Class Note 1995
Issue
January-February 2024
Congratulations to Caitlin Moyna on her recent marriage. “My husband’s name is Michael Sullivan. We got married in the picturesque Jersey Shore town of Spring Lake, where we met several years ago. We live in Rumson, New Jersey, with our Cavalier King Charles spaniel named Pirate. I’m a partner at Grant and Eisenhofer in their N.Y.C. office. I think that about sums it up!”
Congratulations also go out to Rodrigo Martinez on his new job with Chartis, a healthcare consulting company. Rodrigo is a “physician executive and practicing otolaryngologist with more than 14 years of management consulting and healthcare leadership experience” and he is excited to get back into consulting. When I checked in with Rodrigo, he was in the thick of a big Dartmouth week: “Not only did I have a really fun time last evening at the Washington, D.C., welcoming of President Sian Beilock—where I met up with fellow ’95s Steve Fagell, Scott Thompson, and Mike Kidd—but I’ll be joining Andrew Resnick tomorrow at an onsite event for Chartis, where he serves as chief medical and quality officer!”
Josh Larson recently posted on Facebook, “I’ve discovered what my ‘why’ is,” and I was intrigued. Josh wrote: “I’ve been fortunate to spend most of my career post-Dartmouth working in video games, believing in games as a force of good. My cause found me when our youngest daughter, Reese, was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) at age 6 in 2016. T1D is an autoimmune disease that requires 24/7 management and has no cure. So in 2020 I felt it was my calling to be the first director of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation’s (JDRF) Game2Give program, which has raised more than $3 million for critical T1D cure research through in-game integrations, livestream fundraisers, game bundles, and e-sports tournaments.” In September Josh and his fellow founders and leaders of JDRF were honored at the annual JDRF NorCal Hope Gala. “Our heroes are the nearly 9 million individuals globally—including Reese, half her life with T1D—who manage this brutal disease.” Josh would love to hear from other alumni who have a T1D connection and may want to get involved. You can find him on Facebook or in the alumni directory.
Keep your news coming!
—Kaja (Schuppert) Fickes, 2 Bishops Lane, Hingham, MA 02043; kaja.k.fickes.95@dartmouth.edu
Congratulations also go out to Rodrigo Martinez on his new job with Chartis, a healthcare consulting company. Rodrigo is a “physician executive and practicing otolaryngologist with more than 14 years of management consulting and healthcare leadership experience” and he is excited to get back into consulting. When I checked in with Rodrigo, he was in the thick of a big Dartmouth week: “Not only did I have a really fun time last evening at the Washington, D.C., welcoming of President Sian Beilock—where I met up with fellow ’95s Steve Fagell, Scott Thompson, and Mike Kidd—but I’ll be joining Andrew Resnick tomorrow at an onsite event for Chartis, where he serves as chief medical and quality officer!”
Josh Larson recently posted on Facebook, “I’ve discovered what my ‘why’ is,” and I was intrigued. Josh wrote: “I’ve been fortunate to spend most of my career post-Dartmouth working in video games, believing in games as a force of good. My cause found me when our youngest daughter, Reese, was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) at age 6 in 2016. T1D is an autoimmune disease that requires 24/7 management and has no cure. So in 2020 I felt it was my calling to be the first director of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation’s (JDRF) Game2Give program, which has raised more than $3 million for critical T1D cure research through in-game integrations, livestream fundraisers, game bundles, and e-sports tournaments.” In September Josh and his fellow founders and leaders of JDRF were honored at the annual JDRF NorCal Hope Gala. “Our heroes are the nearly 9 million individuals globally—including Reese, half her life with T1D—who manage this brutal disease.” Josh would love to hear from other alumni who have a T1D connection and may want to get involved. You can find him on Facebook or in the alumni directory.
Keep your news coming!
—Kaja (Schuppert) Fickes, 2 Bishops Lane, Hingham, MA 02043; kaja.k.fickes.95@dartmouth.edu