Program: Rotary 5030 District Governor, Kae Peterson, February 23, 2023

Kae Peterson spent almost seventeen years at the Evergreen Health Foundation as Vice President of Development. Prior to that, she spent nearly ten years at Shoreline Community College in various roles including Senior Executive Director for Community Relations and the Foundation.

She spent nearly eighteen years as an elected Commissioner of the King County Fire Protection District #16 — Northshore Fire Department.

She has a BA in Education from Augustana College in Illinois and a Master’s Degree in Educational Leadership from Argosy University in Seattle.

Since July of 2022, she has been Rotary 5030’s District Governor.

Program: Rachele Bouchand & George Northcroft, “DEI Brings Members,” February 9, 2023

The University Sunrise Rotary Club will welcome Rachele Bouchand and George Northcroft this Thursday, February 9, 2023, as they address the topic: “DEI Brings Members.” Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion are hot topics in all organizations, including Rotary. George and Rachele will help us better understand how to –build DEI efforts that can build our Club–and all organizations.

Our Zoom line will open at 7:00 a.m. for informal discussion. The formal meeting runs from 7:30-8:30 a.m. Join us. No registration is required.

Click here to join the meeting Thursday morning. Join us!


Long-Time Rotary Leaders Rachele Bouchand and George Northcroft will present their program on how to increase membership through the incorporation of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion concepts.

Rachele Bouchand

Rachele Bouchand is a member and Past President of the Bellevue Rotary Club since 2009. She currently serves on the Rotary District DEI Committee and the Rotary District Strategic Visioning Team. She is the Assistant Governor for Seattle 4 and Creating Newly Formed Clubs. Additionally, she will be District 5030 Governor for 2024-2025. Rachele was also a member of the Rotary International Next Generation Conference in 2014. Lastly, she was able to blend her vocational and Rotary lives when she served as a member of the Global Polio Finance Committee.

Her Rotary classification is Consulting-Business. Rachele currently serves as Managing Director of Pathstone, where she is responsible for advising families and single-family offices on a variety of wealth management and estate planning topics. She has over 20 years’ experience working with multi-generational wealth.

George Northcroft

George Northcroft has been a member of the Bellevue Rotary Club (BRC) since 1989. In 2001, George served as BRC’s Sergeant At Arms. He currently serves on the Rotary District DEI Committee and Co-Chair of the BRC DEI Committee. He also serves on BRC Environmental Sustainability Committee and the BRC Diplomacy Committee.

His Rotary classification is Public Administration-Senior Active. He retired in 2017 as Regional Administrator/Northwest Arctic Region for U.S. General Services Administration where he was responsible for the management of Federal real estate, acquisition and information technology in Washington, Oregon, Alaska, and Idaho. George is a business and civic leader with experience in financial management, marketing and operations in Fortune 500 companies and state, local, federal government.

Program: Averyl Mooney and Mackenzie Pedersen, Washington State Wine Commission, February 2, 2023

Averyl Mooney and Mackenzie Pedersen: We really look forward to hosting this conversation with you and sharing what we think makes Washington wine exciting and special. We are at such a interesting time in our state’s growth and we have so much more in store for the world. There is so much excitement happening in our own backyard!

Washington Wine Presentation

  • Averyl Mooney, Senior Communications Manager
  • Mackenzie Pedersen, Senior Marketing Manager

The Washington State Wine Commission is a state agency that represents every licensed grape grower and winery in Washington state. The Commission team creates and produces marketing, awareness, and education programs around this booming industry for a local, national, and international audience. Averyl Mooney and Mackenzie Pedersen will share a historical overview, the current state of industry, and take a look into what the future holds for Washington. www.washingtonwine.org/

Program: Michael Bronsdon and Tom Ranken, “Making Wine and Beer at Home 101,” January 26, 2023

The University Sunrise Rotary Club program on January 26, 2023, will feature our Members Michael Bronsdon and Tom Ranken. Michael is a successful home winemaker. Tom is currently brewing his 85th batch of beer (a bohemian lager). Come hear how you can get started with these fun hobbies.

The Zoom connection opens at 7 a.m. and the meeting will run from 730 a.m. until 830 a.m.

No reservation is required: just click here Thursday morning!


Michael Bronsdon is a Seattle native and long-time University Sunrise Rotarian. He attended the University of Washington, receiving degrees in History and Business. He worked in the publishing industry for eight years prior to joining Microsoft in 1995.

Michael joined Adobe in 2017 to lead sales enablement for the Microsoft-Adobe partnership. Prior to that, he spent 21 years at Microsoft, in several different business and marketing roles. Prior to joining Microsoft, Bronsdon worked for eight years in the publishing industry in sales and marketing positions. He holds Bachelor of Arts (History) and Master of Business Administration degrees from the University of Washington. In his personal time, he enjoys skiing, hiking, cooking, and amateur wine-making.

