People

Collection for person entities.


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Terry Burnett
An artist who had artwork displayed in the Art on the Corner (AOTC) exhibit in Downtown Grand Junction.
Terry Catsman
Terry Catsman is from Norwich, Connecticut and studied at Norwich Free Academy and then at Marjorie Webster. While ski bumming in Aspen, she met Steve Catsman and they married in Aspen in 1970. The couple moved to Telluride in 1972. (The newlyweds finished college and left Michigan to find a less expensive ski town to call home). Once in Telluride, the couple opened an upscale bar and restaurant, called The Senate. Terry also opened The Examiner, a fine clothing store on Main Street in Telluride, Colorado, in 1979. Terry and Steve still live in Telluride, Colorado as of 2020. --Information taken from an online article by Bobbie Shaffer, called “The First Seder” accessed 11/19/20: https://www.telluridenews.com/opinion/columnists/article_84d51816-2434-11e6-b5c1-47ba6a3838f8.html Also, information taken from Terry’s Facebook page, accessed 11/19/20, and from an email.
Terry Minger
Terrell John “Terry” Minger was born 7 October 1942 in Ohio. He attended Baker University in Baldwin City, Kansas where he was student body president and earned a B.A. in Political Science. Minger earned a master’s degree at the University of Kansas Institute of Public Affairs and performed his M.A. internship at the City of Boulder, Colorado. After his internship, Minger became the Assistant City Manager of Boulder, Colorado. He earned an M.B.A. at the University of Colorado and also pursued scholarship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University and Stanford University. On 7 August 1965, Minger married Judith Rea “Judy” Arnold in Baldwin, Kansas. Judy Minger was one of Vail’s earliest educators. In 1967, Terry and Judy Minger stayed at the RamsHorn Lodge where Gerry White and Pete Seibert enticed Minger to relocate to Vail. Minger was the Town of Vail Manager between 16 February 1969 and 16 March 1979. According to former Vail civil servant, Pam Brandmeyer, Town Manager, Terry Minger, and Vail Mayor, John Dobson, were “kindred spirits” who were both “forward thinkers” and visionary leaders. Together, Minger and Dobson founded the Vail Symposium. Inspired by Vail Symposium interchange, Minger subsequently wrote Vail’s home-rule charter. Active in the civic, private and nonprofit sectors during his career life, Terry Minger is a writer and speaker on matters of community sustainability, global environment and resource management issues, and environmental and develop concerns of the intermountain states. He has served on the board of directors for numerous non-profit organizations. In 1999, Minger received the Jane Silverstein Ries Foundation Award for lifelong commitment to environmental issues of the Rocky Mountains and the American West. In 2015, Minger received the Torch Award from the Vail Centre acknowledging his contributions toward the arts, cultural heritage, learning and intellectual development within the community of Vail. Terry Minger has written two books and also wrote the forward for the John Horan-Kates publication, The Making of a Community: The Vail Way.

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