Mini Golf Mountain 50013 Peace Park Program2014

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2014 PEACE PARK ASSEMBLY SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

82nd Waterton-Glacier International
Peace Park Assembly | September 18 - 20, 2014
Hilton Garden Inn, 1840 US Hwy. 93 South, Kalispell, MT
Ph. 406-756-4500 Contact the hotel directly for reservations.
Hosted by Rotary Clubs of Montana: Polson, Missoula
Sunrise, Missoula, Evergreen and Kalispell
Convention Chairmen:
Doug Wold, Polson Rotary, doug@woldlawfirm.com
Keith Urbach, Polson Rotary, urbmt@yahoo.com
DG 5080--Norman McCarvell, Nelson
BC: DG D5370--Linda Robertson, Edmonton, Alberta
DG D5360--Garth Toombs, Calgary, Alberta
DG D5390--Roy Beekman, Kalispell, MT

WGIPPA BOARD

Board Officers for Waterton Glacier Int’l Peace Park Assoc.
Carl Prinzing, President (D5390)
Terry Allen, Vice President (D5360)
Marshall Gingery, Vice-President Nominee (DC5390)
Glenn E. Coulter, Secretary/Treasurer (D5360)
Camillie Baycroft, Treasurer (D5390)
Fran Leggett, Past President (D5360)
Board of Directors for Waterton Glacier Int’l Peace Park Assoc.
Directors D5080
Casey Brennan, Fernie BC
Randal McNair
Directors Dist. 5360
Sheran Carter, Pincher Creek
Dick Bide, Medicine Hat
Carolyn Clark, Lethbridge
Directors D5370
John Vrolijk, Sherwood Park

Directors Dist. 5390
Carl Ernest, Miles City
Dan Bingham, Helena
Marshall Gingery, Helena
Susan Hay Patrick, Missoula
Greg Duncan, Helena
Dale Gillespie, Polson

Event Menus
We are very pleased to be able to offer Assembly attendees
several delicious meal choices highlighting the talents of
Hilton Garden Inn chef Don Burleson and his staff. Here is
some additional information about the planned meals:
Friday Dinner Dinner will be at the Flathead Lutheran Camp.
Everyone will go by bus from Lakeside (following the cruise);
no cars at the camp, please. Dinner will be a BBQ served in
the scenic Cockrell Convention Center at the camp. The menu
is ribs and chicken; pasta, potato and green salads; fruit; rolls;
pie and ice cream. Concert to follow dinner.
Saturday Luncheon will be a buffet featuring: Chicken
Piccata with saffron rice pilaf, steamed vegetable medley with
assorted rolls, fruit bowl, and mixed green salad with dressing
choices. Tea and Coffee.
Saturday Banquet Your choice of Prime Rib OR Steelhead
Salmon, each served with Yukon Gold mashed potatoes and
grilled asparagus with lemon garlic butter sauce. Garden salad
with Huckleberry vinaigrette. Dessert, tea and coffee.
Sunday Morning Buffet Country scrambled eggs with diced
ham, tomatoes, mushrooms and green peppers. Sausage,
bacon, and roasted breakfast potatoes. Assorted pastries,
muffins, fresh baked cinnamon rolls with cream cheese icing.
Sliced fruit. Assorted juices, tea and coffee.
Gratuities are included in the price of each meal.

PLEASE NOTE:
If you have special dietary needs, please make this known
when you check in at the Rotarian Registration Desk.
The greeter will give you a special dinner ticket.

SEPTEMBER 18-21, 2014

l

HILTON GARDEN INN

l

KALISPELL, MONTANA

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Welcome to the Celebration!
The Rotary Clubs of Polson, Missoula Sunrise, Missoula,
Evergreen and Kalispell welcomes you to the 82nd
Anniversary celebration of a very unique international event:
the Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park Assembly.
We hope you enjoy all of the events, presentations, food and
fellowship we have planned for your visit. We also thank you,
because by being here you help extend the rich heritage of the
founding (by Rotarians) of the very first International Peace
Park.

paint, or work in the nursery collecting seed. Check in at front
desk at Park HQ, just across the bridge at West Glacier. Wear
appropriate clothing.

