Jim Carr passed away, the NAUAA received
two extraordinary, impassioned letters, from an administrator and a
former student. Their words demonstrate eloquently just how valuable
NAU’s instructors of different educational backgrounds are to the
university’s tradition of academic excellence—including those
whose amassed knowledge doesn’t come with a doctoral seal.
From Chuck Pilon, ’59 B.S., ’66 M.A., former director of state-
wide academic programs for Maricopa County and past president
of the NAU Alumni Association:
As an adjunct professor of history for NAU, Jim taught thou-
sands and thousands of NAU undergraduates in the Maricopa
County Bachelor of General Studies degree program. He taught
over 90 classes for NAU; his evaluations were always the highest
of the adjunct teaching staff and he received the outstanding
adjunct professor award.
A teacher, lecturer, researcher, and author, Jim was among the
most outstanding academicians at NAU, a peer with Dr. Garland
Downum and Dr. William Tinsley.
From Michele D. Pettit, ’97 B.G.S., ’00 M.A., now a doctoral
candidate at Boise State University:
I must give credit for my academic success to Mr. Carr—or as many of his students fondly called
him, “Professor Carr.” He was a true fi nd, a rare individual, who always went above and beyond a
course’s outlined objectives to make sure you understood and could apply what he was teaching you.
Mr. Carr never carried any lecture notes or opened a book if there was a question. Dates, names,
and places were all in his mind, clear as a bell; sometimes I wondered if he might even be able to tell
you what the weather conditions were like on the day of a certain battle. I never liked history before Mr.
Carr’s classes, but he was so good at depicting historic scenarios, at locating you in a particular time
and place—he captivated us. You could not help loving the subject matter, as well as the man explaining
it with all of his heart and soul.
I’ve always had wonderful experiences at NAU, and never hesitate to tell others. But Mr. Carr is
beyond the realm of exceptional. We were extremely blessed to have such a superb instructor, a kind
and highly dignifi ed gentleman who lived to teach history.
“Dates, names, and places were all in his mind, clear as a bell; some-times I wondered if he might even be able to tell you what the weather conditions were like on the day of a certain battle.”
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22 Fall 2006 I naualumni.com
NAUConnectionsin California. Retired in 2001 from the federal government, where he was a Head Start Program Specialist.
Nancy C. Dvorak, ’58 B.S.ED., December 23, 2005, a “down-winder,” from cancer. A member of the Top-Hatters, she was also a charter member of Tri-Delta. She and husband Leo Dvorak (Sigma Pi) were the fi rst fraternity-sorority pinning on the ASC campus. Taught in Arizona, Colorado, Nevada and California, where she retired as a kindergarten teacher from the El Centro Elementary School District.
Mary Ray, ’61 B.S.ED., March 8, 2006.
Ronald A. Terrill, ’62 B.A., March 11, 2006. Resided in Las Vegas for the past 35 years, working in the gaming industry. Past Master of the Acacia Masonic Lodge #49 of North Las Vegas.
Frankie Marianito, ’64 B.S.ED., March 15, 2006.
Earl R. Putman, ’64 M.ED., February 19, 2006. Recruited for football by both Woody Hayes and Bear Bryant, but chose ASU. Served in the Korean War and was All-Service champion in shot put and discus. Drafted to the new York Giants, Hamilton Tiger Cats, and Chicago Cardinals. 25-year football coach at Moon Valley (Ariz.) High School, winner of the 1982 AAA Arizona State Championship, and a “gentle giant of a man in stature, character, and accomplishments.”
Kenneth J. Orms, ’67 B.S.B.A., ’69 M.B.A., March 19, 2006, in a plane crash. A fi fth-generation Arizonan who owned Platinum Mort-gage and Real Estate in Scottsdale.
A. John Swartz, ’66 B.S., ’67 M.S., March 28, 2006. Attended NAU on a band scholarship. Avid French Horn enthusiast, studying under Herr Stocker of the Stuttgart Sym-phony and playing with the Austin
Valeen Tippets Avery ’81 M.A., ’83 PH.D., April 7, 2006. Award-winning biographer, history
professor, Homecoming Dedicatee, cook, storyteller, grandmother, bar-
gain shopper and intrepid explorer. Those who knew Val Avery could easily
add a wealth of complimentary epithets. At her memorial service, son Nate
said he could describe his mother in one word: fi erce.
A westerner by birth and temperament, Val grew up on ranches and alfalfa farms in the Sun River
Valley, west of Great Falls, Mont. Graduating magna cum laude from Rocky Mountain College in 1959,
she worked several years for World University Services and spent time in Europe leading tour groups.
Following her husband Charles Avery’s career in the Forest Service, she lived throughout the West and
Southwest, settling in Flagstaff in 1971. For six years starting in 1972 she hosted an educational program,
Thrifty Kitchen, on northern Arizona television.
