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FELLOWS


The mission of the <strong>Jefferson</strong> <strong>Scholars</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong><br />

is to serve the University of Virginia by<br />

identifying, attracting, and nurturing individuals<br />

of extraordinary intellectual range and depth<br />

who possess the highest concomitant qualities of<br />

leadership, scholarship and citizenship.<br />

1


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

WILLIAM JOSEPH DIRIENZO (2008)<br />

EDWARD P. OWENS FELLOW<br />

Department of Astronomy<br />

University of Wisconsin-Madison (B.S.)<br />

University of Virginia (M.S.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Bill has been busy researching the mysteries of star formation in<br />

the Milky Way galaxy. His major focus is the origin of the most<br />

massive stars because, even though they are rare, they have the<br />

greatest affect on their environment and their formation is the<br />

most difficult to understand. He has been preparing a paper for<br />

publication about the identification and analysis of triggered star<br />

formation in several regions. The presentation of this work won<br />

a Chambliss Astronomy Achievement Award for an outstanding<br />

graduate student poster at the 218th Meeting of the American Astronomical<br />

Society. Bill has begun to work in depth on his dissertation<br />

topic, the characteristics of Infrared Dark Clouds identified<br />

by the orbiting Spitzer Space Telescope, and how that relates to<br />

the presence and type of star formation. This project will use data<br />

taken in the infrared, radio, and millimeter wavelength ranges. He<br />

has recently begun collecting data from the Combined Array for<br />

Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy in California to study the temperature, density, and chemical structure of<br />

IRDCs. Bill is involved with a program to mentor students at the Central Virginia Governor’s School for Science and Technology<br />

. He advised students working on the astrochemistry of a giant star’s wind and two star-forming regions, as well<br />

as the properties of Active Galactic Nuclei. Bill has also been advising an undergraduate <strong>Jefferson</strong> Scholar working on a<br />

project to identify Young Stellar Objects in a star-forming region and compare their infrared colors to their X-ray properties.<br />

This project is a continuation of a CVGS project from the previous year. Bill was the graduate student member of<br />

the Astronomy Department Admissions and Recruitment Committee for the past two years. He has recently completed<br />

the Teaching Resource Center’s “Tomorrow’s Professor Today” program, and successfully implemented teaching methods<br />

from the TPT program in his first solo taught course, Astronomy 1210: Introduction to the Sky and Solar System, last<br />

summer. Bill is excited to be the new Natural Sciences associate editor for the <strong>Jefferson</strong> Journal of Science and Culture.<br />

LAURA EMILY GOLDBLATT (2008)<br />

JOHN S. LILLARD FELLOW<br />

Department of English<br />

Wesleyan University (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

This past year Laura served as the president of the Graduate<br />

English Students Association. In addition to this departmental<br />

commitment, she delivered a paper at the South Atlantic Modern<br />

Language Association annual conference in Atlanta and at the biannual<br />

meeting of the Society of Nineteenth-Century Americanists<br />

in Berkeley. This summer she will attend the Futures of American<br />

Studies Institute at Dartmouth University where she will workshop<br />

a prospective article drawn from the third chapter of her dissertation.<br />

She is also currently working on an article about representations<br />

of Native Americans on U.S. postal stamps at the turn of the<br />

twentieth-century which she is co-authoring with professor and<br />

director of Global Development Studies Program, Richard Handler.<br />

They plan to complete the article sometime in August.<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

