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2013 Colorado Skiing
2013 Colorado Skiing TABLE OF CONTENTS BUFFS AT A GLANCE SPORTS INFORMATION Location: Office Phone: Population: Office Fax: Enrollment: Mailing Address: 2013 Season Information 1 Founded: Quick Facts/Credits 1 Boulder, Colo. 303/492-5626 2013 Roster 2 Colors: 101,547 Website: 303/492-3811 2013 Schedule 3 Nickname: 29,887 Associate AD/SID357 (Skiing): UCB COACHES & STAFF 5-9 Mascot: 1876 Boulder,E-Mail: CO 80309 Head Coach Richard Rokos 5-6 Mascot:Silver, Gold & Black AssociateCUBuffs.com Director (Skiing): Nordic Coach Bruce Cranmer 7 Elevation: Buffaloes (Buffs) E-Mail: David Plati Nordic Assistant Jana Weinberger 8 NCAA Affiliation:Ralphie V (live buffalo) Cell: [email protected] Alpine Assistant Taggart Spenst 8 Conference: Assistant Director: Administrative Assistant Jodi Mossoni 8 Chip (costumed) Curtis Snyder Home Ski Area: CUBuffs.com Contributing Editor: Skiing Support Staff 8 5,345 feet above sea level [email protected] CU Regents/Administrative Staff 9 Secondary Home DivisionSki Area: I Assistant 720/218-4796Director: WOMEN’S ALPINE 11-16 President: RMISA Assistant Director: Troy Andre Khyla Burrows 11 Chancellor: Eldora Mountain Resort Graduate Assistant: B.G. Brooks Thea Grosvold 12 Provost: Steamboat Ski Resort Graduate Assistant:Andrew Green Jessica Honkonen 13 Faculty Rep:Bruce Benson (Colorado ’64) Linda Sprouse Shane McLean 14 Athletic Director:Dr. Phil DiStefano (Ohio State ’68) Ron Knabenbauer Brooke Wales 15 Sr. Women’s Admin.: ELDORA MOUNTAIN RESORT Clare Wise 16 Dr. Russell Moore (UC Davis ’76) Marlee Horn Assoc. AD (Skiing): MEN’S ALPINE 18-26 Dr. David Clough (Case Inst. ’68) Phone: Henrik Gunnarsson 18 Mike Bohn (Kansas ’83) Address: Andreas Haug 19-20 Ceal Barry (Kentucky ’77) Kasper Hietenan 21 COLORADO SKIING Julie Manning (Iowa St. -
Minutes of the Spring 2012 Blue Ridge Ski Council Meeting
Minutes of the Spring 2013 Blue Ridge Ski Council Meeting Date: May 4, 2013 Location: Maggiano’s, McLean, VA Host Club: Ski Club of Washington DC (SCWDC) Attendees: The attendance list is available on this link. Call to Order Bill Schrodel, president called the meeting to order at 8:45 am. Bill welcomed delegates from 16 member clubs including newcomers from The Fund Bank Ski Club and Black Ski Inc. The following tour operators were also present: Dan Ellis of Winter Ski and Sport; Judy Miller of Group Trips Unlimited; Effie Rubinstein of Sportours of New Jersey; and Bob McErland of Holidaze Ski Tours. Special guests: Tommy Geary, new regional sales representative for Vail Resorts, and Simon Diggins representing Snowbird/Alta ski resorts. Presentation on Vail, Colorado – Western Carnival 2014 Tommy Geary from Vail Resorts talked about upgrades at Vail (replacing Chair 4 —the Mountaintop Express, a quad chair from Mid-Vail to the top—with a 6-pack) and Breckenridge (adding Peak 6), highlighting the new gondola from Vail Village to Mid- Vail is in place and he congratulated the council for choosing the Vail Cascade Resort & Spa Hotel with its amenities and convenient location (everybody at one place, adequate event space, only a few hundred yards away from Lionshead, dedicated chairlift right by the hotel). Tommy also explained the Epic Pass/Epic Mix features and recommended the Epic Pass to members who are skiing in Colorado multiple times during one season. Presentation on Snowbird/Alta Simon Diggins promoted Little Cottonwood Canyon (known for pristine powder snow, and which is only 45 minutes from Salt Lake City Airport) as a possible destination for our 2016 Western Carnival. -
Oregon Tourism Commission
Oregon Tourism Commission Staff Report | April 2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS Optimize Statewide Economic Impact............................................................................... 2 Drive business from key global markets through integrated sales/marketing plans leveraged with global partners and domestic travel trade ..................................................... 2 Facilitate the development of world-class tourism product in partnership with community leaders, tourism businesses and key agencies .................................................... 7 Guide tourism in a way that achieves the optimal balance of visitation, economic impact, natural resources conservation and livability ....................................................................... 10 Inspire overnight leisure travel through industry-leading branding, marketing and communications ...................................................................................................................... 10 Support and Empower Oregon’s Tourism Industry ...................................................... 39 Provide development and training opportunities to meet the evolving tourism industry needs ......................................................................................................................................... 39 Implement industry leading visitor information network ................................................... 46 Fully realize statewide, strategic integration of OTIS (Oregon Tourism Information System) ................................................................................................................................... -
