Friday, September 25, 2009

We Remember, Class of '94 Memorial Service (2009)

On Friday, May 22nd, 2009, after our Groove is in the Heart Yoga class, members of the class of '94 gathered in a clearing by the pond on the other side of the crew house. We were joined by the parents of Laura Swymer-Clancy '94, who brought four daughters to Smith and have lost two of them far too early.

This is what I read:
"In Memoriam"

Four years ago, I attended the wedding of a dear Smith friend in Mystic, CT. Despite some of us not having seen each other in several years, and despite the many different paths our lives have taken, the Smithies at the wedding embraced one another with jubilation, appreciation, and great affection. We were as familiar to one another then as we were on the last day we sat down together for Sunday Brunch in Cushing House more than a decade earlier.

During the outdoor reception at the Mystic Seaport, I stepped away from the dance floor for a moment and I watched my friends dancing as the sun set into the water behind them. The sky was filled with brilliant swaths of color, the last vestiges of day embraced by the first dark arms of night. In that moment between the bright shining day and the deep velvet night, there was a pause for celebration, a great joining together of colors, a hello and a goodbye all in one. The sky, like the bride and the groom, and my glorious friends dancing beneath it, was gaining something and losing something both.

I wanted to be in that moment forever, but since that was impossible, I reached for a pen so I could write down what I saw.

A few days later, I found the note I’d written on a napkin crumpled at the bottom of my purse. And all it said was this: “Describing my love for these women is like trying to draw the sun with nothing but a crayon.”

Even eleven years after moving away from our shared Smith home, words failed to capture the light that dances between us when we come together in any room. Our happiness in one another’s company is almost impossible to describe (particularly if there is music and a meal involved). This, I believe, is the Smith Experience.


We are here today, exactly 15 years after we graduated, to honor that unique connection, the inimitable togetherness that a Smith education affords, and to mark the loss of seven of our classmates:

  • Kimberly Tyler, who passed away 2/11/1991.

  • Linda Miller, who passed away 10/15/1995.

  • Judith Grubbs, who passed away 11/20/2000.

  • Carol Boyer, who passed away 4/17/2001.

  • Laura Swymer-Clancy, who passed away 10/21/2001.

  • Deirdre Flaherty, who passed away 8/12/2004.

  • Jennifer DelVecchio Gustafson, who passed away 8/1/2007.

[At this point, I was overcome with emotion. I gestured for the Reverend Alyssa May ('94) to join me, and she was kind enough--and composed enough--to help me invite the group to offer a moment of silence to these women we have lost. During this time, I also offered loving thoughts in memory of Robert Nylen, my beloved teacher, who was a guest lecturer at Smith during the 1990s and who passed away in December 2008 after a long, gutsy battle with cancer, and in memory of the spouses and loved ones of classmates and other Smithies who we have lost.]



After our moment of silence, Lesley Reidy, who was very close with both Laura and Jen, read a poem (Snow Geese by Mary Oliver) and shared some of her memories. She also described some of the ways in which she still actively feels the sweet presence of her good friends in her days, and the ways in which she shares that love and warmth with her children.

Laura's mother, who brought along photos of her daughters, also read a moving poem. And both of Laura's parents shared their appreciation at being able to experience our remembrance of their wonderful daughter.

Other friends and classmates shared their grief at losing friends and their gratitude for having known them.

We then performed our offering:

Earlier today, I came to this clearing, I said a blessing, and planted seven lilies-of-the-valley, one for each member of our class who has passed away. Lily-of-the-valley is also known as Ladder to Heaven and Our Lady’s Tears. It is said to have magical properties and is used to improve the memory and the mind. When placed in a room, these flowers are supposed to cheer the heart and lift the spirits of anyone present.

It is my hope that these lilies-of-the-valley will grow and thrive in this clearing. So that we can return year after year to this quiet spot and witness their bloom and remember how we were when we were young here and what a special thing we have become a part of.I have filled this watering can with water from Paradise Pond. I invite you now to join me in offering a drink to these lilies we have planted, in recognition of the life that this water gives, and as a symbol of our connection to Smith and t o Smithies, whether they can be here today in body or only in spirit.

As those gathered came up one by one, to offer water to our lilies, I read our benediction:

In this moment between the bright shining day and the deep velvet night, let us pause for celebration, a hello and a goodbye all in one. Even fifteen years after moving away from our shared Smith home, words fail to capture the light that dances between us when we come together. Our happiness in one another’s company is almost impossible to describe (particularly if there is music and a meal involved). This, I suppose, is the Smith Experience.


After the benediction, I thanked everyone for coming. There were hugs and tears and, I think a great deal of joy at our connection--followed up, most appropriately, by music and a meal at our class dinner.

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Will there be Wi-Fi?

