CLASS OF 2009 | 2022| FALL ISSUE

Hi everyone! This is Asia Neupane and Ally (Heaney) Lamson—we’re really glad to be your class secretaries! Please send any news and updates (or any other ideas) to us anytime this year so that we can include it in the upcoming newsletters. Asia is based in New Haven and Ally is in Philadelphia. Please definitely let us know if you are in these areas too!

Congratulations to Michael Green for developing Lynit, an outlining tool to assist writers in structuring and developing their novels. Michael also finished writing his first book, The End of Nobility, which he has been working on since the age of 15. The book will be released in early 2023.

Paul J. Edwards writes, “Happy to report that I will be starting as an assistant professor of English and dramatic literature at New York University after two years as an assistant professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. As well as my engagement to Rebecca Kastleman, assistant professor of English at Columbia University.”

Eugene Wong was named CFO of Boston-based start-up Hometap.

Michelle Katz writes, “Last fall, my partner Robert DeSimone and I finally tied the knot at the Bronx Zoo. Rachel Berkowitz, Nina Cohodes, and Joseph Melendez ’07 were all in the wedding party, and many Wes alumni, ranging from the classes of ’92 to ’10 (with heavy ’09 representation, of course) were in attendance. And, after more than a decade in Brooklyn, we’ve moved to Philadelphia, as I am starting rabbinical school this fall. Would love to grab coffee with any other Wes Philly folks!”

The Katz-DeSimone wedding party

One of those Philly folks is Ally (Heaney) Lamson who is working as an insurance broker for Gallagher, raising three Spanish-speaking daughters, and occasionally playing beach volleyball.

Oriana Korol has been “working as a nature-based therapist for over a year in Canby, Oregon, at the Center at Heron Hill” and was expecting her first child in August!

On August 21, 2021, Ryan Walsh married his wife Kristen at Valley View Farm in Haydenville, Massachusetts. Several Wesleyan hockey alums were there to celebrate, including: J. J. Evans, Bryan Wieland, Scott Burns, John Wierzba, Mike Dorsey ’08, and Michael Ruderman ’11.

From left to right: JJ Evans, Bryan Wieland, Scott Burns, Mike Palladino, Ryan Walsh, John Wierzba, Mike Dorsey, and Michael Ruderman.

CLASS OF 2008 | 2022 | FALL ISSUE

After becoming an author in 2019, Kat Cho hit The New York Times bestsellers list this summer with her third published young adult book, Once Upon a K-Prom (Disney Books).

Lynn Favin is back in NYC after starring in an Equity show with CVRep in Palm Springs, California (January–February 2022). Her performance in Life x 3 was hailed by critics: “Lynn Favin’s ‘Sonia’ is a tigress—a no-nonsense mother, polished professional and a flirt, she is no one to mess with”; and landed her full representation with Buchwald, Eris Talent, and Entertainment Lab. She recorded her 17th character on the Emmy Award–winning animated show Robot Chicken this year and received top billing along with Seth Green and Bob Bergen in Season 11, episode 4. She looks forward to more bookings around the country and creative collaborations with fellow Wes alums.  For more news, visit www.lynnfavin.com.

CLASS OF 2007 | 2022 | FALL ISSUE

Greetings classmates! Megan here. Victoria and I have a few updates to share. First, we’d like to give our thanks to the class of 2007’s reunion committee. We really appreciate the time and effort they put into our 15th Reunion! Thank you to: Eric Altneu, Liam McAlpine, Estrella Lopez, Tory Masterson, Nishita Roy, Eugene Dayanghirang, Melissa Miller, and Samantha Kantor.

On the career front, we have quite a few exciting updates. Jessica Necheles says, “I moved to Guam last year and it would be fun to know if there are other alumni out in this part of the world. I’m working as an RN at a hospital here, and scuba diving and hiking in my free time.” If you’re in or around Guam, give Jessica a shout!

Jesse Nasta reports that he is starting his sixth year of teaching in Wesleyan’s African American Studies Department. He also became executive director of the Middlesex County Historical Society in Middletown in 2020, hired via Zoom during the pandemic. Jesse says, “I am always happy to hear from classmates who are visiting campus!”

Matt Donne has been moving and shaking as well. He says, “I’m psyched about a new role I just took. I recently joined a new clinical trial start-up called Vial as a senior business development director.”

Jessica Mack has also accepted a new position. She reports, “Starting this fall I’ll be an assistant professor of history at Rowan University!” She continues, “I’ll be teaching digital history and Latin American history and launching a new center for digital humanities at Rowan. Happy to be staying in the Philadelphia area.”

