2021 Communique
2021 Communique
2021 Communique
INS IDE
VOLUME 65 | 2021
DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE
HELLO FROM Don Anderson Hall and a Director Denise
smoke-filled Missoula Valley. Last year at Dowling hosts
this time, we were in the midst of the pan- the J-School’s
virtual graduation
demic and holding on for dear life. I’m hap-
celebration on
py to report the faculty, staff and students April 30, 2021,
of your J-School have weathered the storm from her office
and come out whole. Well, mostly. in Don Anderson
I’m not going to sugar coat it; it was a Hall.
rough year. We pieced instruction togeth-
er as we went along, offering remote
and blended and all in-person courses.
Students and faculty rotated in and out of
the different attendance methods as they
contracted COVID or were close contacts 17
and had to quarantine. None of it was
ideal, but I’m incredibly proud of the way
we worked together to make the most of
the situation.
Fall T. Anthony Pollner Distinguished
Professor Tammy Kim proved remarkably
resilient and creative. She found ways to The Montana Media Lab was on a low We’ve had some coming and going
engage with her class and the Montana simmer for most of the past academic year this year. Development officer Gita Saedi
Kaimin while fully masked and distanced. but was out in force this summer. Four stu- Kiely left us for another opportunity. And
When it came time to deliver her commu- dents and recent alums took to the road Montana Media Lab Founding Director
nity lecture, we partnered with the televi- in June, spending a week in four different Anne Bailey welcomed baby girl Vivienne
16 14
sion students to create a live-streamed, communities. The student teachers gave and stepped away from her position with
(photos, clockwise from left: Jeremy Lurgio, Bruce Ely, Paul Queneau)
interactive session unlike any previous instruction in media literacy, worked with us. We wish them the best in their new
Pollner lecture. high schoolers on a storytelling project, adventures and we are taking this oppor-
The documentary film class was not to and made community presentations of tunity to think big about the future of the COVER STORY 15 Study abroad stays stateside, MORE NEWS
be denied a chance to produce a feature their work at week’s end. Media Lab and development. and updates from the grad program
film. Students found a topic that would The pandemic brought an unexpected We’ve just wrapped up a fantastic 4 “Covering COVID-19 is trauma reporting.” 26 Alumni obituaries
keep them outdoors so they could follow benefit in our ability to hire adjunct profes- summer camp for high school students. 16 Native News, Documentary
and Radio-TV class updates 28 Updates from alums
pandemic protocol and still tell a compel- sors to teach from afar. We had the great They came from as far away as Portland IN THIS ISSUE
ling story. Their work, “Weathering the good fortune of hiring alumnus Nathan and Pittsburgh, and Montana was well 17 Showcase of recent work by 34 Honoring our donors
Storm,” explores the business of fly-fishing Rott of NPR to teach our advanced audio represented with students from Miles 6 Q&A with Dean Laurie Baefsky, photo-J alums
in the state and COVID’s impact on the course in the spring. Nate was able to be City, Joliet, Whitefish, Missoula and Great College of the Arts & Media
20 Faculty updates
industry. Other courses and capstones in Missoula for part of the semester, but Falls. The students produced stories, 7 An interesting year for Pollners
found complicated and creative ways to also taught remotely as he returned to his photographs and designs considering E. Tammy Kim and Geoff McGhee 22 Favorite professors of the past
keep on keepin’ on. home base in Los Angeles or continued the future of the media. I think you’ll report back
8 Past Pollners tell us what they’re up to
Dean Laurie Baefsky joined us in January. his reporting around the West. We also enjoy seeing what they accomplished in 25 Student awards and the latest
She has been working hard to get to know engaged Kate Gammon, a Los Ange- this issue. 14 J-School resumes summer camp. from our Media Lab
the School of Journalism and the three les-based independent journalist covering We would not have made it through this Also: student election coverage
other schools in the college. She’s also had science and the environment, and Mallory crazy year without your ongoing support
an abrupt introduction to the budget chal- Pickett, a freelance journalist for the New and your cheerleading from afar. While we
lenges facing UM and a crash course in the Yorker, The Guardian and Slate, to teach expect to be back to business as usual
Montana Legislature. You can meet Laurie our graduate-level journalism seminar. this fall, the pandemic continues to rage
in Communiqué’s pages this year. We again hosted many of our annual and we are keeping a constant watch in Volume 65, 2021 Send news and Class Notes to: Contact us:
The J-School sent students to cover the events virtually, like our High School case our plans need to change. We’re Published for Alumni and Friends Communiqué Email: [email protected]
67th Montana Legislature. Austin Amestoy Journalism Day, Job and Internship Fair, ready to roll with it.
Editor: Paul Queneau ’02 UM School of Journalism Online: jour.umt.edu
and James Bradley were witness to one Dean Stone Awards and Journalism Com- We hope you’re well and managing
Design: Allison Bye ’14 Don Anderson Hall
of the most contentious sessions in recent mencement. Since we’d been through through this ongoing upheaval. Please be @umjschool
Missoula, MT 59812
memory. You can read about what they this once before we had the hang of it. in touch. UM School of Journalism © 2021 #montanajournalism, #learnbydoing
406-243-4001
learned and what took away from the Although I have to say I really hope this
hard work of political reporting in these will be the last time we’re forced to take Denise Dowling
fractious times on page 14. all our events online. It’s just not the same. Director of the School of Journalism COVER PHOTO: As part of his work as chief photographer for the Portland (Maine) Press Herald, Gregory Rec ’96 took this
image of Bryce Barnes adjusting the nozzle on a snow-making machine at the Sunday River ski resort in Newry, Maine, this past
January. To see more photos from Rec and other alums, turn to page 17.
REPORTING THE
Reporter Maritsa Georgiou ’07; and Ryan Divish expiration date—an investigation, a verdict, current of misinformation and accusations seats. People were desperate to get that jab
’01, who covers the Mariners for the Seattle Times.
(photos: left, Jade WalksAlong; right, Dean Rutz) a season-ending event. But there’s no clear of fear mongering. An entire field of trained in the arm, knowing it could mean the lit-
PANDEMIC
timeline of how long we will be writing eral difference between life and death. So I
about PCR tests, variants and (thankfully) “It has been did what I could to help, signing people up
the vaccines. and sending alerts with each new clinic an-
“I think [my reporting] early on was the emotionally draining. nouncement. It soon became a daily Twitter
hardest with all the suffering and people dy- When you’re thread. Missoula County now has the high-
ing,” said CBS News’ Meg (Basinger) Oliver est vaccination rate in the state.
’93, who covered one of the nation’s first
reporting on it every “From a professional standpoint, I’m
hotspots in New Rochelle, New York. “It was day there’s no escape. hoping it gets back to normal a little bit
overwhelming to try and make sense of it all, I definitely think more. We’re seeing signs of it,” Divish said.
let alone cover it under a deadline when the “I think also [the pandemic] helped me re-
headlines were constantly changing.” the buildup over time alize that you can’t live your entire life just
Divish said he faced opposite challenges. has taken a toll.” to do the job, that if you don’t have a life
He was covering spring training in Arizona outside the job you won’t be very good at the
— Meg Oliver ’93, CBS News
as baseball shut down. “I’ve never been more correspondent, on reporting job in the first place.”