A lot of activity will be near the Rotary registration desk at the Hilton Garden Inn! In addition to artist Allan Jimmerson painting onsite, four groups supporting Glacier National Park will have a presence with representatives and tables of information nearby.
The National Park and Conservation Association will also be represented, as well as the Rotary Club of South Calgary.

Friday, September 19

Early check-in at at the Assembly Registration Desk, Hilton
Garden Inn lobby. Registration Desk open 8:00 am - 5:00 p.m.
FRIDAY MORNING: (breakfast on your own)
8:30
Golf tournament at Buffalo Hills Golf Club, 1176
North Main Street, Kalispell. (406)756-4530. Meet at the golf
course; first tee time is 8:30. Pay for tournament play at the
Club house. Cost includes the use of a cart.
8:30

Special Offer for Rotarians: Due to the Kalispell location
and the capacity of the Hilton Garden Inn to serve, we have a
unique opportunity to introduce many more Rotarians to the
Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park Assembly. Realizing
that some Rotarians cannot devote the time to attend the full
Assembly, we are offering the chance to attend one meal:
• Friday night Dinner (5 p.m.) If not on the cruise, catch the
bus at 5:45 pm at the Lakeside dock. (Small bus fee charge).
• Saturday Noon Luncheon (and stay for the 1:30 p.m. Peace
Park Assembly meeting) OR the
• Saturday night Banquet (5:30 p.m.)
You may attend one of these three functions without
registering (you will receive a meal ticket and name tag). If
you elect to attend more than one of these three, you must
register. We hope most Rotarians will register to support the
full Assembly and all it offers. However, if you cannot, please
indicate on the enclosed Registration Form which meal event
you plan to attend.

Schedule of Events:
Thursday, September 18

Early check-in at the Assembly Registration Desk, Hilton
Garden Inn lobby, 3:00-8:00 p.m.
10:00: “Volunteer at the Park
Come to Park Headquarters in West Glacier anytime between
9 and 3 and work with the USPS staff to fight invasive plants,

Guided hike/Apgar Lookout Glacier National Park

The Apgar Lookout Trail provides a beautiful and unique
view into Glacier National Park. The lookout sits atop Apgar
Mountain, which lies at the outlet of Lake McDonald. From
on top you get a stunning, nearly unobstructed view down on
Lake McDonald and of the high peaks in the Park. We’ll leave
Hilton Garden Inn at 8:30 a.m. The hike is 6.6 miles round trip
with an 1,850 foot elevation gain (rated
MODERATE). Bring your hiking boots,
daypack with water, snacks, camera and
binoculars. We’ll stop en route at Subway
so you can pick up a sack lunch. Carpool
transportation with all contributing $5 to
the driver for gas. You may also incur a
park entrance fee ($25 per vehicle)
if no one in the vehicle has a Glacier
National Park Pass. Check out a trail description at: www.
hikinginglacier.com/apgar-lookout.htm
9:00

Non-Profit Partners of Glacier National Park at the Hilton Garden Inn
Glacier Association www.glacierassociation.org
• Operates bookstores to help support Glacier National Park
interpretation and education activities and programs
• Serves as an official Park partner specializing in educational
and interpretive materials

Glacier Institute www.glacierinstitute.org
• Serves as an official Park partner specializing in fee-based
field seminars and programs for adults and families
• Provides field-based, in-depth learning experiences to the
public

Glacier National Park Fund
www.glaciernationalparkfund.org
• Serves as an official Park partner specializing in philanthropy
for trails, education and interpretive programs, historic
structures, cultural resources and research
• Fosters public awareness of glacier National Park and the
need to preserve and protect it

Glacier National Park Associates
www.glaciernationalparkassociates.org
• Serves as an official Park partner specializing in volunteer
services
• Donates money, goods and voluntary services to Glacier
National Park

District Governors
Dist. 5080 Norman McCarvell | Dist. 5360 Garth Toombs | Dist. 5370 Linda Robertson | Dist. 5390 Roy Beekman
Thank you to our generous Sponsors and Donors

