Williams College Senior Named Canadian Rhodes Scholar

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Williams College senior Linda Worden is among the 11 men and women named as Canadian Rhodes Scholars for 2019.

Worden has been selected to join a class of 100 students from more than 60 countries worldwide to receive this distinguished scholarship to study at Oxford University next year. She is Williams' 39th Rhodes Scholar.

Since the establishment of the scholarship in 1902, nearly 8,000 Rhodes Scholars, including more than 1,000 Canadians, have gone on to serve at the forefront of government, the professions, commerce, the arts, education, research, and other domains. The Rhodes Scholarships for Canada are a partnership between the Rhodes Trust and the Second Century Founder John McCall-MacBain.

The Scholars were selected in a highly competitive process administered by six regional committees composed of Rhodes Scholars and eminent members of the community. The committees worked independently and made their decisions on the basis of applications, university endorsements, letters of reference, and in-person interviews held across the country in the past week.

A political economics major from Penticton, British Columbia, Worden plans to use her Rhodes Scholarship to pursue an M.Phil. in comparative social policy, examining citizen participation in policy formation, particularly in countries such as New Zealand, Australia, and her native Canada. Inspired by the documentary film, The Pruitt-Igoe Myth, and David Harvey's essay, "The Right to the City," Worden is interested in finding new ways of conceptualizing urban spaces, citizen participation, and communities. "As Canada launches its first-ever National Housing Strategy, I am particularly interested in the consultation processes with First Nations communities," Worden says.


During her junior year in the Williams-Exeter Programme at Oxford, Worden studied social policy with professor of Public Policy Peter Kemp, one of the world's pre-eminent housing policy scholars, as well as history, politics, and law. While there, she formed connections with members of the university and actively engaged with the local community. Worden volunteered with the Oxford Homeless Action Group, where she planned and coordinated a successful fundraiser, and with On Your Doorstep, a student campaign against homelessness.

As part of Winter Study in 2017, Worden undertook an independent study project to interview homeless LGBT youth in Vancouver, Canada, an experience that prompted her to combine her interests in social policy and housing justice and set her on her current path. An article stemming from her work is currently under consideration for the Toronto Urban Journal.

"We think of Linda Worden as a natural leader poised to effect social policy reform in Canada one day," Williams' President Maud S. Mandel said. "Already she counts as an expert on public housing in almost any room. As a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, she will transform her community in the best of ways."

At Williams, Worden is a leader both on and off campus. She is a member of the Gargoyle Society, a senior honor society, has served as a social coordinator for the Queer Student Union, worked with her fellow students to develop orientation programming for first-year international students, and was a tutor with the economics department. As a researcher at the Susan B. Anthony Birthplace Museum in Adams, Mass., she wrote a paper on the history of the International Council of Women for the museum’s archives. Beyond academia, Worden competes in roller derby at Southshire Roller Derby in Bennington, Vt.

Worden is the 39th Williams student to be named a Rhodes Scholar since the program began in 1902. The most recent previous Williams recipients were a graduate of the college’s Center for Development Economics, Diala Issam Al Masri ’15, in 2016 and Brian McGrail ’14 in 2013.


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Clark Art Presents Music At the Manton Concert

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Clark Art Institute kicks off its three-part Music at the Manton Concert series for the spring season with a performance by Myriam Gendron and P.G. Six on Friday, April 26 at 7 pm. 
 
The performance takes place in the Clark's auditorium, located in the Manton Research Center.
 
According to a press release:
 
Born in Canada, Myriam Gendron sings in both English and French. After her 2014 critically-acclaimed debut album Not So Deep as a Well, on which she put Dorothy Parker's poetry to music, Myriam Gendron returns with Ma délire – Songs of Love, Lost & Found. The bilingual double album is a modern exploration of North American folk tales and traditional melodies, harnessing the immortal spirit of traditional music.
 
P.G. Six, the stage name of Pat Gubler, opens for Myriam Gendron. A prominent figure in the Northeast folk music scene since the late 1990s, Gubler's latest record, Murmurs and Whispers, resonates with a compelling influence of UK psychedelic folk.
 
Tickets $10 ($8 members, $7 students, $5 children 15 and under). Accessible seats available; for information, call 413 458 0524. Advance registration encouraged. For more information and to register, visit clarkart.edu/events.
 
This performance is presented in collaboration with Belltower Records, North Adams, Massachusetts.
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