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Faust was not last night’s only honoree: Tracy E. Nowski ’07 was given the Harvard College Women’s Leadership Award. Nowski has held leadership positions in 10 different student organizations, including Strong Women Strong Girls and the Athena Theatre Company. She also managed the successful Undergraduate Council campaign of Ryan A. Petersen ’08 and Matthew L. Sundquist ’09 last semester...
Faust embraced her new status as a role model as she accepted the Harvard College Women’s Professional Achievement Award yesterday evening, lauding the advances of women since she left college, and advising young women to not feel trapped by expectations...
Next time you consider throwing out that beloved collection of Marvel comic books you’ve been collecting since birth, think again. Like the winners of the Philip Hofer Prize for Collecting, you too could get paid for your passion. This year’s prizes were awarded to Ph.D. student Drew M. Massey and third-year graduate student Grete T. Viddal in a ceremony at Houghton Library yesterday. The prizes are given annually to one or several individuals whose collection of books or works of art exemplify “the traditions of breadth, coherence, and imagination?...
...currently at the Institute for Advanced Study, is best known for his economic analysis of developing countries in Latin America. His past appointments include professorships at Columbia, Yale, and Harvard. Craig Calhoun, president of the council, said he was pleased that Rodrik is the first recipient of the award. “I was delighted by the selection because I think Dani Rodrik is about the most interesting mid-career economist around,” Calhoun said. “Like Hirschman, he is an economist who is able to connect the analysis of market phenomena to broader kinds...
...Earth Day merrymakers who gathered in the MAC Quad on Saturday had more to celebrate than spring’s first dosage of balmy weather: Over the past year, Al Gore ’69 had won an Academy Award for his documentary “An Inconvenient Truth,” Governor Schwarzenegger had put regulatory teeth behind carbon controls, and the Supreme Court had scolded the Environmental Protection Agency for its indifference to carbon emissions. The wall of obstructionism that has long faced climate change activists has begun to crumble, or at least crack...