Guided hike/Avalanche Lake, Glacier National Park

Avalanche Lake Enjoy a splendid day in Glacier National Park
hiking through old- growth forest to a beautiful lake in a cirque
that is fed by waterfalls. We’ll leave Hilton Garden Inn at 9:00
a.m. This hike is 4 miles round trip with a 500-ft elevation gain
(rated EASY). Bring your hiking boots, daypack with water,
snacks, camera and binoculars. We’ll stop en route at Subway
so you can pick up a sack lunch. Carpool transportation with
all contributing $5 to the driver for gas. You may also incur a
park entrance fee ($25 per vehicle) if no one in the vehicle has
a Glacier National Park Pass. Check out a trail description at:
visitmt.com/categories/moreinfo.asp?IDRRecordID=5826&sit
eid=1

Carbonari Associates, Inc. (Pins)
Designworks/Graphic Design
Flathead Beacon
Glacier Park Incorporated
Insty Prints (program)
Mission Mountain Winery (wine)

Montana Maps
Plum Creek Lumber Company
Signs Now (signs)
Total Screen Design (Briefcases, shirts)
and a special thanks to the management and
staff of the Hilton Garden Inn, Kalispelll

Hosted by Rotary Clubs of Montana:
Polson, Missoula Sunrise, Missoula, Evergreen, Kalispell

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At the mansion we will be treated to a brief concert by Julliardtrained, internationally famous violin virtuoso, Wai Mizutani.
Wai lives in Bigfork and we are truly fortunate to witness this
great talent during our time at the mansion.

patients and staff at North Valley Hospital as often as time
permits. Jaxon will not be with Peg at this event, but he loves
to rest under the piano when she plays at the hospital and at
home!

SATURDAY EVENING:
5:30
Cash bar
6:30
Banquet, Guest speaker: Dr. Jack Stanford, Director
Flathead Lake Biological Station

SUNDAY,
September 21

Jack A. Stanford
Jessie M. Bierman Professor of
Ecology
and Director Flathead Lake Biological
Station
The University of Montana
Stanford has worked at the Flathead
Lake Biological Station since
1971. The Biological Station is
a multidisciplinary research and
education center with 8 resident
faculty and 40 staff members, including graduate students
and postdoctoral scholars, with an annual budget currently
exceeding $4M from competitive grants, mostly from NSF,
NASA and private foundations. He has graduated 13 PhD
and 28 MS students. Professor Stanford is most noted for
his long-term studies in the 18,200 km2 Flathead RiverLake Ecosystem in Montana and British Columbia that
demonstrated the 4 dimensional nature of rivers, ecological
connectivity of aquatic systems and food web cascades caused
by introduction of nonnative species. In 1999, Dr. Stanford
began extensive work on a suite of observatory salmon rivers
in Kamchatka, Argentina, Alaska, and British Columbia; the
research focuses on cross-site comparisons of the salmon
and steelhead life histories and effects of marine nutrient
subsidies on floodplain ecology. Professor Stanford teaches
field ecology for undergraduates at FLBS every summer,
a very popular, outdoor course. He has served on many
national and international science review panels and editorial
boards concerning the ecology and conservation of rivers and
salmonid fishes. He was elected a Fellow of the American
Association for Advancement of Science in 2000. In 2004
Professor Stanford received the Award of
Excellence of the Society for Freshwater
Science, and in 2011 he received the Lifetime
Achievement Award from the International
Society for River Science.
Dinner music:

Peg Allison

Peg Allison Our evening pianist this year is
Peg Allison from Kila, MT. She has played for
special occasions, musical productions, and vocalists since
she was in high school. Peg has also been an organist and
pianist for church services since the age of 13. Peg studied
music in college but found her calling in politics as the Clerk of
District Court for Flathead County. In addition to her musical
abilities, Peg is also a “pet partner.” With her certified therapy
dog, a registered yellow lab named Jaxon, she visits the

