gives - Smith Alumnae Quarterly
Transcription
gives - Smith Alumnae Quarterly
Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 A PROFESSOR’S PILGRIMAGE Floyd Cheung and his students travel to a World War II–era Japanese internment camp and learn an important history lesson HIGH-WIRE ACT Krin Haglund ’99 wows crowds as a ‘new circus’ performer A PLACE FOR POETS Smith’s Poetry Center marks a milestone Keeper of the trust Enforcement chief Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76 does more than ensure the integrity of the nation’s stock exchanges; she protects people’s lifestyles WINTER 2007-08 Volume 94 Number 2 Features Departments 20 SHE WON’T BACK DOWN By Jennifer Maddox Sergent ’91 Some say she’s too tough, but Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76, head of enforcement for the Securities and Exchange Commission, remembers the lessons of Enron. Her aim is to safeguard the integrity of the U.S. investment market. 3 SMITH MIX Krin Haglund ’99 runs off and joins the new circus; posture expert Mary Bond ’64 has us sitting up straight; class of 2002 scores with two award-winning documentary filmmakers. 9 FROM THE BANKS OF PARADISE Quantitative Learning Center helps students make sense of math; Poetry Center celebrates a decade; one student’s dual personality; recitals help pianist Monica Jakuc bid farewell; Iraq veterans have their say. 26 A SITE OF SORROW AND STRENGTH By Floyd Cheung Sixty-five years after nearly 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans were incarcerated without cause, a Smith professor and his students visit one internment camp and learn a lesson no textbook could teach them. 17 PRESIDENT’S PERSPECTIVE: A generation of women leaders shaped culture and the way we educate young women today. 30 MOMENTUM ON HER SIDE By Debra Michals Efforts to undermine women’s rights have inspired Kathy Rodgers ’70, president of a leading women’s advocacy group, to educate women about their history and encourage them to harness their collective power on election day. 2 READERS WRITE 36 ALUMNAE UPDATE 76 OBITUARIES 80 ALUMNAE EXCHANGE 30 82 BEYOND THE GRÉCOURT GATES Janice Carlson Oresman ’55 gets a surprise honor; alumna designer dresses up a historic Boston club. 84 SMITH SEEN 7 12 WWW.SAQONLINE.SMITH.EDU only on our web site: Read more about Smith people in full-length versions of stories from the magazine. In Stories from Our Past, learn about the early days of Gold Key guides, and read college warden Laura Scales’s 1925 musings about how to address class differences on campus. ON THE COVER Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76, photographed in her Washington, D.C. office by Chris Hartlove [opening notes] after reading through the fall issue, a few readers contacted me, wondering what’s happened to what one called the “intellectual integrity” of the Quarterly. Their concern stemmed mostly from our cover story on Devin Alexander ’93, a rising chef who recently published a best-selling book in which she offers recipes that re-create healthier versions of high-fat fast foods. Readers questioned whether this story—in which Alexander discusses weight loss and healthful eating habits—along with other recent stories we’ve done on infertility, stress, and dating, was appropriate for a magazine that they believed should reflect the intellectual vibrancy of the college, not mainstream issues that might be covered in, say, Ladies Home Journal or Self magazine. Their letters prompted me to take a careful look through the past year’s worth of issues. Though I think we could beef up our faculty coverage in some ways, I feel that we’ve done a commendable job of reporting on not only campus life but the lives of Smith women in general. Naturally, college news is a vital part of our content, but our primary focus is on alumnae. With each issue, we aim to celebrate alumnae accomplishments and tell stories that examine how Smith women at every stage of life are responding to the world around them. Alumnae experts and leaders in their fields provide insight into topics important to women, whether it be their careers, health, motherhood, or financial well-being. What’s more, we strive to show the diversity of experience that exists in the alumnae community, ensuring that there’s a place for everyone, from the young woman just starting out to Devin Alexander to this issue’s cover subject, Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76, who is shaping national policy. In telling these stories, we keep you—our readers—close to Smith and, I believe, promote the intellectual vigor for which all Smith women are known. I’m proud of the work we do, and I encourage you to keep