While researching material for a biography on Emma Hale Smith (see below), Val completed two
advanced degrees at NAU and began her career as a history professor, specializing in women’s history
and Colorado Plateau studies. Both of her key biographical works, Mormon Enigma: Emma Hale Smith,
Prophet’s Wife, Elect Lady, Polygamy’s Foe (1984) and From Mission to Madness: The Last Son of the
Mormon Prophet (1998), won the Evans Award for the best biography in Western history.
In 1996 she married fellow NAU professor Bryan Short, and continued life’s adventures with their
combined family of six children. A beloved member of the NAU community, Short passed away in 2003.
When Val died unexpectedly in the spring, regional media could not fi nd enough praise for her depth
and versatility. The Salt Lake Tribune wrote about the pitfalls of her sometimes controversial work:
What most Mormon historians know about Avery is that she co-wrote the first scholarly biography of Emma Hale Smith, wife of LDS founder Joseph Smith. They might also have heard of the LDS Church’s refusal to allow Avery and her co-author, Linda King Newell, to talk about Emma Smith at church meet-
ings after their book was published in 1984. It has been popularly known in Mormon circles as “the silencing.”
In the same article, friend and colleague Jan Shipps, an emeritus historian at Indiana University/
Purdue University at Indianapolis recalled, “Val had the essential empathy that is key to great biography,
and that empathy made her one of the world’s greatest friends.”
It was this personal touch that Val’s students recall most gratefully. Kathy Farretta, ’04 M.A. in
history, recalls her indebtedness to Val for chairing her master’s thesis committee. “Professors don’t
get any extra money for serving on these committees,” says Farretta. “But Val agreed to be my chair
despite her incredibly busy schedule, because she personally knew what it would take for me to get
the work done. When it was time for my thesis defense I was petrifi ed, but Val took me in hand and
said, ‘We’re on your side.’ It was important to her that I wasn’t scared and knew what the experience
was going to be like.” After the defense, Farretta waited anxiously in the hall as the committee debated;
and then “Val came out with a huge smile on her face and said, ‘Congratulations, Master.’ She cared so
much about learning and scholarship—and more than anything else about teaching.”
Dr. Avery’s papers are being donated to Utah State University, an important hub of Mormon schol-
arship. In tribute to her incomparable life and work, the Avery family set up an endowment, the Valeen
T. Avery Scholarship. For more information, please contact the NAU Foundation at 928-523-2012.
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naualumni.com I Fall 2006 23
Kermit C. Smith, ’81 M.B.A., April 21, 2006. Served two years as an Army M.P. in Germany. Held a variety of high-level positions throughout the Arizona educational system, spending the last several years as behavioral health technician and director of education at Mingus Mountain Academy in Prescott Valley, Ariz.
Caroline Baer, ’87 B.G.S., October 26, 2005.
Frederick J. Bellanger, ’83 B.S., ’87 M.ED., February 7, 2006. Served U.S. Army in Cambodia, Vietnam, and Hawaii, receiving an NCO of the Year award in 1958. Employed by Sperry Flight Systems (Honeywell) for 31 years. Dedicated volunteer for Heard Museum and fi rst Native American to serve as president for the Heard Guild. Talented silversmith and Native American jewelry artisan.
Julie Anne Gannon, ’87 B.S., 2006, of cancer. Juvenile corrections worker, probation offi cer and dedicated DUI evaluator for Colorado’s 9th Judicial District. Traveler, bicyclist, triathlete.
George W. Marshall, ’83 B.S.B.A., April 23, 2006. Pilot for the U.S. Navy and SkyWest Airlines.
Constance L. Erickson, ’93 B.S., December 12, 2005.
Ricky Morrison, ’95 B.S., ’98 M.ED., February 5, 2006.
Leslie Ann Emmert, ’99 M.ED., ’02 M.ED., January 26, 2006. Preschool and kindergarten teacher in Gilbert (Ariz.) public schools, Alhambra preschool and Cartwright head start program. Expert grant writer and peer grant reviewer.
Friends and AssociatesLorraine Frank, December 22, 2005. Member of the Arizona Board of Regents and longtime civic and community leader.
Jeanne B. Franklin, March 24, 2006. Assistant professor of music at ASC in the late ’40s and early ’50s who helped found ASC’s opera department.
Symphony. He was also a career computer engineer—working on mili-tary, aerospace, and health/human service projects—and a voracious reader, member of the Austin Writers’ League and country-western dancer.
Raymond W. Angel, ’69 B.S., March 22, 2006. In the U.S. Navy for 27 years, retiring as a Chief Hospital Corpsman. Served the County of San Diego as a health inspector until 1999.