A classmate wrote today and asked me if there would be Wi-Fi available on campus during our reunion. In case you were wondering the same thing, here's my reply:

>>I'm not entirely sure what the Wi-Fi situation is on campus, but I
think there are hotspots in at least some houses and some academic
buildings.

There's free also Wi-Fi at Forbes library, adjacent to campus (closed Sunday). And
both pay-for and free options at in-town businesses.

On campus, I think you need a Novell account to get access. More on
that here: http://www.smith.edu/its/tara/account_forms.html

There are computers available to the public in the campus center and
athletic facility, but not good options for secure data or prolonged
work sessions.

Verizon Wireless offers a $15/day access fee for it's mobile broadband
data service, although you also have to buy a USB wireless modem for
about $200, if you don't already have one. It may actually be more affordable to buy a whole month from them, instead...

More on Smith Wi-Fi here: http://www.smith.edu/its/tara/macintosh/iphone.html

You may be able to contact IT and fax in an application form--or
something--to get a Novell account set up by Thursday or Friday. I
used to have one, so I know that alumnae are eligible--at least, they
used to be. They may have some accommodations for visiting alumnae, as
well. Perhaps a generic temp username and password for everyone?>>

If anyone finds out something concrete and helpful, please let me know and I'll try to post!

Cheers,

Naomi

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Illumination, Rain or Shine?



Many an illumination night has been ruined by rainstorms. Illumination is maybe my favorite part of reunion/commencement weekends, so I was glad to hear today that Smith has finally invested in waterproof lanterns. I wonder if they'll look the same...

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Thursday, May 7, 2009

Commencement speaker, 2009

Tammy Baldwin, a Smith College alumna and the first woman to serve in the House of Representatives from her native Wisconsin, will be the speaker at the college’s 131st commencement ceremony at 10 a.m. Sunday, May 17, at the Quadrangle. Honorary degrees will be awarded to Baldwin, installation artist Jenny Holzer, international journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault and microbiologist Claire Fraser-Liggett. More at the Smith Web site...

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Monday, May 4, 2009

Child Care at Reunion

The college sent out this e-mail today to registered attendees:

Having your children with you at Reunion can be lots of fun. There is plenty to do and lots of places to explore on campus, from the banks of Paradise Pond to the botanic garden and the playing fields. But Reunion is really about you and your Smith friends. The Alumnae Association understands that and has contracted with an excellent child-care company so that you can take a night off and enjoy the campus and the company of friends.

Children’s Conference Care Inc. (CCCI) has been working with the Alumnae Association for seven consecutive years. It’s the only company in New England that specializes in child care for reunions and conferences. Staff are trained professionals who create a camp-like experience for children. They offer games, indoor/outdoor sports, movies, crafts, and board games.

CCCI will be on campus Friday and Saturday evenings from 5–10, offering a fun-filled program for children ages 3 and up. The cost is $20 per child and includes dinner.

Space fills up quickly and pre-registration is encouraged, so click here if you’re interested in signing up for this service.

More information about CCCI is available at www.childrensconferencecare.com. If you require additional forms or have any questions, e-mail us at info@childrensconferencecare.com, or call 617-492-6925.

We’re looking forward to seeing you on campus!

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Thursday, April 9, 2009

Conserve Resources: Ride-share


To pair up with other alumnae and share a ride to reunion, visit the college's Zipride! ride-sharing Website.

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Tour the first building on campus named after a corporation

During reunion, the college is offering "hard-hat tours" of the under-construction Ford Hall. Currently scheduled to open in January 2010, the building will be the largest in all of Northampton and was vehemently opposed by residents of Northampton.

President Carol Christ blazed ahead, however, and demolished an entire neighborhood of historic homes and the only naturally occurring affordable housing in Northampton--which also had the benefit of being walkable to town, thus reducing greenhouse gases and encouraging a walking and biking lifestyle.

The college has also built a newly opened and operational co-generation plant, which alumnae can tour on Friday May 22nd. Tours require preregistration through the AASC Reunion Resources Web site (not yet available).

Participants in either tour are urged to wear comfortable shoes because there will be lots of walking and stairs to climb. Hardhats will be provided on the Ford Hall site.

View photos of the Green Street neighborhood before it was demolished by Smith here.

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Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Early Bird Reunion Registration Deadline Friday

The college has extended its Early Bird registration deadline to April 10th (Friday). If your e-mail is registered with the AASC, you likely received the e-mail below:

The Alumnae Association of Smith College has extended the early-bird Reunion registration deadline to April 10, giving you more time to take advantage of discounts on meals and housing. Click on the Registration link at the left to sign up now.

Our Reunion Resources Web site is chock full of good information and things to do before you even set foot on campus. Get started by checking the list of alumnae who’ve already registered for Reunion (updated daily) to see which of your classmates have already signed up.

