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SNAP: SEE NEW ABROAD PHOTOS
Contest Winners


Journalism, Anne Greenleaf
School for International Training, China
"The Elder Ladies’ Disco Club"
Livyi, Yunnan, China


Landscape, Yasmine Soiffer
Reid Hall
"Paris"
Paris, France


Creative, Meaghan McConnell
Queen Mary
"Seagulls"
Brighton England


Documentary, Thea Tangle
Cape Town
"Robben Island—Only the Tress Are Free"
Robben Island, Cape Town, South Africa

New York, NY—On April 8, 2003, Barnard announced the winners for SNAP: See New Abroad Photos, an annual photo contest and exhibit for students who studied abroad during the academic year. Every year more than 150 Barnard students study abroad in countries as diverse as Australia, Chile, Cuba, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, and South Africa. There were 49 photos submitted by 16 students for the four-day exhibit which was open to the community.

Photos were judged by Adjunct Assistant Professors of Architecture Alicia Imperiale and Madeline Schwartzman and Senior Lecturer in Art History Joan Snitzer. Prizes were awarded in each of the following categories: Landscape, Journalism, Creative, and Documentary. Prizes were donated by ARAMARK, the Student Store, the Office for Career Development, the Office of Public Affairs; and Caffe Taci, Cardomat, Deluxe, Garber Travel, Kitchenette, Le Monde and Scott J Salon. The winning photographs are shown here.

The event was sponsored by the International Education Fund of the offices of the Provost and the Dean of the College.

For more information, please contact Janet F. Alperstein, Assistant Dean and Study Abroad Adviser at 212.854.2024
.


Barnard College, a distinguished leader in higher education for women for over 100 years, is today the most sought after private liberal arts college for women in the nation. Founded in 1889, the College was the first in New York City, and one of the few in the nation at the time, where women could receive the same rigorous liberal arts education available to men. Independent but affiliated with Columbia University, Barnard maintains its own administration, trustees, faculty, curriculum, endowment, budget and campus. Barnard students may take classes at Columbia, as Columbia students may do at Barnard. Barnard alumnae include pioneers like anthropologist Margaret Mead and Judith Kaye, the first female Chief Judge of the State of New York, along with prominent cultural figures such as choreographer Twyla Tharp, writers Zora Neale Hurston, and Mary Gordon, and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists Anna Quindlen and Natalie Angier.

 

 

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