writing. Your comments only enrich our content. Editor John MacMillan Managing Editor Elise Gibson Associate Publications Editor Cheryl Dellecese Student Intern Alexandra Neale ’08 Student Editorial Assistant Lindsey Nguyen ’10 Design Director Ronn Campisi Editorial Advisers Linda Kramer Jenning ’72 Judith Glassman Daniels ’60 The Smith Alumnae Quarterly is published by the Alumnae Association of Smith College. The Quarterly exists to report on matters relating to the college and to provide a forum for alumnae comment. The contents of the Quarterly are the responsibility of the editors and the board of directors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Smith College. O F F I C E RS AND D IRECTORS OF T H E A ASC President Charlotte Kea ’82 Vice President Audrey Paek ’92 Treasurer Lynn Steppacher Martin ’75 Clerk Diane Hessinger Dukette ’87 Quarterly Liaison Linda Kramer Jenning ’72 Chair, NAAC Jacquelyn Woodworth ’92 Chair, RCC Adrianne Todman ’91 Chair, Classes Committee Caroline Soleliac Carbaugh ’66 Chair, Nominating Committee Susan Goodman Novick ’81 Chair, Smith Fund Debra Romero Thal ’77 Lillian Agapalidou-Panagopoulou ’70 Caroline Walsh Holt ’97 Katya Wilson ’82 Norma A. Melgoza ’92 Cecily Hines ’73 Alice Schlegel ’56 JoAnne Lyons Wooten ’74 A LU M NAE T RUST E ES Nancy Keebler Bissell ’61 Elizabeth Mugar Eveillard ’69 Susan Komroff Cohen ’62 Lisa Ferrell ’85 Annie Steeper Morita ’90 A LU M NAE ASSOCIAT ION Carrie Cadwell Brown, M.Ed. ’82 Smith Alumnae Quarterly is published quarterly in September, December, March, and June. Sent to all alumnae of Smith College. Offices: Alumnae House, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063. Copyright © 2007 by the Alumnae Association of Smith College, Inc. Printed by The Lane Press, Burlington, VT 05402. * Alumnae Association at your service The Alumnae Association of Smith College offers a lifetime of benefits designed to keep alumnae connected to Smith and to one another. Here are some of the things we can do for you. SMITH ALUMNAE QUARTERLY Keep informed of campus events and alumnae accomplishments through this award-winning publication. Send letters, story ideas, or comments to SAQ@ smith.edu. SMITH TRAVEL The Smith Travel Program offers alumnae first-rate trips to exotic destinations, world-class accommodations, and expert hosts, including Smith faculty members. For information, call (800) 225-2029; alumtrav@smith.edu. REUNIONS Fun abounds for two weekends every May when nearly 2,000 alumnae converge on campus to celebrate Reunion. Visit old haunts, learn something new at Alumnae College, or simply catch up with old friends. For information about Reunion, call (800) 526-2023, option 4. Or visit alumnae.smith.edu and click on “Reunions and Classes.” ALUMNAE EDUCATION Just because you’ve graduated doesn’t mean your Smith education won’t continue. The Alumnae Association offers regional and national educational symposia on a variety of topics that draw on the talents and expertise of Smith faculty and alumnae. For information on various programs, contact Betsy Baird at bbaird@smith.edu, or (800) 526-2023, option 4. CLUB CONNECTIONS The first Smith club was established in Boston in 1887. Since then, Smith clubs have formed in nearly 50 states, Europe, and Asia. For club information, call (800) 526-2023, option 4. To find a club in your area, visit alumnae.smith.edu and click on “Clubs and Affinity Groups.” VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES The Alumnae Association values your input. If you have a particular area of expertise that would benefit your class or the Alumnae Association, there are plenty of ways to volunteer your time. For information, call (800) 526-2023, option 4. Or visit alumnae.smith.edu and click on “Volunteer Resources.” CAREER SERVICES Working with the Career Development Office, the Alumnae Association helps keep your career on track. Benefits include career counseling, networking, and skill-building seminars. Contact the CDO at cdo@smith.edu, or call (413) 585-2582. FINANCIAL SERVICES The AASC has assembled a range of products to meet your financial needs at every stage of your life. Benefits include life insurance, short-term medical insurance, and an AASC credit card. For information on all of these programs, go to alumnae.smith.edu and click on the “History and Mission” button and follow the links to “Benefits and Services.” ONLINE COMMUNITY The Alumnae Association offers a full-service Web site—alumnae.smith.edu—where you can, among other things, look up friends in a searchable alumnae directory, find out about upcoming events, and connect with your local Smith club. Also visit the Smith Alumnae Quarterly online at www.saqonline.smith.edu. There you can submit class notes, read past issues, update your address, or submit a story idea directly to the magazine. For details on all of these benefits and services, visit alumnae.smith.edu, or call (800) 526-2023. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 1 READERS WRITE Mountain Day memories President Carol Christ declared Monday, October 1, Mountain Day this year and, through an e-mail message, encouraged alumnae to take a moment to catch their breath and recall their favorite Mountain Day memories. Here are a few of the responses left on the Alumnae Association’s Mountain Day message board. mountain day always came at just the right moment—when stress had started to escalate and one needed a break and reminder to recalibrate to balance. I’m looking at my day today and wondering if I can’t honor this tradition. Perhaps a Starbucks coffee on the way to an appointment, enjoyed in the sun reflecting. Juliet Roney Johnson ’80 every mountain day was beautiful, but I especially remember going hiking with Morrow House during senior year. We knew it was our last Mountain Day, but we had a great time meeting all the new first-years. Gillian Econopouly ’02 it must have been 1985 when Jennifer Tai Chin ’87 and Veronica Moore Bartlett ’87 and I took advantage of Mountain Day to borrow my parents’ car in Springfield and drive to the Berkshire Mountains. We went to my uncle’s cottage on a beautiful lake, but having lost the key through the porch steps, we had no way of warming up on that cool day. A neighbor happened to be home and she invited us into her kitchen, completely decorated in red, and gave us matches to make a fire in the outdoor fireplace. After we warmed up and JIM GIPE/PIVOT MEDIA EDITOR’S NOTE: had our picnic, we had to head back to Northampton, since a professor had seen me on the way out and told me class was on for that evening! Bummer end, but beautiful day! Kerry Gaffney Nappi ’86 the days leading up to Mountain Day were filled with theories: can’t be on that day, there’s an art history exam; won’t be on a Friday. Then when we heard the bells, Park House had a tradition of marching over to the President’s House in our bathrobes to say thank you. I don’t remember the specifics of what we did with the day, except for an image of lying on green grass somewhere, under bright blue sky framed by autumn leaves, feeling the warm sun and cool air. I can do that today. Meg Hanna House ’84 i have such fond memories of Mountain Day. I think it’s a day that all businesses should have, too. It would lead to many happy employees. Rebecca Johnson Gorham ’97 * 2 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 my only memory of the day is from my first year. We all knew that it was coming, but no one knew when, so there was that awesome feeling of surprise and relief when it finally came. I lived in maid’s quarters in Comstock, so we had our own little party as soon as we found out, taking pictures of our groggy selves, giddy with relief that there were no classes. Being new to the school, new to college, it was a great way for me to bond with my fellow Smithies. Anastasia (Stacy) Guerasseva ’97 how i wish I could have heard the bells in Northampton this morning. I can remember them clearly, starting off quietly, eventually washing across campus (much like the pre-exam campus scream). The bells would soon be followed by the joyous shouts of my Talbot housemates—at least until some senior yelled at them to pipe down so she could go back to sleep. Whether it was the geology department’s hike or wandering around Prospect Street and vicinity, I really enjoyed all of my Mountain Days. Maria Honeycutt ’95 i have fond memories of every Mountain Day, but my senior year is my fondest. Six of us piled into a classmate’s car and drove to Quiche Gorge on a perfect crisp autumn day. We spent the afternoon in Woodstock, Vermont, and had dinner that evening at a restaurant that a former Smith friend was part owner of. I miss Mountain Day, and I miss New England as I sit here in hot Florida. Sara Erickson ’84 F READ MORE LETTERS AT: http://alumnae. We welcome letters to the editor. Letters should be typed and no more than 200 words. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. All letters reflect the opinions of the writers and not necessarily those of the Quarterly, the AASC, or Smith College. Contact us: Letters to the Editor, Alumnae House, Northampton, MA 01063; 800-526-2023; saq@smith.edu. INSIDE: A multimillion-dollar deal; standing straight and tall; a tale of two filmmakers; goodbye to a beloved children’s author. smithmix alumnae on our radar After Krin Haglund ’99 went to the circus for the first time at 4 years old, she told everyone she wanted to be a trapeze artist when she grew up. Although it would be years before she actively pursued that dream, she never let go of it—not at Smith, where she made the seemingly unlikely decision to major in chemistry and East Asian languages and literature, and not even when a high-wire accident threatened to derail her circus career in its early stages. She recovered from that accident and went on to spend five years in Rain, a production of the Montreal-based Cirque Eloize. Now >> ENTERTAINMENT :: With the greatest of ease Photograph by Solomon Kruger Krin Haglund ’99 is at the forefront of the “new circus.” Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 3 smithmix device] snapped when I was waiting on the platform and I was catapulted into the floor. I broke both wrists, my jaw, and cracked my skull. I was hospitalized for two weeks and I had external fixators and my jaw wired shut for two months. Your academic program at Smith doesn’t seem suited to a future circus performer. Cirque Eloize is a “new circus.” What, exactly, is that? Good circus is much more than acrobatics. Excellent directors push your creative abilities. Majoring in East Asian languages and literature and chemistry turned out to be a great education in creative thinking. An unlikely example is organic chemistry—I loved the required diagrams for chemical reactions. I understood them spatially; to me, it was like a dance. Where did you learn your circus skills? [After graduating from Smith] I took acrobatics and aerial classes at San Francisco’s Circus Center and attended its Clown Conservatory. However, the best training has been on the job. At the New Pickle Circus and Cirque Eloize I have had extensive acting, clown, voice, music, and juggling training, along with specific acts such as the Cyr wheel, teeterboard, and high wire. You were the first woman to use a Cyr wheel. How does it work? The Cyr wheel looks like a giant hula hoop. I balance myself inside, like da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man. And then I spin. Fast. When I rotate upside down I have to quickly lift my fingers. The challenge of the Cyr wheel, and it takes years to master, is to learn to spin in many ways, along different axes, while at the same time dancing inside the hoop. How did your accident occur? After a year at Cirque Eloize my highwire rig collapsed because of a rigging failure. The carabiner [rope-connecting 4 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 “New circus” is a bit of a misnomer because it embodies hundreds of years of tradition. Generally it refers to circus without animals. Physical skill makes circus circus. New circus draws from any type of clown, acting, music, dance, and technical design lashed together with acrobatics or juggling into a compelling theatrical performance. What has Cirque du Soleil done for new circus? Laurel Touby ’85 created mediabistro.com as the ultimate media networking Web site. JOSHUA PAUL appearing in Melbourne, Australia, with a burlesque cabaret called La Clique, Haglund plans to direct her own circus production for the first time this spring. Here, she discusses her training, her (unusual) talents, and the phenomenon known as the “new circus.” AMANDA RUSSELL << They have opened the eyes of North Americans to the artistic potential of circus. And people understand that even if the tickets cost a premium they will get a fantastic show. BUSINESS :: Laurel Touby ’85 hits the cyber jackpot with mediabistro.com Describe your current project. to the shock and awe of industry watchers, mediabistro.com founder Laurel Touby ’85 (“Networking on the Net,” Spring ’06 Quarterly) sold her company—an on- and offline-“community center” for journalists and media professionals—to the Jupitermedia Corporation for $23 million in July. Her first priority since then? To buy a “new swank pad” in Manhattan. The media maven is also thinking of writing a book about her experience starting, running, and selling a business. Not that she’s retired. On the contrary, Touby now holds the title of senior vice president of mediabistro.com, and she’s busily brainstorming ways to expand the site’s services. “I’m just doing what I’m doing,” she says, “and I do it well— taking over the world of media!” —Christina Barber-Just When I first saw La Clique a year and a half ago, I knew immediately I wanted to work with that company. It’s a cabaret housed in a beautiful historic mirrored tent, The Famous Spiegeltent. The intimacy of the venue requires that your character and acts are both exaggerated and generous. I am doing wig juggling, comic aerial silks, playing the saxophone, and