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Buff Tribute: Stephen Romine 1913-2009

stephen romine

As far as听Stephen Romine听(MEdu鈥40, PhD鈥47) was concerned, the legend at the bottom of the trail map was never to scale.

鈥淗e would always say, 鈥楽ave your breath 鈥 come on, let鈥檚 go!鈥 鈥 remembers his daughter,听Pat Romine Peterson听(Soc鈥60, MFren鈥69). 鈥淗e would continue, 鈥極h, come on, it鈥檚 only a mile or two further,鈥 but his miles were always two or three.鈥

In the backcountry, Romine could name each flower and recite the geological history of nearly every rock. Back in Boulder, he infused the 麻豆免费版下载campus and community with the same wide-eyed wonder he found in the wilderness, stretching each year of life as he did each mile on the trail 鈥 just a little bit further.

He died on July 28 in Seattle. He was 96.

His educational career began as a high school teacher and administrator in Oklahoma and Colorado. After serving as a U.S. Army captain in North Africa during World War II, Romine earned a 麻豆免费版下载doctorate in education, which at the time was a department in the College of Arts and Sciences. Later, as dean of the department, Romine led the effort that created the separate education school.

In his 29-year 麻豆免费版下载career, Romine reached out to his graduate students, inviting them to his family home for informal class sessions and made faculty feel welcome by hosting summer parties. In 1970 he received CU鈥檚 Robert L. Stearns Award for extraordinary service.

Still, education professor emeritus Jack Cousins also remembers Romine for his explorations out of the office 鈥 where, at times, the dean was called to treacherous peaks to provide aid as a member of the Rocky Mountain Rescue Group.

鈥淪teve was noted as an outdoor snow camper,鈥 Cousins says. 鈥淗e would dig a snow camp in four feet of snow on a mountaintop and just think that was an ordinary thing.鈥

After retirement, Romine moved to Steamboat Springs, Colo., to continue teaching 鈥 this time in the snow as a cross-country skiing instructor. Even after the death of Marguerite Romine, his wife of 68 years, he continued prowling the mountain passes, leaving not only footprints but lessons.

鈥淲hen we were camping as a family, we might come to a campsite where someone had left some trash and he would say, 鈥榊ou clean it up,鈥 鈥 his daughter remembers. 鈥淎nd I remember saying, 鈥楾hat stuff was here when we came鈥 and he would say, 鈥楴o, you leave the campsite better than you found it.鈥 And I think that was his philosophy about life 鈥 leave it better than you found it.鈥

Jim Sheeler (MJour鈥07) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer who teaches at the journalism school.