1


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

MARY ELLEN HICKS (2008)<br />

NEWMAN FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of History<br />

University of Iowa (B.A.)<br />

University of Virginia (M.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Currently residing in Lisbon, Portugal, Mary is conducting her<br />

dissertation research on enslaved and free seamen of African descent<br />

in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century Luso-phone<br />

Atlantic. Her current project expands upon recent scholarship of<br />

the African diaspora that conceptualizes the southern Atlantic<br />

Ocean as a space that united, not divided, the non-contiguous territories<br />

of Europe, West Africa, and Brazil. By focusing on seafarers<br />

and the commercial activities in which they labored and profited<br />

from, Mary hopes to reveal the sometimes surprising degree of<br />

economic agency that enslaved and free African peoples exercised<br />

in the early modern Atlantic world. Her study will also address<br />

issues of violence and coercion, ethnicity, as well as other modes<br />

of identification and belonging, and the centrality of skilled labor<br />

preformed African peoples in Portugal and Brazil. Mary is planning<br />

to continue her primary research in London, Rio de Janeiro, and<br />

Salvador, Brazil in the upcoming semester.<br />

LINDSAY PARSONS O’CONNOR (2008)<br />

IRBY CAUTHEN FELLOW<br />

Department of English<br />

Tulane University (B.A.)<br />

University of Virginia (M.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

In the fall of 2011, Lindsay served as a teaching assistant for an<br />

undergraduate survey of modern and contemporary literature in<br />

English and presented a paper about William Faulkner’s portrayal<br />

of the 1927 Mississippi flood at the South Atlantic Modern Language<br />

Association’s annual conference. Her dissertation prospectus<br />

was approved in the Spring of 2012 so she has begun work<br />

on waste and disaster in 20th century American literature and<br />

culture. Lindsay was part of the 2011-12 class of Praxis Fellows at<br />

the U.Va. Library’s <strong>Scholars</strong>’ Lab, where she has been learning web<br />

design in a digital humanities setting. This summer Lindsay will<br />

again participate in the Futures of American Studies Institute at<br />

Dartmouth College and will continue to build design skills as part<br />

of the U.Va. Writing Program’s Batten Project.<br />

2 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

HAROLD SMITH REEVES (2008)<br />

ERIC M. HEINER FELLOW<br />

Department of Classics<br />

Princeton University (B.A.)<br />

Brooksville, Florida<br />

Harold spent the past academic year preparing for his Ph.D.<br />

comprehensive exams, a collection of 4 written examinations<br />

on Latin and Greek language and literature, and a two hour oral<br />

examination. He passed all five examinations and is now beginning<br />

to define a topic for his dissertation.<br />

CAROLYN BEANS (2009)<br />

TERRENCE D. DANIELS FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of Biology<br />

Penn State University (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

This past year Carolyn began her dissertation research through<br />

an investigation of the impact of an invasive species, Showy<br />

Jewelweed, on the evolution of the closely-related native species,<br />

Spotted Jewelweed. Her preliminary results suggest that the<br />

invasive competitor strongly out competes the native species for<br />

pollinators. The competitor also alters the evolutionary trajectory<br />

of floral traits such as shape and color in the native plant. Carolyn<br />

recently won a grant from the Scientific Research Society Sigma<br />

Xi to continue this work. She will present her current findings<br />

this summer at the microMORPH workshop at Harvard’s Arnold<br />

Arboretum as well as at the annual Evolution meeting in Ottawa,<br />

Canada. In addition to her dissertation work, Carolyn has also<br />

studied the spread of the invasive species Japanese Honeysuckle<br />

in the United States. Her work suggests that in areas of high human<br />

influence such as cities, Japanese Honeysuckle can survive<br />

even in suboptimal climates. She recently published this research<br />

in the journal Biological Invasions. Carolyn has also continued her<br />

volunteer work with U.Va.’s Women in Math and Science by teaching<br />

science lessons to kindergarten and first grade students at Red<br />

Hill Elementary School.<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

3


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

BENJAMIN KAGAN BRADY (2009)<br />

ERIC P. AND ELIZABETH R. JOHNSON FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of History<br />

