2009 Law/Medical Jessica Bod is the associate director of medical student education and the director of the emergency medicine sub-internship at Yale Medical School. Elbridge Colby is serving as the deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy & force development in the US Dept. of defense. Ben Goldberg is a psychiatrist practicing in Sacramento, California. Please send class updates to Thorin Tritter ([email protected])

2010 Law Gary Lawkowski is the counselor to the solicitor for the US Department of the Interior. Danny Pearlstein is taking a new position, still in NYC, with the Riders Alliance, focused on policy and communications for better mass transit. He is also about to become a father. Class representative: Sarah Nadeau-Balducci ([email protected])

2010 Medical Ben Abelson is in his fourth of six years of urology residency, and the plan is to head somewhere for Peds fellowship once I finish. He and his wife Jennifer have three kids, Gabriela (5), Eliana (3) and Sam (1). Amanda Bradke is in her second year of a global health fellowship called the HEAL Initiative, during which she spends half of her time providing medical care in Fort Defiance, Arizona on Navajo Nation, and half her time providing medical care in Hinche, Haiti. Caitlin Koerber reports “nothing new here, still a community pediatrician in White Oak, PA outside of Pittsburgh working with a predominantly underserved population.” Jason Liebowitz I completed last year as Ambulatory Chief Resident at Johns Hopkins Bayview and now I am a fellow in rheumatology at Johns Hopkins (my wife and I live in Philly and I commute as she is a second-year resident in OB/GYN at Penn). Will Parker is still a pulmonary and critical care fellow currently doing research on a T32 training grant. His research has a major ethics component as he works on trying to optimize the allocation of scarce resources, specifically deceased donor organs. Grace Tassa recently started a medical practice along with a group of 23 other physicians called Santa Monica Family Physicians. On the personal side, she and her my husband are expecting their first baby, a boy, this January. Class representative: Grace Tassa ([email protected]).

2010 Seminary Meghan Roth Clayton recently moved with her husband Josh and their son James to Williamsburg, VA to serve as an associate pastor at Williamsburg UMC. Class representative: Hannah Rose Peck ([email protected])

2011 Journalism Alex Alper moved to Rio de Janeiro in June to cover oil and mining for Reuters. She now is speaking Portuñol! Eugene Kwibuka still writes for The New Times in Kigali. He says “Let me know when you want to organize a FASPE reunion in remarkable Rwanda!” Raksha Kumar writes “I have no plans of being in NYC :( Why don’t you plan to come to India sometime?” Laura Murray published a feature in Rolling Stone earlier this month about six young transgender women struggling to survive on the streets of New York City that uncovered the institutional shortcomings that dictated their lives. 48 hours after the story was published, the New York City Council held a 4+ hourlong hearing on youth shelters & introduced new legislation that would require the DYCD agency to provide shelter to all youth, extend the length of time youth are allowed to retain a shelter bed, and force all youth shelter beds be available for youth up to the age of 25, in accordance with federal guidelines. Gianna Palmer is still working at Midroll, where she produces Katie Couric's podcast and Fake the Nation, a comedy political podcast hosted by Negin Farsad. Class representative: Kelly Boyce ([email protected])

2011 Law Send updates to the class representative: Elle Gilley ([email protected])

2011 Medical Haleh Van Vliet was officially extended partnership status at her small democratic EM group (Southern Colorado Emergency Specialists) this summer. She lives by the mountains in Colorado with a super-loving toddler and reports “life is good!” She's also currently working on some poetry. Class representative: Jonathan Levin ([email protected])

2011 Seminary Avi Narrow-Tilonsky lives in Jerusalem. He got married at kibbutz Ramat Rachel to Atara Oren, a teacher who specializes in working with children with autism. Avi is in his third year working at the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC). He is an account manager. He writes “Atara and I love living in the Katamon neighborhood of Jerusalem and would love to see any of you if you come to visit.” Ben McConaughy continues to work as an attorney while also serving as the Coordinator of Spiritual Formation/Transformational Leadership at Mercer Island Presbyterian Church. He is also on the Permanent Judicial Commission for the Seattle Presbytery (our church judicial system) and serves on the Coordinating Council for the Seattle Presbytery. Amy Chapman is working on her dissertation at Michigan State University. She writes “I am looking at how reflective processes before/during/following service/service- learning/service-immersion programs help to develop identity.” Sara Williams began serving as the Associate Director of Community-Engaged Learning at Miami University of Ohio in mid- September. In this role she works with faculty to develop and implement Service-Learning courses, as well as resource them to do so through designing and running Service-Learning workshops on campus. On the personal side, Sara and her husband James welcomed their son, Simon David Bielo-Williams, to the household on October 14, 2017. He was born at 5:18pm, weighing 7lbs. 8oz. Rachel Heath reports that she published two articles this year in the Journal of Interreligious Studies and was recently appointed to Vanderbilt's Religious Affairs Standing Committee, which "serves as an advisory board to the University with the responsibility of informing religious diversity and educating the whole person." On the personal side, she has been exploring the possibility of organizing military brats (like herself) around concerns of peace, nonviolence, and nuclear disarmament; and has created a simple website for this topic: militarybratsforpeace.org. Class representative: Bethany Slater ([email protected]).

2012 Journalism Laurie Guthmann is Senior Producer at ATTN: She was promoted this past summer. Aleks Sagan is a business reporter with the Canadian Press, Canada's wire service. She moved from CP'S Toronto office to its Vancouver office in July. She covers retail, technology and the business of food. Brielle Morgan says that while covering B.C.'s child welfare system, she’s been facilitating conversations about media ethics and best practices. In September she organized a workshop series that brought journalists and child welfare leaders together to discuss how media can better cover B.C.'s complex child welfare system. She says “we’re working to build a network of journalists committed to collaborating on projects and developing best practices.” She also, with the support of her colleagues at Discourse Media, launched a media fellowship for youth who have lived experience of government care. Class Representative: Laurie Guthmann ([email protected]).

