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DENTISTS TOGETHER, HUSKIES FOREVER: ALUMNI COUPLE GIVE BACK TO SCHOOL OF DENTAL MEDICINE

UConn Foundation
UConn Foundation

2 min read

As classmates and soon after, a couple, Dr. Jason Raney ’03, DMD and Dr. Nicole Cambria ’03, DMD graduated from the same class at UConn’s School of Dental Medicine. Today, they share their lives and a passion for dentistry – together.

“My practice is located in a small town, so it gives me the opportunity to be involved and connected with the local community,” Raney said. “It is a rewarding experience to help people improve their overall health and self-confidence.

Raney and Cambria both credit their success to the UConn School of Dental Medicine, including the strong medical science background of the curriculum, increased clinical opportunities in the third and fourth years, and smaller class sizes that enabled close relationships with fellow students. Cambria added that direct one-on-one interaction with faculty was invaluable.

“My favorite UConn memory is when Dr. Grasso, a UConn dental legend himself, gathered our exhausted class stressed with Board-prep and clinical test cases to explain, ‘These are the best times of your lives,’” she recalled. “We all scoffed at the time and could hardly imagine the truth in his words. He was right! I miss being surrounded by my best friends in that learning bubble with access to great minds, clinical talent, and research at our fingertips.”

Because of the many opportunities they’ve had as a result of their education, Raney and Cambria strongly believe in giving back to UConn.

“We are blessed to have a career that can provide us with a comfortable lifestyle so giving back and allowing future generations the same opportunities is appropriate,” Raney said. “All alumni should feel proud to be part of such a wonderful institution, and should contribute in whatever way possible to keep UConn among the leaders in the dental community.”

Cambria recently celebrated her ten-year anniversary as owner and clinician of her private practice, and with Raney, will be preparing for another milestone: their 15-year reunion on Saturday, September 29.

“Reunion is a fun chance to catch up with fellow alumni and connect with your professors socially, while meeting new alumni spanning the ages,” Cambria said. “It’s so special to view yourself as part of a legacy within our profession at the beautifully renovated UConn Health campus.”

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UConn Donor Makes His Mark on UConn’s New Basketball Practice Facility

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Grace Merritt

3 min read

Ted Lunney and family
UConn alum Ted Lunney with his wife, Melissa, and two daughters, Alexa and Taylor.

Ted Lunney ’92, a loyal alum and Husky basketball fan, will be one of the first donors to have a locker named after him in UConn’s new Werth Family UConn Basketball Champion Center.

Lunney says he wanted to contribute because of the strong connection he feels toward UConn, where he majored in business and formed lifelong friendships.

“This is a chance to give back to a place that had a big impact on me personally and professionally. Hopefully, this will have a positive impact on the university,” Lunney said. “I have incredibly fond memories of UConn. It’s been a great experience.”

The new 78,000-square-foot basketball practice facility features common areas for strength training, academic support, and sports medicine as well as separate practice gyms, locker rooms, coaches’ offices, meeting rooms, and video analysis theaters. Fundraising is ongoing for the $40 million facility, the first and only building on campus funded completely by philanthropy.

“Seeing major supporters like Dan Toscano ’87 and Mark Shenkman ’65 give both their time and money over the years planted the seeds for me to make my own donation. Hopefully it will have a meaningful impact,” Lunney said. “The perfect opportunity presented itself in the locker naming at the Werth Family Champion’s Center.”

Lunney’s donation will assist UConn Athletics’ Drive to 5K initiative to raise funds for scholarships, facility expenses, and other related costs to support UConn’s 24 teams. To date, nearly 4,000 donors have contributed to support our 700 student-athletes and help keep UConn’s teams nationally competitive. UConn is competing with universities such as Kansas, which has 6,050 athletic donors, Maryland, which has 6,500, and Rutgers, which boasts 7,460.

Lunney was raised in Meriden. His parents divorced early and he was raised by his father, Bob, an elementary school teacher in North Haven. After graduating from Maloney High School, Lunney headed to UConn. A lot has changed on campus since then. He remembers watching the basketball team play in the old fieldhouse and the Hilltop residence halls had just opened and were considered the “cream of the crop” in dorm living. UConn’s transformation through the UConn 2000 construction program was just starting then.

His fondest memories are of the great friendships he formed at UConn, particularly during his junior year on his floor in Hale Hall. He remembers the day it all started when three guys down the hall were trying to watch a game on an old TV with a rabbit-ear antenna in their room. They were frustrated because they couldn’t get any reception.

They walked by Lunney’s room and noticed that he was watching the same game. They asked if he minded if they watched it with him.

“I had cable TV,” Lunney said. “That was a big deal then.”

After that, every day he came home from class he’d find them in his room watching cable.

They became and have remained good friends over the years. All three were in his wedding party and they still get together, though not as often.

“What I remember most about UConn is the great relationships we created, the lifelong relationships you establish going through university together,” he said.

Lunney married his high school sweetheart, Melissa, and they live in Westport with their two daughters, Alexa, 11, and Taylor, 8, whom he calls his “mini Huskies.” Lunney has worked on Wall Street for the past 23 years. He currently runs the high yield trading desk for the Bank of Montreal, BMO Capital Markets, in New York.

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