C
uncertain about my job in my life, and that’s “I’m so excited to travel for work, I’m so ex-
“
during COVID
Alums went OVERING COVID-19 is trauma
reporting.”
than statistics. They were our family mem-
bers, our friends, ourselves.
saying a lot for the journalism business.” His
past experiences kept him innovative. At
cited to see people, but I’m also not really en-
tirely ready to get out of my hole,” Rott said.
to great lengths I’ll never forget reading those Brien contracted COVID-19 in April one point he had staffers write about their The news cycle once again has room
words in an article advising news 2020. So too Ryan Divish ’01, who covers favorite sports books to fill space. professionals became stuck in an endless for topics like cicadas, as we ourselves are
to tell the stories managers to check on their reporters. They the Mariners for the Seattle Times. He tested “What I learned [in my early days] in game of journalism whack-a-mole. emerging from our holes. But the pandemic
of COVID-19,
turned me into a puddle on the couch. I was positive in his hometown of Havre, Mon- Montana was you had to be willing to adapt “To be honest, I feel like I’m treading wa- is far from over, it seems, and for many of us,
coming off the most exhausting and traumat- tana, where he rode out part of the pandemic. and adjust on a moment’s notice,” Divish ter most days trying to juggle it all,” said it will take years to process how document-
setting grief ic year of my career working as an anchor at
NBC Montana where, among many stories,
“Don’t ever get COVID and be stuck
in quarantine in your childhood house with
said. “When you’re coming up through the
journalism ranks and you’re at smaller news-
Oliver.
But we collectively pushed through,
ing this episode in history has affected us.
But we’re ready to write the next chapter.
and fear aside I covered the removal of USPS boxes before your parents who also have COVID,” Divish papers, you’re asked to do all that stuff.” working to convey this massive, evolving
the 2020 election when most of the state laughed. “It is not something I recommend.” For Rott, his creative shift at NPR came beast that affected every person watching, Maritsa Georgiou ’07 just accepted a new po-
BY MARITSA GEORGIOU ’07 would be voting by mail. I also reported on National Public Radio’s Nathan Rott ’09 when he and colleague Ryan Kellman listening and reading. We leaned on each sition as a Montana-based national reporter
COVID’s heavy toll on Montanans. thinks he had it, too. After he returned to Los broke NPR’s traditional storytelling mold other, and in many cases, camaraderie re- for Newsy, after years as an anchor at NBC
Big Horn County News general manager Angeles from covering the devastating Aus- to convey the soul-crushing toll on medical placed competitiveness. Montana. There she earned the 2021 Walter
Luella Brien ’06 can relate. “I’ve been through tralian bushfires in March 2020, he became providers as tensions ran high about mask It also provided opportunities most of us Cronkite Award for Excellence in Television
traumatic grief. I’ve lost friends to car acci- very ill, but the hospital didn’t have enough mandates. never thought possible. Remote work al- Political Journalism for her coverage of the
dents or alcoholism or just random tragedies. tests to confirm it. “This nurse that I had talked to for an- lowed Divish and Rott to leave their respec- USPS collection-box removal before the 2020
But this unrelenting death after death after Few experienced it like Brien, though, who other story was expressing frustration and tive cities to return to Montana for a time. election when a majority of Montana voted by
death—it will mess you up,” she told me in grew up in Big Horn County. During Mon- basically just despair about it. And so I did “Working from home has been my sav- mail. This year, she interviewed Dr. Anthony
a candid (if therapeutic) phone conversation. tana’s peak, it had the highest infection rate an hour-and-a-half long interview with her ing grace since our children were all remote Fauci, Dr. Deborah Birx and Dr. Robert Red-
“You want to try to articulate it.” in the state, and she estimates she knew about about her whole day,” Rott said. But instead for more than 13 months,” Oliver said. “My field while working from home for the entire
The pandemic beat was both personal and 50 people who died from the virus, including of sticking to the traditional radio format, heart goes out to all the women who had to pandemic, allowing her to spend more (and
relentless as COVID numbers became more many relatives. he worked with an illustrator to convert the leave their careers. There is no way I could much needed) time with her family.
COLLEGE OF THE ARTS & MEDIA Montana Repertory Theatre were from. Despite the limits of pandem-
are huge assets both for our The School of Journalism exist- ic life (talking through masks, a truncated Geoff is an infographics and multimedia
LAURIE BAEFSKY joined the University of Mon- students and for being a cultural ed for more than a century as semester, no beautiful seminar room, no journalist whose work spans the mass me-
tana in January 2021 as the first permanent dean resource in Missoula. a college in its own right, with late-night drinks after putting the Kaimin dia and academic worlds. He is a veteran
of the new College of the Arts and Media. Baefsky its own dean and a seat at the to bed), they gave me four months of joy.” NEXT POLLNERS of The New York Times, ABC News and
Where do you see opportunity academic officers’ table until
worked for nearly 20 years to build and direct arts Tammy is a freelance magazine report- FALL 2021: Jan Winburn, France’s Le Monde, and spent nine years
for collaboration between the the merger in 2019. This shift
and culture programs in the academic, nonprofit and er, a contributing opinion writer at The who spent 25 years editing working at Stanford University creating
School of Journalism and the in independence and identity
government sectors. New York Times, and a co-host of the at CNN, the Atlanta Journal- original journalism, interactive graphics
other schools in CAM (Music, has been a hard pill to swallow
Previously, she was associate dean of research & “Time to Say Goodbye” podcast, based Constitution and the and dashboards exploring contemporary
Theater & Dance, Visual & for many alumni. What would
strategic partnerships at University of Colorado Den- in Brooklyn, New York. Her work has Baltimore Sun. and historical topics around the North
Media Arts)? you say to them?
ver’s College of Arts & Media, executive director of appeared in outlets including The New SPRING 2022: Daniella American West. In addition to working
Students are creating some Dear Journalism School alumni:
ArtsEngine and Alliance for the Arts in Research Uni- Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, Zalcman, an award-winning with such clients as Schema Design, The
amazing content, feeding into thank you. One of the reasons
versities (a2ru) based at the University of Michigan, The New York Review of Books, Colum- photojournalist, grantee Committee to Protect Journalists and the
the growing media industry this position appealed to me is
grants manager with the Utah Division of Arts and bia Journalism Review, and The Nation. of the Pulitzer Center on Oxford University Press, Geoff serves as
in Montana and leading our because of your school and the
Museums, and established the USU ArtsBridge pro- She previously worked on the editorial Crisis Reporting and the the visuals editor for the Water Desk at
emerging experience economy rich tradition and reputation you
National Geographic Society,
gram at Utah State University. regionally and in some cases na- created. staff of The New Yorker and as a nation- the University of Colorado and the Asso-
and founder of Women
Trained as a classical flutist and music educator, she tionally. The Montana Media Lab, CAM is at an amazing moment al features writer at Al Jazeera America. ciate Editor of “…& the West,” a digital
Photograph.
holds degrees in flute performance from Stony Brook with the adjacent TV studios, is of reinvention: Creating a new Before becoming a journalist, Tammy was publication covering western environmen-
University, University of Michigan, and California poised to serve as a profession- college identity; establishing a a legal-services attorney and adjunct pro- tal and public health issues. In 2009-10,
al training ground and explor- shared culture that is inclusive
State University, Fullerton. She has appeared with the fessor. Geoff was a Knight Fellow at Stanford
atory space for this work, and of all arts and media. To have
Minnesota Orchestra, Utah Symphony, was a 15-year is a natural touchpoint to bring a school of journalism woven
Geoff McGhee joined us as the spring a lot of teaching and learning into the researching data visualization, which re-
member of the Virginia Symphony, and founding fel- together the college around into the ethos of the arts gives Pollner professor and contracted COVID mostly remote classes. Geoff’s class was sulted in the widely-cited video documen-
low with the New World Symphony. We recently sat communication and creativity— me hope for the future and the on his move from Seattle to Missoula. entitled “The Infographic Story,” and stu- tary “Journalism in the Age of Data.” In
down with her for a Q&A to help introduce her to through both documentary, nar- nation. This is a rare and won- It was a rough start to the semester, but dents learned how to find, visualize, pro- 2015-16 he was the lead writer on Nation-
J-School alums: rative and realism, as well as all derful moment. Geoff and his students managed to cram duce and report data-driven features. al Geographic’s “Data Points” blog.
