Civic News
Mentorship / Nonprofits / Startups

Venture for America announces 2014 class of Baltimore fellows

Ten of the 15 recent college grads are headed to ZeroFOX in Federal Hill.

Photo by wallyg
Correction: Karyn Vilbig's and Benjamin Platta's names were spelled incorrectly. Two fellows bound for ZeroFOX, Sean Wen and Spencer Wolfe, were originally missing from the list.

Venture for America announced Friday 15 fellows for its second class in the Baltimore area.
The fellows will join local startups. Ten from this year’s cohort are headed to the Federal Hill-based cybersecurity firm ZeroFOX.
Venture for America tasks young graduates with spending two years in a startup, with the goal of empowering them as entrepreneurs later on. This year’s fellows come from alma maters like Duke, Brown, Northwestern and Notre Dame.
Recently, some members of Baltimore’s first class of VFA fellows worked together to crowdfund a new food market event.
Applications are already open for the 2015 class of fellows.
Here are this year’s fellows.

  • Allovue: Jolene Gurevich
  • Avhana Health: Harrison Tan
  • Everseat: Michael Tucker
  • Eyemaginations: Karyn Vilbig
  • PathSensors: Forrest Miller
  • ZeroFOX: Alexander Baca, Benjamin Platta, Benjamin Snowdon, Brian Schwartz, Christopher Holter, Dimitri Fautsch, Joan Thompson, Mike Patterson, Sean Wen, Spencer Wolfe
Companies: Avhana Health / Everseat / Rendia / ZeroFOX / Allovue / PathSensors / Venture for America
Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Baltimore daily roundup: Data collection for community empowerment; UMD awards its innovations; chatting with Zara the AI bot

Baltimore daily roundup: Film fest spotlights cinema's immersive frontier; over $1M for a wellness startup; $2B to rebuild the Key Bridge

Baltimore daily roundup: Key takeaways on the local tech ecosystem; a video editor's path to working with Keke Palmer; BCIT's new podcast

Baltimore daily roundup: 20 people building Baltimore's innovation community; a local startup's $15K win; the USMC's new tech office

Technically Media