2019/20 Steamboat Press Kit
2019/20 Steamboat Press Kit TABLE OF CONTENTS Winter air service .................................................................................................... Page 2 Fly nonstop into Steamboat from 14 major U.S. airports. Winter Olympic tradition .................................................................................. Pages 3-8 Steamboat has produced 96 winter Olympians, more than any other town in North America. Champagne Powder® snow .............................................................................. Pages 9-11 Family programs ............................................................................................. Pages 12-14 Mountain facts and statistics ......................................................................... Pages 15-18 History of Steamboat ...................................................................................... Pages 19-27 Events calendar .............................................................................................. Pages 28-30 Cowboy Downhill ............................................................................................ Pages 31-32 Night skiing and snowboarding ..................................................................... Pages 33-34 On-mountain dining and Steamboat’s top restaurants ............................... Pages 35-42 Mountain tours and activities ........................................................................ Pages 43-44 Deals, packages and reservations ................................................................. -
President's Letter
June 12, 2020 PRESIDENT’S LETTER Downtime Quarantining at home, we’re all facing a bit more downtime than usual. I started to learn the ukulele and it’s going great, assuming all you want to hear is “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.” I’ve also practiced Morse code for the first time since my Boy Scout days. Still having trouble with numbers and punctuation, but I’ve got the 26 letters of the alphabet nailed. Sadly, Morse code doesn’t come up too often in conversation. Putting aside music and ham radio, this is a good opportunity to hone your own professional skills and undertake long-overdue office projects. Get caught up on that pile of New Yorker magazines, some of the best writing in the country. Take out your digital SLR camera and learn the difference between aperture and shutter priority. Create space on your computer by backing up and deleting old files. Learn a few more Photoshop skills such as cropping, brightness/contrast and image size. Get acquainted with new outdoor apps like National Geographic’s iNaturalist or The Cornell Lab’s Merlin. Start a website or blog showcasing your work. Increase your proficiency in video editing. Create a target list of editors to pitch. View a professional development seminar, such as the recent webinar hosted by New York-based freelance journalist Meena Thiruvengadam linked below. The world is slowly opening up and I fully expect we’ll all come roaring back in the fall. Having a few more skills in your professional quiver will keep your career on track. -
Killy Vince La Coppa E Saluta La Compagnia
SCIATORI D’EPOCA STORIA DELLA VALANGA AZZURRA Gli anni bui: il 1968 - Finale di stagione VOLUME 1, NUMERO 27/28 Finale di stagione Killy vince la Coppa e saluta la compagnia Dopo il match delle 5 nazioni di Sun giungibile, Jean Claude Killy non è la pochezza di Nenning nelle disci- Valley vinto dalla squadra francese, ancora matematicamente certo della pline tecniche. Si tratterà solo di la stagione di sci alpino giunge alla vittoria. In teoria, ma molto in teoria, vedere quando Killy si aggiudicherà conclusione con le ultime 4 gare da l'austriaco Nenning potrebbe ancora matematicamente la Coppa. Molto disputarsi a Rossland in Columbia batterlo se vincesse le quattro rima- probabile già dalla prima gara a Britannica (Canada) e a Heavenly nenti gare. Impresa pressochè im- Rossland. Ammesso che sia presen- Valley (California). Pur se ampia- possibile, non tanto per l’imbattibili- te in Canada e non prolunghi la bre- mente in testa e praticamente irrag- tà del campione francese quanto per ve vacanza già programmata. Le gare di Rossland: omaggio a Nancy Greene E’ stato venerdì 28 marzo 1968 che spettata per il suo successo, il suo entrambi vinto le gare. Sono andata Nancy Greene e la sua città natale di fascino e il suo atteggiamento che alla mia conferenza stampa e lui Rossland, BC, hanno accolto il mon- anche Killy non ha potuto resistere a aveva appena concluso la sua. La do dello sci per prima volta in una venire a Rossland a fare "una gara prima domanda dei giornalisti per gara di Coppa del Mondo in Cana- me era cosa ne pensi dell'annuncio da. -