Pollner Professors
Hurricane Katrina and its horrific af- fund site were deposited. Their work was
termath, and the role that local report- published in the Missoulian.
ers for the New Orleans Post-Crescent After his Pollner he returned to the Bal-
and citizen journalist bloggers played timore Sun, then in 2008 moved over to
in telling the story of a dramatically work at the Lexington (Kentucky) Leader,
Students cover turbulent elections, legislature Study abroad class Grad program keeps making waves
makes best of bad THE GRADUATE PROGRAM in environmental science and natural
resource journalism awarded degrees in May to six graduates: Mary
WHILE THE PRESIDENTIAL RACE Austin Amestoy
grabbed national attention, a capstone photographs the
67th Montana
year for world travel Auld, Katie Hill, Anthony Pavkovich, Kylie Mohr, Hannah Welzbacker
and Peter Zimmerman. Members of the so-called “COVID cohort” spent
class of juniors and seniors covered Mon- Legislature, one much of their time in the two-year program studying remotely and do-
tana’s statewide elections last year. Profes- of two J-School IT HAS NOT BEEN an easy two years for the ing journalism under extremely challenging circumstances. Yet despite
sors Lee Banville and Dennis Swibold’s stu- students that moved students who planned to travel abroad with the those obstacles, the group completed strong graduate projects and
dents followed the twists in the campaigns, to Helena in January J-School as reporters. A 2020 trip to Northern
to cover what turned
portfolios of work based on deep original reporting.
which ended in Republican control of the out to be one of the Ireland fell victim to COVID-19, so many of The graduates are already finding success away from the university.
governorship, all statewide elected offices most contentious the same students re-enrolled this spring. Auld worked with the Montana Media Lab on a summer news literacy
and both houses of Legislature for the first sessions in recent But with a clear possibility travel would not program for Montana Native high school students. Hill is an assistant
time in 16 years. history. Their be back by May 2021, students did what so editor at MeatEater, an outdoors media conglomerate based in Boze-
reporting provided man. Mohr accepted an internship at High Country News. Welzbacker
Students profiled Montana’s federal and essential coverage many of us did and moved their work virtual.
is a reporter covering agriculture and the environment at the Times-
statewide contests and ballot issues. They to news outlets In February, they began holding class ses-
News in Twin Falls, Idaho.
fact-checked debates for MontanaPBS. On across the state. sions with experts in the troubles that have THE ANNUAL CROWN OF THE CONTINENT PROJECT, which pairs
Election Day, students scattered across the dogged the UK region for decades, as well as two students with professional journalist mentors to work on in-depth
state to record exit interviews with voters political and legal experts in Brexit and the projects, led to two strong publications in professional media outlets this
for an online website that added voices to publications around the state during each access and cracking down on voter access. European Union. They soon began develop- year. Kylie Mohr’s project, which documented the conflict surrounding
the expert post-election analysis. biennial meeting of the Legislature. But my favorites were the issues outside ing their own stories reported via Zoom and the routing of the Pacific Northwest Trail through Montana’s Yaak Valley,
In January, two students in the elections “Between Zoom sessions and the dis- the limelight, like expanding tax credits phone about everything from abortion policy was published by National Geographic’s website. Hannah Welzbacker’s
class packed their bags and moved to Hele- tancing and masking mandates that were in for film productions and stripping pro- in the region to Irish language schools in Prot- project on scientific efforts to count bird populations was published in
na to cover the 67th Montana Legislature. place for the first few months, it was hard tections for landowners who live near estant East Belfast to the impact of Brexit on Cool Green Science, the conservation blog of The Nature Conservancy.
The Crown of the Continent dinner went virtual this year due to
Junior Austin Amestoy writes: to meet lawmakers and build the trusting gravel pits. businesses and farmers.
COVID-19. Graduate students made their pitches to a panel of pro-
“I had the pleasure of joining fellow stu- relationships that all good Capitol report- “The experience offered great challenges While the pandemic layered on the chal- fessional judges that included Rachael Bale, an executive editor at
dent James Bradley and adjunct professor ers value. Luckily, James and I had a huge and even greater rewards for a pair of stu- lenges, students had in Brexit a story both National Geographic; Chris Johns, former editor-in-chief at National
Courtney Cowgill as a member of the UM support team to help us find our way, both dent journalists. James and I walked into complex and deeply human. When Great Brit- Geographic; and Breanna McCabe, a producer at Montana PBS. This
Legislative News Service, a program spon- around the maze-like Capitol and the com- the Capitol on January 4 bright-eyed and ain officially left the European Union at the year’s winners are Bowman Leigh and Sierra Cistone. They are working
sored by the Montana Newspaper Associ- plex issues being debated inside. overwhelmed, and left April 29 with a li- end of 2020 it triggered a wave of changes and with mentors Kate Gammon and Mallory Pickett, both freelance science
ation, the Montana Broadcasters Associa- “I reported stories on the passage of brary of reporting to be proud of, and a uncertainty. Our reporters were able to talk to journalists based in California.
tion and the Greater Montana Foundation hotly debated bills restricting the rights ‘rolodex’ stuffed with connections and op- everyday residents of Northern Ireland as well This fall, a cohort of eight students will begin the graduate pro-
that provides print and radio coverage to of transgender youth, limiting abortion portunities.” as experts about what was happening in real gram. As always, they’re an eclectic mix from around the country
with backgrounds ranging from scientists and professional journalists
time. They also met remotely with dozens of
to organic farmers and a musician. Program director Nadia White is
residents of the region in hopes it would serve away on sabbatical until January, and professor Joe Eaton is serving
as pre-reporting for the trip in May 2021. as interim director.
COVID, of course, had other plans. When
J-School resumes and they put all their coverage together
carefully and in context.
One of the campers summed it up nicely
when she wrote that her favorite part was
word came down in early March that this
year’s trip would also be canceled, students Sarah Mosquera (left) and
Bowman Leigh are both
summer camp In other words, they practiced the kind
of journalism we hope they will use to
“spending time with smart people!”
That same student, Helena Brown of
didn’t give up. They finished reporting their
stories, then created a new website to feature
busy earning master’s
degrees in Environmental
for high schoolers shape the future of journalism themselves. Billings, was one whose definition of jour- their articles and that of future internation- Science and Natural
Resource Journalism.
