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Nirmalan wins Phillips Award

By Ben Gittleson and Tessa Gellerson

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Published: Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Updated: Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Anjali Nirmalan

Dilys Ong/Tufts Daily

Senior Anjali Nirmalan beat out five other finalists, all seniors, to win the Wendell Phillips Award.

Senior Anjali Nirmalan won this year's Wendell Phillips Award, an annual prize that will make her the only student to speak at May's Baccalaureate Commencement Ceremony.

The award recognizes a junior or senior of exceptional speaking ability and commitment to public service.

Nirmalan, the chair of Elections Commission for the 2008 calendar year, bested five other finalists for the award. Kevin Lownds, Courtney Mario, Sophia Michelen, Patrick Roath and Jessica Lynn Snow, all seniors, joined Nirmalan on Friday to present their speeches to the Committee on Student Life (CSL), which selected the award winner.

The Wendell Phillips Memorial Fund Association established the Wendell Phillips Award in 1896 as a tribute to Boston native Wendell Phillips, a preacher and abolitionist. The award also includes a small cash prize.

Each year the Office for Campus Life (OCL) presents the award to an upperclassman on the basis of public-speaking ability, and dedication to community service.

CSL Co-Chair Calvin Gidney, an associate professor of child development, said that this year's selection of seniors stood out. The deliberations on Friday afternoon, he said, took 90 minutes -- twice as long as he had expected them to.

"This year it was really a fantastic experience," Gidney said. "We had ... the largest number of applicants that we've had at least in the past five years since I've been on the committee and perhaps longer than that."

All six seniors were required to speak about an experience or new idea that caused them to re-evaluate something they had once taken for granted.

Nirmalan, who is also the education and advocacy chair for the Tufts Timmy Foundation, spoke about her experience growing up as the child of immigrants.

"It was a pretty personal speech," she said. "It advocated acknowledging rather than denying difficult and painful histories."

Gidney called the speech "beautifully delivered."

"I think a lot of people felt emotionally engaged about the topic and the way in which she delivered the speech," he said. "She had ... excellent speaking skills."

Nirmalan was also an organizer for the Dominican Art Exchange, a project that involved sending postcards between children in Somerville and the Dominican Republic. She has also emceed the annual Community Day.

Nirmalan, who is also a student at the Museum School, said that she has worked to make public service "an integral component of my involvement at both schools."

Nirmalan said that she was nervous about delivering the speech, especially as she had trouble sleeping on Thursday night and vomited before delivering her Friday speech. "I can't imagine what type of fits I'm going to have [before the Commencement speech]," she said.

Nirmalan has not yet made up her mind about the topic of her Commencement speech.

"I have no idea," she said. "I may be the one giving it, but it's for the Tufts community so I want it to be a community effort."

Wendell Phillips, born in 1811, dedicated his life to the abolition of slavery. He also championed civil rights causes including the treatment of Native Americans, women's suffrage and workers' rights. Phillips received his bachelor's degree in 1831 and his law degree in 1834 from Harvard. He died in 1884.

"The great thing about the award is that it empowers seniors to give speeches that are uncompromising because Wendell Phillips himself was a radical," Nirmalan said.

The rigorous application process for the award begins annually in November. The CSL invites the Tufts community to nominate noteworthy juniors and seniors at that time. Nominees are then invited to apply for the award.

Gidney attributed the higher interest in this year's award to the publicity efforts of Joe Golia, who this year assumed the position of director of the OCL.

"I think he's the reason that this event was such a success as compared to years past," Gidney said.

Carter Rogers contributed reporting to this article.

Comments

10 comments
Manju Sethi
Sun Jul 5 2009 15:34
Congratulations Anjali! A well-deserved award and an outstanding speech. We are all so proud of you and how you are a shining example for your generation.

Love,
Manju Aunty, Ravi Uncle, Pooja, Akash

Tufts Student
Tue Apr 28 2009 19:26
Congratulations lady, you're amazing!
Shiromi Rajendra
Sun Apr 19 2009 21:45
Hey Anjali
Congratulations! Need I say I am not surprised? Good luck with the commencement speech.
Love from Suresh, Shiromi, Shani & Shashi
Stephanie Kleindienst
Fri Mar 13 2009 21:18
Congratulations, Anjali! What an honor! I am so proud of you. It doesn't really surprise me though. I think it is just one of the many amazing things that you will be recognized for in life. You are very talented and have so much to share with all around you.
My mom also says congrats. She is proud of you.
Shanthini
Thu Mar 12 2009 18:13
Hi Anjali,
Congratulations on winning the award wtih so much competition. You are great!! May be, when we meet at Pathmini Mami's place next, we could be your audience & you could deliver the speech to us.
Love,
Shanthini Mami, Naren Mama & Kishani
valli aunty
Thu Mar 12 2009 08:30
Anjali,
CONGRATULATIONS! all your aunts, uncles and cousins are so very proud of you - you are such an inspiration to all of us - you are the BEST
Love you
Valli aunty
Your name
Wed Mar 11 2009 20:45
Your speech and delivery were perfection.
Kahran Singh
Wed Mar 11 2009 17:34
Anjali, I'm so proud of you. Congratulations my love.
Your name
Wed Mar 11 2009 13:34
I can't think this was as difficult of a choice as the article's lip service makes it out to be. I was at the presentation and Anjali easily was the best. Congratulations!
Prakhar Agarwal '09
Wed Mar 11 2009 12:21
Congratulations Anjali! You definitely deserve it! You are model student of Tufts!






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