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President
Shapiro Receives National Institute of Social Sciences Gold
Medal
New
York, N.Y. (Dec. 5, 2002) The National Institute
of Social Sciences has honored Barnard President Judith
Shapiro for her contributions as a leader in higher education.
Presenting its annual Gold Medal Award to Shapiro, the Institute
recognized her outstanding leadership at Barnard and in
the education of women overall.
The award was presented on Monday, Dec. 2 at the Institutes
annual dinner, held at the Union Club in New York City.
Other honorees this year included William J. McDonough,
President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
John Negroponte, United States Ambassador to the United
Nations, and Bruce Babbit, former Interior Secretary and
Governor of Arizona.
Shapiro, a cultural anthropologist and president of Barnard
since 1994, became the fourth leader of Barnard to receive
the Gold Medal, following Virginia Gildersleeve in 1946,
Millicent McIntosh in 1960 and Ellen Futter in 1993.
The Gold Medal Award has been presented annually since 1913
to individuals who have made significant contributions toward
improving society in diverse fields, including government,
education, the arts, sciences, literature and philanthropy.
Recent winners include Madeleine Albright, John Kenneth
Galbraith, Enid Haupt, Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Arthur
Schlesinger Jr.
In accepting the award, Shapiro noted her good fortune in
being associated with three universities that have special
strength in the social sciences: Brandeis, where she majored
in history as an undergraduate; Columbia, where she earned
the doctorate in anthropology, and the University of Chicago,
where she was the first woman faculty member in the Department
of Anthropology.
Although her academic career has led from teaching to administration
she told the gathering her training as an anthropologist
often guides her thoughts and actions. "That is the
kind of benefit that all of us here enjoy: once a social
scientist, always a social scientist," Shapiro said.
"It is a way of being in the world. We work unendingly
to cultivate what C. Wright Mills called the sociological
imagination, connecting our personal circumstances
to wider social forces, locating ourselves in history."
The Institute was incorporated by Congress in 1899 to promote
study and research in the social sciences and today holds
discussions on social issues.
Contact: Suzanne Trimel, Barnard Office of Public Affairs,
(212) 854-7583, strimel@barnard.edu
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