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Carol Lally '90
graduated with a degree in English. She is now an intellectual
property lawyer.
Neal Baer '78 earned
his degree in political science. He is the executive producer and
writer for the hit show "ER."
Colorado
U.S. Senator Ken
Salazar graduated
from CC in 1977. Elected
to the senate in 2004,
he had been the state's
attorney general.
Holly Ornstein Carter
'85 received her degree in political science and is now a writer and
documentary filmmaker.
Karen Andersen Medville,
a research scientist at Arizona State University, graduated in 1985.
Marcia McNutt,
president and CEO of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute,
earned her degree in physics in 1974.
Jay Engeln graduated
in 1974 with a degree in biology. He is the 2000 National High
School Principal of the Year.
Basketball star Verdel Baskin,
an English major from the Class of 1999, is now an El Pomar Fellow.
Laura Hershey, a
disability rights activist, graduated in 1983 with a degree in history.
Jazz singer Lorna
Kollmeyer, a liberal arts major from the Class of 1980, owns an
ornamental plasterwork company.
Richard Koo, 1982
alumnus with a degree in math, is the co-founder of Vitria.com.
Mountain climber Jake Norton,
Class of 1996, was a history-philosophy major.
Paul Markovich
graduated in 1988 with an international political economy major and is
the co-founder of MyWayHealth.
J. Ralph Armijo, a
business administration major, graduated in 1974 and founded Navidec,
Inc. and DriveOff.com.
Theatre artist Liz Stanton
earned her degree in business and economics in 1988.
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Jake
Norton
Class of ’96 Climber, Real Estate
Developer, Photographer Colorado Springs, Colorado
When media across the country learned that one of the climbers on the
recent news-making Everest expedition spoke Nepalese and hailed from
Colorado Springs, their first call was to the Colorado College Alumni
Office. With a strong Asian studies program, world-class climbing just
minutes away, and accessibility to a study-abroad program in Nepal, CC
was the obvious connection to Jake Norton.
Already
an avid climber, Jake arrived on campus and went straight to the Study
Abroad Office. He found a program in Nepal that included intensive language
study, so during fall semester of his sophomore year, Jake and two CC
friends made their journey.
His learning about the Nepali people had already begun. Declaring a
history-philosophy major with an emphasis in South Asia, Jake eventually
did a thesis on a form of Buddhism practiced by the Newar tribe of the
Kathmandu Valley.
The last two years of college, Jake and his friends lived in a local
Victorian home, “and it just broke our hearts to see this amazing
house falling apart. As history majors, we were intrigued by these old
places.” So just after graduation, the three formed a real estate
development company, buying, restoring, and selling or renting local
Victorian homes. “Our plan from the start was to create a stable
source of income that would allow us to do the things we love and still
have the flexibility to take off for a couple of months at a time.
That plan worked, as shortly thereafter, Jake was invited to climb
Cho Oyu, “the goddess of turquoise,” a neighbor of Everest and, at
8,201 meters, the sixth highest peak. The leader of that expedition
called him just a year later and told him of the possibility of an
Everest trip. At first, Jake wasn’t that excited. “The summit of
Everest never really held a huge appeal for me,” he says, “because
I’ve seen too many people die over the years going for it, and I
don’t want to end up like that.” But when he learned they’d be
looking for the bodies of Mallory and Irvine, reputed to possibly be the
first climbers to reach Everest’s summit, he was hooked. With his
experience in the field, Jake helped find sponsors for the
two-and-a-half-month endeavor. Not only did they find Mallory’s
remains, but Jake, the only climber who brought a camera on that day,
was able to publish several photos in National
Geographic Adventure and other publications, including the
expedition book, Ghosts of
Everest. Since then, he’s launched his own company, MountainWorld
Photography.
Today, he’s planning a second trip to Everest to find Irvine and
the camera Irvine may have had, as well as to do a comprehensive
archeology of all the old expeditions. “We’d really like to put
together an exhibit that’s a tribute to what these guys managed to
pull off,” he says. Still, Jake’s realized that “living in a tent
and having a nomadic life is not exactly what I want for the long
haul.” He’s working on an opportunity with a nongovernmental relief
agency that helps the Tibetan and Nepali people.
Jake credits Colorado College with helping him further his passion
and unite all his interests in life. He found the Block Plan not only
allowed him more time to climb -- it also helped him academically.
“I’ve always been the kind of person who likes to dive in to one
subject and focus on it,” he explains, “and I always found myself
distracted in high school when I’d have 10 different things going at
the same time.”
It was his college history, philosophy, and religion professors who
inspired him most, their example ringing true with Jake’s mountaintop
experience. “The quality of professors at CC is phenomenal,” he
says. “They really care about their students as people and encourage
each one of us to reach our fullest potential.”
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