Class Note 2009. Here’s what’s news with our classmates. Brian Chao is happy to share that his first book is finally out: Continental Powers and Naval Development: Strategy Coherence, Threat Diffusion, and Success at Sea is the 75th monograph in Rout
Class Note 2007. Happy holidays, 07s! Thanks for consistently sending in great updates! Here are the reports from fall term around the girdled earth. Sahiba Krieger wrote in that in early October she attended the Dartmouth West Coast Homecoming organ
Class Note 2006. Hello, ’06s.Yale Fillingham is an orthopedic surgeon specializing in hip and knee replacements at the Rothman Orthopaedic Institute in Philadelphia. He serves as an associate professor and vice chair of research at Thomas Jefferson U
Class Note 2005. Hi, ’05s. I hope you all had a wonderful holiday season. A lot of great updates from our class below—please keep them coming. Happy New Year!Brandon Charles has been studying energy policy and governance at Syracuse University in Syr
Class Note 2004. Hi, ’04s! Happy early spring! I hope this note finds you well. And fingers crossed many of you are beginning to experience a little more sunshine throughout your day. With spring breaks and spring holidays around the corner, I recogn
Class Note 2003. Winter greetings, ’03s!Bet it’s cold up in Hanover right now! Apologies for missing our last column, I didn’t receive any news. We’ve remedied that this go around and I have news to report.I saw an interview with Elizabeth Reid in Th
Class Note 2002. Hello, ’02s! I received happy news from Kristen LeFevre: “Owen John LeFevre was born on November 4, joining older brother Henry. We are all doing well! Owen’s middle name honors my father, John LeFevre ’66, who is a doting grandfathe
Class Note 2001. Spring has sprung, fellow ’01s, and our 25th reunion is only about three months away. I hope you and yours are busy making plans to head to Hanover from June 19 through 21. Registration opens March 3, and the reunion committee is bus
Class Note 2000. Greetings, ’00s. Two classmates to report on this issue.Curtis Dozier is assistant professor and the chair of Greek and Roman studies at Vassar, where “classic scholarship is woven into the core of the curriculum.” His curiosity was