And finally, Cynthia Santiago recently announced her 10-year lawyer/law firm anniversary! She says, “I’ve been assisting people in immigration cases nationwide through our legal pop-ups, hosting a national TV show, and direct representation. By my side is my husband and three beautiful kids Nico (8), Galilee (4), and Bethany (2).”

As always, we’d love to hear about what you’ve been up to! Please send any professional or personal updates to megan.kretz@gmail.com or victoriapinsky@gmail.com.

CLASS OF 2005 | 2022 | FALL ISSUE

Rahwa Yebio has published two books of poetry under her pen name, Amaya Sunn, and has recently completed her first young adult novel. She is also a digital content creator specifically producing visual poetry pieces. Over the period of a decade, Rahwa has created arts programming and spearheaded enrichment curriculums for youth in New York City. She is also the mother of a brilliant and beautiful 11-year-old boy!

Misa Dayson gave birth to her and her husband’s, Jules Hollander, son, Isaiah, in July 2020. He is the cutest baby-toddler in the world, and at least once every day she feels like she experiences a bit of magic being in his presence. At the same time, becoming a mother for the first time in the middle of a global pandemic was challenging, and she decided to document the experience with her friend, Veena Hampapur, through their podcast, Memos from Motherhood (Or, I Gave Birth During a Pandemic?!). Memos unpacks the personal and political nuances of navigating the early years of parenting amidst both a global pandemic, and seismic political, cultural, and environmental change. Trained as anthropologists, Misa and Veena process pandemic parenthood holistically and intersectionality through intimate conversations and voice memos. Misa has really enjoyed hearing about how her and Veena’s shared stories are resonating with a range of people, both parents and child-free alike! When not producing the podcast, she continues her work in film producing and screenwriting. She lives in Harlem, and this past summer enjoyed traveling internationally for the first time in three years visiting family in France. She would appreciate any tips people have to offer on how to make future vacations run smoother with a toddler in tow!

Xiomara Lorenzo and Cara Herbitter ’03, despite nearly convincing themselves in 2013 that they would return to New York City once Cara completed their clinical PhD program in 2020, have truly made a home in Boston; so much so that they are closing on a house this fall! This year they celebrated 17 years together and 10 years married. Xiomara co-leads digital product management at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, while Cara completes their postdoctoral fellowship at the Boston VA.

Ada Pinkston is an artist and lecturer who currently works at Towson University and Maryland Institute College of Art. Her work was recently acquired by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). You can view an iteration of this augmented-reality monument on LACMA’s Snapchat profile.

Maya Lake is a stylist and designer in Los Angeles. You can find her on a film or television set where she is celebrating the wrapping of a show. You can also find her on a volleyball court.

Andrea Cortes-Juarbe is based in San Francisco where she offers workshops to young people in nature and practices somatic healing sessions at various locations throughout the Bay Area.

Liz Andrews is an artist, curator, and scholar. She recently co-curated The Obama Portraits Tour and Black American Portraits at LACMA. Last fall, she moved to Atlanta, Georgia, to become executive director of the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art, the only museum in the nation dedicated to art by and about women of the African diaspora. In May 2022, she got engaged to artist Brian J. Brown.

Natalia Ortiz is a term assistant professor in the Education Department at Barnard College in her hometown of New York City. Every now and then she also does some independent racial-equity consulting. When she is not meeting with students, curriculum planning, teaching, or facilitating, she is keeping busy as a soccer mom to her two children, Amaya Lolita (10) and Maceo Felix (7). As of this year, Natalia became a titi to niece Naia Rae Ortiz Rothwell, the daughter of Nicholas Ortiz. We are thrilled to welcome a new baby to the family.

Justin F. Kennedy is still a Berlin-based community dance artist, teacher, and DJ. Justin’s work has evolved since Wes, from a durational dance and singing practice, and further translates into workshops, science fiction operas, installations, happenings, and films. Notable works of late include: Cannibalizing the Conductor, an experimental dance film and A(un) Necessary World, a sci-fi opera in parts, at the Hammer Museum in LA. His recent work, performing and body doubling in Ligia Lewis’s A Plot/A Scandal, has been fruitful. Justin plans to teach at the School for New Dance Development in Amsterdam in winter ’22 and is trying his hand at the technical side of music production and hopes to attend a sound engineering course in Lagos in 2023.

Sam Leitner and his partner bid farewell to D.C. friends and moved to Boulder, Colorado. He’s loving easy access to outdoor climbing and will continue his work as a (remote) data scientist at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, where he leads a program that evaluates credit models for discrimination.

Katie Walsh lives in Highland Park, Los Angeles, and works as a film critic for the Tribune News Service, The Los Angeles Times, and The Wrap. She’s also a frequent contributor of film reviews to KCRW’s Press Play with Madeleine Brand. She often meets neighbor Che Landon for afternoon swims in the pool in their complex.

