Finding Her Wings
Debra Terry (B.S., ’80) was looking for an outlet from her pre-med studies. When she found the Air Force ROTC at CSU her life truly took off.
Debra Terry (B.S., ’80) was looking for an outlet from her pre-med studies. When she found the Air Force ROTC at CSU her life truly took off.
The craft brewery scene in Fort Collins has inspired many CSU alumni. A few have even opened their own brewpubs. Among those is a fellow who, with several partners, opened Pinthouse Pizza, a craft brewery in Austin, Texas.
Kim Tobin has announced her departure from CSU to become Michigan State University’s next vice president of university advancement. Tobin, who currently serves as CSU’s vice president for university advancement, joined CSU in 2003.
Mary Ontiveros, a Colorado State University alumna who spent more than five decades studying and working at CSU – most recently as the founding vice president for diversity – passed away last February 19.
A monthly listing of alumni accomplishments, milestones, and announcements. Catch up on your classmates and submit your own announcement!
Christina H. Paguyo (B.A., ’01; MED, ’07) was born in Seoul, Korea. Her family immigrated to the United States, where her father served in the military. She spent her childhood at a series of military bases across the United States and the world.
Kenneth Ausbie (B.S., ’74) spent his career ensuring environmental health and safety, particularly focused on water and petroleum storage. He is amazingly devoted to the field, which may explain the fact that he kept starting new positions in that field after retiring from a previous one.
At first, Christy Texeira (B.S. '00) felt a small sense of relief when the doctor diagnosed her five-year-old-daughter, Hailey, with aplastic anemia. “There’s no good diagnosis when your child is ill, but all we were thinking at the time was ‘not leukemia,’” Christy explained. “We quickly realized that relief was out of ignorance.”
The Marshall Fire looked like it would destroy every home in The Enclave neighborhood of Louisville. It nearly did. A pair of CSU alums and childhood friends went back to different situations the morning after the fire.
Not long after the first TEMPEST-D completed a successful three-year mission, an identical tiny satellite sensor developed by researchers at Colorado State University and NASA’s JPL is back in orbit.