2001-2002 Ledecky Fellows

Photograph by Stu Rosner The students who will serve as Harvard Magazine's 2001-2002 Berta Greenwald Ledecky Undergraduate Fellows--both...

The students who will serve as Harvard Magazine's 2001-2002 Berta Greenwald Ledecky Undergraduate Fellows--both juniors and residents of Leverett House--kept in writing trim during the summer. Arianne Cohen, of Delmar, New York, stayed in Cambridge to serve as associate editor of the new Unofficial Guide to Getting Into College and, on a Harvard public-service fellowship, worked for a nonprofit health clinic on wheels serving Boston families. A government concentrator who is also pursuing studies in public health, Arianne is a member of the women's water polo team and revealed in a column for the Crimson that she indulges in noncompetitive knitting. Eugenia Levenson, who answers to the nickname "Jane," interned at Chicago magazine, near her home in suburban Oak Park. She also worked at Northwestern University Press and wrote for Chicago Parent Magazine.A Crimson news editor, she is concentrating in American history and literature--when she is not busy commuting to New York to see friends.

Most popular

The Supreme Court Affirmative Action Rulings: An Analysis

The underlying arguments project clashing worldviews of race and appropriate remedies.

The Secrets of Haiti’s Living Dead

 A Harvard botanist investigates mystic potions, voodoo rites, and the making of zombies.

An animal’s journey from grief to love shows how much humans need each other, too.

Explore More From Current Issue

Star-filled night sky with the Milky Way arching over a rocky silhouette.

There’s a growing movement to curb light pollution. It starts on your front porch.

A profile illustration of a man surrounded by colorful, whimsical text in multiple languages.

For both American and international students, growing up is like learning a new language.

Massachusetts Hall at Harvard Red brick building with a large clock on top, surrounded by green trees.

With a grade inflation vote and in the courts, the University argued that it’s taking steps to change.