  • Facebook—Join the “Smith College Reunion 2009” Facebook page and get in on the conversation.

  • Talk it up—Check out the Alumnae Association’s Reunion Resources to connect with classmates ahead of time and to find out everything you need to know before you arrive. Click on Talk About Reunion to chat with old friends, share photos of past Reunions by clicking on Post a Picture, or send an E-Postcard to friends inviting them to join you on campus.

  • Sights and sounds—Listen to “Ribbons & Revelations,” a BBC audio broadcast that looks back at Reunion 1994, produced by Julia MacKenzie ’79 Diploma in American Studies.

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Monday, March 16, 2009

Be a part of history


Amy Holich-Dunn, Assistant Director for Reunions and Classes, and I were corresponding earlier this year, after our class Save-the-Date postcards went out. Reunion Chairs are not consulted about the images that go out on those cards; they are selected by the AASC from the college archives, which has a limited pool of photos from which to choose.

Amy said that the college would love it if alumnae from our era would submit their photographs (actual prints, not digital files) since there is a shortage of images from that period.

She writes: "It would be fabulous if classmates sent their photos (labeled with names) to the College Archives for inclusion in the class files. It's becoming increasingly difficult to find images for younger classes as we move further and further into the digital age, and the Archives receives far, far fewer alumnae images from the most recent ten or twenty classes than they do from earlier classes. I certainly encourage you to send copies of any images you have to Archives."

For more information, visit the College Archives Donations page to find out how and what to donate.
Kirse Granat May, Naomi Graychase, Megan Sullivan Dawson.
Winter Weekend, Cushing House, 1994.

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Classmate Photos: Christine Thomas



Classmate Christine Thomas sent me these photos today to share with you all. Sadly, she's lost her old-fashioned film-based photos from our college years, but these three current photos represent part of her community in Boston.


Pictured above, Boston Pride 2007 and 2008 (top of page). "I think all involved in the pics (and those who used to march and dance with me back in Smith days) will get a kick out of them," writes Christine.

Christine (above, right) is a PhD student in Hebrew Bible, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations. Above, she and her partner celebrate New Year's Even 2009.

This year's reunion has a very special LGBTQ-themed event:

2:15–3:15 p.m. Freeheld screening and Q&A with director
Cynthia Wade '89 (LGBTQ reception follows)


Followed by:



3:30–4:30 p.m. LGBTQ reception

For more information about the LGBTQ Alumnae Alliance of Smith College contact Brooke Trent ’57, an organizer of the group, at brooketrent@optonline.net.

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Reunion Schedule: AASC


Our class events schedule is still taking shape, but the college's events are all set in stone now. To view the schedule, click here.

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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Smith Club of Hampshire County News

Greetings, Hampshire County Alumnae -

I am writing on behalf of the new Board to let you know of some changes we are making to the Newsletter (no, we haven't forgotten!!). ;)

In an effort to be more environmentally conscious (a.ka. "green") and budget-friendly, we are asking that Hampshire County alumna with email access accept an eNewsletter in Dec/Jan and again in June/July. Currently there are approximately 200-area alum (members and non-members) who do not have email access and they will continue to receive a hardcopy via mail in order to keep abreast of Club events. New members/renewals going forward will have the option to opt into a hardcopy (for one of the two mailings) as Ruthann Lipman, our Membership Chair, has added this feature to the new membership form.

As a side note, the Club has had many exciting events ranging from the President's Picnic in August to the Andrew DeVries Studio Tour in October and the New York City Bus Trip in November. If you are interested in becoming more involved and/or are eagerly awaiting new events, please feel free to attend our Board Meeting on Th., December 4, 2008, at Campus Center Lounge 205 (6:15-7:30p). In the event you are not available tomorrow evening we are planning a group to help Laurie Wyman '84 and the Interfaith Cot Shelter on Sat., December 13, 2008, and would welcome your attendance and enthusiasm (what a great way to represent Smith in our immediate community!).

Here is the schedule for the remaining Board Meetings (usually 1st Thursday of the month in Dewey Hall Common Room unless otherwise noted):

Jan. 8, 2009 (2nd Thursday of the month due to New Year's Day)
Feb. 5, 2009
Mar. 5, 2009
Apr. 2, 2009
May 7, 2009 Campus Center Lounge 205
June 4, 2009 Annual Meeting (6-8p) - Field House

Please feel free to contact me directly should you want more information on Club events. Also check out our website http://smithsites.alumnae.net/homepages/clubs/hcsc for Board info (filled/unfilled positions), event pictures and membership form.

Happy Holidays,
Autumn

Autumn M. (Ronco) Storozuk '03 - President

Hampshire County Smith Club
(413) 221-5653

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Friday, October 3, 2008

Happy Mountain Day!