Tom Ranken has been a University Sunrise Rotarian for more than thirty years.  He is a music student working on a third degree at Shoreline Community College. He is a two-time President of the Club, co-chair of E8 Angels, a new member of the Magnolia Community Council, Chair of the Scout Troop 80 Committee, and a member of five musical groups (guitar, vocal, and trumpet) including the Ranken File rock trio. Tom was President of the CleanTech Alliance, which grew from 35 to more than 1,000 organizations under his leadership.  Prior to joining the CleanTech Alliance, Tom was CEO of VizX Labs, Axio Research Corporation, and the Washington Biotechnology and Biomedical Association.  Tom has served on many corporate and non-profit boards including two terms as President of the Board at Harborview Medical Center.  An Eagle Scout, Tom spent five years as Scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop 80.  Tom has an MBA from the University of Washington and a BA from the University of Virginia.

Here are Tom’s slides:

Program: Kristin Orloff, “Lifting the Veil from1979 Iran: The Untold Stories,” January 19, 2023

The University Sunrise Rotary Club program on January 19, 2023, will feature a presentation author and educator Kristin Orloff.  Ms. Orloff will tell us the story of Reza Abedi and his daring 1979 escape from Iran. Reza survived The 1979 Revolution and made international news when he defected, with the help of brave American wrestlers, during the World Wrestling Tournament in 1982.

The Zoom connection opens at 7 a.m. and the meeting will run from 730 a.m. until 830 a.m.

No reservation is required: just click here Thursday morning!


My journey into all things Iranian began sitting next to Reza Abedi at a Little League game in 2004. Reza and I taught at the same high school and since our sons played together, we found ourselves having a casual conversation on a lovely Spring Saturday.

A conversation that would change my life.

Reza shared with me that he “ran to third base” the first time he hit a baseball. After we had a good-natured laugh, Reza began to share his story. What I did not understand at the time was that I, too, couldn’t find my way to first base.

My absolute ignorance regarding Iranian identity, culture, history and politics sent me running to third. As Reza told his story to me, I knew I had to share it. And not just his journey, but my own.

Reza, one of 10 children born in Kermanshah in 1960, survived The 1979 Revolution, The Iran-Iraq War and made international news when he defected during the World Wrestling Tournament in 1982.

Then there’s my story–a girl from white-picket fence America in a household of 2.2 children, gold shag carpet and a station wagon. 

Reza’s story had to be told, not only for Reza, but also for the millions of Americans who are just like me–who are running to third base. For whom, Iran has been banished to the 1979 shadows of blindfolded hostages and flaming American flags.

The heart in Reza’s narrative connects humanity. The author’s perspective makes meaning of its place in history.

Kristin Orloff holds a Master’s Degree in Education and a B.A. in Language Arts. She currently serves as a school site administrator and project manager for her local college. She has published several works, mentors young writers, and is an active member of her local writing community.

Currently, she is proud of her two top published stories ~ each of which humanizes world-altering events. With humor and humility, Orloff is able to take complex historical circumstances and connect her audience through brilliant characters.

‘Harmony’ is based on the events of 2008 wherein a middle-class family struggles to survive not just financial ruin, but deception, the crushing of dreams and even murder. Popular with book clubs, Harmony will not only make you laugh, but touch your heart in places you’ll be grateful to reawaken.

In the nonfiction narrative ‘American Wings, Iranian Roots’, her passionate commitment to create opportunities for authentic conversation regarding Iranian culture, history and identity began with a simple conversation at a Little League field. This conversation, with gold medal wrestler and hall of fame coach Reza Abedi, has since changed lives of her readers. Like Kite Runner, Three Cups of Tea and Funny with Farsi, this story makes foreign familiar.

She knew these stories needed to be told. She does so with a confidence of her craft and an authenticity only her experience could achieve.

I think the best way to help the members to become introduced to our story is through our website www.AmericanWingsIranianRoots.com.

Program: Chris Ajemian, “The Commercialization of Fusion Energy,” December 8, 2022


Chris Ajemian is VP of Customer, Legal & Regulatory affairs at CTFusion, a fusion energy company in Seattle, WA.  Chris works with utilities to explain the benefits of fusion energy, is CTFusion’s legal officer, and handles regulatory policy with the NRC.  He also works in environmental politics and seeks to generate social license for fusion energy. 

Prior to CTFusion, Chris consulted in clean energy and nuclear nonproliferation for Pacific Northwest National laboratory.  He was a foreign policy planner and corporate lawyer.  He has worked on three U.S. presidential campaigns, John Kerry 2004, Barack Obama 2008 and 2012 on a variety of foreign policy and energy issues.