James E. Moore, ’69 M.ED., Janu-ary 13, 2006. Served in the Marines during WWII. Worked for the Vinnell Corp. in Saudi Arabia. In Arizona, he was employed by the Gila County Indian Reservation, the Scottsdale school district and the YMCA.
Arlene C. Nard, ’69 B.S.ED., ’75 M.ED., September 24, 2005.
Jim Kuykendall, ’72 B.S.B.A., April 14, 2006. Owner of Canyon County Tires in Logan, Ut., for 23 years, where he enjoyed tak-ing care of customers fairly and honestly. Cultivated a lifetime love of travel; frequent participant in National Bowling Championships.
Howard Chrisman, ’74 B.S.ED., January 25, 2006. A career Air Force man as well as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Woodmen of the World.
David B. Czarnecki, ’78 PH.D., May 4, 2006. Known by many as “Dr. Diatom,” for his research interests with diatom algae, with experiments aboard the space shuttle and an internationally known culture collection. Professor at Loras College since 1984, with previous positions at the University of Minnesota, University of Arkansas, and Iowa State University.
Charles A. “Chuck” Milam, January 22, 2006. Long career in law enforce-ment at NAU, winning “Offi cer of the Year” twice and named Homecoming Dedicatee in 1992. After retirement served as judge pro tem for Coconino County Justice Court.
Mary Jeanne Brand Minor, February 20, 2006. Widow of former School of Forestry head Charles Minor. Committed involvement in Flagstaff community, serving on the Coconino Country Board of Health and the board of the Flagstaff Summer Festival of the Arts; helped found Flagstaff Cooperative Preschool.
Guy Monthan Jr., May 19, 2006. Advertising and design teacher, established one of the fi rst NAU photography courses. Professional photographer, collaborating with his wife on numerous books and articles detailing contemporary American Indian art.
Tremaine “Whitey” McKinstry Penrose, January 10, 2006. Worked as a plumber at NAU for 24 years.
John W. Prather, February 20, 2006. Science lead on NAU’s Forest Ecosystem Restoration Analysis Project. Accomplished researcher in the ecology, behavior, and distri-bution of terrestrial vertebrates, with an emphasis on birds.
Look for contests, surveys, and other ways to get involved
at naualumni.com.web
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17Homecoming Dedicatee Banquet, 6 p.m., Ashurst Audi-torium. Honor the Homecoming Dedicatee. Students $6; others $10. Contact Art Farmer at 928-523-5181 or [email protected].
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19Homecoming Traditions Day, times TBD, Tinsley, Wilson, Allen Quad (weather permitting). Bonfi re and other activities. Con-tact Art Farmer at 928-523-5181 or [email protected].
School Of Forestry 1960s Re-union. Welcome back to the Colorado Plateau! Reunion events continue through Sunday, October 22. For details, schedule and reservations, contact Pam Plude at 928-523-7417 or [email protected].
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20College of Business Administra-tion Open House/Tours, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., New CBA Bldg. 81 (South campus, McConnell & Knoles). See the magnifi cent new CBA Building! Students will provide tours. Contact Betsy Putman at 928-523-7128 or [email protected].
Consortium Of Professional Schools, School Of Nursing Simulation Folk Roundup, 2 to 6 p.m., Nursing Sciences Bldg. 72. Our high fi delity simulation manikins—used in teaching nursing students—will have just participated in a rodeo. See the aftermath of true-life cowboy shenanigans. It’ll be a rootin’ tootin’, good ol’ time with some nice fi xins to chow on. Con-tact Ilene Decker at 928-523-2159, [email protected] or Dian Allred, 928-523-2671, [email protected].
SBS Alumni And Friends Social, 4 to 6 p.m., School of Communication, Bldg. 16. Join the Dean, faculty, staff, alumni and friends of the College of Social & Behavioral Sciences for a reception in the beautifully renovated School of Communication. Reconnect with friends and faculty while learning
about exciting developments in SBS departments from Anthropol-ogy to Women’s Studies. Contact Michelle Brown at 928-523-2672 or [email protected].
College Of Arts & Letters Alumni and Friends Reception, 5 to 7 p.m., NAU Art Museum, Old Main, Bldg. 10. Meet the College of Arts & Letters’ new Dean, Dr. Michael Vincent, and mingle with faculty and friends. An outstanding international ceramics exhibition from our 20 + 1 Years of the Tozan Kilns, An International Wood Fire Conference will be on display. Contact Elizabeth Hellstern at 928-523-8656 or [email protected].