Princeton University (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Ben has completed his final year of coursework and passed his<br />

comprehensive exams. He is beginning work on a dissertation<br />

examining Europe’s embrace of U.S. legal doctrines after World<br />

War II.<br />

GABRIELLE KATHRYN LEE MILLER (2009)<br />

D.N. BATTEN FOUNDATION FELLOW<br />

Department of History<br />

University of Notre Dame (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Gaby presented the paper, “In Defense of Motherhood: Merce<br />

Rodoreda’s La plaza del diamante” this spring at the Kentucky<br />

Foreign Language Conference. She also won the Spanish Department’s<br />

2012 GTA Outstanding Teaching Award. In June, she will<br />

be teaching an undergraduate Spanish course at U.Va. She looks<br />

forward to traveling in Spain in July. Gaby has one more year of<br />

coursework before she begins work on her dissertation. As part<br />

of her comprehensive exams in spring of 2013, she plans to work<br />

on a year long project, directed by Professor Randolph, which will<br />

focus on contemporary Spanish novels published in the past 20<br />

years.<br />

4 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

SARAH ANNE O’HALLORAN (2009)<br />

EDGAR SHANNON FELLOW IN MUSIC<br />

Department of Music<br />

University College Cork (B.A.)<br />

University College Cork (M.Phil.)<br />

Queens University Belfast (M.A.)<br />

Washington, D.C.<br />

This fall Sarah began co-hosting The Listening Room on WTJU, a<br />

show focused on contemporary art music. In recent months her<br />

music has been performed by the Voxare String Quartet and the<br />

MICE Ensemble at U.Va. It has also been played at George Mason<br />

University as part of the College Music Society Mid-Atlantic<br />

Regional Conference and at Stony Brook University as part of their<br />

symposium Encountering Data. Sarah has presented her research<br />

on avant garde singer Tanya Tagaq at the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of<br />

the Society of Ethnomusicology Annual Conference at College of<br />

William and Mary, College Music Society Mid Atlantic Regional<br />

Conference at George Mason University and International Alliance<br />

of Women in Music Congress at Northern Arizona University.<br />

JASON A. PAN (2009)<br />

TAYLOR-TYREE FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of Law<br />

University of Virginia (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

As a triple Hoo Jason has spent this year trying to strengthen the<br />

linkages between various communities on-grounds. In particular<br />

he continues to build on his passion from college for mentoring<br />

and tutoring. He was elected to serve as vice president of Mentoring<br />

for Legal Advisory Workshops for Undergraduate Students<br />

Mentoring, which mentors undergraduates on their law school applications.<br />

He will help run the Darden U.Va. Mentoring program,<br />

which leverages the experience of Darden students to give career<br />

advice to other U.Va. students. Jason was elected to the board<br />

of the Asian and Asian Pacific American Alumni Network and will<br />

serve on the committee overseeing the alumni-student mentoring<br />

program. As a J.D./M.B.A., Jason enjoys his studies of the intersection<br />

between business and the law and seeks to apply it in a<br />

practical way. He joined Darden Capital Management and will help<br />

manage the Rotunda Fund, which has a sustainability focus and<br />

$800,000 assets under management. Jason finds the strong<br />

overlay of policy in this sector appealing and hopes this experience will refine the way he thinks about how policy should<br />

be crafted and implemented. This summer he will intern at the Securities and Exchange Commission in the Division of<br />

Risk, Strategy, and Financial Innovation. He is very thankful to receive a grant from the Darden Non-Profit Internship Fund<br />

for living expenses. Jason also served as an assistant director of Operations for the E* Society, which promotes entrepreneurship<br />

at the Law School, and as a research assistant to Professor David C. Smith, a professor at the McIntire School of<br />

Commerce. He participated during the 2012 <strong>Jefferson</strong> <strong>Scholars</strong> Selection Weekend as an essay reader and gave a talk on<br />

international investment law during the Fellows Symposium.<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