What’s more is they had some fun doing nalism at the end of camp helped us know al trips. The site, Montana Journalism Abroad
WHEN 35 HIGH SCHOOL students it. We promised them at the start of the we’d hit the mark we’d set when we first (journalismabroad.jour.umt.edu), launched in
showed up on the University of Montana camp that one of the things they would started planning this camp: May and includes stories, interactive timelines
campus for the first day of journalism sum- learn, in addition to the role of journalism in “Journalism is giving a voice to those and multimedia maps.
mer camp in July, they immediately went democracy and the importance of journal- who need it,” she wrote. The reporters even had a bit of fun photo-
on assignment. ism in informing and connecting communi- Also spot-on was fellow Billings high shopping themselves into locations around
And we didn’t give them an easy assign- ties, is just how fun it is to spend your time schooler Hank Jagodzinski’s comment on Northern Ireland for website illustrations.
ment. They were tasked with spending talking to people about stuff that matters. the role of local journalism (which he cov- But not to be deterred, the International Re-
three days covering one big—and compli- When we asked students at the end of ered as his story during the week): porting class plans to give it another go in May
cated—topic: the future of journalism. the week what the best part of camp was “Journalism is the central component of 2022, traveling to Belfast and Londonderry
They pitched story ideas based on what for them, overwhelmingly they said it was in keeping local communities together to report in the immediate aftermath of elec-
matters to their communities, they asked all the time spent making friends and con- through stories. Without it, we are merely tions. Like this year, they will first use Zoom,
the hard questions, they kept their minds necting with their camp counselors, profes- individuals in the same area, not a commu- then hit the ground with a deep understanding
open, they sought different perspectives sors and professional journalists. nity,” he wrote. of the region, its politics and culture.
Professors
from technical writing to creative writ- moved to the Oregon coast in 2016.
ing to what we call “journalistic writing” We now live in Manzanita, Oregon,
(a long and bureaucratic tale lies behind where I grow vegetables and flowers. I
that sobriquet). I teach courses in the have been teaching picture editing at
latter, naturally. Since 2019, I’ve also the Mountain Workshop in Kentucky
served as director for the program. for years, but because of COVID we
MERRILYN (WENTZ) ROBERTS ’46 ZENA BETH MCGLASHAN ’61 died Les was instrumental in the creation of career at the Missoulian, where she was the world lost the king of quick, witty a kind word for everyone she met. She
died of complications from a stroke on at age 81 on June 22, 2021. Zena was the Bigfork Summer Playhouse and was a general assignment reporter, police one-liners.” is survived by her 13-year-old son Alex
March 14, 2021. Born in Missoula, she known for her indomitable spirit and founder and artistic beat reporter, educa- Steve had a photographic memory and husband Doug of Schaumburg,
was an editor of the Montana Kaimin her loud and proud director of the West tion reporter, society for sports statistics and trivia. He raised Illinois. She leaves behind her grieving
and an active member of the Delta Gam- championing of Butte. Coast Ensemble The- editor, feature writer a baseball-loving son, Austin, a high mother Miriam, sister Tito, nephew
ma Sorority at UM, where Merry met a Zena moved to Butte atre, one of the most and editor, and city school and college baseball standout. Gavin and countless friends touched by
“handsome flyboy” and husband-to-be as a second grader and acclaimed 99-seat the- editor. She started He also umpired for the Gallatin Coun- her giving spirit.
Jack Roberts. They moved to Bozeman graduated from Butte aters in Los Angeles. the “Newspaper in ty Softball League. Madie worked as a producer at
in 1946, where Merry gave birth to the High. She earned a Les was born in Education” program, After earning his B.A. from the KPAX-TV in Missoula in the early
first of 10 children and Jack finished his B.A. in Journalism at Kalispell and graduat- which she oversaw J-School he wrote short stories, poetry 2000s and then at several television
degree. His job with Conoco sent their UM in 1961 where she ed from Flathead County High School. from 1982 to 2002, created the youth and four unpublished novels. He also stations in the Chicago area. In 2014,
family around Montana and the Mid- was a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta At UM he earned degrees in Journalism pages, the Midway Dispatch and the reported for the Mukilteo, Washington, she took a job with the West Chicago
west. They settled in Billings and Merry sorority. and Theater, went on a USO tour and children’s drawings featured on the newspaper, earned a law degree from School District where she found her
stayed busy with volunteer work and the During a long and varied journalism worked as an actor at the fledgling Big- weather page. She carried a camera the University of Puget Sound and true calling, working with children.
Delta Gamma organization. career, Zena worked at the Montana fork Playhouse in the summers. everywhere and took many excellent practiced law in Washington before Madie loved Montana and returned
After 52 years of marriage, Jack died Standard in Butte, The Daily Interlake After graduation he headed for LA to photos for the paper. moving back to Montana where he as often as she could, always with son
in 1998. Merry is survived by eight chil- in Kalispell, The Missourian, Aspen Il- pursue acting. Known as Les Hanson Lynn moved to Missoula from Cali- worked in sales and construction. Alex in tow. She wanted him to love
dren, their spouses, 20 grandchildren, lustrated News, the Albuquerque Journal to the theatrical world, he brought fornia when she was 11. A horsewoman Steve is survived by his son Austin Montana as much as she did and she
23 great-grandchildren and countless and the Santa Monica Evening Outlook. more than 200 productions to the West from a young age, she rode all over the and siblings Jeff, Bill, Jim and Mary stayed in touch with her Montana
friends who will miss her dearly. She earned her M.A. in Mass Commu- Coast Ensemble Theatre, earning major Rattlesnake and occasionally to the Anne who encourage those who re- family through the years. She loved
nication from California State University, awards and premiering thought-pro- downtown Missoula library. She also member Steve to think of him the next with her whole heart and will be sorely
DONNA MAE FANNING BRYGG- Northridge, where she taught as well. She voking plays and musicals. Les also had an incredible green thumb and a time you wear a Hawaiian shirt. missed.
MAN ’48 died in Fairfield, California, went on to get her doctorate from the worked for Joan Rivers, cooking and “Snow White” way with animals. An educational account has been
at age 93 on August 30, 2020. Born in University of Iowa in 1978, and worked helping out as she entertained. Lynn always related well to young JANELLE ELIZABETH PATTER- established for Madie’s son, Alex. Con-
Butte in 1927, she graduated from Girls’ as a journalism professor at State College, Les is survived by his brother, Monty. people and was active in the Treasure SON ’86 died unexpectedly in her tact Denise Dowling at the J-School if
Central High School in 1944, then the University of North Dakota and State Spelling Bee, St. Paul Lutheran Missoula home on June 5, 2021. She you’re interested in making a contribu-
went to UM and the J-School where the University of Texas at El Paso before NORMA SANDBERG (HOBER) Church, Target Range School, Big Sky was 60. tion.
she made life-long friends. Donna was a moving back to Butte in 1988. MASON ’66 died of Alzheimer’s High School, 4-H, the Five Valleys Janelle was born in Missoula and
proud Grizzly and a member of Kappa She published “The M&M in Butte, disease on December 8, 2020. She Reading Council and Habitat for raised on the family ranch west of The lovely, creative and talented MIRA
Alpha Theta and Sigma Delta Chi. After Montana and Other Faces: Photog- grew up in Missoula and attended the Humanity. She remained engaged with town. She learned early how to drive CHRISTINE REMIEN ’06 died on
graduation she worked at an advertising raphy by Harley E. Straus” and wrote J-School, graduating with honors and UM throughout her life, serving a jour- a tractor and loved her 4H animals. October 29, 2020, after a long struggle
agency in San Francisco and met Roy feature stories for the Butte Weekly. In making lifelong friends in the Delta nalism honor society for women, the Janelle graduated from Hellgate High with mental health. She was born in
Bryggman. The two married in 1953 2010 she published “Buried in Butte,” Gamma Sorority. Matrix Honor Table and the Friends School in 1979 and earned a B.A. in Missoula in 1979, attended Sentinel
and raised four children in Salinas. after years of researching and writing, But her favorite experience was UM’s of the Maureen and Mike Mansfield Journalism and a minor in Political High School and later graduated with
Donna leaves behind daughter Jan then “The Watchman’s Daughter,” an Semester at Sea, traveling the world Library board. Science from UM in 1986. a degree in Radio-Television from the
Chard, sons Mark and Terry, brother afterword in the 2019 printing of “The on water and learning about different Lynn met her husband Bill Schwanke She worked at a New Mexico news- J-School.
