The university names five Loggers to receive its most prestigious alumni awards.
Professional Achievement Award/Lifetime

Sarah Rudolph Cole 鈥86 is one of the country鈥檚 leading scholars on arbitration, mediation, and other forms of alternative dispute resolution. She holds the Michael E. Moritz Chair in Alternative Dispute Resolution at Ohio State University鈥檚 Moritz College of Law.
Cole鈥檚 family moved to Tacoma from Nebraska when she was 9, when her law professor father became dean of Puget Sound鈥檚 then-law school. She began taking classes at the university during her senior year of high school and graduated with a B.A. in American history. Cole cites professors Terry Cooney, William Breitenbach, and Arpad Kadarkay as influential, calling them 鈥渄ynamic, knowledgeable鈥 teachers. At Puget Sound she also won five NCAA Division II swimming titles and was named Outstanding NCAA Division II Woman Swimmer in 1985.
Cole became interested in alternative processes while a law student at the University of Chicago. 鈥淚 was fascinated that instead of using the judicial system, we have people opt out of it,鈥 she says, pointing out that at least 98% of cases are now settled out of court.
A few years ago, Cole and a group of Ohio State colleagues developed a collection of resources to aid communities facing polarizing conflict. The result was the Divided Community Project, which she hopes will teach community leaders the mediation and facilitation skills to 鈥渉elp them engage better with people across differences in a civil manner."
Cole says the most gratifying part of her career is witnessing her students鈥 enthusiasm for learning about law. She has a particular fondness for helping her students plan careers that they love. 鈥淚 get a special happiness when my students plan jobs they鈥檙e really excited about,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd if I鈥檝e played any role in that, I鈥檓 ecstatic.鈥
Professional Achievement Award/Mid-Career

Laura Heywood 鈥01 has a special knack for harnessing her passions.
鈥淭he closest thing I can come up with for a consistent job description is 鈥榩rofessional enthusiast,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been a broadcaster, a spokesperson, an entrepreneur鈥攁 whole bunch of things in one鈥攂ut they all seem to come back to the fact that my superpower is spreading joy through contagious enthusiasm.鈥
Heywood is known to her followers as @BroadwayGirlNYC on social media, where she shares her infectious love of theatre. She has interviewed leading Broadway stars like Lin-Manuel Miranda, Kristen Chenoweth, and Idina Menzel; she also provides social media consulting services to theatre companies and other businesses.
Before becoming Broadway鈥檚 main hype woman, Heywood participated in the theatre arts program at Puget Sound, lived in the Spanish House, and took part in the Lavender Graduation ceremony for LGBTQ+ students. But it was her KUPS show that laid the foundation for her thriving career in media: Heywood hosted an early-morning slot devoted to the college a cappella craze, and the radio station soon became her second home.
Her broadcast experience resulted in Rockapella (the group best known for Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?) asking her to introduce them before a sold-out show at the Seattle Opera House. It also led to her first job out of college, working as a morning show producer for fellow alum Julie Jacobson Gates 鈥90.
The entrepreneurial verve that served her back then is still alive and well.
鈥淚 try to focus not just my content, but the way I think about the world, on the things that bring joy and light,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think as a result, I have been able to bring more joy and light to some people鈥檚 lives, and that鈥檚 my proudest achievement.鈥
Service to Community Award

For Jean Baumgartel 鈥76, a sense of adventure, coupled with her passion for humanitarianism, has taken her all over the globe. In her career as an occupational therapist, she鈥檚 traveled to Chile, Vietnam, Peru, Honduras, Nepal, Bhutan, and Georgia, among countless other places.
鈥淚 think occupational therapy has given me a really unique way of getting to know people in another country,鈥 she says.
When she started as a Puget Sound student, Baumgartel already knew she wanted to work in occupational therapy鈥攕he was inspired by her grandmother, who treated returning soldiers and worked in a mental hospital in the then-nascent field during World War I. But Puget Sound鈥檚 liberal arts approach allowed her to explore unexpected subjects, including a ceramics class led by artist F. Carlton Ball and a Winterim class on wilderness survival and cross-country skiing.
She met her husband, James Mitchell 鈥74, in a physiology lab. After graduation, the couple volunteered for the Peace Corps in Chile, where Jean provided therapy to children with neurological and learning disabilities.
She spent 30 years working for Group Health Cooperative/Kaiser Permanente, mentoring a number of Puget Sound OT students along the way. Though she retired in 2015, she still strives to improve wellness in resource-scarce countries by educating local health care workers there. She鈥檚 also a member of the steering committee for Health Volunteers Overseas and a founding board member of the Tacoma-based nonprofit LICHA African Heritage Relief Organization, which aims to better the lives of women and children in Kenya.
Baumgartel has advice for students looking for a fulfilling line of work: 鈥淚f they want a career that combines traveling the world and meeting interesting people in other countries with providing health care,鈥 she says, 鈥済etting a degree in physical or occupational therapy will lead them to the perfect profession.鈥
Service to Puget Sound Award