2012 Law Adam Israelov and his wife Shilpa welcomed their first child, Maya Avasare Israelov, to the family in October. Jessica Mar is the Deputy City Attorney for the City of Berkeley. She reports that she is spending a lot of time working on immigration issues. Maria Sevilla is teaching her first class at the University of Miami this semester (Gender, Sexuality, and the Law) and, on a personal note, is getting married in February. Class Representative: Maria Sevilla ([email protected])

2012 Medical Shakira Bandolin moved from California to Salt Lake City Utah and where she is a global health fellow in Emergency Medicine. She writes “It’s been a lot of fun and I am trying to block out time to come to the reunion.” Chrissy Henneberg graduated in July '16 and moved to Napa (where her husband has been practicing for a few years). She writes “it's been lovely except for the fires last month, which thankfully didn't touch our home, but practically singed our eyelashes.” She is doing a mix of clinical work (office prentatal care/gynecology and, as she says “of course, family planning, my true passion)” and writing (including a piece in last Sunday’s San Francisco Chronicle). On the personal side, Chrissy and her husband are expecting their first baby any day now and, she writes “so probably won't be at the reunion this year. but let me know the next time you're in wine country.” Nino Mihatov writes that he is “reeling from Dan and Dhruv's abrupt departure.” He is excited, on the other hand, that Mariam has joined the Boston FASPE family and they now live in the same building. Nino is in n the midst of cardiology fellowship at MGH. He writes “when I'm not in Boston, I could be found in New York City trying to take advantage of all the city has to offer - including Dan's epic brunch parties and a visit to the FASPE office.” He plans to be at the reunion! Mike Peluso is a first-year ID fellow at UCSF. He writes “the adjustment to the west coast has been good so far.” He is still coordinating some projects in Botswana remotely, but will probably shift in the short term toward domestic HIV research. Altaf Saadi just made the move from Boston to Los Angeles, doing the National Clinical Scholars Program at UCLA (the new evolution of the Robert Wood Johnson Fellowship focusing on health services, health policy, and community-based research). She writes “It’s been great and a much better fit in terms of my interests than residency was! I’ve been getting involved with advocacy work surrounding immigrant health, including most recently trying to organize a Los Angeles physicians group to work with legal organizations to protect the rights of immigrants in detention centers. I won’t be at this reunion but look forward to continue to hear from everyone! Let me know if life ever brings any of you to LA!" Dhruv Khullar just finished residency and moved to New York. He is working at New York Presbyterian as a teaching hospitalist and also doing health policy research at Cornell and writing. Class representative: Dan Weisberg ([email protected])

2012 Seminary Joseph Brosious continues to serve as Pastor of Outreach and Advocacy at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Madison, but is now also the mission developer for a new start food cart that is called Holy CoW Ministries. Jacob Buchholz has led Claremont United Church of Christ through the process of becoming a Sanctuary Congregation. The church currently works with undocumented Americans, refugees, and asylum seekers to provide legal and material assistance to those in need. Nicholas Collura, who spent the past two years in the Jesuit novitiate in Los Angeles, recently returned to the East Coast for a one-year residency in hospital chaplaincy. This interfaith CPE (Clinical-Pastoral Education) program entails both clinical work (in Nicholas's case, on the Surgical Intensive Care Unit of a hospital in North Philadelphia) and continuing education in the art of pastoral care. Abby Ferjack continues her work as an Interfaith Chaplain at Valley Hospital. She is currently working on a team within her health system to insure our hospital and entire health system are places where LGBTQ+ identified people are safe, affirmed, and welcomed both in policies and practice. Adam Kelchner and his wife, Keeli Lewis, welcomed their daughter, Serena Grace Kelchner, into the world on February 7, 2017. Becoming a father is the highlight of his entire year. In addition to becoming a father, Adam was ordained as an elder in full connection in the Tennessee Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. Adam continues to serve as the Lead Pastor at Kingston Springs United Methodist Church, while most explicitly addressing issues of racial injustice, white supremacy, homelessness, and inclusive ministry in his preaching. Michael Le Chevallier is working on his PhD and hopefully finishing this year. He got married (April 23, 2015) to Victoria Flores, a PhD Candidate in evolutionary biology at the U of C. Michael is now the Assistant Director of the Lumen Christi Institute, an educational non-profit in Chicago that works to increase engagement with the richness of the Catholic Intellectual tradition. Michael Rozier is wrapping up his doctoral studies at Michigan. He will start a faculty position at a Jesuit university yet to be named in Fall 2018. Class Representative: Mary Rawlinson ([email protected]).

2013 Journalism Harman Boparai will finish his four-year residency at New York Presbyterian Hospital (Columbia-Cornell) in Manhattan next summer. He also continues to nourish his passion for journalism and is working on global health and social issues journalism projects with ABC news. After six years in journalism, Beth Cortez-Neavel has returned to graduate school to become a Licensed Professional Counselor and a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist. She says her professional experience as a journalist is an asset to her practice and she hopes to continue writing on mental health and relationships –and maybe start a podcast on those topics in the near future. She also volunteers as a Sexual Assault Advocate with the local domestic violence and sexual assault crisis shelter. Valerie Hopkins continues to freelance, but she has moved from the Balkans to Vienna, Austria. Her work continues to appear in Politico Europe, Foreign Policy, and elsewhere. Kelly Moffitt recently moved from St. Louis to Brooklyn for her dream job as a producer at StoryCorps, a non-profit oral history archiving initiative and the nation's largest collection of American voices, which are archived at the Library of Congress. She produces a weekly segment that airs on NPR's morning edition, running nationwide. She also recently received the MJ Bear Fellowship from the Online New Association, which selects three under-30 journalists doing exemplary digital journalism work. The honor recognized the Flyover Podcast, a weekly newsletter that highlights a different podcast/podcaster who is creating audio between the coasts, as a method to draw people's attention to the fact that the majority of podcasts you're listening to are produced in NYC and LA. Toby Salinger is in New York City and since January, works for a finance industry publication called Financial Planning, covering wealth management. In 2017, Claire Ward won several awards for her filmmaking, got married, had a child, and moved to rural Kenya, where she continues to work as a freelance camera operator. Byron Wilkes writes “Journo turned tech bro, managing content at Lyft, & honky tonkin' in Nashville since November 2016.” Class representative: Valerie Hopkins ([email protected])

