Project manager and marketing strategist Andrea Robbins (Comm) and her team at Studio Six Branding in Longmont, Colo., recently rebranded several transit systems: The Lift in Winter Park, The Hop in Boulder, SMART in Telluride and the Trinidad Trolley in Trinidad. Separately, Andrea has coached and trained young athletes in alpine skiing in Winter Park for the past 15 years.

Posted Jun. 3, 2019

Deborah L. Napier (PolSci’82) writes that in January 2019 she met her distant cousins Sadie Young (EnvDes’81) and Maree Young (Comm’87) in Durango for the first time. Sadie and Maree were born in Craig, Colo., while Deborah grew up in Fairfax County, Va. “We are related through [our] shared Luttrell ancestors: Our Virginia great, great grandparents,” writes Deborah, who recently returned to Colorado after spending four years in Washington, D.C 

Posted Mar. 1, 2019

Andrea Robbins (Comm’82) and her team at Studio Six Branding in Longmont, Colo., recently rebranded six Colorado transit systems in Winter Park, Boulder, Telluride and Trinidad. For the past 15 years, Andrea has coached and trained young athletes in alpine skiing in Winter Park.

Posted Mar. 1, 2019

In late September, Teresa Parko McHenry (Engr) and a group of CU alums met on campus for a 40-year reunion. They met in 1978 in Nicholas Hall, which is now the Cheyenne Arapaho building. “We didn’t all graduate from CU, but between all of us, we managed to keep a thread of friendship going over the years,” Teresa said.

Posted Nov. 30, 2018

˛Ń˛ą°ů˛őłó˛ąĚý±Ęľ±ł¦ł¦´Ç˛Ô±đ (Jour; Law’85), partner of Rollin Braswell Fisher LLC (RBF Law), was named to 5280’s Denver’s Top Lawyers list in 2018. Marsha is a trial and appellate lawyer and former Colorado Court of Appeals Judge.

Posted Jun. 1, 2018

Susan E. Seabrook (Hist) joined the tax practice group of Eversheds Sutherland as a partner in the law firm’s Washington, D.C., office. Susan was previously a partner in Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC’s D.C. tax controversy practice.

Posted Dec. 1, 2017

Tracy Hume (Psych) is a freelance writer in Greeley, Colo., who specializes in writing about the healthcare industry, particularly health information technology. She recently ghostwrote a book about how the changing health insurance landscape is impacting healthcare providers.

Posted Sep. 1, 2017

Marsha Piccone (Jour; Law’85) joined Rollin Braswell Fisher LLC in Greenwood Village, Colo. In 2003, Marsha was the sixth woman to be appointed as a judge on the Colorado Court of Appeals.

Posted Sep. 1, 2017

Scott Baines (Fin) and son Nick competed in the 2016 Oregon Golf Association Parent-Child Chapman in August and won with a score of 62. Scott, an alumnus of CU’s golf team, was in the reverse role when he won with his father, Ken Baines, in 1977. Advancing their legacy, he won the event with his oldest son, Mitch, in 2008 and has now completed the trifecta.

Posted Dec. 1, 2016

The Honorable Joseph Rosania (Law) was appointed to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado. Joseph has spent the past three decades in private practice, first as a solo practitioner, then as a shareholder with Connolly Rosania & Lofstedt, PC.

Posted Sep. 1, 2016

In October, former Colorado Solicitor General Timothy Tymkovich (Law) became the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, which covers six states. He is the first chief judge of the circuit from Colorado in 75 years. Timothy served the past four years as chair of the committee on judicial resources for the Judicial Conference of the United States, the governing body of the judiciary. As solicitor general, he represented the State of Colorado in two cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. While at CU, Timothy was managing editor for the ŔÖ˛Ą´«Ă˝ Law Review. He is now an adjunct professor at Colorado Law. Timothy is married with two adult children.

Posted Mar. 1, 2016

Bioinfo-rmatician David Haussler (PhDCompSci) of the University of California, Santa Cruz, led one of two teams that in 2000 first sequenced the 400,000 pieces of the human genome. At the time, President Bill Clinton called the Human Genome Project, of which David’s team was a part, a historic achievement that would revolutionize the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of diseases. Thousands of biomedical researchers worldwide use the UCSC Genome Browser to uncover the causes of diseases and develop treatments.

Posted Dec. 1, 2015

Ever thought about dropping everything and traveling the country? When Penny Roushar Jansen (Mgmt) and her husband retired, they decided to do just that — on a bike, for a year. After eight months and more than 6,000 miles, Penny wrote about some of their adventures in the Wall Street Journal, advising other adventure-seekers to “look beyond your fears.” Penny, a mother of three, also blogged about her adventures at .

Posted Sep. 1, 2015

Tax attorney Susan Seabrook (Hist) joined Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney’s Washington, D.C., office. She previously worked as a trial attorney for the IRS and as an attorney advisor in the National Office of Chief Counsel. She is a three-time recipient of the IRS’s Special Act Award, once for significant issue litigation and twice for her superior performance.

Posted Sep. 1, 2015

Former CU-Boulder Alumni Association board member Jenny L. Herring (Jour) joined the Broomfield, Colo., office of investment advisory firm Wilshire Associates. She has had a career in public relations, marketing and writing for financial services companies and is now part of Wilshire Consulting’s business development team. Her 2014 article “Remembering Jamestown” was published in the Forever Buffs Insider e-newsletter.

Posted Sep. 1, 2015

Author and educator Peggy Campbell-Rush (MEdu’82) has been named head of the lower school on the Ponte Vedre Beach Campus of the Bolles School in Jacksonville, Fla. Her seventh book, Ready to Write, was published by Scholastic in June.

Posted Sep. 1, 2014

An immigrant from Warsaw, Poland, Joanna Regulska (PhDGeog’82) found her calling as the vice president of international and global affairs for Rutgers University. She came to Boulder in 1978 and has worked at Rutgers since she graduated from CU. Joanna has been able to keep close ties to her home country by teaching and researching in Poland.

Posted Sep. 1, 2014

For those principals in schools all over the country who wish their staff would show up just a little more motivated every morning, Kenneth Cooper (EdD’82) has some advice. Together with his two co-authors, Nels Gustafson and Joseph G. Salah, he wrote the book Becoming a Great School: Harnessing the Powers of Quality Management and Collaborative Leadership. Cooper has 22 years of experience as the principal of the Paul F. Doyen Memorial School in Ipswich, Mass., where he lives. His secret? “Harness the intrinsic motivation of the staff,” he says. To learn how to do that, read his book, which is available on Amazon.

Posted Jun. 1, 2014

Fidelity Charitable, an independent public charity with a donor-advised fund program, has a new president. Amy Noonan Danforth (IntlAf’82) took the job in February after five years as senior vice president of marketing and programming. She oversees an organization that has helped donors support more than 170,000 nonprofit organizations with more than $16 billion in grants. Amy lives in Marblehead, Mass.

Posted Jun. 1, 2014

In 1999 Daniel Carr (MechEngr’82) designed the New York and Rhode Island state quarters for the U.S. Mint. He combined his expertise in mechanical engineering, art and coinage to form his own private mint, Moonlight Mint. Daniel does all of his own designs, sculpting and engraving work to stamp coins, tokens and medals. He restored a surplus U.S. Denver Mint coin press in 2008, which he uses. He lives in Loveland, Colo., and his website is .

Posted Mar. 1, 2014

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