Ward Fanning and 11 grandchildren. Biography of F. Augustus Heinze: Cop- countries, cultures and peoples. A at the J-School, whom she married in paper before being diagnosed with a She went on to study at the Universi-
Roy died in 2015. The two had been per King at War.” proud journalist, she wrote for the Mis- 1968, the same year she graduated. She mental illness and returning to Missou- ty of the Arts-London and received her
married for 61 years. As one of Zena’s close friends said, soulian after graduation and worked at is survived by her husband of 52 years, la for care and family support. Janelle master’s from Central Saint Martin’s.
“She was a feisty and funny loyal friend UM’s athletic department. their four children, five grandchildren, was a lifelong member of the First Mira wrote remarkable poetry and
JACK SEIGLE M.A. ’56 died at age 91 who looked fabulous in baseball hats, Norma raised three sons with Terry three sisters, numerous cousins and Baptist Church and volunteered at the prose, was an accomplished photogra-
on March 19, 2021. was dedicated to social issues, was Hober and was a devoted stepmother to countless dear friends. Her family Missoula Food Bank and the Western pher and was working on illustrations
Jack earned his M.A. in journalism an amazing historical researcher, was the daughters of her second husband, writes she was “everyone’s favorite Montana Clinic’s mental health center. for a children’s book at the time of her
at the University of Montana and later generous and put her money where her William Mason. She is survived by sons something,” with tremendous courage death. She traveled the world exten-
taught in the graduate program in jour- mouth was, had incredible knowledge of Todd, Brett and Jeff Hober; stepdaugh- and a deep love of life. Lynn died on MADIE BELTRAN HATFIELD ’01 sively and intrepidly, making friends
nalism and public affairs at The Ameri- antiques, and was patient enough to get ters Kathryn Mason Vanderput and November 3, 2020, from complications perished during childbirth on August 6, wherever she went.
can University in Washington D.C. for orchids to bloom again. She was the best Pam Mason Foster; siblings, grandchil- of Huntington’s Chorea. 2021 along with her She will be remembered by her fam-
more than 30 years. friend anyone could ask for.” dren and many devoted friends. baby William Na- ily and friends for her beautiful smile,
Prior to that, he was editor of the Zena is survived by her husband, STEPHEN ROBERT HANSEN ’80 than “Nate” Hatfield. laughter, sense of humor, her many
Wolf Point Herald News and of the Michael Gamble; her children Grant MARGARET LYNN STETLER died in Bozeman on April 21, 2021, Madie graduated in talents and unrealized potential. Mira’s
South Dakota Union Farmer. McGlashan and Meg Guenin; and SCHWANKE ’68 will be remembered from a ruptured aorta. Radio-Television and family writes their “troubled Mira…is
Jack is survived by his wife of 63 many friends. for her love of life and ability to relate Born in 1957 in San Jose, California, is fondly remembered at peace and free at last.”
years, Margaret Vallejo Seigle; son Paul; to everyone she met. he was the third of six children and the by classmates and pro- Mira is survived by her parents Dr.
daughter Susan Washo and grandchil- LESTER HANKINSON ’65 died on Starting as a copy editor while still peacemaker and jester of the family. fessors as someone full Jack and Anne Remien of Missoula, sis-
dren Blythe and Jack Washo. June 9, 2021, in Los Angeles, at age 78. in high school, Lynn had a 44-year His family writes, “With his passing, of life and love with a ready laugh and ter Erin and brother Dr. John Remien.
on the “Pioneer Women in Montana advertising agency and public relations MICHAEL PANTALIONE ’75 retired
1950s Media” wall, slated for unveiling in the firm, political consulting and manage- in January after coaching soccer for the
Montana Media Lab next fall. ment, and as a television news director last 32 years at Yavapai College in Arizo-
GARY A. SORENSEN ’57 reported and on-air personality. na. In the history of men’s intercollegiate
in from Missoula, where he’s lived since MARK MILLER ’67 is awaiting soccer, he is the all-time leader among
1993. He swings past the J-School from publication of his sixth book next year, J.F. PURCELL ’72 says COVID-19 coaches at any level in winning percent-
time to time and says it continues to “Rediscovering Wonderland,” about affected the amount of volunteering he age (90%) and the only coach to average
provide top new blood for a challenging early travel to Yellowstone Park. The did in the past year, but he has still been over 20 wins per season.
industry that is changing all the time. work explores the Washburn Expedition able to further the work of fellow UM
“At my age the slogan is ‘stay active.’ So that brought the area to wide attention Graduate Gary Israel. Purcell has sup- DON OYLEAR ’75 writes, “While
I do,” he says. “I have been retired for and was instrumental in establishing the ported Israel’s foundation to remember mostly retired, I recently completed my
more than 30 years and spent 30 years in park 150 years ago. It follows his books the artwork and philanthropy of Israel’s first book. It’s commercial fiction. “The
the Army doing a lot of public relations.” “Sidesaddles and Geysers: Women’s mother. He is also a donor and sup- Marco Polo Alliance” is a fast-paced
Adventures in Yellowstone Park” (2020) porter of arts-related organizations like action adventure and a murder mystery
and “Encounters in Yellowstone: The GLOW and DREAMS in and around with just enough thriller aspects, a little
1960s Nez Perce Summer of 1877” (2019). Wilmington, North Carolina. romance, infused humor and a spice of
believable future technology. Now I’m
Shane Bishop ’86 covered his third Olympics this summer in Tokyo, producing features for NBC’s
JUDITH BLAKELY MORGAN ’60 CARL GIDLUND ’67 worked his way RICHARD BANGS ’73 retired in 2010 searching for an agent. Query letters.
