Word: datar
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...hired professionals, several volunteers pointed out. It costs about $300 to pay for the airfare and food costs of each volunteer, and the value of the labor each student contributes—about 30 hours, in many cases—is likely less than that, according to Gayatri S. Datar ’07, a coordinator of undergraduate relief efforts...
...always strive for the best for their kids.”The expectation can be that “ideally you would marry up, and by marry up, we mean marry white,” says Sherri Y. Geng ’09, who is Chinese American.BEYOND COLORGayatri S. Datar ‘07, an Indian-American, also says that South Asian students usually face less family resistance if they date East Asians or Caucasians than if they date African Americans.But, Datar stresses, religious tensions might weigh more heavily than racial stereotypes in their romantic choices...
...also a member of the dean search committee. In October, The Crimson reported that seven candidates had emerged as frontrunners in the dean search. HBS professors contacted by The Crimson this week said they did not know about any changes to the list.Dickinson Professor of Accounting Srikant M. Datar, who was named a favorite for the deanship by both the Financial Times and Business Week, said he did not know how the dean search would proceed.“At some levels, only the president would know because he is the one that has to make the decision...
While Gayatri S. Datar ’07-’08 was in India visiting family in December 2004, the tsunami hit South Asia. It ultimately killed almost 170,000 people and left thousands more without homes. When Datar returned to Harvard shortly after, she says she no longer felt as though she belonged. So she took time off and headed back to India to aid relief efforts. For four months, she lived on the floor of a training center for a local non-profit and spent up to 16 hours a day cranking out grant proposals. Since she?...
...Loss of Innocence,” which was put on by the South Asian Women’s Collective and South Asian American Theatre in the Leverett Old Library Theatre this past weekend. Directed by Manisha Munshi ’06 and produced by Gayatri S. Datar ’07 and Tanuj D. Parikh ‘09, the show consisted of a group of monologues and dialogues exploring different topics ranging from death to sexuality. All proceeds went to the Edhi Foundation for Earthquake relief in South Asia. An original and powerful mixture of humor and solemnity...