Emory undergraduates Erik Fyfe and Molly Harrington, both recent members of the Ethics and Servant Leadership Forum, were among six students honored with the 2005 Emory University Humanitarian Award. Awards were presented January 26 by Emory President James Wagner and other top administrators.
Both Fyfe and Harrington were participants in the 2003-2004 EASL Forum, and Harrington was also a Servant Leader Summer Intern in 2004.
Awardees were nominated for the awards by fellow students or professors.
Criteria for selection were:
Last year the Metro Vision leaders won the Chris Gellar Award in addition to recruiting many new volunteers. Anita Husen applied and won $1,000 for the development of their organization’s work.
Harrington was recognized for leading the Mental Health Anti-Stigma Campaign, which she began as her Servant Leader Summer Internship project. The campaign works to bring the entire Emory community together in a people-centered community building approach to promoting individual and societal mental health and wellness, primarily by calling upon all community members to work together to overcome the fear associated with mental illness.
The campaign has met with marked successes this year, including the creation of a student government initiated task force on mental health and a popular petition for the creation of a President’s Commission on Mental Health at Emory. Current standing Commisions include Race and Ethnicity, the Status of Women, and Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Concerns.
[ Posted by Edward Queen at March 1, 2005 11:06 AM |
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