SUNDAY MORNING:
7:30 Breakfast buffet, Speaker
Pastor Glenn Burfeind
Pastor Glenn holds a BS in
Forestry from the University
of Montana and a Masters of Divinity from San Francisco
Theological Seminary. Glenn worked for the US Forest Service
on the Tahoe National Forest prior to becoming a pastor and is
currently serving as pastor/head of staff at First Presbyterian
Church in Kalispell. Glenn enjoys Glacier and has hiked almost
every trail with his wife Deb. Glenn will lead us in a biblical
exploration of the concept of shalom—peace and wholeness.
11:00		 Hands Across the Border Ceremony in Glacier
		 National Park
Reach out with your fellow
Rotarians by commemorating the
world’s first International Peace
Park with the Assembly’s traditional
“handshake across the border”
ceremony between Canadian and
American Rotarians. Travel to
Glacier National Park on your own or in car pools, leaving
Kalispell by 9:15 a.m. for arrival by 10:30.
There is no charge to enter the Park to attend; just tell the
entrance attendant you are going to the ceremony. Park at
the Apgar Transit Center. The ceremony will take place at
the Apgar Amphitheater. It is about a 1/4 mile walk from the
Transit Center to the Amphitheater. One of Glacier Park Inc.’s
historic red Jammer Buses will be provided if you need to ride
to/from the Amphitheater. The ceremony will be outside and
will be held rain or shine. Families are very welcome. This is
the final event of the Assembly and is a wonderful opportunity
to celebrate the International Peace Park that Rotary brought
together as a beacon of international peace.

9:30-3:00 Day in Bigfork
Voted one of the “Best Small Towns in America”, Bigfork
Village is nestled on the northern shores of Flathead Lake, the
largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi.
With over 18 galleries in this picturesque community we will
tour many of them, meeting the artists, watching demonstrations and enjoying discussions with them. We will visit the
work shop of Lee Proctor a renowned glass blowing artist.
Bigfork mystery writer and two-time Agatha Award winner
Leslie Budewitz will be signing Crime Rib, latest in her
nationally-bestselling Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries, a lighthearted mystery series set in Jewel Bay, Montana, a fictional
cousin of Bigfork.
Lunch will be served at the celebrated Grill 459. You will also
have free time to visit many of the local merchants.
Book signing: Meet Leslie Ann Budewitz
Leslie Budewitz writes The Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries,
published by Berkley Prime Crime, a division of Penguin
books. “It takes a village to catch a killer.” Set in Jewel Bay,
Montana, a lakeside resort community on the road to Glacier
National Park, the light-hearted mysteries feature Erin Murphy,
proprietor of The Merc, a market specializing in regional
foods, in her family’s century-old former grocery. Erin’s
passion for pasta, retail, and huckleberry chocolates leads
to an unexpected talent for solving murder. New York Times
bestseller Laura Childs says “Small town charm and big time
chills.” Death al Dente, first in the series, won the 2013 Agatha
Award for Best First Novel. The second, Crime Rib, appeared
in July 1, 2014, and like its predecessor, quickly became a
national bestseller.
Also a lawyer, Leslie is the
author of Books, Crooks &
Counselors: How to Write
Accurately About Criminal Law
and Courtroom Procedure,
winner of the 2011 Agatha
Award for Best Nonfiction—
making her the only author to
win Agatha Awards for both
fiction and nonfiction.
4:00-9:00
4:00

end of the lake and see
the beautiful mountains
and lakeshore homes.
You will love this trip,
complete with catered
hors d’oeurves and a
cash bar. Guaranteed
to be a highlight of the
Assembly. The busses
will meet us at the docks
in Lakeside and take us about 5 miles to the Cockrell Center on
the incredibly scenic bay fronting the Flathead Lutheran Camp.
Cash bar. We will be treated to a scrumptious BBQ of chicken
and ribs and all the fixin’s, followed by an outstanding concert
by Rob Quist and the Montana
Band, western Montana’s premier
country music performers. During
dinner we will be introduced to
the Rotary exchange students
attending the assembly. Busses
will pick us up at the camp at 9:00
for the 20 minute ride back to the
convention hotel.
Note: If you either register late
and the boat is fully booked, you
can still meet us at the Lakeside
docks at 5:45 for the bus ride to the camp, dinner and concert.
After dinner, the bus will take you back to your car at the dock.
(Please do not drive your cars to the Lutheran Camp because
parking is quite limited).