2013 Law Kristen Bell is living in New Haven where she is a Senior Liman Fellow at Yale Law School. Eileen Dorfman joined the firm of Bell, Moore & Richter, S.C., in Madison, Wisconsin, as a litigation associate in June 2017. She serves on the boards of the Legal Association for Women in Dane County and the James E. Doyle American Inn of Court. David Jakus left Sullivan and Cromwell in January and is now Legal Counsel at Roivant Sciences. Kevin Humphries moved to Chicago where he is an associated at Kirkland and Ellis. Class representative: Eileen Dorfman ([email protected])

2013 Medical Alex Charrow is still in Boston where she is working on a combined internal medicine/dermatology residency at Brigham & Womens and Mass. General. Anya Levinson moved to California where she is a clinical fellow in pediatrics at UCSF. Lincoln Pac is a clinical pathology resident at the University of Washington in Seattle. Ilana Stol lives in New Haven where she is a Geriatrics Fellow at Yale Medical School. Class representative: Jordan Cohen ([email protected])

2013 Seminary Shireen Baker moved to Oak Park, Illinois. She is now serving as the Episcopal priest, at the Church of Our Savior in Elmhurst, IL. Jeremy Mann lives in Chicago with his wife Erin and his children Ezra, Nora, and William. He is the managing director of the Center for Pastor Theologians. Alissa Oleson lives in where she serves as the pastor at the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Quincy. She traveled to Europe recently with a group of potential FASPE donors. Andrew Scheer is a Chaplain for the NYC Department of Correction. Class representative: Adeel Zeb lives in Claremont, California with his wife. He serves as a university chaplain at The Claremont Colleges. Class representative: Kate Andre ([email protected])

2014 Journalism Samantha Pickette is currently in the third year of a Ph.D. program at Boston University. She passed her Oral Comprehensive Exam in the spring of 2017 and is now working on the prospectus for her dissertation, which will focus on the stereotypes of Jewish women created by Philip Roth and the ways in which female Jewish authors sought to counteract those stereotypes in the 1970s. This semester Samantha is also working as a lecturer at BU and teaching an American Studies course that she designed about the history of the teenager in literature and film. Martine Powers is living in Washington DC, where she covers transportation at the Washington Post, works on a podcast in her free time, and participates sporadically in fellow FASPE alum Dustin Volz's journalist book club. Danielle Tcholakian is a freelance journalist based in New York Cite. She writes regularly for Longreads, as well as features for the New York Times, the Daily Beast, The Outline, New York Jewish Life and the Village Voice. Her first story for the New York Times was on the cover (below the fold) of the Sunday Metro section. Dustin Volz is a cybersecurity reporter at Reuters based in Washington, D.C., where he writes about surveillance, privacy and nation-states efforts to disrupt civil society by weaponizing the internet. Kate Wilkinson is an editor and producer based in Toronto. She primarily reports on business, advertising and media. Kate holds a Master of Journalism degree from Carleton University (Ottawa, 2013). Stav Ziv is working as a staff writer at Newsweek in New York City. Class representative: Dustin Volz ([email protected])

2014 Law Rose Goldberg is starting her second year as a Skadden Fellow representing veterans with Other Than Honorable Discharges before the Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense, to help them access healthcare, disability benefits, and housing. Andrew Haile is working in the Fair Labor Division of the Massachusetts Attorney General's Office. He writes that he is”helping get restitution for workers and suing Trump on the side (over DACA, travel ban, a few other things).” His daughter Alethea is almost two years old and he and his wife Rene are expecting a second child in April! He adds “Also, just as important, I am building a wood-fired pizza oven in our backyard.” Brittany Horth left Latham & Watkins LLP to become Counsel at Epson America, Inc., a technology company in Long Beach, California, where she is a generalist in-house attorney. Even more recently, she was hired as a Lecturer at Chapman University Fowler School of Law to teach a practical course about transactional legal work. She reports “between jobs, I took a two-week road trip through Alaska.” Andrew Mamo is back in Cambridge, Mass. after three years abroad. He has started a new position as a clinical instructor at Harvard's ADR clinic and is enjoying working with students again. He writes “It was great to catch up with Andrew H. and Dvora at the Boston FASPE event this summer, and I hope I get a chance to see the rest of you soon!” Jared Miller is in his fourth year working as a Staff Attorney for the Orleans Public Defenders, now handling more serious felony cases. Her writes “I love New Orleans and am still working on making it my permanent home (by hopefully buying a house in the near future!).” He just completed his second 170-mile bike ride to Angola State Penitentiary to raise money for free buses for people to visit their incarcerated loved ones across the state, and still enjoys biking across the city, dancing in Second Line parades, and eating delicious food! Class representative: Andrew Haile ([email protected])

