Four With Local Ties and Big Goals Head to Oxford to Pursue Studies

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By Donna St. George and Megan Greenwell
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, November 20, 2006

With aspirations to influence the larger world -- in international relations and politics and literature -- four students with ties to the Washington region have been named to the 2007 class of Rhodes scholars, officials from the trust announced yesterday.

Two of the students grew up locally -- one in Virginia, the other in Maryland -- and two attend or recently graduated from universities in the region. They were among 32 recipients nationally for the prestigious scholarships to study for two or three years at Oxford University in England.

"I'm still six inches off the ground right now," said Sean A. Genis, 21, a U.S. Naval Academy midshipman ranked first in the senior class who has co-authored a paper for a scholarly journal on the acoustic detection of landmines.

One of the midshipman's professors noted that, along with his physics background and weighty research, Genis is a cyclist with a self-deprecating sense of humor. He started his Rhodes essay with the sentence: "I crash bicycles." In his first year on the academy's cycling team, Genis said, he had 12 mishaps. He persisted. Last year, his crash count was one.

With the scholarship, Genis will go to Oxford for a two-year course of study before he becomes a Navy submarine officer. "I would like to one day work at the frontier where science and technology intersect with international security policy," said Genis, who was raised in Sharon, Pa., near the Ohio border.

Sharing his honor -- and elation -- locally are Maria Repnikova, 22, a Latvian immigrant and recent graduate of Georgetown University; Casey N. Cep, 20, a Harvard University senior who grew up on Maryland's Eastern Shore; and Nicholas J. Shelly, 21, a senior at the U.S. Air Force Academy with roots in Annandale.

All are accomplished students with an expansive sense of what lies ahead.

Repnikova is in China on a Fulbright scholarship, studying immigration between China and Russia. She plans to delve deeper into migration studies at Oxford University, helped by her fluency in five languages: Russian, Mandarin, Latvian, Spanish and English.

Her interests stem from her life experience, she said. She arrived in the United States at age 14, the granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor who lost her family in a ghetto of Belarus. She grew up in Vermont, quickly became an honors student and at Georgetown worked in filming and reporting for the university television station.

"She has extraordinary intellect, a powerful commitment to make a difference with her life and a heroic family story," said Daniel R. Porterfield, associate professor of English at Georgetown.

"Migration turned my life around," Repnikova said in a statement. "I intend to be someone who makes comparable opportunity securely available to the millions of people who in the years ahead must face and cross the borders of our globalized world."

With a focus on literature and possibly journalism, Cep -- who was raised in Cordova, Md., not far from Easton -- plans to explore "what people believe in and how they live their lives through those beliefs" at Oxford during her two-year program in theology.


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