Saturday, September 20

Check-in at the Assembly Registration Desk, Hilton Garden Inn
lobby, 8;00 - noon, 4:00 - 56:30 p.m.
SATURDAY MORNING
8:00
Breakfast Buffet (in convention hall).
8:30-9:30 Glacier Superintendent Jeff Mow and
Waterton Superintendent Ifan Thomas on
“The state of the Park(s)”

Leslie Budewitz

Afternoon on the lake, BBQ and concert
Flathead Lake Cruise Board the busses at the
Hilton Parking lot for a short trip to the dock of
the Far West, the largest
cruise ship on Flathead
Lake. (The ship’s capacity
is limited to 149 persons,
so book early!) We will
take an hour and a half
tour around the north

Jeff Mow has been the superintendent of Glacier National
Park since August 2013. He was a student at Carleton College
in Minnesota when he first came to Montana in 1979 for a
summer job with the US Geological Survey. Subsequently
he spent three summers conducting geologic mapping in
the Flint Creek, Anaconda Pintler, and Sapphire Ranges of
Montana. In his first summer as a seasonal ranger at Glacier
Bay National Park and Preserve in Alaska he was assigned to
cutting fireline on the Red Bench Wildland Fire in the North
Fork of the Flathead. Mow has had eight National Park Service
duty stations over the course of his career. Prior to Glacier
National Park, he had assignments as the superintendent of
Kenai Fjords National Park, and Florissant Fossil Beds National
Monument, and the acting superintendent of Denali National
Park and Preserve.

4

5
He served for a year on
the U.S. Senate Energy
and Natural Resources
Committee and another
year with the National Park
Service Office of Legislative
and Congressional Affairs.
His additional duties have
included involvement with
the Department of Interior
Jeff Mow
during response regarding
the Gulf of Mexico Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and the Exxon
Valdez Oil Spill in Alaska.
Mow’s community involvement has included serving as Mayor
of Bettles Field, Alaska, and volunteer firefighter and EMT,
and has been a member of Rotary International for about nine
years. He and his family are passionate about winter sports
including all types of skiing and skating and in the “off-season”
they enjoy biking, hiking, camping, and paddling.

Graduate Institute for International
and Development Studies in Geneva,
Switzerland, which he passed Summa Cum
Laude. His PhD thesis examined Chinese
investments in Africa.
He also holds two masters degrees in
Sociology and International Relations, a
two-year professional certificate in Conflict
Steven Nakana
Resolution and Peacebuilding from the
University of California, Berkeley and the University of Cape
Town in South Africa, as well as numerous traineeships in
conflict management.
Zahid Hamdard is a graduate of Yale School of Environment,
class of 2010, where his studies focused on environmental
economics, business & environment and environmental law
and policy. During 2008, Mr. Hamdard helped in cofounding
the “ Yale Afghan Forum”, a student led forum on Afghanistan.
Additionally, Mr. Hamdard was a member of Yale Forestry Club
at Yale School of Forestry and Environmental studies.

Ifan Thomas is the Superintendent for
Waterton Lakes National Park and Bar
U Ranch National Historic Site.
Previous to moving to Waterton,
Mr. Thomas was the Field Unit
Superintendent for Ivvavik, Aulavik
and Tuktut Nogait national parks,
Saoyú- ehdacho National Historic
Ifan Thomas
Site and Pingo Canadian Landmark in
Yukon and the Northwest Territories.
Mr. Thomas began working for Parks Canada as a labourer in
Jasper National Park. He has worked for Parks Canada for 28
years.
Mr. Thomas holds a Master of Arts in Political Science.
9:30-10:15

Assembly (in convention hall)

General business session of the Assembly. Everyone
welcome. See your Board of directors in full action!! Review
the Assembly’s accomplishments, mission and activities.
Make your voice heard – project suggestions welcome.
10:15 - 11:00 Steven Nakana, Rotary Foundation World
Peace Fellow and Zahid Hamdard, Afgan
environmental preservation expert.
Steven C. Nakana
Senior Conflict Program Officer, Mercy Corps
45 SW Ankeny Street, Portland, Or 97208, USA
Email:snakana@mercycorps.org
Steven Nakana is a Senior Program Officer at Mercy Corps
an international Humanitarian Organization in the Youth and
Conflict Management Program based in Portland, Oregon, and
a Rotary Foundation World Peace Fellow. His Rotary fellowship
was made possible through the generosity of the late PDG Paul
Elder and his wife Jean of Somerset, PA.
He holds a PhD Degree in International Studies from the