Culture, Landscape & the Making of the Colorado Ski Industry
CULTURE, LANDSCAPE, AND THE MAKING OF THE COLORADO SKI INDUSTRY by ANNE GILBERT COLEMAN B.A., Williams College, 1987 M.A., University of Colorado, 1992 A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Colorado in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of History 1996 This thesis for the Doctor of Philosophy degree by Anne Gilbert Coleman has been approved for the Department of History by Patricia Nelson Limerick Philip J. Deloria Date ACKNOWLEDGMENTS When people hear the topic of my dissertation, they often give me a knowing smile and ask if I am a skier. I say "I was a skier in my life before graduate school, when I had more time and a paycheck." This project has allowed me to explore Colorado's ski areas from the inside out, through their history, design, and marketing as well as their lifts, lodges, and trails. In the process I have met dozens of interesting people and incurred a number of debts. This project received financial support from the American Historical Association's Albert J. Beveridge Research Grant, the University of Colorado History Department's Douglas A. Bean Memorial Faculty Research Stipend and Pile Fellowship, the Roaring Fork Research Scholarship funded by Ruth Whyte, and from Dr. Giles D. Toll. I would like to thank all the people who helped me research this project, including Charlie Langdon at the Durango Herald, Mary Walker and Ingrid Schierllng Burnett at the Tread of Pioneers Museum, Sue Spearing at the Grand County Historical Society, all of the people at the University of Colorado Archives and the Colorado Historical Society, and Lisa Hancock, Jody Phillips McCabe, and my other friends at the Aspen Historical Society. -
Steamboat; Sun, Snow, and Billy Kidd
STEAMBOAT; SUN, SNOW, AND BILLY KIDD by John DeYoung Tetty DeIIiQuadti and Jamie Lynch . TOWf IS WHERE TH IR1$ 60 Steamboat trademark in Billy KiUd, a KI A VOLUAHO IN CALWORNIA magazines and pictures, is one of the best skiers HW PONThBS 10 SKt SPRING SNOW in the United States. Hewon a silver medal in the - . 1964 Olympics, and a gold in the World Cham pionships. From pro racer he went to marketing Billy on the covet director for the Steamboat Ski Area. He was married to Kristin, in 1976 and has two children, of Ski Magazine. Buff and Christian. “At school in Stowe we got out two afternoons a “I was born in Burlinton, Vermont, on April 3, week to ski. The top classes were coached by the 1943. I grew up water skiing and playing around best ski instructors from the Austrian ski school. Lake Champlain. In general, I had a pretty ideal The head instructor and a number of the others childhood. There was a touch of city life in were former Olympic and world champions. Burlington, and when I was twelve, we moved to They were Othmar Schneider, Peggy Goggle, Vermont. was sort of like Steamboat, Stowe, It and some others I doubt you would know. Some and Stowe was the ski racing capital of the of the best racers in the world came to Stowe to country then. teach skiing. I was glad I had a chance to train “My dad did a number of things, but he was with them. mainly in the resort business. -
15.02.1962. Chamonix Giant Slalom, Men Course Length: 2200 M Vertical
15.02.1962. Chamonix Giant Slalom, men course length: 2200 m vertical drop: 470 m number of gates: 49 course setter: Louis Ravanel FRA started: 65 finished: 51 forerunner: Chuck Ferries USA weather: sunny 1. Egon Zimmermann II AUT 1.38.97 ( 6) 0.00 pts. 2. Karl Schranz AUT 1.39.12 ( 3) 0.70 3. Martin Burger AUT 1.39.42 ( 1) 2.80 4. Adrien Duvillard FRA 1.39.69 ( 2) 4.90 5. Bud Werner USA 1.40.13 (11) 8.40 6. Carlo Senoner ITA 1.40.25 (14) 9.10 7. Leo Lacroix FRA 1.40.66 ( 5) 11.90 8. Gerhard Nenning AUT 1.41.24 ( ) 15.58 9. Felice de Nicolo ITA 1.42.25 22.05 10. Ludwig Leitner FRG 1.42.53 ( ) 24.00 11. Willy Forrer SUI 1.42.85 ( 4) 25.95 12. James Heuga USA 1.42.97 26.50 13. Roger Gruenenfelder SUI 1.43.11 (15) 27.14 14. Paride Milianti ITA 1.43.18 27.78 15. Billy Kidd USA 1.43.40 29.06 16. Wolfgang Bartels FRG 1.44.01 32.80 17. Georg Gruenenfelder SUI 1.44.11 (16) 33.43 18. Martino Fill ITA 1.44.55 36.58 19. Bill Marolt USA 1.45.19 40.24 20. Verne Anderson CND 1.46.87 50.40 21. Yoshihiro Fukuhara JAP 1.47.01 50.80 22. Olle Rolen SWE 1.47.34 53.12 23. Peter Duncan CND 1.48.14 57.52 24. Tore Grahn SWE 1.48.17 57.52 25. -
