Word: hardwicke
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...fact that, from what I could see, all ethnicities were represented in the models, every color of the rainbow was pretty much on stage, and it made for a very interesting and eclectic experience,” said Clayton W. Brooks III ’10. Spencer H. Hardwick ’11 summed up the atmosphere of the show: “It was really well run. I thought it was worth the hype. I had a really good time...
...play out the tournament with this many registrants.” Canaday residents comprised a staggering 170 of the 225 registered participants for IM tennis this spring. “If we flooded this, we had a very definite chance of winning,” Canaday resident Spencer H. Hardwick ’11 said. According to the announcement by the Frosh IM staff, the organization of the tournament was changed to parallel the house format, with matches consisting of one men’s singles, one women’s singles, and one mixed doubles. Each dorm is also...
...Marcus G. Miller ’08, Barry E. Breaux Jr. ’08, and Ofole “Fofie” U. Mgbako ’08. Underclassmen winners were O. Randall Ojukwu ’09, Sangu J. Delle ’10, and Spencer H. Hardwick ’11. Undergraduate women nominated their black male peers, who were then reviewed by the Tribute Board based upon submitted essays and resumes. A few weeks before Saturday’s ceremony, the Black Men’s Forum (BMF) recognized black female leaders at Harvard...
...writer and Kentucky native Elizabeth Hardwick was born in the wrong region for someone who aspired to be a "New York Jewish intellectual." So she moved north and got a Ph.D. at Columbia. In 1945 she drew comparisons to Eudora Welty with her first novel, The Ghostly Lover. After writing for the Partisan Review, though, Hardwick became better known as a critic, co-founding the highbrow New York Review of Books in 1964 and producing such collections as Seduction and Betrayal, now standard reading for the study of women in fiction. Hardwick...
...argued the famous 1986 case Bowers v. Hardwick, urging the court to invalidate a Georgia anti-sodomy law that, Tribe said, violated his gay client’s fundamental right to private sexual association. Tribe lost, but he was redeemed 17 years later when, sitting in a packed courtroom, he heard Justice Anthony Kennedy say, “Bowers was not correct when it was decided, and it is not correct today...