For reasons known only to herself, President Christ has declared today "Mountain Day." It's cold, gray, windy, and rainy. But, it's still a welcome day off, I'm sure--and a long weekend.

Enjoy!

And...if you have any photos from your Mountain Days past, send them over and I'll post.

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Monday, September 22, 2008

Dedication of Smith Tennis hut balcony

Autumn M. (Ronco) Storozuk '03 of the Hampshire County Smith Club informs me that the dedication for the Smith Tennis hut balcony will take place at 4pm on Tues., September 30 (weather-permitting).

Immediately following the dedication the team plays rival Mt. Holyoke College.

Varsity coach Chris Davis ('79G) welcomes the attendance and support of local alumnae.

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Thursday, September 4, 2008

Danielle Drumke '95 Remembered in "Glamour" Magazine

Amy V. Smith '94 wrote recently to tell me that she'd read a beautiful article in Glamour magazine (of all places!) about Danielle Drumke, who many of you knew at Smith.

I ran right out and bought a copy and the essay written by Danielle's sister, Mila, is jaw-droppingly gorgeous. You'll find it beginning on page 239 of the September issue of Glamour. And yes, Smith College--and Danielle's bulging scholarship fund--are mentioned! [The image above was nabbed from Danielle's Web site.]

Even now, her friends and family unite around their love for Danielle at her Web site.

Below is an excerpt from her Updates page (11.15.00):

>>>Big discounts: Naomi Graychase shares a recent story
On November 2, I was out at Club Q, the big, all-girl club that happens once a month here in the city. I should have been, but I wasn't at all surprised to see Danielle there. I wimp out on Q if I have so much as a blister, and there she was, fresh from brain surgery, standing at the bar. She greeted me as enthusiastically as ever. She looked great, although a little puffy. Later, she removed her baseball cap to show me her fuzzy head and tremendous scar. It looks like a shark bit her.
She'd already been waiting for a long time for the bartender to notice her. I have no idea what his problem was, but he waited on people to her left and to her right and wouldn't even acknowledge her. Someone else may have gotten upset. I'm sure she was tired, and all she wanted was a freakin' Gatorade. But she never lost her cool. She started cracking jokes about how if we told him she had brain cancer, maybe he'd give her some service. I suggested that she carry a small sign around with her from now on for just that purpose--she'd never have to wait in line for the bathroom or be ignored by a bartender again. She told me a story about going to Ben and Jerry's the night before her surgery. "I told them I was having brain surgery the next day," she said, "and they gave me a discount." "A discount?" I shouted over the music. "Yeah." I thought about this for a minute. "How much is the discount for brain cancer at Ben and Jerry's?" "Fifty percent," she said with a grin.
In the end, Danielle got some other girls to buy her Gatorade from a different bartender, but she got it, and made friends in the process. For me, it was an amazing experience, a slice of Danielle's life. She came out to a dance club, even though she was recovering from major surgery and facing the prospect of radiation in the next few days. She cracked jokes and made me feel completely at ease, demonstrating so clearly that on a day to day basis, having a sense of humor, a generous heart and a love of life and music will draw caring, supportive people and little miracles to you. I feel blessed to know her and to witness, even at a distance and in glimpses, her strength, honesty and most importantly, good humor.>>

Not long after Danielle was diagnosed, I wrote to the Alumnae Quarterly asking them to let me write a story about Danielle and the phenomenal outpouring of love and unity that her illness inspired among hundreds and hundreds of Smithies. They turned down the story idea. I plan to write to them again and ask that they reconsider. It's a shame it won't have happened before Danielle passed away, but her story is glorious--and raised more than $100,000 for Smith! If you believe the AQ should run a story, please take a minute to let them know that. I'm going to drop Mila a note and see if she retained the re-print rights to her essay...perhaps the AQ could run it. (If they've run one and I missed it, someone tell me!)

You can submit an idea to the AQ here.

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Less than a year away!


Last weekend, Kirse, Amy, and I attended the 15-year reunion for the Class of 1993.

Kirse traveled more than 6,000 miles round-trip, found round-the-clock child care for the three children she left behind, and helped Amy take care of her baby here, when it turned out Amy had to travel without her husband. She also took the time to visit every single class headquarters and attend a constant stream of events, while also investigating almost every venue on campus as a potential site for our headquarters, dinners, or other gatherings.

Amy traveled from several hours away by car with her 9-month-old, Sam, who was an absolute sweetheart about his first trip away from his dad--and his home. [Photo, right: Naomi, Susan Bullivant (who started class of '94, but graduated '93), and Elizabeth Solaka '93 at the Saturday night class dinner.]

The whole thing was exhausting for all of us and I'm tremendously grateful to Kirse and Amy for the sacrifices they are making in service to our class. I knew they would do a terrific job, but in true Smithie style, they are overachieving already.