Joel Hefty 鈥86 has served his alma mater in a wide range of roles. He has been a class agent for 15 years, served on the 兔子先生 Council Executive Committee, and has been an integral part of Logger Day Challenge since its inception in 2018. He also has chaired the alumni committee of the Puget Sound Fund and volunteered for the ASK (兔子先生 Sharing Knowledge) program. In 2016 he created the Joel T. Hefty Scholarship Fund for deserving students.
鈥淚鈥檓 motivated by that feeling of connection to current and previous students and being part of something that's bigger than I am," he says.
Hefty calls his time at Puget Sound 鈥渢ransformative.鈥 He praises his liberal arts education for developing his intellectual curiosity and communication skills. Those skills have served him well in his career as a consultant, trainer, and facilitator in the banking industry鈥攁 job that has taken him to 29 different countries.
During college, he was a member of the Adelphian Concert Choir. He points to Professor Emeritus Mike Veseth 鈥72 as a formative influence for his sense of humor and teaching ability.
鈥淢y time at Puget Sound was very much focused on broadening my perspective and understanding of the world,鈥 Hefty says. 鈥淲hen I came in, I probably thought that I knew more than I did when I left, and that鈥檚 the sign of a good education, realizing how much you don鈥檛 know, and gaining both curiosity and the ability to learn.鈥
Hefty also has cultivated and maintained a number of friendships from the Puget Sound community. 鈥淭he opportunity to meet different Puget Sound people at different stages in life has been a real joy,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople from the Class of 鈥67 all the way to grads from the Class of 鈥23鈥攂eing able to engage with them has made for a much richer understanding of the university and a much better grasp of its continuing mission.鈥
Young Logger Service Award

Rachel Sugar 鈥16 credits Puget Sound鈥檚 liberal arts approach with shaping her current worldview and social justice values. 鈥淭he more time I spent at Puget Sound, the more curious I felt about the world, about addressing social problems and approaching that holistically from all sorts of different perspectives,鈥 she says.
Sugar wasn鈥檛 expecting to pursue psychology, Latin American studies, or religion, but soon took an interest in all three, eventually earning her degree in psychology. (She also forged some lifelong bonds: Last year, she married Reilly Rosbotham 鈥15, and six of her bridesmaids were Loggers.)
After graduating, Sugar spent nearly two years as a domestic violence legal advocate for clients at YWCA of Pierce County, then worked in a similar capacity at The Family Tree in Denver. She returned to Washington to study at Seattle University School of Law and interned at Disability Rights Washington, the ACLU of Washington, and Legal Voice before receiving her J.D. in 2022.
Sugar then worked as a staff attorney at Tacomaprobono Community Lawyers鈥 Housing Justice Project. Recently, she took a new position as an associate attorney at Cedar Law in Seattle, where she advocates for students with disabilities.
Sugar鈥檚 interest in equity and her psychology background have served her well as an attorney鈥攕he says that understanding the effects of trauma and oppression on mental health have helped her bring a person-first, trauma-informed perspective to her legal work. In keeping with this fiercely empathetic mindset, she emphasizes the importance of mutual exchange and human connection in fighting social ills.
鈥淭aking the lead from community and approaching things with a broad toolbox is the best way to do that,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I think that鈥檚 very much something I learned from my Puget Sound education.
Know a Logger who deserves to be honored?
Nominations for the 2025 awards are welcome. Just fill out the form at: pugetsound.edu/awardnomination.