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Letter: MSU Moorhead celebrates Women in Construction Week
The stereotypes of women in construction are old, tired and mostly inaccurate. At MSUM, we focus on the business side of construction and train mangers to lead myriad projects in the industry, a field where women are welcomed and encouraged to use their skills and perspectives.
Written By:
Joshua Behl | ×
This week, Minnesota State University Moorhead, along with businesses and organizations across the construction industry, recognizes women making an impact during Women in Construction Week.
The stereotypes of women in construction are old, tired and mostly inaccurate. At MSUM, we focus on the business side of construction and train mangers to lead myriad projects in the industry, a field where women are welcomed and encouraged to use their skills and perspectives.
Daily Beast, and
Foreign Affairs, among other publications. He is a past president of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations and is a member of the Council of Foreign Relations and the Society of American Historians.
Much of his research for volume two of
JFK is completed, Professor Logevall said, but he has more work to do and is eager for the archives to reopen for researchers.
Professor Logevall generously discussed his work by telephone from his home near Harvard University during a snow storm. He remarked that the 15 inches of new snow reminded him of his native Sweden.
Rob Gogan
Rob Gogan, Harvard’s recycling and waste manager, retired in October, having long done more than anyone else to instill a culture of waste-reduction, reuse (of furniture, for example), recycling, and composting throughout the University.
Helped by friends and correspondents, he also compiled and published a monthly “Nature Watch,” starting in 2001. With Harvard now barely peopled, it seems fitting to share some of his collected observations of the other kinds of life that teem on campus. Nodding to this winter season, Primus has selected a few entries from his January dispatches.
• 2002: “Tendons snap audibly as a hawk perched in a tree in front of Massachusetts Hall dismembers a squirrel rip by rip.”
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