Kirse will be sending me a blog to post sometime in the next week or so--her first one!--and hopefully I'll have some photos to post as well. We were so busy, we hardly took any photos, but Elizabeth Solaka '93 snapped quite a few and will share them with us soon. [Below, photo from Elizabeth Solaka of the Alumnae Parade on Saturday morning.]

Highlights of reunion for me were getting to spend time in my old house, Cushing (there's some new, hideous wallpaper downstairs, and the dining room is much-improved--they have fountain soda!); Illumination Night; seeing friends; eating in Smith houses; exploring campus; and sipping champagne late at night with my best friends from the Class of '93.

If you have friends from other classes, they are welcome to come to reunion, by the way. They would march with the 1776 group in the alumnae parade (if they wanted) and can attend events, such as the all-reunion dinner on Thursday night.

If you or your friends are thinking of coming to reunion and don't want to register and/or stay on campus, it's important to make other arrangements at least six months in advance. The Hotel Northampton and other venues fill up very quickly for that weekend.

As always, if you have photos to share of your life now or reunions past, or from our undergrad years, please post them at our Flickr page (link to the right) or send to me to post at our blog.

Please also spread the word about our blog and make sure your contact information is up-to-date at the alumnae house.

Hope you all are well!

[Illumination Night photo by Elizabeth Solaka, '93]

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Friday, May 23, 2008

Young Smithie profiled on NPR


This is the story my friend Amy was helping with when she recorded commencement last weekend.

WFCR, NPR News & Music for Western New England, May 23, 2008
Remarkable graduates: Allison Bellew
Thousands of students graduate from the region's colleges this spring; many of them have accomplished more than you might expect. Today WFCR begins a series on some of these remarkable graduates with the story of Smith graduate Allison Bellew '08, who spent most of her childhood between foster homes.

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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Scary Numbers

The Smith College Board of Trustees has approved a comprehensive fee of $48,108 for the 2008-2009 school year, reflecting an overall increase of 5.5 percent over the 2007-08 comprehensive fee. That fee includes tuition ($35,810), room and board ($12,050) and a student activities fee ($248).

Even so, the college received 3,771 first-year applications, a 13 percent increase over last year's numbers.

Source: NewsSmith

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Monday, May 19, 2008

Women Battle "Macho" Culture in Science and Tech Professions

This article from last Thursday's NEW YORK TIMES, discusses a study by the Center for Work-Life Policy to be published in the June issue of the Harvard Business Review, which paints a portrait of a macho culture in the science, engineering, and technical professions, where women are outsiders, and where those who do enter are likely to eventually leave.

Engineering has risen to become the fifth most popular major among Smithies. Smith is the first and only U.S. college to offer an all-women's engineering program.

The new Ford building, the location and size of which I strongly opposed, has struggled to find funding and is not yet completed. It is the first building on campus named after a corporation. It will be the largest building in the entire city of Northampton. It will be the permanent home of the Smith engineering program, as well as home to other sciences.

Perhaps if it does help women to obtain a stronger and more permanent foothold in engineering and the sciences, it will have been worth the terrible price Northampton and the Smith campus have paid for its construction.

Related post:

An Open Letter to Girls Considering a Career in IT

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Smith adopts SAT-optional admission policy

According to an e-mail I received from the college on Friday, Smith will make the submission of SAT scores an optional part of the admission process starting with the class entering in the fall of 2009.

I haven't been able to track down a press release to that effect yet, but will include the link when I find it.

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Monday, May 12, 2008

One Smithie's Education Pulled her "Out of the Ghetto"

THE STAR-LEDGER, May 11, 2008
For Giants rookie, mom is judge and jury
New York Giants rookie Jonathan Goff's recent graduation from Vanderbilt University was the culmination of an academic career fostered by his mother, Smith alumna Gwendolyn Tyre '75, whose education pulled her "out of the ghetto" and into the history books as the first African-American law clerk on the Georgia State Supreme Court.

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The Class of 2008

On Sunday, May 18th, Smith will host it's 130th commencement. I know, like most of you, I well up and get all goosebumpy and full of emotion when I think about my connection to all those women of years past.

If you'd like to learn a little more about the newest batch up near-alumnae, click here to read some statistics the college has prepared. For instance, the five most popular majors in this graduating class are (in descending order): government; psychology; art (includes art history, art studio, architecture, and urbanism); economics; and engineering.

The oldest Ada Comstock student graduating is 68-years-old.

50 percent of Smith applicants for Fulbright Fellowships were accepted--more than double the national average.

Smithies rule.

A record number of applications for admission were received this year for the class of 2012.

For more Class of 2008 "By the Numbers," click here.