5


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

CORLETT WOLFE WOOD (2009)<br />

H. EUGENE LOCKHART FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of Biology<br />

Swarthmore College (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Corlett spent the past year analyzing her first summer’s worth of<br />

field data for her dissertation. In the summer of 2011 she worked<br />

with an undergraduate collaborator to determine whether beetles<br />

specialize on a single food resource. Using genetic data from over<br />

600 beetles that were collected from three species of fungus,<br />

they found that beetles migrate freely among fungi, indicating<br />

that individual beetles do not specialize on a single resource. This<br />

summer Corlett is conducting a second study with another undergraduate<br />

collaborator to extend these results. They will measure<br />

the strength of natural and sexual selection on beetles living on<br />

each of these three species of fungi to determine whether there<br />

is an advantage to resource specialization in this species. Corlett<br />

recently received a Student Research Award from the American<br />

Society of Naturalists to fund this project. Finally, Corlett is looking<br />

forward to serving as co-editor-in-Chief for the <strong>Jefferson</strong> Journal of<br />

Science and Culture with Sarah O’Halloran this coming year.<br />

DANIEL ELLIOT FRANZ (2010)<br />

PAUL B. BARRINGER FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of Mathematics<br />

Kenyon College (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Daniel successfully passed his qualifying exams in the fall and<br />

enjoyed his first year of teaching, finding it very enriching and<br />

rewarding. This summer he will be doing reading on combinatorial<br />

group theory and p-adic analyticity to prepare for doing research<br />

in the fall.<br />

6 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

ANNE MARIE GUARNERA (2010)<br />

JOHN A. BLACKBURN FELLOW<br />

Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese<br />

Bryn Mawr College (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

At the beginning of this school year, Anne was appointed to<br />

serve as a preceptor in the Department of Spanish, Italian and<br />

Portuguese. In this leadership position she works to oversee and<br />

coordinate the work of all Spanish Teaching Assistants teaching<br />

the department’s Intermediate Spanish classes. She will continue<br />

to serve as a preceptor in the 2012-2013 school year as well. Anne<br />

presented a portion of her M.A. thesis at this year’s <strong>Jefferson</strong><br />

Fellows Symposium in February. She passed all eight of her M.A.<br />

comprehensive exams in March and finished her thesis, entitled<br />

“La mexicanidad reciclada de Pedro Ángel Palou,” in April. Her<br />

thesis examines Palou’s postmodern treatment of Mexican national<br />

identity as it emerges in his most recent trilogy of historical<br />

novels. Anne was awarded a Summer Language Institute Fellowship<br />

by the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, which she will<br />

combine with a grant from Middlebury College in order to attend<br />

the Middlebury Language Summer Institute in Portuguese this<br />

summer. She is excited to expand her research to contemporary<br />

Brazilian poetry and fiction.<br />

CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL IRWIN (2010)<br />

OLIVE B. AND FRANKLIN C. MAC KRELL FELLOW<br />

Department of Astronomy<br />

University of Pittsburgh (B.S.)<br />

Irwin, Pennsylvania<br />

This January Chris successfully passed his second qualifying exam<br />

and was admitted to PhD candidacy in the Astronomy Department.<br />

He has continued his research of supernovae--the extreme<br />

deaths of massive stars--which combines theoretical work with<br />

analysis of data from the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. This year<br />

Chris co-authored two supernova papers in the Astrophysical<br />

Journal Letters: “X-Rays from Supernova Shocks in Dense Mass<br />

Loss” and “Strong Evolution of X-Ray Absorption in the Type IIn<br />

Supernova SN 2010jl.” A third paper on another X-ray bright<br />

supernova, SN 2006jd, was recently submitted to the Astrophysical<br />

Journal as well. In addition, Chris has worked with <strong>Jefferson</strong><br />

