Four Harvard seniors have won scholarships to study at Cambridge University

Four seniors have won scholarships to study at Cambridge University.

Four seniors have won Harvard Cambridge Scholarships to study at Cambridge University during the 2014-2015 academic year. Eric Cervini, of Round Rock, Texas, and Lowell House, a history concentrator, will be the Lionel De Jersey Harvard Scholar at Emmanuel College; Miriam Farkas, of Ellicott City, Maryland, and Lowell House, a linguistics concentrator, will be the John Eliot Scholar at Jesus College; Shelby Lin, of Poquott, New York, and Adams House, an applied mathematics concentrator, will be the William Shirley Scholar at Pembroke College; and Mariel Pettee, of Dallas and Quincy House, a physics and mathematics joint concentrator, will be the Charles Henry Fiske III Scholar at Trinity College.

Related topics

You might also like

A summer program helps students from under-resourced high schools close a hidden academic gap.

Ronny Chieng Tells Harvard to ‘Destroy AI’ as Graduates Cheer

The comedian and The Daily Show host gave the keynote address for Class Day 2026.

Phi Beta Kappa Speakers Call Out a ‘Deeply Troubling’ Moment

Former Harvard President Lawrence Bacow and poet Meghan O’Rourke urge graduates to focus on character and “radical attention.”

Most popular

The former economics concentrator brings his talent for crunching numbers to netminding.

Naval architect William Francis Gibbs, designer of the SS United States

Brief life of America’s greatest naval architect: 1886-1967

Harvard graduate and NASCAR racer Patrick Staropoli on pedals, attention, and fearlessness.

Explore More From Current Issue

A blue refrigerator covered with animal pictures, notes, and drawings, surrounded by greenery.

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

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.

Two figures stand before a large, colorful pixelated face against a yellow background.

Harvard scientists identify hundreds of genes under selective pressure.