Fellows of Jonathan Edwards

A (11) | B (27) | C (16) | D (11) | E (14) | F (15) | G (16) | H (19) | I (1) | J (7) | K (17) | L (18) | M (19) | N (10) | O (3) | P (14) | Q (1) | R (10) | S (20) | T (6) | U (1) | V (3) | W (12) | X (1) | Y (2) | Z (2)

Thomas Leatherbury


Bio:

Thomas S. Leatherbury, JE ’76, YLS ’79, is a partner in the Dallas office of global law firm Vinson & Elkins.  He is co-head of the firm’s appellate practice group and chair of talent management and has handled a wide variety of litigation in state and federal court and before administrative agencies.  Tom has served in the leadership of a number of law-related organizations, including the National Association of Law Placement Foundation, the ABA’s Forum Committee on Communications Law, the Media Law Resource Center, and the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas, and of a number of non-profit organizations, including Greenhill School and Business Council for the Arts.  

Tom has spent a great deal of time volunteering for Yale and is the immediate past-Chair of the Yale Alumni Fund Board.  He and his wife, lawyer Patricia Villareal, have two sons who were graduated from Yale College (Branford), Sean in ’06 and Colin in ’09.  Sean then received his M.Phil. and D.Phil. degrees in Late Antique and Byzantine Studies from the University of Oxford and is an assistant professor of History of Art at Bowling Green State University in Ohio.  He is married to Steve Welsh, who is studying for his Ph.D. at Columbia University and working in educational technology at the University of Michigan. Colin works in the video product group at Twitter in San Francisco.

Tom would be pleased to visit with students who are considering law school.  tleatherbury@velaw.com

Albert E. Lee


Bio:

Albert R. Lee is Associate Professor of Music and Director of Equity, Belonging and Student Life at the Yale School of Music. With degrees from the University of Connecticut, The Juilliard School, and Florida State University, he has made a career as a classical vocalist in opera, oratorio, recital, and liturgical music. Professor Lee is a featured soloist on a recording of works by composer, George Walker on Albany Records singing musical settings of the Walt Whitman poem “When lilacs last in dooryard bloomed,” a poem written as an elegy to Abraham Lincoln after his assassination. A sought-after guest lecturer, he has given the faculty keynote address for university cultural graduation celebrations and at university opening ceremonies during his time on the faculty of the University of Nevada, Reno. Most recently Professor Lee offered the keynote address for Sacred Heart University’s MLK observance. His TedTalk titled “When I Sing the Anthem” offers a deeply personal perspective on the significance of performing the National Anthem throughout his career. Professor Lee draws inspiration from the literary works of Langston Hughes, the focus of his doctoral and post-doctoral research, as well as his unique artistic, spiritual, and personal journey from childhood to his current life as a performer and scholar.

Ann P. Lehman


Bio:

Ann P. Lehman. Smith college BA 1949; Cranbrook Academy of Arts;Yale Art School  ‘56. Sculptor. Teaching at Creative Arts Workshop, head of sculpture dept. Taught Metal sculpture in Yale seminar program for 10 years.  Founder and first president of Creative Arts Workshop ;First president of Artspace. Public  sculpture throughout area.  Other interest is all about horses.

Noel Lenski


Bio:

Professor of Classics and of History

noel.lenski@yale.edu

Andre Levchenko


Bio:

John C. Malone Professor of Biomedical Engineering

andre.levchenko@yale.edu

Pauline Leven


Bio:

Professor of Classics, Classics Department
pauline.leven@yale.edu

Murph Levin


Bio:

Murph Levin, JE ’66 is a financial advisor with Morgan Stanley in NYC. After Yale, he got his MBA from Harvard (’68) and spent 37 years at a number of Wall Street firms in sales and management. Prior to joining Morgan Stanley in early 2011, he spent four years on the development staff of Environmental Defense Fund. He would be pleased to meet with – and hope to be a resource for - students contemplating a career in finance. murph.levin@morganstanley.com

Andrew C. Lipka


Bio:

Andrew C. Lipka MD, ‘78 JE, is an ophthalmologist in private practice in Princeton, NJ, the ophthalmology department head for many years at University Medical Center at Princeton, a member of the Yale Ophthalmology Society, a clinical professor at Rutgers Medical School, and a leader of many Yale Alumni programs.  He enjoys speaking with and mentoring members of the JE community on the life of a doctor, medical school admissions, and the many ways that one’s Yale experience can continue, meaningfully, as a Yale alum.  Andy leads the Yale for Life program, wherein alumni (and their spouses, and Yale parents) return to live at Yale for a week in the summer for intensive, seminar-based courses with leading Yale faculty.  He founded the Princeton campus of Yale Alumni College, where seminars are provided in communities beyond New Haven for Yale alumni, and serves on the overall YACOL Board.  He directs the local Yale Alumni Schools Committee, leads the Yale Club of Princeton, served on the JE Reunion Committee, is a principal organizer and panelist of the Humanities in Action Conference at Yale each November, is an AYA delegate, a mentor in the AYA mentorship program, and much more.  He treasures his interactions and friendships with all members of the Yale Community.  andrew.lipka@gmail.com

Mae-ling Lokko


Bio:

Mae-ling Lokko is an Assistant Professor at Yale School of Architecture and research faculty at Yale’s Center for Ecosystems in Architecture. Her research focuses on ecological design, integrated material life cycle design and the broad development and evaluation of renewable biobased materials. Lokko is the founder of Willow Technologies, Ltd. based in Accra, Ghana that upcycles agrowaste into affordable biobased building materials and for water quality treatment applications. 

Charles Long


Bio:

Charles Long has been a Fellow of Jonathan Edwards since the fall of 1966, when he was appointed to the faculty of the English Department. He is a Summa Cum Laude graduate of Rutgers University, and he earned a Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of California at Berkeley, where he was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow.  After a number of years on the full-time faculty he moved to the Yale College Dean’s Office where he became Dean of Academic Affairs. In 1983 he was appointed to the Provost’s Office, where he eventually became Deputy Provost of the University. During his many years in the Provost’s Office, his responsibilities included all of the humanities and most of the social science departments and nearly all of non-medical professional schools, including Law and Management. His also had oversight responsibility for the MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies, the Institution for Social and Policy Studies, the World Fellow’s Program, and the Center for the Study of Globalization. He was the coordinator and often author of some of the University’s core academic policies, including the Faculty Handbook, and he was deeply engaged in senior faculty recruitment across the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.  He retired from Yale in June of 2010, but has remained active in an informal consulting capacity.