Class Note 2006
Issue
Hello ’06s! I hope this finds you doing well! I have some news to share from classmates who have recently traveled great distances.
Kim McKee just finished hiking the Appalachian Trail. She started from Springer Mountain, Georgia, in April and finished her hike at Mount Katadin in Maine. Kim has been working at a startup Internet social networking site in Washington, D.C., since graduation. This fall she will be starting a master’s program in regional planning at UMass Amherst. Congratulations, Kim!
Ann Irvine wrote in after she, Hannah Gelman, Brittany Beth, Ruth Jones, Mignon Lamia and seven friends participated in the first American Odyssey Relay race in April. The race began in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and ended 204 miles away in Washington, D.C. The team completed the race in about 30 hours and had a great time.
Sarah Emel is beginning a Ph.D. program at Washington State University. In the spring she defended her thesis on the Oklahoma salamander and earned her master’s in biology from the University of Tulsa. Sarah says she’s “excited to get to live in another part of the country, especially one with cooler temperatures than Tulsa.”
I’m looking forward to hearing about your adventures this summer and plans for the fall!
—Heidi Immesberger, 225 Delmar St., Philadelphia, PA 19128; (215) 482-3769; heidiimmes@gmail.com
Sept - Oct 2009
Hello ’06s! I hope this finds you doing well! I have some news to share from classmates who have recently traveled great distances.
Kim McKee just finished hiking the Appalachian Trail. She started from Springer Mountain, Georgia, in April and finished her hike at Mount Katadin in Maine. Kim has been working at a startup Internet social networking site in Washington, D.C., since graduation. This fall she will be starting a master’s program in regional planning at UMass Amherst. Congratulations, Kim!
Ann Irvine wrote in after she, Hannah Gelman, Brittany Beth, Ruth Jones, Mignon Lamia and seven friends participated in the first American Odyssey Relay race in April. The race began in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and ended 204 miles away in Washington, D.C. The team completed the race in about 30 hours and had a great time.
Sarah Emel is beginning a Ph.D. program at Washington State University. In the spring she defended her thesis on the Oklahoma salamander and earned her master’s in biology from the University of Tulsa. Sarah says she’s “excited to get to live in another part of the country, especially one with cooler temperatures than Tulsa.”
I’m looking forward to hearing about your adventures this summer and plans for the fall!
—Heidi Immesberger, 225 Delmar St., Philadelphia, PA 19128; (215) 482-3769; heidiimmes@gmail.com