Scholar Eda Herzog-Vitto on a Fellow-Scholar research project,<br />

studying how pulsars interact with their surroundings. As part of<br />

his fall coursework, Chris had the opportunity to visit several major<br />

observatories in Arizona and New Mexico, including the Large<br />

Binocular Telescope, the Very Large Array, and Apache Point<br />

Observatory, where he received training on the 3.5-meter telescope. He also served as a TA for an astronomy lab course<br />

that introduces students to small telescopes and the night sky. This summer Chris will teach an introductory course<br />

about stars and galaxies, and plans to study gamma-ray bursts--the most luminous events in the universe--and their<br />

connection to the brightest known supernovae.<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

7


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

REED A. JOHNSON (2010)<br />

JOHN S. LILLARD FELLOW<br />

Department of Slavic<br />

Wesleyan University (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Since last year’s report Reed has continued pursuing his interest<br />

in literary translation, and this spring will see the publication of<br />

two of his own Russian-to-English translations along with a critical<br />

essay in the literary journal Meridian. As part of his goal of introducing<br />

American audiences to little-known Russian writers, he has<br />

focused on the work of the author Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, an<br />

early Soviet writer whose work lay undiscovered in state archives<br />

for nearly a half century, and who is only now receiving critical<br />

and popular attention. Alongside these publications Reed has also<br />

presented on Krzhizhanovsky’s work, first at the Annual <strong>Jefferson</strong><br />

Fellows Symposium, and later at the Southern Slavic Conference<br />

in Savannah, Georgia, where he gave a conference paper entitled<br />

“Man Against Time: Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky’s Memories of<br />

the Future.” Reed has concurrently been working on translating<br />

a more recent Russian author, a young writer named Vsevolod<br />

Benigsen, who has been nominated for numerous literary prizes<br />

and is one of the most intriguing writers working in Russia today. Reed has had the opportunity to work directly with<br />

Benigsen--who speaks fluent English--on a translation of a short story, and hopes their friendly collaboration will continue<br />

into the future. Besides his translation activity Reed has been hard at work on coursework, and this year passed<br />

his comprehensive exams with distinction and will receive a master’s degree in May 2012. Along with his departmental<br />

colleagues, he organized U.Va.’s Third Annual Slavic Forum, where he presented a paper on a Soviet writer of the Gulag,<br />

Varlam Shalamov, entitled “One Thousand and One Kolyma Nights: Shalamov and Scheherazade.” In addition Reed has<br />

greatly enjoyed teaching undergraduates in second-year Russian classes this past year, and will continue teaching Russian<br />

language for his third year in the fellowship.<br />

STEPHANIE RACHEL BERNHARD (2011)<br />

GREGORY L. AND NANCY H. CURL FELLOW<br />

Department of English<br />

Brown University (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Stephanie is spending summer 2012 in Rome to study Latin<br />

poetry. She is a contributing blogger and features writer for Full<br />

Stop Magazine.<br />

8 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

FRANK JOSEPH CIRILLO (2011)<br />

JOHN L. NAU III FELLOW<br />

Department of History<br />

Yale University (B.A.)<br />

Rye, New York<br />

In his first year as a graduate student in the History Department,<br />

Frank presented a recent paper regarding the memory of Abraham<br />

Lincoln at two graduate conferences, and he also had a book<br />

review published in a graduate history journal. Frank is currently<br />

working on exploring how abolitionists invoked the memory of<br />

Thomas <strong>Jefferson</strong> before and during the American Civil War. He<br />

will spend the summer as a research and reporting intern for the<br />

local public radio history program, BackStory with the American<br />

History Guys.<br />

ANNE ELAINE DUNCKEL (2011)<br />

PAUL T. JONES II FELLOW<br />

Department of Environmental Sciences<br />

University of Texas (B.S.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Anne is currently active in her National Science <strong>Foundation</strong><br />

Graduate Research Fellowship tenure for her Master’s thesis.<br />

Her Masters work is focused on environmental changes to the<br />

denitrification N2O/N2 ratio in agricultural stream sediments on<br />

the Eastern Shore of Virginia.<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