Mr. Hamdard has been with Kabul Rotary
Club since 2005, and has served as
president, president elect and secretary
to the Kabul Rotary Club, base in Kabul
Afghanistan.
In 2012, Mr. Hamdard founded “iOba
Management and Consultants, a private
Zahid Hamdard firm focusing on water management and
related assessment in Afghanistan. Weblink: http://www.obamanagement.org/index.php.
Mr. Hamdard currently works with the Canadian International
Development Agency (CIDA) as Advisor on humanitarian
issues and assistance based in Kabul, Afghanistan.
iOba means Water in Pashto language.
11:00

Frank Tyro, polar bear expert

Dr. Frank Tyro has been at Salish Kootenai College (SKC),
Pablo, Montana since 1984. He is administrator of the SKC
Media/Public TV Department. Frank brought local public
television to the Flathead Reservation in 1988. KSKC-TV
now serves the Flathead Reservation and surrounding areas
full-time with public television fare and local programs from
5 transmitter sites. Frank’s background includes 46 years in
radio and television broadcast. He has produced several dozen
television documentaries.

Frank Tyro

Frank became involved with the
Great Bear Foundation (GBF)
through a fellow faculty member
at SKC in 1984, accompanying
Dr. Jonkel on the first Arctic
Ecology Field Trip to Churchill,
Manitoba to learn about and
observe polar bears, other

mammals and the ecology and
geology of the arctic. Since
that time, he has visited the
Churchill area over 34 times as
well as traveling to Baffin Island,
Svalbard Iceland, Australia
and Alaska. His wife, Dr. Lori
Lambert who he met in Churchill, shares his interests. Frank
loves the arctic and Great Bear and has shared the Churchill
adventure with one of his two daughters, a son-in-law and 7
of his grandchildren. All his grandchildren know they have a
trip to Churchill in their future whenever they decide to take
advantage of it.
Frank received the Distinguished Service Award in 2002 from
Salish Kootenai College. He was president of the Montana
Public Television Association, 1990-1992, and president,
Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Lake County, 2001-2003. He
received the Mission Valley Salutes Award for Communication
in 1996. He was Co-presenter on American Indian Learning
Styles, Constructivist Theory and Successful Online Courses
at the Sloan-C International Conference on Online Learning
2001 and the International Distance Education Conference,
Calgary, 2002. Frank has been a preliminary and final judge
for the International Wildlife Film Festival and a final judge for
the International Cultural Film Symposium as well as judging
the Aurora awards. He lives in Pablo, MT with his wife, Dr. Lori
Lambert and their rescued sled dogs.
12:00-1:45

Lunch with Denver Holt (Convention hall)

This will be a lunch you will
never forget and talk about for a
long time. Denver Holt is a most
scintillating speaker who will both
educate and entertain you about
animal and bird issues relating to
the Peace Park. Don’t miss this.
Denver Holt is a wildlife researcher
and graduate of the University
of Montana. He is founder and
Denver Holt
president of the Owl Research
Institute and the Ninepipes Wildlife Research Center, a
nonprofit organization located in Charlo, Montana. A dedicated
field researcher in North and Central America, Holt believes that
long-term field studies are the primary means to understanding
trends in natural history. In 2000, he was named Montana’s
“Wildlife Biologist of the Year”, by the Wildlife Society of North
America.
Since 1978, Holt’s focus has been researching owls and their
ecology. He has published more than 90 papers and technical
documents, including three species accounts for the Birds
of North America project. He was also team leader for the
Strigidae Family owl species accounts for The Handbook of
the Birds of the World, volume 5, covering 189 species of the
world’s owls. In collaboration with elementary school teachers,
he has co-authored two children’s science books on owls:
Owls Whoo Are They, and Snowy Owls. In 2006, he was a

chapter author on owls for the book; Arctic Wings, highlighting
the birds of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska. The
forward was written by former United States President, Jimmy
Carter. The book has won the prestigious National Outdoor
Book Award for Design and Artistic Merit.
2:00-3:00

