Anassa Kata
Mawrters Making Their Mark
Margaret Levi 鈥68
Elected to the British Academy
Margaret Levi, former director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and professor of political science at Stanford University, was recently elected to the British Academy, the UK鈥檚 national academy for the humanities and social sciences. Levi, whose research looks at the origins and effects of trustworthy government, has written and co-authored several books, including Of Rule and Revenue (University of California Press, 1988) and In the Interest of Others: Organizations and Social Activism (Princeton University Press, 2013). 鈥淏ryn Mawr is where my mind returns whenever I receive honors as significant as my election as a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy,鈥 says Levi. 鈥淭he College offered a space where I could be a 鈥60s political radical with impunity, an explorer of subjects and ideas, and a border-crossing intellectual. The extent to which my work is innovative鈥攐f which this honor is a recognition鈥攔esults from those formative experiences.鈥
Lisa Krassner 鈥94
Named director of the Concord Museum
Lisa Krassner recently joined the Concord Museum as its new executive director after more than 20 years at The Metropolitan Museum of Art; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; and the American Museum of Natural History. 鈥淏ryn Mawr intensified my love for art and history and prepared me well for a museum career,鈥 says Krassner, who adds that she is thrilled to be back in New England leading the Concord Museum at such an important moment in the museum鈥檚 history. 鈥淭he 2021 re-envisioning of the galleries sheds new light on the history of Concord and how its community influenced American political, literary, and cultural life in unparalleled ways. I look forward to welcoming more visitors to our dynamic programs, ever-changing exhibits, and treasured collections of American material culture and decorative arts.鈥
Barbara Clark 鈥79
Won the Bryn Mawr NYC Club poetry prize
The Bryn Mawr Club of New York City named Barbara Clark 鈥79 the winner of its first Evelyn Barish 鈥56 Poetry Prize with her nostalgic, tender haiku about Goodhart Hall. The winning poem evokes the autumnal, leaf-trodden road opening onto the entrance of Great Hall. First envisioned by Helen Thurston 鈥74, club president, the contest received 50 entries. The five-judge panel, including Barish, Thurston, Trilby V. John 鈥98, Friya Bankwalla 鈥16, and Mina Bansal 鈥17, with assistance from Becky Hahn 鈥07, picked a haiku that spoke to decades of Mawrters.
Published on: 10/23/2022