9


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

ASHLEIGH DAWN ELSER (2011)<br />

MARC AND NANCY SHRIER FELLOW<br />

Department of Religious Studies<br />

Prairie Bible College (B.A.)<br />

Yale (M.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

After spending the summer of 2011 studying at Tel Aviv University<br />

in Israel, Ashleigh stepped into her first year of coursework in<br />

the Religious Studies Department. She was selected as a Rachel<br />

Winer Manin Interdisciplinary Fellow of Jewish Studies in the fall<br />

and during the spring semester she presented a paper at the Mid-<br />

Atlantic Meetings of the American Academy of Religion.<br />

LAUREN K. REYNOLDS (2011)<br />

WILLIAM AND CAROLYN POLK FELLOW<br />

Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese<br />

The University of Iowa (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

During the summer of 2012 Lauren will attend El Colegio de<br />

Mexico to study contemporary Mexican culture. A Summer Research<br />

Grant from the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and<br />

research funds from the <strong>Jefferson</strong> <strong>Scholars</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> made this<br />

opportunity possible.<br />

10 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

LINDSAY MARIE ROBERTS (2011)<br />

THE SCHENCK LAW FELLOW<br />

Department of Law<br />

Edinboro U. of PA. (B.I.S.)<br />

University of Scranton (M.S.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

Lindsay spent a portion of winter break working for Legal Aid<br />

Services in Charleston, South Carolina. She had the opportunity<br />

to work with and for current and prospective clients under the<br />

supervision of an experienced attorney. Lindsay also joined the<br />

Virginia Sports and Entertainment Journal this spring, and is enjoying<br />

the articles and content after being a collegiate athlete herself,<br />

while also expanding upon her legal writing skills.<br />

JOCELYN RACHEL ROHRBACH (2011)<br />

HARRISON FAMILY FOUNDATION FELLOW<br />

Department of Classics<br />

Catholic Univ. of America (B.A.)<br />

Washington University (M.A.)<br />

St. Louis, Missouri<br />

Jocelyn will be studying this summer for her Master’s exams in<br />

Greek literature, and in the preliminary stages of her master’s<br />

paper. She will also be working to increase her reading proficiency<br />

in German.<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

11


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

JESSE I. ROSENTHAL (2011)<br />

PETER AND EADDO KIERNAN DARDEN FELLOW<br />

Department of Darden<br />

University of Chicago (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

While also surviving his first year at Darden, Jesse was elected<br />

president of the Darden Health Care Club and was selected by<br />

his peers for a leadership position in Community Consultants<br />

of Darden, a student-led club which offers consulting services<br />

for small businesses and non-profits in Charlottesville. He will<br />

be interning this summer at the San Francisco office of Bain &<br />

Company.<br />

ROBERTO I. ARMENGOL (2012)<br />

JEFFERSON ARTS AND SCIENCES<br />

DISSERTATION YEAR FELLOW<br />

Department of Anthropology<br />

University of Delaware (B.A.)<br />

University of Virginia (M.A)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

12 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

CHARLES EDSEL COTHERMAN (2012)<br />

HILLIARD FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of Religious Studies<br />

Grove City College (B.A.)<br />

Pittsburgh Theological Seminary (M.A.)<br />

Knox, Pennsylvania<br />

ADAM JAMES FALLON (2012)<br />

LAURA S. BAILEY FELLOW<br />

Department of Physics<br />

University of Oklahoma (B.A.)<br />

University of Oklahoma (B.S.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

13


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

ROBERT BENJAMIN GORHAM (2012)<br />

EDGAR SHANNON FELLOWS IN ART HISTORY<br />

Department of Art History<br />

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (B.A.)<br />

University of Arizona at Tucson (M.A.)<br />

Durham, North Carolina<br />

JONATHAN GRINSPAN (2012)<br />

JEFFERSON ARTS AND SCIENCES<br />

DISSERTATION YEAR FELLOW<br />

Department of History<br />

Sarah Lawrence College (B.A.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