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

May Day--and Mayday! (Class of '94 Reunion News)


My Dearest Classmates:

Today marks the end of the dreary winter half of the year and means it (finally) really is spring in the northern hemisphere. Hoorah!

It also means we are soon going to be less than one-year away from our 15-year reunion. Since May Day has traditionally been an occasion for celebration--and mayday is a call for help--our VP (who's last name is also May!) has chosen this day to ask you for help in planning our reunion celebration.

To help us find out what you want from reunion--and who is willing to volunteer--we have prepared a short online survey for you to take. You can find the free survey at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=VWfGeg4F9xrmUMJmhgiU1Q_3d_3d.

There are eight questions, two of them are multiple choice, and we expect it should take somewhere between two and five minutes to complete, depending on how much you have to say. (Why put it off? Click on the link now and let us know what you want.)

As always, you can keep up-to-date on reunion planning by visiting our class blog at http://www.graychase.com/Smith94.htm or by e-mailing your reunion co-chairs, Kirse and Amy, at smithreunion1994@gmail.com. We are keeping a running list at the blog of who's planning to come, so drop us a note once you've decided so we can add you to the list.

With warm wishes for spring and many thanks for your help,

Naomi
"Groove is in the Heart"

Naomi Graychase
Alumnae Class President, 1994
graychase@gmail.com

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Smith Club of New York Fundraiser

Jennifer Pollock writes that the Smith Club of New York is holding a fundraiser. Proceeds of the benefit go to the Smith College Scholarship Fund. As always, sponsors receive priority seating and pre-show cocktails. Due to the limited number of seats for the screening, tickets will be issued on a first-come-first-serve basis.

Per her e-mail:

This year, we are pleased to present ‘A Walk To Beautiful’, a documentary that follows five astonishing Ethiopian women and girls, shunned and rendered "untouchable" because of fistula, as they embark on a journey to reclaim their lives. This inspirational film won top honors as
the Best Feature Documentary of 2007 from the International Documentary Association.

It is also being considered for next year’s Academy Award. The film and its producers have a strong Smith connection, ranging from the Executive Producer, Steven Engel (husband of Heidi Reavis ’81), to members of the able crew who helped produce the movie. For more information please visit: www.walktobeautiful.com.

Please join us at 7:00pm on Tuesday, May 20th at the Kodak Screening Room (360 W. 31st Street, Floor 2). The cocktail hour for sponsors will be held from 6:00pm. Please reserve ASAP as tickets are selling out!

    · Sponsor tickets are $100
    · Friend tickets are $65

      (100% of the ticket cost is tax deductible)

Please make checks payable to the Smith College Club of New York and return to:

      Smith College of New York
      c/o Rora Tanaka
      250 W. 89th Street, #2D
      New York, NY 10024

If you prefer to pay by credit card, please use the attached form and email it back to rora@roratanaka.com or fax to (212) 600-1215.

Special thanks to Melanie Jones of Kodak for donating the venue; and to Heidi Reavis (Class of '81) and Steve Engel for allowing us this screening of A Walk To Beautiful.

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Friday, April 4, 2008

Rachel Sontag '97 Publishes Memoir of Abuse

Rachel Sontag '97, who left Smith during her sophomore year, has written a memoir of the emotional abuse she suffered at the hands of her father, Dr. Stephen Sontag.

You can read a review by June Sawyers published in the San Francisco Chronicle here.

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Thursday, April 3, 2008

Honest to Blog

Two enterprising Smithies have come up with a fantastic idea. Amanda '06 and Sarah '05 have created the Association of Smith College Alum Blogs. Basically, a blog about Smithie bloggers. It's fantastic.

From them:

"There are over 53,000 Smith College alums, in all 50 states and in over 100 countries.

How
many of them have blogs?

We're on a mission to find out.

Check us out: http://smithalumblogs.wordpress.com/

Want to be indexed? Know a Smithie with a blog? Send an email to smithalumblogs@gmail.com."


You can view the blogs by year--starting with a blogger from the class of '61, all the way up to the current graduating class ('08).

So far, three '94ers are represented. If you have a blog, send the link to them.

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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Update Your Contact Info

In order to receive reunion (or other class-related news and items via e-mail or snail mail) the college must have your current e-mail and/or snail mail address. As a class, we prefer to contact you via e-mail because it saves money (we have a very small treasury) and because it saves resources. ("No trees were harmed in the writing of this e-mail.")

Unfortunately, figuring out how to update your information at the AASC Web site is a bit baffling. To get the steps, I contacted Mike Yargeau, the AASC Web master. He said:

>>The process of updating your e-mail address or contact information is relatively straight forward. Once you are logged in to the Directory you simply click on the "Directory" text link on the left of the page to expose some options, then click on "My Personal Information", and then on the resulting page click on the "Edit" button on the top right corner of your profile. On the page where you actually update your data you have to click on "save" at the bottom of the page to retain any changes you make. Our records staff does receive these updates, but they still go through them manually to maintain consistency and accuracy so it can take a bit of time for changes to be implemented.