2014 Medical Hasenin Al-khersan is in the midst of his transitional year in Chicago, and then will be heading down to Bascom Palmer in Miami for my ophthalmology residency. He writes “I've tried to use this year to pick up things I have wanted to pursue but that have been on the back burner. I started taking Spanish lessons and am trying to achieve my life-long dream of learning the bagpipes. I've also been lucky enough to travel before things get more hectic next year. Seven countries thus far, some old and some new, with a few more coming up next month. A FASPE- related highlight for me was visiting the Anne Frank house in Amsterdam. I came away feeling pretty inspired. Obviously, the story ends tragically, but there was something enduringly empowering about this young girl who stared evil in the face and never lost her spirit.” Dipankan Bhattacharya is graduating this year with his MD/PhD. He is applying into pediatrics and writes “I will be interviewing at your institutions soon :)” Matt Bobel and his wife Hilary live in Minnesota. Matt is in his third year of surgery residency. He expects to pursue a colorectal surgery fellowship after residency. Matt writes “a year ago Hilary and I bought a house and I've been busy updating faucets, re-landscaping our backyard, and leaning in to my new favorite hobby: gardening. Hil has been updating the electrical fixtures, painting and organizing/decorating every room.” They are also kept busy with a newly adopted second dog, Haley, who joins Madison. Sam Enumah is in his PGY-2 surgery year. He writes “It's been a lot of fun to see Salina Bakshi (FASPE 2014 Med Fellow) around Brigham. I was in breast cancer clinic a few weeks ago and saw that Dr. Bakshi was the PCP for my patient and my attending was happy that I was able to call and talk to the PCP (Salina!) about our shared patient.” In terms of life updates, Sam and Rashmi and got married two months ago! Rashmi is grinding through PGY2 internal medicine at MGH and in the primary care program and planning to work in community medicine when she finishes. Of note, Salina, Sam and Liese all were married on the same day! He writes “Life is overall great but many troubling questions remain unanswered. Perhaps this is how I felt about our time at FASPE.” Liese Pruitt is a PGY3 at the University of Utah and making the transition from junior to senior resident. Starting this month she became the trauma chief for 2 months. She is also in the process of setting up 2 years of health services research in pediatric surgery. On a personal note, she and her husband Jordan got married in the mountains in Utah on the same day as Sam and Salina. Sara Goldkind and her husband were able to attend. Liese also reports “We have a furbaby Natasha who is spoiled rotten, but provides a wealth of love and makes our house feel like home. Yael Shinar reports “I have 247 days left of internship at Yale-Waterbury (where I've just had approval of an ethic research elective with Mark). In June we move to Baltimore for my anesthesiology residency at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Also working on some popular/journalistic style publications in ethics, more as they are released. Family is doing well, Dean Angoff hooked us up with an excellent pediatrician, and we found the stores that sell Bamba.” Class representative: Dipankan Bhattacharya ([email protected])

2014 Seminary Daniel Goldberg just started as the assistant rabbi at Ahavath Torah in Englewood, NJ. He and his wife Dina, and their two sons, have moved from Teaneck to Englewood. Jordan Loewen continues to work on his Ph.D. in religion. He and his wife Amber live in Syracuse. Sarah Stewart reports that she is settling in Wichita as an associate rector and that the people in her parish are wonderful. She also mentioned how she greatly appreciates the contacts she has been able to keep with FASPE Fellows that she has met at previous reunions. Class representative: Jordan Loewen ([email protected])

2015 Business Yodit Beyene has a new position as portfolio manager at REDF. She and her husband live in Belmont, California. Hugo Santillan continues to work at MetLife, managing a portfolio of mortgage bonds. In May he and his wife moved to Montclair, NJ. They also got a chihuahua, her name is Mia. Class representative: Liz Bershad ([email protected])

2015 Journalism Lindsey Anderson writes that she and her husband, Charles Hoke, “are expecting our first baby, due January 2017.” Laura Smith moved to the San Francisco Bay Area this year to do a fellowship at Mother Jones. She now works at Timeline, a history magazine that offers context on the news. Her book The Art of Vanishing is coming out in February. Katelyn Verstraten has been keeping busy writing a non-fiction book and a children's book, in addition to her job as Science Communications Specialist and the writer of a weekly column in Canada's biggest newspaper, The Toronto Star. She writes “I've also been freelancing for Canadian Running Magazine, and Gripped, Canada's largest running and rock climbing magazine respectively.” Parker Yesko moved to Minneapolis to work for American Public Media. She is working as a reporter for an investigative podcast called In the Dark. She writes “So far, it's been awesome!” Class representative: Laura Smith ([email protected])

2015 Law Danielle Abada is now working at Sullivan & Cromwell in New York. Roxy Landis (nee Strohmeier) is married and lives in San Francisco. She is now a JD/MPH and is Assistant Director of Policy at the Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health at the University of California, San Francisco. Jana Loeb was at Boies Schiller for the past two years, but is currently clerking for Judge Edward Korman, Eastern District of NY. Carla Pierini Losada moved to New York and is working at Ropes & Gray. She has switched from corporate to litigation and is specializing in compliance, anti-corruption and white-collar crime. She’s been doing a lot of work in Latin America, which has allowed her to use her language skills. She is enjoying it! Adam Mendel lives in New York where he is an associate at Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP. Nick Reaves is now working as an associate at Jones Day in Washington, DC. He has recent exciting news… he got married on September 16, 2017 to Nicole Frazer. Rebecca Rosen lives in Los Angeles and currently works in the field of M&A and Franchise Law. Last year Zach Shapiro served as the Presidential Scholar of Law at the Hastings Center, and was a visiting fellow in Law and Neuroscience at Massachusetts General Hospital's Center for Law, Brain, and Behavior. He recently moved to DC to begin his one-year clerkship for the honorable Timothy B. Dyk, on the court of appeals for the federal circuit. Hal Stanton is still living in Detroit, where he and his fiancee bought a house last year. Hal is currently clerking for Justice Wilder on the Michigan Supreme Court. In other news, Hal and his fiancee started a nonprofit called Darkroom Detroit which focuses on the arts in education. He writes “check out our website at www.darkroomdetroit.org.” Class representative: Hal Stanton ([email protected])

2015 Medical Andrew Huang is in the process of applying for residency in neurology. He continues to keep busy writing papers. Robert Smith got married to his wife, Sarah Woodson, in March 2017. Meredith Camp Binford is an emergency medicine resident at Carolinas Medical Center. Danielle Bitterman is continuing her residency at the Harvard Radiation Oncology Program. Class representative: Danielle Bitterman ([email protected])