Colorado Olympians U.S. National Ski Hall-Of-Fame
Colorado Olympians U.S. National Sk i Hal l- of- Fame Former CU Ski Team Members Name ................................. Nation Sport Olympics Cary Adgate .................................. USA ASK 1976, 1980 Buddy Werner Jimmie Huega Jim Barrows .................................. USA ASK 1968 Inducted 1964 Inducted 1976 Tahir Bisic ....................................... BOS ASK 2002 Frank E. Brown ............................ USA ASK 1960 Ingrid Langell Butts .................... USA NSK 1988, 1992, 1994 John G. Dendahl ......................... USA NSK 1960 Billy Kidd Bob Beattie Michael Donald Gallagher ....... USA NSK 1964, 1968, 1972 Inducted 1976 Inducted 1984 Robert Hawes Gray ................... USA NSK 1968, 1972 Carolina Gede-Dahl ................... NOR ASK 1994 Katerina Hanusova ..................... CZR NSK 1998, 2002 Lucie Hanusova ........................... CZR NSK 2002 Bill Marolt Tom Jacobs Jimmie Heuga .............................. USA ASK 1964, 1968 Ben Husaby .................................. USA NSK 1992, 1994 Inducted 1993 Inducted 2007 Greg Jones .................................... USA ASK 1976 Hank Kashiwa .............................. USA ASK 1972 Robert C. Kendall ........................ USA NSK 1968, 1972 Cary Adgate Michael Lafferty ........................... USA ASK 1972 Andy LeRoy ................................... USA ASK 1998 Inducted 2008 Beth Madsen ................................ USA ASK 1988 William Marolt .............................. USA ASK 1964 Clark Matis .................................... -
BEERCATION at LAWSON’S FINEST LIQUIDS
2019/20 GOLF’S BERMUDA TRIANGLE BEERCATION AT LAWSON’S FINEST LIQUIDS Plus: Resort Tech Upgrades | Those Friendly Ambassadors | Sugarbush Trendsetters 2019/20 ADAPTIVE ATHLETES KICKING BUTT & TAKING NAMES INTRODUCING THE WALL OF FAMERS Plus: TOP TEN TIPS for Sugarbush First Timers BEERCATION at Lawson’s Finest Liquids KIDS ON SNOW: What to Know sugarbush.com 800.53.SUGAR 34 Undaunted: The Story of Vermont Adaptive A program at Mt. Ellen provides adaptive adventures to athletes with disabilities. BY CANDICE WHITE Plus: Sugarbush’s Adaptive Sports Triumvirate 44 Thirteen at 13 The dark heart of the Sugarbush back nine is a tricky stretch for even the Mad River Valley’s most competitive golfers. BY DREW SIMMONS Plus: The Pro's Take on Holes 12–14 Sugarbush Golf Tournament Preview 52 Matters of Style If you spent any time at Sugarbush between 1960 and 2000—and beyond—you were likely to encounter something seminal in skiing’s Darwinian evolution. BY PETER OLIVER be here There are a lot of places you could be but only one place you should be. Here. Come to Sugarbush to discover one of the best kept secrets in the East. Our legendary terrain and rich history beckons all who are looking for the refreshing adventure of a new challenge. JA DEPARTMENTS SUGARBUSH MAGAZINE INSIDE LINES PRESIDENT 4 One on one with Win Smith, majority owner Winthrop Smith Jr. and president of Sugarbush Resort EDITOR VALLEY LIFE Candice White 6 Welcome to the Sunny Side MANAGING EDITOR Lawson’s new taproom is much more Katie Bacon than a place to enjoy great beer. -
Special Supplement
SKIING HISTORY Journal of the International Skiing History Association SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT SKIING THE SEVEN CONTINENTS Why the Quest Now Goes Well Beyond the Sport TEXT “POW” TO 52886 TO MAKE YOUR PLEDGE TO VOTE 2 | Winter 2020 SKIING HISTORY Letter from the ISHA President Climate change is a matter of concern to all of us who live to glide on snow. Each of us can support candidates who advocate productive climate legislation, and we can support organizations working to activate young voters in snow country. TOM LIPPERT TOM To the readers of Skiing History: harlie Sanders frames his wonder- grams to slow carbon emissions, or even ful Seven Continents report in plan for a warmer future. If our sport is to Cthe context of climate change. He have a future, those climate deniers must points out that skiers worldwide face habi- be exiled from power. Regardless of who tat loss. It’s a matter of concern to all of us sits in the White House, as long as the who live to glide on snow. As historians, Senate remains in the hands of climate de- we are acutely aware of the problem, be- niers, no progress can possibly occur. And cause we have seen the retreat of Alpine the Senate will continue to approve judges glaciers over the past century and, espe- determined to put corporate interests cially, over the past decade. above the environment. I first saw this for myself in 1983, when, Skiing is a small community that with a couple of friends, I skied the Haute spends very little on political action.