Dr. Dan Fagre, Research ecologist on Peace
Park glaciers

Dr. Daniel Fagre works for the United States Geological Survey
as Research Ecologist and Director of the Climate Change in
Mountain Ecosystems Project, and Lead Investigator in the
U.S.G.S Benchmark Glacier Program. He has been working
since 1991 in the WatertonGlacier International Peace Park
to understand how global-scale
environmental changes will affect
mountain ecosystems. Stationed
at Glacier National Park, Montana,
Dr. Daniel Fagre
he has collaborated with other
scientists around the world on
diverse research projects that addresses glaciers, avalanches,
amphibians, alpine plants, paleo-climates, snow chemistry and
ecosystem dynamics of bio-regions among others. He received
his Ph.D. from the University of California, Davis, has been faculty
affiliate at six different universities and mentored or sponsored
many graduate students, published three books and 135 scientific
publications, and founded several national and international
science networks. He is currently active in the Western
Mountain Initiative, a program to coordinate mountain research
across different areas; GLORIA, a global program to monitor
alpine vegetation on mountain summits on six continents; and
CIRMOUNT, a consortium of mountain scientists.
3:30-4:30

Conrad Mansion tour and violin concert.

The Conrad Mansion Museum
We’ll leave the Hilton Garden Inn
at 3:15 p.m. and journey to the
residential eastside of Kalispell
where you’ll visit the most outstanding example of luxurious
pioneer living and period architecture in the Pacific Northwest.
You’ll also have an opportunity to visit the lovely gardens and
the gift shop. The Conrad Mansion was built by Charles E. and
Alicia Conrad, the founding family of Kalispell, in 1895, just as
the Flathead Valley was being settled. The 26-room home sits
on three landscaped acres and contains original furnishings,
family clothing, accessories, and extensive collections of
books, glass, taxidermy, and three generations of children’s
toys and dolls. www.conradmansion.com.



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Manifest Placed Y Resolution    : 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 300.00, 72.00, 72.00, 300.00, 300.00
Manifest Placed Resolution Unit : Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches
Manifest Reference Instance ID  : uuid:C3B940BF1B1311E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:14963C101B1411E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:6BFBD0681B1C11E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:6BFBD06D1B1C11E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:171C71471B2711E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:7EEC01BC1D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:F4FF16A11D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:14963C141B1411E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:7EEC01B61D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, xmp.iid:91A25CF66120681195FEE42D46FC1411, uuid:4AE0B4AC1D7D11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:D03207AA1D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:D03207AF1D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:F2C4289C1D7B11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:41221762-1cb2-11e4-80be-0025bce46e00, xmp.iid:15085B7914CC11E3AA508DF7BDF1A6FF, uuid:14963C181B1411E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:AC5F5490B101DD11A340F5864DE206C6
Manifest Reference Document ID  : uuid:C3B940BE1B1311E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:D71018661B0311E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:6BFBD0671B1C11E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:6BFBD06C1B1C11E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:171C71461B2711E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:7EEC01BB1D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:7EEC01B31D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:14963C131B1411E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:7EEC01B51D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:10FB85CBC10611E085A4A29141D366E7, uuid:4AE0B4AB1D7D11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:D03207A91D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:D03207AE1D7E11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:F2C4289B1D7B11E48F51CE15EC96CC73, uuid:0C6F7FBE1E0D11E49C458CB2FAB70952, xmp.did:15085B7A14CC11E3AA508DF7BDF1A6FF, uuid:14963C171B1411E4BBB593BD553EE84C, uuid:AB5F5490B101DD11A340F5864DE206C6
Metadata Date                   : 2014:08:13 16:10:42-06:00
Creator Tool                    : Adobe InDesign CS2 (4.0.5)
Format                          : application/pdf
Producer                        : Adobe PDF Library 7.0
Trapped                         : False
Page Count                      : 4
EXIF Metadata provided by EXIF.tools

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