14 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

ASHLEY ROBIN HURST (2012)<br />

GROUNDBREAKERS FELLOW<br />

Department of Religious Studies<br />

University of Florida, Gainesville (B.A.)<br />

Yale University (M.Div.)<br />

New Haven, Connecticut<br />

KATHERINE ELENA KOOPMAN (2012)<br />

MELVILLE FOUNDATION DARDEN FELLOW<br />

Department of Darden<br />

Harvard (B.A.)<br />

Arlington, Virginia<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

15


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

ANDREW H. KRITZER (2012)<br />

JOHN L. COLLEY JR. DARDEN FELLOW<br />

Department of Darden<br />

University of Michigan - Ann Arbor (B.A.)<br />

New York, New York<br />

MICHAEL CHASE LEVINSON (2012)<br />

HAROLD J. AND JACQUELYN F. RODRIGUEZ<br />

FAMILY FELLOW<br />

Department of Economics<br />

University of South Carolina -- Columbia (B.S.)<br />

Charlottesville, Virginia<br />

16 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

BENJAMIN W. MOHLIE (2012)<br />

W.L. LYONS BROWN III DARDEN FELLOW<br />

Department of Darden<br />

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute - NY (B.S.)<br />

Belmont, Massachusetts<br />

ALICIA NOBLES (2012)<br />

OLIVE B. AND FRANKLIN C. MAC KRELL FELLOW<br />

Department of Engineering<br />

Georgia Inst Technology (B.S.)<br />

Atlanta, Georgia<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

17


THE JEFFERSON FELLOWS<br />

SARAH G. NOLAN (2012)<br />

SIMPSON THACHER & BARTLETT LAW FELLOW<br />

Department of Law<br />

College of William & Mary (B.A.)<br />

University of Wisconsin (M.A.)<br />

Madison, Wisconsin<br />

MATTHEW PAUL JULIUS ORESKA (2012)<br />

KENNETH L. BAZZLE FELLOW<br />

Department of Environmental Sciences<br />

College of William and Mary (B.S.)<br />

University of Cambridge (M.Phil.)<br />

Henrico, Virginia<br />

18 JEFFERSON SCHOLARS FOUNDATION


FELLOWS IN RESIDENCE 2012-13<br />

AARON MICHAEL REEDY (2012)<br />

JAMES H. AND ELIZABETH W. WRIGHT FELLOW<br />

Department of Biology<br />

Southern Illinois University Carbondale (B.A.)<br />

National-Louis University (M.A.)<br />

Chicago, Illinois<br />

For the past seven years Aaron Reedy taught at Thomas Kelly High<br />

School in Chicago, where he used innovative projects to connect<br />

his classroom to the wider world of science. In pursuit of great<br />

education, he sea-kayaked down the Mississippi River, immersed<br />

kids in field studies of reptile reproductive biology and climate<br />

change, and carried out professional-level science in the classroom.<br />

Right now he is a team member on a National Geographic/<br />

Waitts grant to investigate the role that the sex ratio plays in evolution<br />

and population growth in island populations of lizards. At<br />

his blog,wideworldscience.blogspot.com, he helps bring field biology<br />

into classrooms and shares the work of his students with the<br />

world. Reedy recently spoke at TED 2012 on lines of evidence used<br />

by evolutionary biology.Together with legendary animator Candy<br />

Kugel of Buzz Co. studios, he wrote and narrated an animated<br />

video lesson on sex determination systems in the animal kingdom,<br />

for ed.ted.com, the new TED education website.<br />

JASON SCOTT REMER (2012)<br />

PETER AND CRISLER QUICK FELLOW<br />

Department of Engineering<br />

George Mason University (B.S.)<br />

George Mason University (M.S.)<br />

Fairfax, Virginia<br />

2012 FELLOWS SUPPLEMENT<br />

19

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