After many years in many cities, Hallie Dalsimer has been making home in the Sierra Foothills of California since 2015. They love living in a place where people are greatly outnumbered by trees. In 2021, Hallie launched Humaning: in Conversation, a podcast exploring what it means to human well—in our bodies, in relationship, in present time, on planet Earth—with three friends who share an orientation toward embodied practice, social justice, and an animist worldview.

After nearly a decade with NOAA’s Office of Coast Survey and following a four-year stint as an at-home parent, Janice Eisenberg is heading back to graduate school (second time is the charm?) to pursue her MSW at the University of Maryland. She still lives in Silver Spring, Maryland, with her husband and three kids.

CLASS OF 2004 | 2022 | FALL ISSUE

Lelah Ann Baker-Rabe shares, “Dylan Osborn ’05 and I have put down roots in Norwalk, Connecticut, where we’re replacing our front lawn with a pollinator garden on Connecticut’s Pollinator Pathway and raising two sons. I’m writing and publishing contemporary romance novels under the name ‘Libby Waterford’ and teaching genre fiction at the Westport Writers’ Workshop.”

Please write in with your news and updates anytime!

CLASS OF 2003 | 2022 | FALL ISSUE

Kate Reder Sheikh lives in San Francisco with her husband and two kids (future Wesleyan grads?). She is a partner at Major, Lindsey & Africa and a member of Chief.

Kate Standish just moved with her family back to Managua, Nicaragua. She continues working for Boston University in the Family Medicine Department (mostly remotely), doing clinical and health services research on breastfeeding among high-risk and underserved populations, as well as clinical breastfeeding medicine. Her son Noah is seven years old.

Anna Seastrand will be spending the academic year (2022–23) as a fellow in garden and landscape studies at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C., working on her second book, Trees and the Ecologies of Sacred Art in Southern India. She’d love to catch up with anyone in the area.

Ryan Garbalosa has been elected to the Board of Trustees of the South Carolina Medical Association representing his district. He still currently serves as the chief of medicine at Prisma Health Tuomey hospital in Sumter, South Carolina, and was named “Best Cardiologist” in Sumter County for 2022 in the annual “Best of Sumter” awards hosted by the Sumter Item recognizing professionals in the area.

Ami Boghani has been living and writing in Los Angeles since 2018. She’s currently working on a to-be-announced DreamWorks show that will air on Apple TV next year.

Matt Kushner has been working as the head of VFX Technology for the past year at Illuminarium Experiences, an immersive entertainment company based in Atlanta. Matt has worked on Wild (an African safari show) that premiered in summer 2021, Space (an outer-space show) that premiered in summer 2022, and has helped integrate a Georgia O’Keeffe retrospective and Waking Wonderland, a narrative Alice in Wonderland sequel. Illuminarium also opened a second location in Las Vegas’s Area 15 in spring 2022, which is a haven for immersive content. Matt still lives in Jersey City and works mostly remotely for Illuminarium. Lauren Kushner (Brown ’04) is still working at the American Museum of Natural History and is in the process of building interactive AR content for an insectarium that will be part of a brand-new wing to the museum. Kids Mimi (seven) and Tessa (four and a half) will be entering second grade and kindergarten respectively in the fall.

CLASS OF 2001 | 2022 | FALL ISSUE

Oliver Platts-Mills and Natasha Sienitsky ’02, joined by their daughters Ursula (6) and Ona (4), have taken over an Appalachian Mountain lodging and campground on the Blue Ridge Parkway in Central Virginia. Oliver says, “Come visit us at www.loveridgeva.com!”

Andrew Drane writes, “I got married in December 2020 and we became foster parents in September 2021. We are currently caring for an adorable 2-year-old foster daughter!”

Grace Anderson-Smith now lives in Georgia, and has a “beautiful, smart, 4-year-old daughter and future Wesleyan field hockey player. I am proud to have successfully accomplished working in corporate for Time magazine, then graduated from NYU with a master’s in education. I worked and coached at Rye Country Day School, taught math, and had a math tutoring company for over 20 years. Grateful for all I have accomplished with multiple sclerosis. I have MS, but MS it does not have me.”