singing a song with my new ukulele. What’s next for you? I am launching a company of my own, Heady Gait, with the goal of creating new and innovative circus while incorporating traditional vaudeville and oldcircus styles. I will direct my first fulllength show, the Heady Gait Vaudeville Circus, in the spring of 2008. I plan to keep performing Cyr wheel, aerials, and clowning. —Christina Barber-Just F READ the extended version of this interview at saqonline.smith.edu F MORE: Raintheshow.com Spiegeltent.com Media queen F READ the full story at saqonline. smith.edu F MORE: mediabistro.com FIVE TIPS :: Banish back and body pain and look better at the same time Posture perfect You probably already know the old rules of posture: hold your shoulders back, stick your chest out, straighten your spine. But in The New Rules of Posture: How to Sit, Stand, and Move in the Modern World bodywork specialist Mary Bond ’64 advocates a more nuanced, holistic approach. “These new rules apply to our whole experience of living in our bodies as we move in relationship to the world around us,” she writes. So if improving your posture— and maybe even giving your bad back a break—is among your resolutions this year, these are Bond’s suggestions for getting started. 1) Sit up Raise the seat of any chair in which you sit to work or study. Your hips should rest an inch or more above the level of your knees. This establishes a forward curve in your lower back that supports your upper spine and chest. 2) Stand your ground Distribute your weight evenly between the heel and front of each foot. This gives you balance between the front and back of your whole body, automati- cally reducing pressure on your spine and lifting your posture. 3) Loosen your grip Grasp the computer mouse lightly. The pace dictated by electronic devices loads tension in your hands, arms, shoulders, neck, and even jaw. Such tension prevents good posture. Relaxing your grasp of things relaxes your whole body. 4) Breathe! The motion of your rib cage elevates your torso and massages your spine as well. Practice breathing slowly, moderately, and low in your rib cage. A habit of holding your breath produces chest, shoulder, and neck tension that sabotages elegant carriage. 5) Feel the rain on your skin Taking in the pleasure of the moment releases tension and leads to an open, graceful use of your body. This counteracts stiffness caused by time, pressure, and hurrying. —Christina Barber-Just F MORE: newrulesofposture.com [in remembrance] Good night, Madeleine Celebrated author Madeleine L’Engle (Madeleine Camp Franklin ’41) died September 6. Her classic tale for young adults, A Wrinkle in Time, was published in 1962 and was awarded the prestigious Newbery Medal for best children’s book. In 1986, Smith awarded L’Engle an honorary degree, and she returned to campus often over the years. In a discussion with students in 1997, L’Engle remarked that honesty is the most important quality for successful storytelling: “If my readers don’t believe it, then it’s not true.” [books] CHILDREN’S A Mezuzah on the Door Amy Meltzer, EdM ’97 Kar-Ben Publishing, 2007, $17.95 How the Jewish tradition of putting a mezuzah on the door helps a little boy adjust to his new home. FICTION Liszt’s Kiss: A Novel Susanne Dunlap ’76 Touchstone, 2007, $14 A young pianist in cholera-ravaged Paris, and her infatuation with composer Franz Liszt. Mercy Lara Santoro ’89 Other Press, 2007, $23.95 A powerful first novel about two women seeking justice and hope in Africa. HUMAN RIGHTS A Long Day’s Dying: Critical Moments in the Darfur Genocide Eric Reeves, professor of English language and literature The Key Publishing House Inc., 2007, $37.99 An unsparing account of the Darfur genocide and the global community’s inability to take action. Illustration by Monica Hellstrom Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 5 smithmix FILM :: Two from the class of ’02 make their mark in the world of documentary filmmaking Cinema for social change The class of ’02 can claim two award-winning documentary filmmakers as their own. Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy already has an astonishing twelve films to her credit, tackling subjects like the repression of women in Afghanistan and Afghan refugee children. Socheata Poeuv made her debut in 2006 with a first-person Khmer Rouge survival story that promptly won cinema’s highest human-rights honor and led to an appointment as a fellow at the genocide studies program at Yale University. Here, the two young filmmakers—both of whom lived in Talbot House as sophomores—reflect on early success, their varied motivations, and the allure of documentaries. Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy ’02 BACKGROUND Born and raised in Karachi, Pakistan, I was a feminist at the age of 10, a political animal at 12, and an investigative journalist for a local Pakistani newspaper at 16. Then came Smith and two master’s degrees from Stanford University. FILMS Reinventing the Taliban? (2003), Women of the Holy Kingdom (2004), Pakistan’s Double Game (2005), The New Apartheid (2006), Lifting the Veil/ Afghanistan Unveiled (2007), Birth of a Nation (2007). AWARDS Twelve awards worldwide, including the first non-American recipient of the Livingston Award and the youngest recipient of the One World Media Broadcast Journalist of the Year award. INSPIRATION I find inspiration in everything: newspaper articles, ordinary citizens, human-rights activists. SMITH MAJOR Economics and government. GOALS OF FILMS To be a catalyst for change—bottom up or top down. WHY DOCUMENTARIES Documentaries are a raw, effective way of exploring reality. They let ordinary people tell their story to a global audience the way it should be told—in their own words. TOPICS Issues that others shy away from: the Talibanization of Pakistan, female suicides in Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia’s treatment of women, Sweden’s far right, Canada’s treatment of aboriginal women. PHILOSOPHY OF FILMMAKING Be honest about life, and in the process, remind people of what it means to be human. 6 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 Photograph by Derek Shapton New Year Baby tells the story of one Cambodian family’s survival under the Khmer Rouge, and is slated for broadcast on PBS’s Independent Lens. Birth of a Nation examines the unrest in East Timor, and originally aired as part of the U.K.’s Channel 4 series Unreported World. Socheata Poeuv ’02 BACKGROUND My family survived the Khmer Rouge genocide of the 1970s in Cambodia. I was born in a refugee camp in Thailand after my parents escaped. We came to the United States two years later and settled in Dallas, Texas. After graduating from Smith, I worked in network news in New York City for four years. FILMS New Year Baby (2006). AWARDS New Year Baby has won seven awards at national and international film festivals, including Amnesty International’s Movies That Matter award, the highest human-rights honor a film can win. INSPIRATION Film is a very powerful medium to make possible human intimacy. Films have a way of getting inside you and staying with you. SMITH MAJOR English literature. GOALS OF FILMS To move, entertain, and inspire. WHY DOCUMENTARIES Nothing is more compelling than real life. I can watch a documentary about almost anything—as long as it’s authentic. TOPICS The nature of love, how the truth can heal. PHILOSOPHY OF FILMMAKING Always lead with emotion. —Christina Barber-Just FREAD the extended version of this article at saqonline.smith.edu FMORE: newyearbaby.net sharmeenobaidfilms.com Photograph by Yoko Inoue Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 7 SP still S RI av pa N aila ces G b a 20 le o re 08 n t TR hese IP S! Traditional and Modern Women in Tanzania January 18–30, 2008 Indochina Unveiled: A Journey to Vietnam with extensions to Laos and Cambodia Treasures and Traditions of South India January 15–24, 2008 February 18–March 1, 2008 Smith Travel Make plans now for your 2008 Smith Travel adventure! CONTACT US | SMITH TRAVEL Tel: (800) 225-2029 Fax: (413) 585-2015 E-mail: alumtrav@smith.edu Web: http://alumnae.smith.edu/travel Why travel with Smith? The answer is simple: Smith Travel gives you unique access to Smith faculty and scholars, expert local guides, and extraordinary venues. Every detail of your trip is taken care of by highly trained tour managers, so you can spend your time taking in the local culture and enjoying the company of your fellow alumnae travelers. For 2008, we’ve planned an array of cruises, land seminars, family adventures, and service trips. For a full list of trips and itineraries go to http://alumnae.smith.edu/travel. Empires and Explorers February 20–March 13, 2008 London Theatre Cruising the Canary Islands, Madeira, Gibraltar, and the Algarve March 16–22, 2008 April 23–May 1, 2008 Inside Morocco April 12–23, 2008 INSIDE: The Poetry Center celebrates its first decade; student’s room expresses two sides of her personality; seminar considers food, water, and energy policies. paradise from the banks of ACADEMIC SUPPORT Do the math New Quantitative Learning Center aims for gaps in students’ number skills news of the campus two students who seem to have little in common academically are heading for the same destination in Neilson Library. One, a government major whose last math course was high-school