2015 Seminary Rachel Abdoler recently began a PhD program at the University of Chicago Divinity School in the History of Christianity and also recently got married. Liz Andrasi Deere is a freelance writer and editor, and spends time volunteering with the International Rescue Committee. Jawad Bayat recently moved to Cleveland, OH in August 2017 to begin training as a chaplain educator/supervisor trainee for the Clinical Pastoral Education programs at the Cleveland Clinic, and also serves part time as an Imam for the Muslim population at the clinic and as staff chaplain. Ayalon Eliach is completing his last year of rabbinical school and continuing his internship at Congregation Beit Simchat Torah. Katie Escalante graduated from Luther Seminary and is interviewing with congregations. Judah Kerbel is currently in his fourth year of rabbinical school and is a rabbinic intern at Young Israel of Plainview. He is also pursuing a master’s degree in Medieval Jewish History and coursework in Mental Health Counseling at Yeshiva University. Michael LaMarca continues to serve as parish priest for St. John Paul II Parish. Eric Martin is writing his dissertation on a theology of dis/obedience, teaching classes on The Bible and Social Justice at Fordham University, and serving with the Catholic Workers in Charlottesville and New York City. David Stark is a Doctoral Candidate in Homiletics, Duke University, and Styberg Institute Teaching Fellow at Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary. Jaye Starr Boz serves on the leadership team of the Association of Muslim Chaplains and also serves on the University of Michigan Adult Care Ethics Committee. Luke Zerra is a second year PhD student and is pursuing ordination in the Episcopal Church. Class representative: Katie Escalante ([email protected])

2016 Business Simon Basseyn completed his MD/MBA at the Perelman School of Medicine and The Wharton School in May 2017. He started a residency in internal medicine at Weill-Cornell in June 2017 and is working part-time for a biotech hedge fund, continuing to merge his interests in medicine and business. Jean-Marc Chanoine finished his MBA at UC Berkeley and started working at Accenture Strategy in New York this past October. Between his graduation in May and his recent start at Accenture, he completed the Mongol Rally, a charity drive, starting from outside of London through Mongolia and finishing up in Ulan-Ude Russia. He writes “Yeah I’m glad to be back.” Rowan Frankel finished up his MBA at MIT Sloan in June 2017, and one month later began a Graduate Leadership Development Program with Thermo Fisher Scientific in Waltham, MA. During the gap, he spent three weeks supporting a non-profit in Wisconsin Rapids (Incourage Community Foundation) and picked up a newfound love of fried cheese curds. Brian Hathaway entered the second year of his PhD program in Management and Business Ethics at Wharton. His research focuses on "taboo trade-offs" in social entrepreneurship, or how different combinations of social and market goals are evaluated by stakeholders. Along with his wife Samantha, he enjoyed adopting three cats this year and is eagerly anticipating the arrival of a baby boy in April 2018. Michael Heumann is continuing with his PhD studies in the field of business ethics and philosophy of economics at the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland. He works on a critique on the “growth paradigm” as well as on the de- growth movement. When not studying, chances are Michael is probably following his favorite hockey team. Kora Krause took over a new task at Deutsche Bank, building up an innovation function for the bank’s risk management. She spent the summer exploring Georgia (the country) and looks forward to the FASPE reunion in March. Rob Wilson and his wife Shannon welcomed their wonderful new daughter Teresa Rose into the family this past January. The family is now fully settled into a life of beauty and temperate weather in Seattle. Class representative: Brian Hathaway ([email protected])

2016 Journalism Catherine Bennet has started doing video work for the European Parliament. She writes that she will be spending a lot more time “in Brussels and Strasbourg from now on." Rachel Gross just got back from Poland, where she was on a two-week fellowship with historians and journalists covering religions and multiculturalism. She writes “It was a completely eye-opening experience.” Now back in DC, she is working on a couple features and planning her next steps, “but aiming to be on the East Coast for the foreseeable future.” Natalie Lampert is spending 10 weeks in residency at the Carey Institute for Global Good in upstate NY, working on a book. She writes “I'm back in Colorado for the foreseeable future." Dayton Martindale continues to work at In These Times. He writes “we recently pulled off a top-to-bottom redesign of the magazine, a long and difficult but really exciting process.” Day-to-day, he helps assign and edit stories and manages the internship program. To the extent possible, Dayton tries to pursue other writing and advocacy projects on the side, as well as the occasional 5K. Christine Rushton is digging into a new job in NorCal as Social Media Coordinator for Digital First Media. She writes “Basically, I handle the social media and digital engagement strategy for about 18 local weekly and daily newspapers in NorCal. My coverage runs from the Eureka Times-Standard up toward Oregon, over to the Chico Enterprise-Record in the valley and down to the Monterey Herald south of San Francisco. I do everything from posting to training to developing our standards to ensure even the smallest newsrooms are equipped to stay afloat in the digital world. It keeps me in local news and gives me a chance to help transform these newspapers approach so that they adapt to the changing landscape and can stay alive. Plus, I get to work in 3 different newsrooms throughout the week and get to visit each over the course of the next few months. I still get to teach a few music students, I'm still on teaching Digital Comm for Syracuse U online and I still get to do some contract work for the LA Times. Somewhere in there I wrangle with my pomegranate tree." Priscilla Thompson is based in New York City with CNN's Documentary Unit and is also working on her own independent film project. Priscilla was in LA recently as her documentary, “On Pointe,” won an award at the Student Academy Awards. Ilgin Yorulmaz completed a fellowship last month called the East-West Center Senior Journalists Seminar, which focuses on identity and religion in the public sphere. She was with 11 other journalists from US or Muslim-majority countries. The seminar includes a reporting trip to DC and Minneapolis in the US; Manila and Cotabato in the Philippines; and Rabat, Morocco. She writes “I'm wrapping up my reporting for the fellowship, and also brushing up on my Japanese in Tokyo, where I moved in September, to prepare for new opportunities in international media." Class representative: Ilgin Yorulmaz ([email protected])