From Emily Barth Isler: “My debut middle-grade novel, AfterMath, came out in September from Lerner/Carolrhoda, and was called ‘a gift to the culture’ by Amy Schumer and ‘pretty close to perfect’ by Judith Viorst. AfterMath also won the 2022 Mathical Book Prize, was A Mighty Girl’s Books of the Year list winner 2021, and was chosen as Nate Berkus’s Nate’s Reads book club pick for the month of April 2022! I was delighted to be on a panel at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books in April with John Cho, Kelly Yang, and Lexie Bean, speaking about the importance of books that address difficult topics for middle-grade readers. AfterMath deals with the lasting impact of gun violence in communities, as well as themes of grief, resilience, friendship, and family, and sadly it’s getting more relevant every day in light of recent mass shootings. I’m quite involved in several gun violence prevention organizations and donate a portion of my proceeds from the book to said orgs. I love doing school visits via Zoom or in person, so if you teach middle school or know a teacher who wants to bring authors into classrooms, please be in touch! Learn more at emilybarthisler.com/aftermath.”

Ben Clark was hired by the United States Attorney’s Office, Northern District of New York, to serve as an AUSA in the Criminal Division.

Jennifer Tuft’s entertainment technology company, Kaleidoco, has opened an immersive mixed-reality experience called Particle Ink: Speed of Dark in the arts district of Las Vegas. Particle Ink: Speed of Dark is a narrative experience, one that seamlessly weaves live performance with mixed-reality technology. If you find yourself in Las Vegas and want to step into a living graphic novel, go see Particle Ink! More at particleink.com.

Joanna Weaver (formerly Richman) moved her family of four to Boston this year for her faculty position at Northeastern University. She has enjoyed re-connecting with fellow class of ’01 alumni Will Tsoules and Mara Voukydis [aka me, and the feeling is mutual!] and alum Demian Szyld ’00. She is hoping to discover more Wesleyan friends in the area!

Always great to hear from you all.

Best,

Mara

CLASS OF 2000 | 2022 | FALL ISSUE

After recently completing his degree from Fordham University Gabelli School of Business, Marvin Thomas has left admissions from his alma mater Xavier High School in NYC and is now the director of business development of the Corporate Work Study Program at Cristo Rey Brooklyn High School in East Flatbush, Brooklyn, New York.

Matt Rahaim has been teaching Hindustani music, relational improvisation, and practices of listening at the University of Minnesota, most recently in the new Creative Studies Program. His new book, Ways of Voice: Vocal Striving and Moral Contestation in North India and Beyond, was published in the Music/Culture series at Wesleyan University Press in fall 2021. He and his wife Jenna are spending as much time as possible in and on lakes, frozen and liquid.

Bryan Rowe lives in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, with his wife Asia and two sons, Jacob (7) and Oscar (4).  “I would love to hear from any classmates in the area!”

Eden Robins writes, “My first novel, When Franny Stands Up (Sourcebooks Landmark), is coming out November 1st! I call it ‘my funny book about trauma,’ and my editor calls it ‘a queer Marvelous Mrs. Maisel where the jokes are magic.’”

Ali Haider says, “After working in western Massachusetts for 10 years, I have taken a position at New York Presbyterian/Cornell—Queens, where I will continue working as an interventional and structural cardiologist. My wife Uruj Kamal Haider ’09 and I have a 17- month-old baby, Parisa Haider, and a second girl coming in December. We are excited to be moving back to New York and closer to our family.”

Trace Peterson completed her job as the NEH postdoctoral fellow in poetics at Emory University this past spring, and she has moved back to Connecticut, where she currently works as a visiting assistant professor of English at the UConn Storrs campus. This year Trace’s small-press publishing company, EOAGH Books, also won the National Jewish Book Award in Poetry for The Book of Anna, a title by trans writer Joy Ladin. An interview about the prize-winning book with Trace and Joy appeared in a recent article in Forbes magazine and is probably the first time poetry has ever appeared in Forbes.

Mandy Snyder writes, “I lead groups online for self-discovery and emotional intelligence using somatic approaches at mandysnyder.com. I am relocating to western Massachusetts, near Greenfield, should anyone live nearby, let me know!”

Bakley Smith says, “Hi, I moved to Atlanta, Georgia (actually Decatur), in 2021, after more than 20 years in NYC. My wife and I had our second child last year, and things are generally going quite well. Saw Josh Ostrow while in New York recently, and stay in touch with Justin Belin, Nick Kurian, and others. Missed our 20-year Reunion but looking forward to 25 in a few more years.”

Claudia Cruz writes, “During the pandemic I was co-managing editor of a team of reporters that won a national 2021 Murrow Award for our bilingual COVID-19 coverage during 2020. Also, I will finally join the ranks of published Wesleyan authors with the forthcoming academic chapter, “Race, Colorism and Policing in Latinx Communities: Getting the Story,” for a first-of-its-kind journalism textbook about covering Latinos in the U.S. and around the world. It will be published by Routledge in late April 2022.”

Our collective thoughts and prayers are with Greg Amis. His wife, Karen Ferreira Amis, died of cancer last November. Obituary is at https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/name/karen-amis-obituary?pid=200709776.