Masthead image
Friends

Anne&Jules

I am lucky to have so many good friends: I will start with the newest and work my way back. Scroll down so you don’t miss my oldest friends!

Professors Angela Banks, Laura Heymann, Kelly Whalon, and Nikki McCormick all teach with me at William and Mary.

Shelley Deane teaches Government at Bowdoin College.

Eleanor Lewis is a researcher at the Veterans Administration in Palo Alto, California.

Christine Mallinson rocks Baltimore as assistant professor of Language, Literature, and Culture at University of Maryland-Baltimore.

Lisa Reedich is a counselor at Penn Charter School and a visiting instructor of Social Work at Bryn Mawr College.

Maryam Bakht-Rofheart is da bomb and fellow gourmet connoisseur. She hails from Long Island but also makes Philly and Manhattan her home. She studies sociolinguistics up at NYUYeah whatever.

Meriel Baines shares my love of esoteric knowledge as an assistant professor of Italian and director of the foreign language program at Philadelphia University. Sozi was on Jeopardy, and is a lawyer in Philly.

Jenn Karnakis rules. She is currently a patent lawyer at Mintz in Boston. But watch out world.

Triada Stampas did her masters of Public Policy at Columbia and is now works for the Food Bank of NYC.

Langdon Fielding cures horses, but he does not whisper to them. He’s a vet in Sunny California.

Grace Cheng is now an admissions officer for Harvard College. Be nice to her. Your kid’s future is in her hands.

Abena Osseo-Assare is a former RCSerFord Fellow and Assistant Professor at UC-Berkeley. Her husband, Korentang, is a master blogger.

Patty Chui likes to look at dead bodies. She’s an M.D./Ph.D, finding cures for what ails ya up at the Brigham, but is fromback in the day.

Julia Brookins is in the History PhD program at the University of Chicago.

Matthew Bumpas is a fellow country Virginian, but is now a school counselor in Seattle, WA..

Ashley McCowen is a crew stud and a stellar triathlete. She’s a resident at UNC-Chapel Hill. We got gingerbread men in kindergarten, and the rest of the kids didn’t.