Class Note 2002
Issue
May - Jun 2019
Hello, ’02s!
From February 22 to 24 the fifth annual Niseko Green (Niseko-green.com) was held in Niseko Hokkaido, Japan. With the support of Dartmouth alumni relations and the Dartmouth clubs of Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, and China, Niseko Green seeks to bring together alumni from across Asia and across the globe to network, enjoy, educate and stay connected to Hanover in that quintessential Dartmouth way: frolicking in the snow. Organized by Roy Ogura and Cliff Bernstein ’89, the event was attended by 31 alumni, family and guests ranging from the class of ’83 to the class of ’23 (two students matriculating this fall), including Tanya Hsu. The event was a success, and they look forward to holding it again in 2020. Roy lives in Menlo Park, California, with his wife and two daughters and recently cofounded a luxury custom winter travel company specializing in Japan.
Robin Globus Veldman’s first book, The Gospel of Climate Skepticism: Why Evangelical Christians Oppose Action on Climate Change, will be published in October. Robin recently moved to College Station, Texas, where she is an assistant professor of religious studies at Texas A&M University. She is slowly and somewhat reluctantly getting used to life in Aggieland.
Wishing you all a happy spring!
—Anne Cloudman, 315 West 99th St., Apt. 2D, New York, NY 10025; acloudman@gmail.com
From February 22 to 24 the fifth annual Niseko Green (Niseko-green.com) was held in Niseko Hokkaido, Japan. With the support of Dartmouth alumni relations and the Dartmouth clubs of Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, and China, Niseko Green seeks to bring together alumni from across Asia and across the globe to network, enjoy, educate and stay connected to Hanover in that quintessential Dartmouth way: frolicking in the snow. Organized by Roy Ogura and Cliff Bernstein ’89, the event was attended by 31 alumni, family and guests ranging from the class of ’83 to the class of ’23 (two students matriculating this fall), including Tanya Hsu. The event was a success, and they look forward to holding it again in 2020. Roy lives in Menlo Park, California, with his wife and two daughters and recently cofounded a luxury custom winter travel company specializing in Japan.
Robin Globus Veldman’s first book, The Gospel of Climate Skepticism: Why Evangelical Christians Oppose Action on Climate Change, will be published in October. Robin recently moved to College Station, Texas, where she is an assistant professor of religious studies at Texas A&M University. She is slowly and somewhat reluctantly getting used to life in Aggieland.
Wishing you all a happy spring!
—Anne Cloudman, 315 West 99th St., Apt. 2D, New York, NY 10025; acloudman@gmail.com