Sports desk. He’s been a producer for NBC News and Dateline for 27 years.
continues writing and editing on special through the university as a smokejump- and has since self-published a trilogy of Lots of query letters.”
projects linked to her service as Trustee er, graduating in 1967 with both a sci-fi novels. The most recent, “For-
Emerita of the University of California B.A. and M.A. in journalism. He spent gotten: A Stepping Stone to the Stars,” KYLE ALBERT ’84 writes that wife FRANK FIELD ’86 combined his love
San Diego’s Foundation Board, whose five years in the Army Special Forc- published in February 2020, won second 1980s Judi traced her Scottish ancestry to of running, fly fishing and storytelling
campus rises within sight of her home es, including a year in Vietnam, then place in the 2020 Colorado Independent Robert the Bruce, William Wallace and in a freelance print story published in
in La Jolla. During COVID-19 quaran- transferred to the Air Force and retired Publishers Association EVVY Awards. JAMES BRUGGERS ’81 marked three Sir Roger Kirkpatrick. When the crown the Seattle Times and Big Sky Journal.
tine, she used Zoom to interview UCSD as a lieutenant colonel. Carl worked as His other books are “Forsaken: Search- years in May as a staff reporter for Inside of Scotland was up for grabs, Bruce and Frank connected with a group that runs
scholarship applicants. She also is active a spokesman for numerous government ing for God’s Fingerprints” and “Forgiv- Climate News, a national nonprofit Red Common met in a church to decide across the Bob Marshall Wilderness
on the San Diego Library Foundation agencies, including the Office of Emer- en: Finding a Path Home.” Richard lives newsroom covering climate, energy and which of them would reign. Bruce came each year and went along on the adven-
board, with 36 branches. In 1995, she gency Preparedness (now FEMA), and in Littleton, Colorado, with wife Susan the environment, after 31 years in news- out of the church and said his adversary ture to lift his spirits in the pandemic,
co-authored the biography “Dr. Seuss the Department of Health, Education Bangs ’71. These days he spends most papers. In 2020, Bruggers’ work won was wounded but still alive, so Roger be a good dad and set a meaningful
& Mr. Geisel” with her husband, Neil. and Welfare. He also wrote for several of his time volunteering for a non-profit first place in the Society of Environmen- whipped out his dirk and said “I’ll example for his kids. Frank says the
Twenty-five years later, she remains the newspapers including the Anchorage land trust, riding his bicycle and pro- tal Journalists’ small market beat report- make sure,” and went in and finished Times, “…let me keep the copyright (I
go-to authority on the life and work of Times, Spokesman-Review and Tundra moting his books. ing category. At Inside Climate News, the job, for which he was knighted. The dunno if it was an accident, but when
Ted Geisel/Dr. Seuss, who was a friend Drums, and he freelanced for many he most often covers the Southeast, and Kirkpatrick family crest consists of a they sent the agreement, I signed and
and neighbor in La Jolla. When news magazines. Carl and wife Sally are retired MARJE BENNETTS ’73 is retiring has partnered with news organizations bloody dagger and “I’ll Make Sure” in didn’t say anything!). Because I had the
breaks about Seuss’ life or books, Judith and living in Coeur d’Alene. They have from her career as a hotel general man- as diverse as NPR, the Weather Chan- Gaelic. On a tour of Scotland in 2018, copyright, I was also able to sell the
has filed interviews with the BBC, two daughters, living in Virginia and ager and public relations expert. After nel, WMFE public radio in Orlando, Kyle and Judi found that the place story to Montana’s own Big Sky Journal.
Washington Post, the New York Times, Florida. 45+ years she is returning from Southern newspapers in Tennessee and Kentucky, where that historic moment happened I’m super-proud that they took the
National Public Radio and TV. Now California and moving back to Great and just this spring, The Seattle Times. is now a parking lot with a plaque. Kyle story because this is a magazine that has
mostly retired as a reporter, she spent Falls in the fall of 2021. She is looking He recalls writing his first stories for the continues to write and edit all manner published words by people like William
30 years as a freelance travel writer for 1970s forward to being close to family and Montana Kaimin on typewriters and of marketing and advertising materials Kittredge.” Frank remains a communi-
newspapers and magazines, including friends, and doing some volunteer work. covering a controversy over the spraying in all media for clients nationwide in a cations manager for T-Mobile and lives
National Geographic and Travel & KEN DUNHAM ’70 retired in June She says she will miss the beach but is of herbicides on the Oval. He lives in virtual freelance environment under the in Seattle.
Leisure. She returned from the Ama- 2020 after serving as executive director excited to take the next step in life by Louisville with his wife, Christine Brug- guise of Copy Chef, Inc.
zon River in January 2020, before the of the West Coast Lumber & Building returning to her native Montana. gers, the deputy director of the Society JUDI BLAZE ’87 just published her
pandemic halted travel in March. It’s the Material Association since 2006. In of Environmental Journalists. SHANE BISHOP ’86 just returned 5th book, “Riding in the Backseat with
longest her passport has gone unstamped 2017, Dunham wrote “The Legacy of DEIRDRE MCNAMER ’73 published from working for NBC Sports at the my Brother.”
since 1961, when she left for Argentina Lumber,” a history book that tells the her fifth novel, “Aviary,” in April of this SUSIE REBER ORR ’81 has a weekly Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo.
on a graduate fellowship from the Inter- story of the lumber industry in America, year. McNamer retired from the Uni- show on Missoula Community Radio, It was his third Olympics working for DAVID PLEASANT ’87 is in his 32nd
American Press Assn. A keen supporter from colonial times to the present, with versity of Montana English department “Susie Q Till 2,” which focuses on NBC’s Sports desk, a rapid response news year at KPAX-TV in Missoula. He says
of the J-School, she looks forward to the a particular focus on the rich lumber last year, after 25 years teaching creative community issues with local interviews unit that also produces features during he still loves his work every day, adding
re-launching of the Montana Journalism history in California. His prior experi- writing at both the undergraduate and of policy makers, politicians and other the Games. He’s been a producer for that “We have a new grandson, so life
Abroad program. Judith will be featured ence included ownership of a regional graduate levels. Currently, she’s on the Missoula movers and shakers. NBC News and Dateline for 27 years. is good.”
NICK EHLI ’88 resigned in December al genealogist. A case study she wrote in the mountains of Utah homeschool- thology in Ithaca, New York. Daniel ’01 co-wrote Tester’s recent memoir,
from the Bozeman Daily Chronicle about her great-great grandmother, ing my kids and snowboarding.” joined the newly formed Center for “Grounded: A Senator’s Lessons on Win-
after 20 years, the last 14 as its editor. Hannah Roe, has been chosen for pub- Conservation Media and is currently ning Back Rural America.” Ecco Press,
He teaches in the Honors College at lication in the summer issue of Min- URI FARKAS ’98 serves as the Deputy working with partners around the world an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, ALUMNI SURVEY
Montana State in Bozeman. nesota Genealogist, a quarterly journal Athletic Director for Northern Arizona focusing on media that shines a light on published “Grounded” in 2020. Murphy Help students find their
of the Minnesota Genealogical Society. University, overseeing all external aspects major environmental issues at a regional is now pursuing a full-time writing career path and help the School of
JYL HOYT MA ’88 says hello from Julie married George Parisot in June of of the athletic department, including and global scale. Daniel spent his time and has just co-written a second book Journalism make informed
Boise, Idaho. After graduating with a 2020 and lives in Helena. communications. Uri looks forward to in Washington contributing to National that will be published this October. decisions about curriculum,
master’s in journalism, she joined Boise welcoming the Griz to town when the Geographic, PBS’s Frontline, Nature recruiting and more by
State University Public Radio as special JILL MURRAY FERRIS ’93 has written athletic teams visit Flagstaff. and Nova, Red Bull Media House, NATE SCHWEBER ’01 has written his taking a quick alumni
projects director, a position she held a cookbook titled “Cheers to 50 Years! Upworthy.com, as well as HHMI’s first book-length work of narrative non- survey on our website.