There is also an animated tutorial for this on the website at: http://alumnae.smith.edu/tutorials/

Just click on the link that says: "Change your personal information in the Alumnae Directory"
>>

Thank you, Mike!

However, there is one lingering question, right? How does one log in to the Directory??

First, go to the AASC Web site. At the top of the left-hand column are dialog boxes where you can enter your username and password to log in to the Alumnae Directory.

If you have never created a username and password, click on the New User link below the dialog boxes.

If you remember your username, but not your password, click on the Lost Password? link below the dialog boxes.

If you have no idea whether you created an account before, or if you know that you did, but can't recall your username OR your password...well...I don't know what you do.

I've written to Mike to find out and will post that information when I get it.

There is also a link at the bottom of the AASC page, which will allow you to update your mailing address and provide your e-mail address. I don't know for certain if this will mean that the e-mail address you provide will be entered into the same database that the broadcasts draw from, but it's a start. And you don't need a username or a password to do it.

Just go here.

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Monday, March 31, 2008

Update your E-mail with the College

I've received quite a few e-mails from classmates who have not received some or all of my e-mail broadcasts over the last few years.

Unfortunately, I can't update or maintain the list the college uses for these broadcasts, so in order to be sure you receive all of our class e-mail newsletters, reunion info, or other broadcasts, you'll have make sure the college has your current e-mail address.

Unfortunately, this is not an easy process. I spent a bunch of time at the site today and cannot for the life of me figure out how it's done!

I am going to send some e-mails to the AASC and see if we can get instructions, which I will then post here.

In the meantime, you can update your snail mail address here.

And you can contact the AASC Web master, Mike Yargeau directly by phone or e-mail. His information, along with everyone else at the AASC is here.

Thanks for your patience! In the meantime, if you are one of the lucky folks getting the e-mails, please consider forwarding them on to your friends so that we can help more people to be in the loop.

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Sunday, March 30, 2008

UMASS student arrested for lewd acts at Smith

On March 27th, the DAILY HAMPSHIRE GAZETTE, reported that "Police are investigating after two Smith students reported separate lewd incidents involving a male the same evening. Neither woman was injured and both are assisting with the investigation."

The PR arm of Smith later reported that "a University of Massachusetts student was arrested and charged with the incidents."

Since the Gazette blocks non-subscribers from accessing its content (brilliant) and since I couldn't find any further information on the Smith site, that's all I know.

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Marjane Satrapi to Speak at Smith April 3rd

Marjane Satrapi, whose autobiographical novel about the Islamic Revolution, “Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood,” was adapted into an Academy Award-nominated animated film of the same name, will speak at Smith College at 7 p.m., Thursday, April 3. More info here.

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"Doing the News in the Age of new Media" Event at Smith

On Thursday, April 10, at 7:30 p.m. in Leo Weinstein Auditorium, Wright Hall the Friends of Smith Libraries will present an event entitled "Doing the News in the Age of new Media."

The event is free and open to the public and will feature some very cool Smithies, including Laurel Toby, founder of mediabistro, and Stacy Teicher who is just one year ahead of us (and lived in Baldwin).

From the press release:

"The program, which will be moderated by Judy Milestone '66, Smith trustee, long-time CNN executive and an astute observer of the media, will include panelists Susan Green'68, until recently Senior Vice President at The Cable Center, University of Denver; Stacy Teicher Khadaroo '93, reporter at the Christian Science Monitor; Laurel Touby '85, Senior Vice President at Jupitermedia Corporation, which last July paid $23 million for mediabistro.com, the on- and offline "community center" for journalists and media professionals that Touby founded; and Ellen Weiss '81, Vice President for News at National Public Radio.

"Although many Friends of the Libraries programs focus on books and authors, this event will bring together five Smith alumnae who are-or have been-associated professionally with various aspects of a medium other than books. The panel's organizers decided that the so-clalled "new media" is a compelling, current topic and, in fact, not distant from libraries at all, given today's integration of electronic resources into library facilities and collections. The panel discussion, which is open free to the public, is expected to focus on issues that print and electronic media are currently facing, the demographics of their audiences and the various forms of adaptation that are required to be successful in the media marketplace today."

I am hoping to go, but I have a class that doesn't let out until 8:30 that night, so I may miss it.

Hope to see you there!

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Saturday, March 8, 2008

Smithies in the News

DAILY HAMPSHIRE GAZETTE, March 7, 2008
With her play "Commedia dell Smartass" being performed in Hadley this weekend and next, playwright and Smith alumna Sonya Sobieski '91 has sought to take "an ingeniously new slant" on the American high school experience, notes the Gazette arts reviewer. Unfortunately, the Gazette will not allow anyone to view its content without a subscription, so we can't link to the story. (Stupid Gazette.)

