EFTA01828897.pdf
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To: Jes Staley
From: Jeffrey Epstein
Sent: Sat 12/11/2010 4:43:44 PM
Subject: Re: Fw: Re:
lets speak„ we need her new scores.
On Sat, Dcc 11, 2010 at 11:37 AM, Jes Staley wrote:
Below is the recommendation from the other physics professor at Bowdoin on behalf of Alexa.
From: Alexa N. Staley
To: Jes Staley
Sent: Sat Dec 11 11:13:46 2010
Subject: RE: Re:
strange. I will copy and paste:
I am very pleased to have this opportunity to recommend Alexa Staley to you. I first met
her as one of the outstanding students in my class, Physics 104: Introductory Physics II, in her first
year at Bowdoin. Since that time I have had the pleasure of watching her develop into a dedicated
researcher and leader of our senior class physics students. Her strength of purpose and active
intelligence are notable among our majors.
Alexa is quite serious about physics and began taking courses at the 300 level (namely,
Methods of Theoretical Physics, the watershed courses in our sequence for students that intend
graduate study in physics) in the fall of her sophomore year. Doing so opened doors to upper level
theoretical courses that otherwise might have been blocked by her study away semester because of
course sequencing issues. Her strong performance in both 200 and 300 level course work led to the
award of the Hall Prize, our "most promising sophomore" prize, named for Bowdoin graduate and
discoverer of the eponymous effect, Edwin Herbert Hall.
In the spring of her sophomore year Alexa was a student in my Statistical Mechanics course,
Physics 229. This course has the reputation of being one of the more challenging in our major
sequence and is often put off until junior or senior years. For many students, the concepts of
statistical mechanics are elusively abstract and the mathematical reasoning strangely different from
other physics applications. Alexa's previous exposure to advanced mathematical methods was a
clear asset. Her weakness, which is common to sophomores in the class, was a lack of experience
with the applied problem solving strategies necessary for the wide variety of examples used to
illustrate statistical methods. In spite of this, Alexa demonstrated a good, clear grasp of essential
elements of the problems and would clearly communicate her ideas and questions in class and in
private discussion. Her submitted solutions were always exemplary. Her A- reflects excellent
mastery of the course material and steadily growing sophistication as a problem solver.
As Departmental Chair, I consulted closely with Alexa about her course choices for her junior
semester away at the University of Otago in New Zealand. She was highly committed to the
adventure of exploring another culture, but determined not to sacrifice her academic priorities. Thus,
she deliberately chose to visit an English speaking country where advanced course work in Physics
could be part of her program. We discussed the difference in course levels carefully, but for a variety
of reasons, she ultimately chose an upper level Quantum and Atomic Physics course for which she
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EFTA01828897
had insufficient background. In response, she dove in and taught herself the material in the first few
chapters of Griffiths' Quantum Mechanics textbook in a matter of weeks. Although her own report of
this daunting experience tends to minimize her level of mastery, I cannot name more than a handful
of students" in my 15 years of teaching at Bowdoin that would embrace and excel at this challenge
the way that Alexa did. Her unbending commitment to "catching up" and not dropping into a lower
level course for review is a symptom of both her intellectual ambition and her work ethic. She has
talent, works hard, and earns her success. I am sure that my colleague, Thomas Baumgarte, who
has supervised her senior honors thesis, will provide additional examples of her independence and
drive. They have been distinguishing characteristics of her work.
In summary, Alexa will bring an unusual degree of commitment and excellent preparation for
graduate work in physics to your program. She has more than the necessary talent, initiative and
ambition to succeed in a research intensive program. I give her my highest recommendation: She
will be an excellent scientist.
"This group that includes students who have gone on to top graduate programs at CalTech, UCLA,
Berkeley, and UIUC.
From: Jes Staley
Sent: Saturday, December 11, 2010 11:13 AM
To: Alexa N. Staley
Subject: Re:
Weird. I don't see the attachment.
From: Alexa N. Staley
To: Jes Staley
Sent: Sat Dec 11 11:08:11 2010
Subject:
what about now?
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EFTA_R1_00204518
EFTA01828898
Jeffrey Epstein
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EFTA01828899
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
93d843d5c9c0339c77a1a2fb8842b1cf7520741ba38257bfa08cf9dbbea617e1
Bates Number
EFTA01828897
Dataset
DataSet-10
Type
document
Pages
3
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