until retiring in December 2009. “I am Women That Inspire Me & The Recipes TOM MULLEN ’98 says he uses his Tangled Bank Studios. He is especially fiction. “This America of Ours: Bernard
Visit jour.umt.edu/alumni/
so grateful to Montana Public Radio for They Inspire.” Her husband Chad was journalism muscles every day as senior di- thankful to UM professor Bill Knowles and Avis DeVoto and the Forgotten Fight
alumni_survey.php or go to
10 wonderful years prior to graduate the photographer for the book. That grew rector of content based in Santa Monica, and professional instructors Terry to Save the Wild” features scenes at UM jour.umt.edu and follow the
school and altogether for more than 30 into a cooking show called “Jill’s Inspira- California, for Fair, an auto marketplace. Conrad, Ray Ekness and Gus Chambers and in Missoula, he writes. HarperCollins “Alumni” tab at the top of
incredibly rewarding years as a public tion Kitchen” now available to more than He is a creative content and commu- for passing on their knowledge and for is scheduled to publish in July 2022. the page.
radio journalist.” 35 million households on the RCN and nications professional with more than their mentorship while finding his way
LVTV networks, on Roku at You Too 15 years of experience in brand devel- at UM. “Cornell has nothing on you ANNIE WARREN ’04 is the commu-
KEVIN MCRAE ’88 and Beth Mc- America (YTA), and locally on KULR-8 opment, corporate marketing/editorial, folks. My UM education gave me a leg nications manager at Mid-Columbia
Laughlin ’90 live in Helena, where they in the Billings area. Jill and Chad also journalism and public relations. In up in every professional situation I’ve Libraries serving southeastern Wash- Innocence Files” and the Amazon Prime
work in state government and raised own the 307 Bar, Grill & Casino in August 2021, a feature film Tom wrote ever encountered.” ington. From 2015-2019, Annie served film, “All In: The Fight for Democra-
their two kids. Daughters Clara and Columbus, Montana, and Jill contin- with brother Tim, “Vacation Friends,” as the chair of the library’s community cy,” about voter suppression and Stacey
Eliza both attend UM. Beth is the chief ues to sell medical devices for Olympus debuted on Hulu. SARAH (SCHMID) STEVENSON partnership group, the Tri-Cities Latino Abrams’ work in Georgia. Upcoming
administrative officer of Montana’s America. Jill and Chad’s son Max is 11. ’98 recently accepted a position doing Community Network. She led special releases include a film following Mayor
judicial branch. Kevin is a deputy com- SONJA (LEE) NOWAKOWSKI ’98 political communications work for projects including the video series “Inspir- Pete’s historic presidential campaign on
missioner in the Office of the Commis- THOMAS NYBO ’95 writes from the was recently named the administrator of Moonsail North, a public relations firm ing Latinos / Latinos inspiradores.” The Amazon Prime and a Jacques Cousteau
sioner of Higher Education. Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Air, Energy and Mining Division at co-located in Michigan and California. project was a bronze winner in the 40th film for National Geographic.
“I’ve been working mainly in the DR the Montana Department of Environ- Previously, she spent almost a decade Annual Telly Awards social video series:
MICHELLE WILLITS ’88 of Oregon, Congo for the past three years, cover- mental Quality. Nowakowski previously serving as the editor of Xconomy De- culture & lifestyle category. KRISTINE PAULSEN ’06 continues to
Wisconsin, recently was promoted to ing Ebola, civil unrest and now child led the Office of Research and Policy troit, an online publication covering the run a photography business in Missoula
publisher at the Credit Union National miners digging for the cobalt used in Analysis at the Montana Legislature. business of technology and innovation. JOE FRIEDRICHS ’05 is the news while simultaneously working remotely
Association, the trade association for all our phones and laptops. Also doing Stevenson lives with her husband Chris director at WTIP, North Shore Commu- as a senior technical writer for Webflow,
of America’s credit unions. She develops a project for the Dian Fossey Gorilla DANIEL SHEIRE ’98 left a 20+ year and cat Chico on the northwest coast of nity Radio in Grand Marais, Minnesota, a progressive company that empowers
publishing strategies for Credit Union Fund on critically endangered Grauer’s career in the Washington D.C. area to Lake Michigan. and the founder and producer of the people to design websites without code.
Magazine’s print and digital content, gorillas in the Congo. I spent the winter take a job at the Cornell Lab of Orni- WTIP Boundary Waters Podcast. In
news website, podcast, and award-win- 2020, the podcast won a regional Edward STAN PILLMAN ’06 was recently hired
ning newsletter for credit union boards. 2000s R. Murrow Award in the “Best Podcast” as the VP Of Digital Operations for
Julie Walker
“Journalism grads should know that ’91 earned a category. Joe is also the author of the MediaCo, which operates the iconic radio
there are many industries that need Genealogical SAM DEWITT ’01 continues his work book, “Her Island: The Story of Quet- brands HOT 97 and WBLS in New York
storytellers,” she says. “I started out Research Certificate for Compassion & Choices to expand ico’s Longest Serving Interior Ranger,” City. Stan says he’s still wearing flip-flops
in newspapers, and now I’m at a trade from Boston end-of-life choices for terminally ill published in November 2020 by 10,000 in the winter, still playing hockey and still
University and is
association sharing stories about the busy working on a patients. In a year that was very active Lakes Publishing in Minneapolis. fly-fishing. GO GRIZ!
passion credit unions have for their career transition to legislatively, he led a team that passed
members. For me, more enjoyable than be a professional the Elizabeth Whitefield End of Life KATHERINE SATHER ’05 is a pro- MARITSA GEORGIOU ’07 just accept-
Holloran’s public affairs class. Kid- genealogist. She Options Act in New Mexico, which was gram manager at Microsoft focusing on ed a new position as a Montana-based
married George
ding…sort of.” Parisot in June 2020 signed into law in April and will go into content experiences in search engines. national reporter for Newsy, after years as
and lives in Helena. effect in June. As of this writing, he is still She and her husband have two children, an anchor at NBC Montana. There she
working on passing similar legislation and their family splits their time between earned the 2021 Walter Cronkite Award
1990s in the state of Nevada. He lives in a “forti- Whitefish and Seattle. for Excellence in Television Political
fied compound” in East Denver with his Journalism for her coverage of USPS
JULIE WALKER ’91 has earned a wife Rebecca, two daughters Winnie and ELYSE HUGHES ’06 was recently collection boxes being removed before
Genealogical Research Certificate from Vivian, and dog Missoula. promoted to Executive in Charge of Pro- the landmark 2020 election in which a
Boston University. She’s in the process duction at Story Syndicate in Brooklyn, majority of the state would be voting by
of completing additional education to As Senator Jon Tester’s former chief of New York. Prior to the promotion, Elyse mail. She also interviewed Dr. Anthony
make a career transition to a profession- staff (2017-2019), AARON MURPHY line-produced the Netflix series “The Fauci, Dr. Deborah Birx and Dr. Robert
Redfield while working from home for Newscast award for their coverage of old son, Ellis, who asks for the sports the past year as a creative producer,
the entire pandemic, allowing her to downtown Seattle rioting in 2020. section every morning. “Incarceration Nations: A Global
spend more (and much needed) time Docuseries,” was featured at the Tribeca
with her family. CARLI KRUEGER ’13 teaches digital Film Festival in June. Four of 10 total
2010s design as an adjunct professor at Arizona episodes in the series were screened in
LINDSAY GJERDE ’07 is currently a State University’s Cronkite School of the section titled “Tribeca Now.”