Gloria Steinem '56 speaks at Lafayette College
While she considers this year's Democratic presidential primary a truer representation of democracy than previous contests, Smith alumna and feminist activist Gloria Steinem '56 (right, with Naomi at Smith last fall) expressed disappointment recently, to a capacity crowd at Lafayette College, that media coverage focuses on questions of either race or sex but not both. "The battles for racial and sexual equality have been and should be interwoven," she said. "Where does that leave the women of color?"

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Friday, March 7, 2008

And the Oscar goes to...a Smithie!

NEW YORK TIMES, March 7, 2008
A filmmaker triumphant, a film about triumph
Smith alumna Cynthia Wade's documentary film about a New Jersey police detective who valiantly fought the county for the right to transfer her pension to her domestic partner has captured 15 awards, including an Oscar. But, Wade said, "The goal was never an Oscar; the goal was to bring attention to this issue in other states where gay rights are on the legislative agenda." Wade is Smith Class of 1989.

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A Room Full of Women of One's Own

Twice a week, I take a yoga class at Smith. The classes are included in my alumnae gym membership, and while it's a stretch to leave work in time to make the 5pm start, I am deeply committed to them and have only missed them when truly sick or severely injured. (I even returned to class just three weeks after severing my ACL and bruising a bone. Turns out this was a bad idea, and I suffered for it, but you can get a sense for how important it is to me to go. I couldn't walk, but I believed I could do yoga.)

I began taking the classes in the fall of 2006. I had been very sick for a few years, but was finally feeling well enough to make it through a one-hour beginners class once a week. In the beginning, I hated the yoga. I hated my teacher, a bubbly Smith alumna who seemed way too perky for her own good.

But even amidst my stifled rage and irritation and frustration, what I loved about the classes-- immediately--was the experience of being in a room full of women. And not just any women, Smith women. While there are occasionally men, and may or may not be students in the class who don't identify as "women," the dominant experience is one of being among women, in a room of our own. This, I realized, is not something we get to experience all that often after we graduate from Smith. I hadn't realized how much I missed it, until I sat down that first day, tired and sore, on my mat and felt the uplifting comfort of it wash over and through me.

Yoga on its own is special, especially this yoga--anusara yoga--which is very heart-centered. Love, joy, and acceptance are central elements of the practice. But yoga at Smith--with a Smithie teacher--it's difficult to describe to those who haven't felt it. I can breathe better when I have this in my life. I breathe better just thinking about it.

When we were undergrads, this was the water we swam in. Since leaving school, unless we joined a nunnery or went to teach at a same-sex school, we had to adapt to a different kind of water. There have been plenty of times when I was in the full company of women; but, particularly after having spent so much time alone since moving back to Northampton, returning to that space and being with those women for an hour every week--it had tremendous healing benefits. Like a fresh water fish seeking refuge from a brackish new environment, I have returned home, and when I enter that Smith room, my gills fill up with the best and freshest oxygen imaginable.

It is my hope that some of us might come together to practice yoga for an hour with my teacher at Smith during reunion. I'll ask Kirse to put it on the survey in April, to see if there's any interest. Until then, I hope that wherever you are in your life, you may find access to a room full of women of your own--whether it is through a shared religious practice, music, service, support, or any of the other myriad things that bring us together. Namaste.

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Thursday, March 6, 2008

Sylvia Plath Symposium in April

If you're a local alumna, or within driving distance--or just a big Sylvia Plath fan--you may want to plan a trip to campus for the Sylvia Plath 75th Year Symposium scheduled for April 25-26th.

NewsSmith reports that "Smith senior Aubrey Menard is organizing a Sylvia Plath symposium for the Smith community...the event is part of her special studies project on Plath." Menard was a presenter at the international Plath symposium at Oxford University last October. (How odd--an over achiever at Smith...)

It really should be something special. Events include an evening panel with family and friends, including Plath's Smith roommate and her college boyfriend, and talks on everything from Plath and the moon to Plath and war.

You can find more info about the event here.

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Friday, February 15, 2008

Smith's Campus Rates Among the Safest in the Nation

The Daily Hampshire Gazette reported yesterday that, according to Reader's Digest, Smith has one of the lowest crime rates of any campus in the country based on 2004 and 2005 campus crime statistics collected by the Department of Education to determine college crime rankings.

The news comes just four days after officials at UMASS, roughly ten miles up Rt. 9 from Smith, sent out an e-mail to more than 30,000 people on campus pleading for peace after violent incidents, including sexual assualts--already disturbingly high on campus--spiked.

UMASS has one of the highest violent crime rates of any university in the country.

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