College Of Business Administra-tion Alumni & Faculty Hall of Fame Dinner, 6 p.m., Coconino Center for the Arts, 2300 N. Fort Val-ley Rd. All CBA alumni are invited to this event recognizing the achieve-ments of outstanding CBA alumni and faculty. Cost is $35 for non-hon-orees. RSVP required. For more in-formation about the CBA Alumni Hall of Fame, please see wwwcba.nau.edu/publications/dqr/Q4_2005/AlumniFiles_HallofFame2005.asp. Contact Betsy Putman at 928-523-7128 or [email protected].
Axer Auction, 5 to 9 p.m., Rolle Activity Center. NAU Athletics and the Lumberjack Athletic Association will host the Axer Auction, which benefi ts Lumberjack athletic scholarships. If you’re interested in attending or donating items for auction, contact Maria Bruggeman at 928-523-6785 or [email protected].
Blue And Gold Reunion. Welcome, Class of 1966! Reunion events con-tinue through Saturday, Oct. 21. Con-tact Beth Martin at 888-628-2586.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21Café au Louie, 9 to 11 a.m., Zane Grey Ballroom at the Hotel Weather-ford. Join us for a delicious break-fast on Homecoming morning, and meet this year’s inductees to the Blue and Gold Club and the 2006
Alumni Award winners. Contact Beth Martin at 888-628-2586.
NAU Baseball Reunion. Golf, lun-cheon, football game and post-game dinner. Contact Alan Flitcraft at 928-380-8949 or alan.fl [email protected], or Mark Grant at 602-757-1691 or [email protected].
Homecoming Parade, 11 a.m., downtown Flagstaff. Saddle up for a Wild, Wild, Wild! West show. The perennial favorite starts at the corner of Elm and Beaver. Contact Blue Key’s Connie Mapoles at [email protected].
College Of Business Administra-tion Open House/Tours, 1 to 3 p.m. See previous entry.
College Of Business Adminis-tration Football Tailgate Party, 1 p.m., Skydome Parking Lot. Join CBA alumni, faculty, staff and friends for an annual tradition of fun times with fun people. The event is free and no RSVP is required. Contact Betsy Putman at 928-523-7128 or [email protected].
College Of Education Tailgate Celebration, 1 to 3 p.m., Skydome Parking Lot. COE welcomes alums, friends, retirees, students, faculty, staff and families to our Homecoming pre-game party. Light refreshments will be served. Stop by and visit with old and new friends. Contact Laura Theimer at 928-523-8746 or [email protected].
College Of Engineering And Natural Sciences Tailgate Party, 1 p.m., Skydome Parking Lot. Join college alumni, faculty, staff and friends for pre-game cookout. The event is free, and a great opportunity to catch up with old friends. Contact Bonnie O’Donnell at 928-523-8765 or [email protected].
HRM Chuckwagon Tailgate, time TBD, Sky-dome parking lot. As Billy Crystal learned in City Slickers, you just need to know “one thing”: your way to HRM’s Chuckwagon Tailgate. Cost is $5 for adults, free for children under 12. We also have a block of free game tickets for HRM alums, available on a fi rst come/fi rst served basis. Con-tact Kathleen Birch at 928-523-8346 or [email protected].
Letterwinners Tailgating Party, time and location TBD. Reconnect with former Lumberjack letterwin-ners while tailgating before the 2006 Homecoming football game. Contact Leala Wegwerth at 928-523-6785 or [email protected].
Gamma Phi Beta Homecoming Social Event, time and location TBD. For details, contact Joy Belisle Auker at 928-527-0640 or [email protected].
NAU Homecoming Game vs. Sacramento State, 3:05 p.m., J. Lawrence Walkup Skydome. The Lumberjacks take on the Hornets from Sacramento State in a key Big Sky Conference matchup. Contact NAU Central Ticket Offi ce at 928-523-5661 or visit their website, www4.nau.edu/cto.
Award Recognition At The Game, halftime, J. Lawrence Walkup Skydome. It’s a hearty cowboy howdy for the 2006 Alumni Award winners and the Blue and Gold Class of 1966 during the halftime hoedown. Contact the Offi ce of Alumni Relations at 888-628-2586.
Powerful Good Time, 6:30 to 10:30p.m., Heritage Square, downtown Flagstaff. Wind up your Homecoming with music, food and giveaways for alumni. Please check naualumni.com for updates or call 888-628-2586.
NON-PROFIT ORG.
US POSTAGEPAID
NORTHERN ARIZONA
UNIVERSITY
Homecoming Schedule
Events and times are subject to change. Please visit www.naualumni.com for details or contact the individuals listed. Persons with a disability may request a reasonable accommodation by contacting the contact person or department listed for each event. Requests should be made as early as possible to allow time for arrangements.
FALL 2006
NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONPO BOX 6034FLAGSTAFF, AZ 86011-6034
CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED
82nd
Hom
ecoming
GIDDYUP, JACKS!
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