2016 Law Catherine Smith started a judicial clerkship with the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in Roswell, New Mexico in the fall. She is enjoying the work. No alien sightings yet to report. Phil Caruso worked for a private equity firm last summer, and is back at school making progress towards completing his JD/MBA. Jack Huerter moved to the Twin Cities and began a clerkship in the U.S. District Court located in St. Paul, Minnesota. He and his wife Claire recently welcomed their first child into the world, Lucy Day Huerter. Elizabeth Jonas née Sebesky got married in the fall. Her husband is a great guy, as many fellows can attest having gotten to meet him after the 2016 FASPE trip. Elizabeth is clerking at the DC Court of Appeals. Jon Williams completed a clerkship in the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah and began work at Dorsey & Whitney in their Salt Lake City Trial Group. Alexander Ely finished a judicial clerkship on the First Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston, and began a second clerkship on the U.S. District Court, also in Boston, this past September. He is enjoying the work and the competent local professional football team, and plans to move to Washington, D.C. next year to put his ethical training to use in Big Law. Dan Matheny finished my first year at Jones Day and recently joined the Private Equity group. His daughter Jane was born last January and is growing way too fast! Maritza Martin graduated from UC Berkeley in May. She currently lives in San Francisco and works as an Associate in Nixon Peabody’s Commercial Litigation Group. She looks forward to her California winter as always. Class representative: Jack Huerter ([email protected])

2016 Medical Dani Baurer writes that she is “slogging through intern year in family medicine at UCSF.” Her program is based exclusively at SF’s public hospital, San Francisco General. She’s thrilled to be working among her idols in trans* health, abortion care, and HIV primary care, and looking forward to having more time to pursue her research on reframing the current medical analysis and approach to teen pregnancy. Favorite recent quote: “Teen pregnancy prevention is eugenics couched in earnest concern.” Chew on it! Colleen Farrell is an internal medicine primary care intern at NYU. She works at three very different hospitals: Bellevue, the tertiary safety net hospital of NYC; Tisch, NYU’s private hospital; and the VA. She writes “The differences between these institutions is so dramatic, it provides a real window into health inequity. The experience very much keeps questions of ethics and resource distribution on my mind.” In other news, Colleen was accepted into NYU’s Rudin Fellowship in Medical Humanities and Bioethics. Her project addresses gender disparities in confidence amongst medical trainees, combining her own personal narrative with data from the medical education literature and feminist theory. She writes “Overall I'm loving NYU and NYC!” Abraar Karan is an internal medicine resident at Brigham and Women’s Hospital where he is really enjoying the process of being an intern and learning about what it means to be a doctor every day. He writes “I’ve been able to continue with my other academic interests as well, including medical narrative writing and global health research. I will be applying for the Global Health Equity program, which would add an additional year to my residency and allow me to pursue clinical care internationally at a wide variety of locations through Partners in Health.” Monika Krolak is finishing her internship in Switzerland in December. She then plans to work for a few months in Poland, before she starts residency in May in obstetrics and gynecology in Glarus, a picturesque town in Switzerland. Emily Marquez is a categorical intern at the Shirley Ryan Ability Lab, associated with Northwestern University in Chicago. After her intern year, which will be spent mostly acquiring a broad knowledge base in medicine, she looks forward to diving into specialty training in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation during the next three years. She writes “I cannot wait to be on the forefront of the effort to push the limits on what patients with brain and spinal cord injuries, neurological disorders and other debilitating illnesses can accomplish to allow them to re-integrate into their daily lives on their own terms.” She plans to spend the rest of her career advocating for patients with disabilities, who all too often receive medical care that falls short of what they deserve. She writes that she is “getting used to this insanely cold weather, which is such a big transition from Texas. It’s snowing outside as I write this!” Subha Perni is in the midst of her year at Memorial Sloan Kettering, a dedicated cancer hospital where her patients primarily have advanced cancer with extremely poor prognoses. She writes “I frequently come up against the painful limitations of end-of-life services available for those that are dying in NYC.” In other news, the issue of the AMA Journal of Ethics focused on moral distress that she guest-edited came out in June. She is also on the Ethics Committee at Sloan, and finishing some research projects. She will be moving to Boston in July to start a radiation oncology residency. Laura Sherwood is in her critical care month of family medicine residency at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. She writes “The influence of FASPE has been undeniable as I have had numerous discussions with patients and their families about end-of- life decisions, comfort care, and code status.” On a personal note, she recently adopted a cat, Tybalt, who Laura says also enjoys the intricacies of ethical questions. Maria de Lourdes Sturchler (nee Ladino) has been cycling through several rotations mixed with her EM blocks, including pediatric EM, orthopedics, anesthesia, ultrasound, toxicology, and trauma. She writes “Loving finally not being a long-distance married person and doing the groceries and other normal people stuff together.” She took up mountain biking and rejoined the surf community. She writes “Since I recovered from my knee and hip surgeries in May so well, I figured I needed some new ones…all kidding aside, nothing major, and the views I’ve enjoyed on the water and the bike have made my time in San Diego thus far sublime.” She also worked at the Kona Ironman World Championships as a volunteer van doc and got to help some of the pros and age-group champs. Priscilla Wang is almost halfway through her intern year in internal medicine and primary care at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. She writes “Residency feels full of strange moments (case in point -- getting hammer-paged about bowel regimens while you’re in the middle of a code on your dying patient) -- definitely lots to process.” In her free time, she is working on medical advocacy efforts to fight legislative threats to health care access. She writes “unfortunately much on the docket: ACA repeal, failures to renew CHIP for children’s insurance, the rescindment of DACA, etc…” She is also trying to hone her “Boston brunch game when not thwarted by black weekends!” Ben Yu writes that he is “treading water during my internal medicine rotations at Yale,” but is excited about the people he can’t wait to learn from and spaces that he can’t wait to occupy. He writes “The more I hear and see of the people and culture of psychiatry here (especially my ridiculously kind, advocacy-oriented, and stunningly accomplished psychiatry resident colleagues), the more excited I get for the next couple years (after all this night float medicine nonsense).” He adds that he is still cruising on his bike to all the best hole-in-the-wall food spots and has been stalking cat adoption websites preemptively before his move next year to a more pet-accepting domain. Class representative: Abraar Karan ([email protected])