Program: Todd Myers, “Democratizing Environmentalism,” December 15, 2022

Democratizing Environmentalism: How people empowered with small technologies are solving the planet’s biggest environmental problems

Todd Myers
Todd Myers

From climate change to ocean plastic, small technologies like smartphones and AI-enabled thermostats are solving problems that have resisted political solutions. From Fiji to Ghana and the United States, environmental innovators are tackling the planet’s biggest problems, removing millions of pounds of plastic from the ocean and rewarding people from reducing CO2 emissions. Todd will talk about this emerging movement and how you can be part of it.

With more than two decades in environmental policy, Todd Myers’s experience includes work on a range of environmental issues, including climate policy, forest health, old-growth forests, and salmon recovery. A former member of the executive team at the Washington State Department of Natural Resources, he is a member of the Puget Sound Salmon Recovery Council and is the environmental director at the Washington Policy Center, a public policy think tank in Seattle.

His writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, National Review, Seattle Times, and USA Today, and he has appeared on numerous news networks including CNBC, Fox News, the BBC, and CNN. He served as vice president of the Northwest Association of Biomedical Research and received their Distinguished Service Award in 2018 for his support of bioscience. He has also served as president of the Prescription Drug Assistance Foundation, a nonprofit providing medicines to low-income patients.

In 2021, Myers served as president of his local beekeeping club in his quest to build an army of stinging insects at his command. He has a bachelor’s degree in politics from Whitman College and a master’s degree in Russian/International Studies from the Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington. He and his wife Maria live in the Cascade Mountains in Washington state with 200,000 honeybees, and he claims to make an amazing pasta carbonara and an incredible dirty vodka martini with blue-cheese-stuffed olives.

Program: Jonathan Mayer, Professor Emeritus, University of Washington, “What’s a Syndemic? Monkeypox, Influenza, and COVID in Late 2022,” December 1, 2022

Jonathan Mayer
Jonathan Mayer, Professor Emeritus, University of Washington

For this talk by Dr. Mayer, he will discuss the “syndemic” that we’re seeing–and he will tell us why we will see more. There are some fascinating and challenging features of the whole set: Monkeypox, Influenza, and COVID.

It is hard to imagine anyone more qualified to speak about the pandemic.  Jonathan Mayer is a Professor of Epidemiology and Geography at the University of Washington.  He is an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Medicine, (Division of Infectious Diseases), Department of Family Medicine, and in Health Services, Global Health. He is Program Director, joint degree: MPH in Epidemiology/PhD Biocultural Anthropology.

This the sixth time we have asked him back to talk about the pandemic. Why? Here is a typical comment:

Dr. Mayer was fantastic.  He is incredibly knowledgeable about this topic and has the rare ability to communicate a complex topic to an audience.

Program:  Lee Otis, E8 Angels, “Angel Investing in CleanTech,” November 17, 2022


Lee Otis is the immediate past chair of the Board of E8. E8 is an international, Seattle-based community whose mission is to accelerate the transition to a prosperous and cleaner world by investing in and fostering emerging cleantech enterprises. Its flexible, investor-centric platform supports different types of investors and asset classes, including direct angel for-profit investing, pooled investing in expertly managed VC funds such as the E8 Fund and via syndication.

For over 25 years, Lee has been committed to the conservation of our planet and invested in solutions that help protect it and advocate for its care. Lee is an environmental scientist, sustainable and clean-energy consultant. She is a former US EPA scientist, and geographic information systems (GIS) consultant, she has combined her scientific and digital technology experiences to make investments in clean technology startups.

Lee has degrees in Geology/Anthropology and a Masters in Science in Environmental Management from the University of San Francisco.

Lee has five children ranging in ages 20-28, three are currently in colleges, UW, WSU, and Purdue. Two graduates are professionals working as consultants in energy and sustainability in the PNW and helping build sustainable housing for the homeless in the Bay Area.

Program: Bruce Balick, Professor Emeritus, UW, “Beyond Space and Time,” November 10, 2022

The University Sunrise Rotary Club program this week will feature a presentation by Dr. Bruce Balick, Professor Emeritus in Astronomy at the University of Washington.  Dr. Balick’s topic is “Beyond Space and Time.” Dr. Balick has been so popular with the Club that this will the third time he has addressed us.

The Zoom connection opens at 7 a.m. and the meeting will run from 730 a.m. until 830 a.m.

No reservation is required: just click here Thursday morning!

From a cosmic perspective, the Earth and the entire Universe is but a pebble in the vast ocean of possible realities.  How do we know that?  How far an we see?  Where do we come from? Were we the long-debated Something from Nothing? These are the simple yet profound questions (not all with answers) that drive the quest to probe our cosmic past and to predict our cosmic future.

Balick joined the UW Astronomy Department in 1975. Subsequently he served as its chair, became active in faculty governance, and participated in the design of new instrumentation for Hubble. Since his retirement in 2014, Balick continues to publish research papers using data from the Hubble Space Telescope and to supervise astronomy undergraduates in research and public outreach.

He is a coauthor on a research paper based on one of the newly released images from the James Webb telescope.