Word: nathaniels
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...Identities” was primarily the brainchild of Nathaniel P. Gunawan ’07 and Vicky Wu ’09, who each independently e-mailed then Asian American Association (AAA) President Sanby Lee ’08 about using fashion to explore Asian-American heritage...
...senator’s New England kickoff for just $23, though participants could contribute as much as $2300. Members of Obama’s campaign stood at the entrances with sign-up sheets encouraging students to volunteer in New Hampshire. More than 175 students from Harvard attended, according to Nathaniel J. Lubin ’09, a coordinator of Harvard Students for Barack Obama. But the event also drew large crowds from Boston University, Boston College, Northeastern University, and Tufts University. The fundraiser produced one of the largest student turnouts in Obama’s campaign so far, according...
...passers-by allowed themselves to be photographed in T-shirts and jeans, while another posed with her no-nonsense black messenger bag slung at her side. Luckily, there were a few true fashion-mongers here and there. Christopher S. H. Paik, ’09, Nathaniel B. Gunawan, ’07, and Matthew B. Bird, ’10, all sported sharp, stylish oufits, prompting prompting publicity director Carmen P. I. Collyns ’10 to demand, “Why didn’t you audition for the show!” Gunawan, who says he admires...
...veterans, financial aid packages draw a handful of military officers every year. “Harvard was very generous in helping me fund the tuition, and that made the difference, since no one comes out of the military with a pile of stock options,” said Nathaniel C. Fick, an MBA candidate at the Business School. Fick left the Marines as a Captain and earned a Master’s degree in International Security Policy from KSG. He has become something of a veteran celebrity on campus after his book “One Bullet Away...
...they'd been able to record brain activity in sleep, but the feeling was, why bother? Why waste reams of costly graph paper making electroencephalogram recordings of what was thought to be a neurological desert? With no strong expectation of finding otherwise, University of Chicago researchers Eugene Aserinski and Nathaniel Kleitman decided it was worth doing, monitoring 10 subjects in a laboratory. Their findings turned our understanding of the sleeping brain upside down...