2016 Seminary Sam Davidson is finishing his MDiv this spring and is “currently in the really terrible process of applying to PhD programs in Theology and Ethics in the US, Canada and the U.K.” He recently published a book of Advent and Christmas liturgy with Patristica Press. He also participated this month in one-week writer's workshop in Boston with the Collegeville Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research, called Writing to Change the World and led by with Jonathan Wilson- Hartgrove. Daniel Headrick graduated from Truett Seminary in May of 2017, and was called to be the Associate Pastor of Northside Drive Baptist Church later that month. He writes “Aligned with both the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and the Alliance of Baptists, Northside Drive is a progressive Baptist church located in Atlanta, Georgia.” Antuan Ilgit successfully finished his doctorate in Moral Theology from Boston College in May 2017 and, he writes “has been missioned by the Society of Jesus to teach Moral theology at the Pontifical Theological Faculty of Southern Italy in Naples.” He was recently promoted to the rank of Professor-in-Charge and pub a book with Libra Press, entitled Muslim and Catholic Perspectives on Disability: A Proposal for Muslim-Christian Dialogue. Maria Surat accepted a full-time position teaching in theology and community-based learning at Holy Cross College in Indiana. She also assists with retreats through the office of Campus Ministry. She writes “I'm grateful that my position at Holy Cross allows for continued involvement with the Catholic Peace Fellowship and the Catholic Worker community here in South Bend, IN.” Since participating in FASPE, Luke Uebler graduated from Christ the King Seminary with a Masters in Divinity, winning the seminary’s Marion Moeser OFS Award for Excellence in Scripture. He was ordained as a priest for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, NY and has recently been assigned to Queen of Heaven parish community in West Seneca, NY. He is the parochial vicar helping to serve 2500 families and 325 school children. Class representative: Daniel Headrick ([email protected])

2017 Business Emily Anding joined General Mills, after FASPE, in their Albuquerque plant. She writes that she has enjoyed a “fascinating exposure to the manufacturing world, as it is an intricate and surprisingly nuanced series of systems.” Her role is a rotational business associate, which entails cross functional and consumer insights work. She writes “On one hand, I support client groups across logistics, manufacturing and finance, coaching on organizational design, leading strategy sessions and facilitating leadership development sessions. On the other, I apply Consumer Insights methodologies to help General Mills better understand their core human capital base and researching pain points to understand how policies might be better suited for their technicians. Most days I strap on steel toed boots and a hard hat to spend time on the manufacturing floor, building connections with technicians in order to translate corporate messaging into actionable and tangible dialogue to the boots on the ground.” She adds that on most weekends, she goes backpacking or climbing, and has done plenty of desert exploring with Anna Grilley (2017 Law Fellow)! Christopher Pozzi graduated from Wharton and interviewed with several technology companies in the Bay Area, before accepting a full-time position to join Palantir Technologies, an analytics software company based out of Palo Alto. He writes “In my role, I work with software engineers, data scientists, and product designers to deploy Palantir's software at both companies and government agencies. I draw on my FASPE experience often because Palantir handles sensitive data and has made an explicit commitment to protecting privacy and civil liberties.” Class representative: Ian Javkin ([email protected])

2017 Journalism Yemile Bucay got married and is now preparing for motherhood. She added “A shout out to FASPE journos for repping on the dancefloor.” She says marriage and pregnancy have proven to be radical lessons in empathy thus far. Professionally, she has a full-time fellowship from Columbia's Global Migration Project to report stories at the intersection of gender and migration. She writes “I've been writing about pregnant immigrants in detention centers and investigating allegations of abuses committed by ICE against detained women. This process has raised many ethical quandaries, but lately the most pressing one has been discovering how little fact-checking there is in so much of journalism, even in premier publications. Being our own most rigorous fact-checkers now strikes me as an ethical imperative to fulfill all our social contracts -- to our readers, to the source, and to the story.” Jaques Gallant continues to work at the Toronto Star. Since FASPE, his work has included covering a police shooting inquest, reforms to the bail system, and stories about doctors sexually abusing their patients. Renee Gross is moving to Homer, Alaska to be a reporter and host at KBBI, a public radio station. She will be reporting on topics such as the environment and climate change as well as hosting Morning Edition. Kate Harloe joined Mother Jones as an Editorial Fellow after FASPE. She also joined the rest of the 2017 Journalism alumni for a September reunion in Mexico City for the wedding of Yemile Bucay. Astead Herndon continues to write about national politics in the Boston Globe's DC bureau. He has been focusing on the Trump administration and the way it impacts people's lives. Laura Howells spent the summer at internship at the Toronto Star. She is now back in the classroom, completing her final year of a Masters of Journalism at Ryerson University, where she produces a weekly podcast about issues in Canadian journalism. Sonner Kehrt is in her second year of journalism school at U.C. Berkeley and will graduate in May. She has been reporting for the New York Times on the free speech battles taking place in Berkeley, as well as working on several pieces on various issues affecting Indigenous communities in the U.S. and Canada. She writes “I also ran a 50-mile ultra-marathon in October, but I got lost and accidentally ran 6 extra miles.” Thuli Manyathi is finishing up a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship with Columbia Journalism School's documentary department. She joined the rest of the journalism fellows in Mexico City for the wedding of Yemile Bucay. Amanda McGowan writes that since FASPE, most of her time has been “taken up by traveling (including to Yemile's lovely wedding), producing a mayoral debate (local journalism, hooray!) and thankfully writing some features here and there about people who are doing good in the world.” She also took an oil painting class as a way to unplug from the news cycle and reports that it really works. Diana Solomon moved from Los Angeles to Mexico City to work at Reuters, where she has been covering real estate, retail and breaking news -- everything from hurricanes and NAFTA talks to the two deadly earthquakes that hit in September. She writes “In the first couple of weeks after the stronger quake on Sept. 19, I stayed in a hotel near the office and worked non-stop hours to pull together enterprise reporting from my desk, including a story about a school where 26 people died, which went through a rigorous revision from Reuters' top ethics editor. I was not allowed to report on the streets near collapsed buildings because I had not completed "hostile environment" training, but, ironically, my home was in one of the most hard-hit neighborhoods of Mexico City, coated in rubble and broken glass, and filled with brigades of volunteers for rescue efforts that lasted for days. I felt so glad fellow FASPEans had seen some of Mexico City at its loveliest, just a few days before the quake, for Yemile's wedding. Yemile and her husband Darius looked radiant, and they kept us dancing until dawn. We had a blast.” Shira Telushkin is finishing up her MDiv at the Harvard Divinity School, where she is continuing to study early Egyptian monks and publish long torturously researched pieces on minority religious movements in the US. She says she is having a blast. Class representative: Sonner Kehrt ([email protected])

