Alumni Abroad
Well Done
Harvard@Home
Hiram Hunn Awards
Call for Nominations
The Harvard Alumni Association is sponsoring a "Harvard in Europe" conference, designed to "engage our global alumni in the intellectual life" of the University. The event takes place in London on the weekend of November 14.
Highlights include seminars on "Constructing a New International Order," as well as symposiums exploring ethics, global leadership, and the forefront of neuroscience. Several side excursions are also plannedamong them, tours of Stonehenge, London's art treasures, "Winston Churchill's London," and a pilgrimage to Harvard's roots at Cambridge University.
President Lawrence H. Summers will give the keynote address on Saturday night; William C. Kirby, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and provost Steven E. Hyman will also speak over the weekend. The master of ceremonies is HAA president (and British native) James V. Baker '68, M.B.A. '71.
Sponsored by the HAA in partnership with the Harvard Clubs of Europe, the event is hosted by the Harvard Club of the United Kingdom. For further program details and registration information, contact Hillary Olk by e-mail (hillary_olk@harvard.edu) or by phone (617-495-5416), or visit www.haa.harvard.edu/globalseries.
Established in 1990, the HAA Awards recognize outstanding service to the University by alumni volunteers. Six recipients will be honored on October 23, during the HAA directors' fall meeting.
Scott A. Abell '72, of Akron, Ohio, was president of the HAA in 2001-2002 and has also served as an HAA regional director and as president of the Harvard Club of Akron, chairing its schools and scholarships committee for more than 20 years. He now serves on the Committee on University Resources. Until 2001, Abell was the chairman/CEO of the financial services company Abell & Associates Inc. | |
Scott A. Abell |
Catherine A. Connett, M.B.A. '79, of St. Paul, Minnesota, now director of the Center for Entrepreneurship in Minneapolis, was the first woman president of the Harvard Business School Alumni Association. Active in both the Harvard Club of Minnesota and the HBS Club of Minnesota, she is an alumni interviewer for HBS and has chaired the global alumni conferences committee, which organizes an annual gathering for business leaders and HBS alumni and faculty members. | |
Catherine A. Connett |
Joy Fallon '78, J.D. '82, of Newton, Mass., was a Radcliffe trustee and president of the Radcliffe College Alumnae Association from 1993 to 1995. She chaired her fifth reunion committee for Harvard Law School, and has served as a member and chair of the HAA's Overseer and director nominating committee. The former executive assistant United States attorney for the district of Massachusetts, she is now the associate for urban and justice ministry at Trinity Church in Boston. | |
Joy Fallon |
Joan Porter MacIver '75, of Halstead, England, has served as vice president and president of the Harvard Club of the U.K. (formerly the Harvard Club of London), and is currently the club's treasurer. She is also secretary for her Radcliffe class and conducts interviews for the admissions office. Founding coordinator of the Harvard Alumni in Saudi Arabia, she is the secretary of the British School of Archaeology in Iraq. | |
Joan Porter MacIver |
Thomas H. Parry '74, of Los Angeles, was an HAA elected director from 1995 to 1998 and subsequently cochair of the undergraduate relations committee. A long-time cochair for the schools and scholarships committee, he also served on his class's twenty-fifth reunion committee and as a former vice president and director of the Harvard-Radcliffe Club of Southern California, and is currently president of the Harvard Gay and Lesbian Caucus. He is the principal of Pacem Productions. | |
Thomas H. Parry |
Eric Tong-Sheng Wu, LL.M. '77, M.B.A. '80, S.J.D. '90, of Taipei, is the chairman of Taiwan Securities Company Ltd., a member of the Association of Harvard University Alumni Clubs of Asia (AHUACA), and the former president of the Harvard Club of the Republic of China. He is involved with the HLS Asian Legal Studies Program and has helped organize visits to Taiwan by University officials. Wu is also cofounder and a board member of the Wu Foundation, which promotes international scholarly exchange and research in Taiwan. | |
Eric Tong-Sheng Wu |
Offerings at Harvard@Home lend alumni on-line insight into scholarly, cultural, and other events throughout the University. The following list includes highlights from programs currently available at http://athome.harvard.edu.
"Teaching American Politics" presents lectures by Thomas professor of government and sociology Theda Skocpol, Pforzheimer University professor and director of the Harvard University Library Sidney Verba, and professor of sociology Mary C. Waters. This 50-minute program combines statistical, ethnographic, and historical evidence about the challenges to objectivity in teaching politics.
"Solving Cubic Equations: A Modern Approach to an Ancient Problem" features a discussion with Leverett professor of mathematics (and dean of Harvard College) Benedict H. Gross and Peirce assistant professor of mathematics William A. Stein, a glossary of terms, and an interactive audience session that explores various mathematical theorems dating back to a Babylonian tablet of 1800 B.C.
On-line participants may also experience various University events, among them a video montage of Commencement activities; a segment on the Hasty Pudding Awards (featuring director Martin Scorsese and actress Anjelica Huston); and highlights of the 119th Yale game, including footage of quarterback Neil Rose and all-American wide receiver Carl Morris, interviews, and a game summary.
The Hiram S. Hunn Memorial Schools and Scholarships Award honors alumni for service on Harvard College schools and scholarships committees. The award commemorates Hiram S. Hunn '21, who recruited and interviewed students in Iowa and Vermont for more than 50 years. This year's recipients represent, collectively, 200 years of service.
Teresita Alvarez-Bjelland '76, M.B.A. '79, of Oslo, began acquiring her knowledge of admissions interviewing as a tutor at Kirkland House in the late 1970s. Since then, she has interviewed and recruited a wide array of international students for Harvard from her 20-year base in Norway. | |
Tersita Alvarez-Bjelland |
Alan (Mickey) Hammerman '55, of Winnetka, Ill., is in his fourth decade of schools and scholarship work in the Chicago area. He has been committee chairman since 1970, and was the national committee chairman from 1995 to 1998. He has also twice served as president of the Harvard Club of Chicago. In 1990, he received a Harvard Alumni Award. | |
Alan Hammerman |
Edward Meilman '36, M.D. '40, of Great Neck, N.Y., has met with hundreds of applicants during the past four decades as an alumni interviewer, ably serving the admissions office on Long Island. | |
Edward Meilman |
Barbara (Graf) Meyer '62, of Morristown, N.J., is a former national schools and scholarships director. She has been active in admissions work in New Jersey for more than 25 years, spending the last 15 years as committee chairwoman. | |
Barbara Meyer |
Judith (Rood) Traum '62, of Coral Gables, Fla., has interviewed Miami-area applicants for more than 30 years and has often helped admissions officers visiting at local schools. She also served as an HAA regional director in the early 1990s. | |
Judith Traum |
John (Jack) Viets '38, of Madison, Ohio, has recruited countless students for Harvard in his more than 50 years of admissions work. He has served as president of the Harvard Club of Cleveland and was twice the chairman of the schools and scholarships committee in the 1950s and 1960s. He received a Harvard Alumni Award in 1990. | |
John Viets |
Members of the Harvard community may submit nominations for honorary degree candidates for 2005. Submissions must be made by December 15, 2003, and should include biographical material and comments in support of a candidate.
Nominations may be sent to: Conrad K. Harper, Corporation Fellow and committee chair, or to Marc Goodheart, Secretary to the Corporation, at Loeb House, 17 Quincy Street, Cambridge 02138.