production manager running concerts ANDREW DUSEK ’10 is starting a Journalism. She says she’s also furthering
for Live Nation throughout the Midwest. new role as a Press and Public Outreach her career as a designer in the multifam- BENJAMIN ALVA POLLEY ’17 mar-
On occasion she gets her camera out and Officer at the U.S. Agency for Interna- ily industry. On the side, Carli designs ried fellow journalist Cassidy Randall
shoots the shows. tional Development (USAID) within curriculum books that teach kindergar- and this summer will move back to
the Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance. ten through 8th graders STEM concepts Missoula and continue his freelance
JEREMY POOL ’07 left the Washing- Andrew currently serves as a Senior through sport. work. Polley’s work has been published
ton Huskies where he was the Director Information Officer for USAID, where in Popular Science, Esquire, Field &
of Football Technology for nearly four he has worked since 2018. In this role, LILIAN LANGSTON ’13 works as Stream, Sierra, Mountain, Earth Island
years. This year he returned to the Jack- Andrew has provided regular reporting a freelance field producer for reality Journal and other publications.
sonville Jaguars as Director of Football on complex humanitarian emergencies television programs airing on HGTV,
Systems. Pool writes he’s back to “where and sudden onset disasters in Colom- DIY, A&E, Discovery and Fox Business. KATY SPENCE ’18 started a new job
it all began” for him; he was the Assis- bia, Jordan, Kenya, Nigeria, Sudan and Lilian is also a licensed Realtor in Mon- in January as the Communications &
tant Video Director with the Jags from South Sudan. Prior to joining USAID, tana’s Flathead Valley. Engagement Director of the Montana
2007-2017. he served as the on-the-record spokes- Environmental Information Center.
Andrew Dusek ’10 is starting a new role as a Press and Public Outreach Officer at the U.S. Agency
man for the Office of the UN High JESSICA MURRI ’13 is a training con-
for International Development (USAID) within the Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance.
MARNEÉ BANKS ’09 started a new Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) sultant with Sit Means Sit Dog Training ASHLEY NERBOVIG ’18 says she is a
job as Vice President of Communications in Myanmar from 2016 to 2017. in Portland, Oregon. She says she uses pen for hire in Mountain, Central and
at Global Strategy Group, a public affairs the interviewing skills she gained at UM qualities on 19th century Nantucket CARLY VESTER ’16 is producing out- Pacific time. Flag her down at anerbo-
and research firm based in New York and ALISON SCHEEL ’10 moved from Las to talk to dog owners about their pups, whale ships and as a writer for a scientif- doors-focused documentaries full-time [email protected].
Washington D.C. Following her time as Vegas to Texas and is the Key Account their challenges and hopes. Jessica has ic journal about national climate change with her production company Vester
spokesperson for Senator Tester and Chief Manager for creative agency The Hive. earned the company’s top sales awards policy. He still leads trail crews and is Media. Her first full-length documenta- MARTI LIECHTY ’19 is enrolled in
Communications Officer at the Theodore Alison represents liquor brands by curat- year after year and credits her success to currently in Wrangell St. Elias National ry, “700 Feet Down,” premiered on Am- UM’s joint JD-MBA program and
Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, she ing events and securing menu features. her journalism education. Park restoring airstrips with chainsaws azon, Apple and on-demand channels in expects to graduate in 2023.
will now be leading communications Previously, she lived in Las Vegas for six and shovels. July. The film chronicles the collapse of
campaigns for multiple corporate and years pursuing performance and gig life. CONOR BALLANTYNE ’14 was able the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, “Galloping In May, SKYLAR RISPENS ’19 left
nonprofit organizations. to work remotely for the NFL Network TIM BLODGETT ’15 started his career Gertie,” through intrepid divers explor- her job as a breaking news and educa-
ANNA KRATZ ’12 worked as a digital and moved back home to Missoula as a video journalist at KHQ-TV in ing a reef of wreckage and witnesses of tion reporter at the Great Falls Tribune
When ALLY (WELLER) DAVIS ’09 producer at Helena’s KTVH before from Los Angeles this past year. Conor Spokane. Five years later, he is now the bridge’s collapse. to cross the divide and cover educa-
isn’t chasing her 3-year-old twin boys, she moving to St. Peter’s Health where she is worked for NFL Network for seven reporting for KFMB in San Diego. This tion at the Missoulian. Skylar says
is working in marketing, event planning a scheduler. Anna got married in 2019 seasons and recently resigned to create a summer Tim was nominated for his first After more than two years of reporting she’s eager to continue her passionate
(mostly weddings) and making promo and she and her husband bought their digital textile print studio with his fian- local Emmy for his reporting on the for IFLScience, MADISON DAP- reporting on the K-12 education beat
videos for businesses and families. first home. cée opening in Missoula in 2021. death of Kobe Bryant in Los Angeles. CEVICH ’17 has returned to the Rocky and expand into higher education
Mountains. She is now based in Missou- reporting.
In 2020, NATALIE NEUMANN ’09 MARCUS CHEBUL ’13 has recently KENDRA COUSINEAU ’14 worked at ASHLEY STIDHAM ’15 has worked la working remotely as a (mostly) science
finished her Master of Science in Social been promoted to production man- the Sheridan (Wyoming) Press after grad- in marketing and communications jobs reporter for the fact-checking website
Work from the University of Texas at ager at Warm Springs Productions, a uation, but then returned to Missoula to since graduation. She will make a “huge Snopes. Madison will also be returning
Austin and Master of Public Health television production company based in work in tourism. Kendra recently landed career change” this fall by pursuing an to the E/V Nautilus, a deep-sea research
from UTHealth Science Center. She Missoula. Marcus has been working with her dream job as a digital marketing/ MFA in Interior Architecture. vessel that explores the world’s oceans
missed the mountains so much that she WSP since 2017, producing various communications specialist with Project to seek out new discoveries in the fields
moved to Colorado, and this year started un-scripted programs including History Healing Water Fly Fishing, Inc., and will MICHAEL WRIGHT ’15 became the of geology, biology, maritime history, NEWS UPDATES
working for the Colorado State Employee Channel’s long-running series, “Moun- be moving to Alabama this fall. Managing Editor of the Bozeman Daily archaeology and chemistry. She’ll spend Shoot us an email and
Assistance Program providing therapy for tain Men,” and on Animal Planet’s first Chronicle, replacing fellow J-School two months at sea working as a com- let your classmates know
state government employees. season of “Louisiana Law.” CHARLIE EBBERS MA ’14 regu- alumnus Nick Ehli. munications lead to explore and map what’s up in your world.
larly contributes to the gear and travel the seafloor from southern California to
JORDAN TREECE ’09 recently won BROOKS JOHNSON ’13 is a reporter content in Outside magazine and loves MICAH DREW ’16 attended graduate Hawaii and back again. [email protected]
32 Campus Drive
his 4th Northwest Regional Emmy with the Star Tribune’s Duluth bureau, chasing conservation features for Bugle school in an “entirely unrelated field.”
Don Anderson Hall
Award for his work with KING5 which was rebooted in 2019 as the paper magazine. He worked as a researcher on One year ago, Micah signed on with SYDNEY MACDONALD ’17 writes
Missoula, MT 59812
television in Seattle. Treece was part of expanded its footprint across Minnesota. a Montana cold case, an editor and writ- the Flathead Beacon to report from the that the multi-part mini documenta-
the team that won the Best Morning Brooks and wife Caitlin have a 2-year- er on a case study dissecting leadership “beautiful Flathead Valley.” ry series she’s been working on over
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