2017 Law Ama Francis spent most of her summer in Juneau, Alaska interning for Earthjustice. She writes that she had the delightful and frightening pleasure of meeting a brown bear in its natural environment, and made peace with cold, rainy weather. Ama spent the last month of summer in Dominica, helping the government to gain direct access to resources from the Green Climate Fund. Given Hurricane Maria, Ama is feeling the need to devote even more attention to doing climate justice work. Ben Lazarus is enjoying being a 3L and recently got married to Jessie Singleton! Two FASPE Journalism Fellows, Astead Herndon and Kate Harloe, joined in the wedding festivities. Ben reports that he had a great summer at WilmerHale, where he will be returning in the Fall. He also accepted a clerkship with Judge Rowan Wilson on the New York Court of Appeals for the 2019-20 term. Kristina Moore recently moved to Cleveland and started at Jones Day. She also writes “I enjoyed seeing FASPE alumni at David's Labor Day party in Princeton.” Kristin Marshall graduated from UVA and moved to Kansas City, Missouri for a clerkship with the Honorable Stephen R. Bough of the Western District of Missouri. Afterwards, she plans to return to Washington, DC for private practice. Duncan Pickard drove across the country with his mom after graduating in June, took the New York bar exam, and moved to Luxembourg for a three-month clerkship at the European Court of Justice. He has been working for a judge in the trial court, mainly on competition and state aid cases. In January, he will move to The Hague for a fellowship at the Permanent Court of Arbitration, where he will be working on the Court's docket of commercial, investor-state, and interstate arbitration cases. He plans to return to New York next fall to practice at Debevoise & Plimpton. Rachel Jennings moved from Durham, North Carolina, to Spartanburg, South Carolina, where she is clerking for the Honorable Henry F. Floyd on the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. She writes “Clerking is a reprieve from the hours I kept in law school, and I am enjoying searching for answers to questions that have never been asked--and feeling thankful for my time spent as a research assistant doing mostly the same. The judge is wonderful to work for, my colleagues are a pleasure to get to know, and the other Carolina is not nearly as loathsome as us North Carolinians like to imagine.” Dan Tully moved to Chicago and started at Skadden Arps practicing commercial real estate law. Class representative: Dan Tully ([email protected])

2017 Medical Since returning from FASPE, Samuel Cohen-Tanugi disappeared for four months, completing back-to-back visiting sub-internships in orthopedic surgery while applying to residency. Now, his days are spent writing on various topics (mostly inspired by FASPE), studying for Step 2 of his boards, and playing with his 6-month old nephew. After a vacation with her family, Maggie Cupit-Link completed a sub internship in Pediatric Hem/Onc at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. She then returned to Mayo Clinic to complete a pediatrics sub internship and a pediatric allergy/immunology elective; she also visited New York to speak at a St. Jude fundraiser. She is now spending time with her husband in Kansas City while she completes an away rotation in pediatric neurology and begins the interview trail. Rebecca Grossman-Kahn enjoyed her sub- internships in psychiatry and emergency med before starting an MBA at University of Michigan this Fall. She is currently having fun advising an undergraduate Bioethics team, too. Since FASPE, Rachel Johnson coordinated a fourth-year elective about the intersection between visual art and psychiatry. She is currently applying to pediatrics residency programs. Marquita Kilgore spent the summer following FASPE doing a sub-internship in gynecologic oncology and preparing for application to Ob/Gyn residencies. Earlier this fall, she enjoyed joining FASPE on the study trip for professionals. She is now excitedly traveling for residency interviews, planning her upcoming wedding, and completing her medical thesis research on women’s health social enterprises. Logan LeBlanc spent the remainder of her summer traveling in Austria and Ireland. She is now applying into Internal Medicine and completing a research project in healthcare for the homeless. She is looking forward to spending a month on Vanderbilt's Ethics Consult Service this January and completing her certificate in Biomedical ethics before graduation. Natalie Ring did her sub-internships in general surgery and interventional radiology, and she is now applying into interventional/diagnostic radiology. She and her significant other are couples-matching (he's going into ENT), so they are applying all over the country. She reports, “It's been exciting to visit states I have never been to before!” Brad Segal is applying to child neurology residency programs. After FASPE, he published a paper about ethics and big data, sharing his feelings about the topic for the very first time. Class representative: Marquita Kilgore ([email protected])

2017 Seminary Daniel Hanson got married. He writes “Aimee and I were married on September 16, 2017 in La Crosse WI. It was a wonderful day. I now serve two additional ELCA Lutheran congregations part time (St. John Lutheran in rural Hampton and Nazareth Lutheran in Coulter, Iowa). I continue to serve on the board of La Luz Hispana, a local Hispanic community center, who seeks to welcome immigrant families to the community and provide immigration and social services. (My wife works here). Much of our work is focused on building a network of relationships in the community at a local level.” Days after finishing his FASPE trip, Matt Stone and his wife Heather moved from Austin, Texas, to Bryan/College Station, Texas, where Matt currently serves as the curate (assistant clergy) at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church. Matt is part of the Faith Leaders for Justice group and wrote a letter to the editor signed by group members condemning the racism displayed in Charlottesville. Matt is also part of a group developing a six-week discussion of our stories about race that will debut in January. Matt’s focus in the parish is on developing mission communities, helping guests connect to the church and providing pastoral care and liturgical leadership. Ali Tranvik graduated with an MDiv from Duke Divinity School and is serving in a year-long internship as part of the ordination process through the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with Duke Lutherans Campus Ministry in Durham, NC. Ali continues to write, teach, and preach about the theological and ethical issues facing today's church, shaped in large part by her experience of FASPE. Class representative: Matt Stone ([email protected])