algebra, is struggling with a data-analysis paper for her gender studies class. The other took honors math throughout high school but needs help solving a tricky chemistry problem. Despite their differences, both will find help at the new Quantitative Learning Center. The center opened this semester with two goals, organizers say. One is to assist science and engineering students with the math skills needed for their courses. The other goal is to reach out to math-anxious students who thought they could get by as long as they stayed put in the humanities. Keneil Anglin ’10, left, and Sharnique Beck ’10 get help on a physics problem from Catherine McCune, director of the Quantitative Learning Center. Photograph by Kathleen Dooher Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 9 Catherine McCune, a member of the math department for five years before her appointment as director of the new center, notes that the old refrain, “I just won’t take a math course,” doesn’t add up anymore. “With faculty in every department increasing the quantitative content in their courses, more understanding of math is necessary,” she said. A gander at 100-level courses in the catalog bears this out. James Miller’s course on economic game theory requires calculus. Howard Gold’s “Empirical Methods in Political Science” includes descriptive statistics, sampling, and correlation and regression. Albert Mosley’s logic course covers probabilistic and statistical reasoning. And, of course, math-dependent technology weaves its way through courses from digital art and music to computational linguistics. In fact, faculty members are encouraged to introduce quantitative material in their courses as a means to broadening students’ exposure, noted government professor Howard Gold, who chaired a quantitative skills subcommittee that came up with numerous strategies to increase number literacy. Surveys of recent alumnae showed that a significant number of them felt they didn’t get enough math at “With faculty Smith, and that for the sake of increasing the their careers, they regretted it, quantitative Gold said. content, more Math assistance at Smith is understanding not new. Tutors have long been available within the math and of math is science departments. And Mcnecessary.” Cune herself teaches a catch-up math course, which is recommended for students who enter Smith with less than a 500 on their math SAT, or who took fewer than three years of high-school math. A three-week refresher course during interterm is designed to bring science students up to college level in algebra, calculus, and trigonometry. Still, there was no single place to go for a wide range of math assistance. That’s where the Quantitative Learning Center comes in, joining the Jacobson Center with its focus on writing skills, and the Educational Technology Services group, to create what McCune calls “a growing web of support.” The QLC is just beginning, but McCune envisions a place where individuals can come to get questions answered, or for longer-term instruction, either one-on-one or in small groups. Master tutors and peer tutors (both are work-study positions) will be available. For McCune, the QLC plays a larger role than supporting academic coursework. Getting past the fear of math is an important life skill. “If students leave here without quantitative literacy, they won’t be able to understand mortgages, credit cards, or how their student loans work. It’s crucial when a doctor is explaining health risks,” she said. “I don’t think that you can understand information and make decisions effectively without it.” —EG 10 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 MILESTONES Writers in focus Poetry Center marks decade of readings and meetings with poets If “poems have their own faces,” as former U.S. poet laureate Robert Hass told a capacity crowd in Weinstein Auditorium, then it might be informative to look closely at the faces of the poets themselves. Photographer Margaretta Kuhlthau Mitchell ’57 has done exactly that, and this fall her striking black-and-white photographic portraits of dozens of contemporary poets hang in the Book Arts Gallery in Neilson Library. Hass and Mitchell were on campus in October to celebrate the opening of the exhibition and to launch the tenth anniversary of Smith’s Poetry Center. In some ways, Mitchell’s photographs, which are part of her 2006 book The Faces of Poetry (University of California Press), provided the framework for the Poetry Center’s tenth season, noted Poetry Center Director Ellen Doré Watson. Most of the poets coming to campus this year are featured in Mitchell’s book, including Hass, Aleida Rodriguez, and Elizabeth Alexander, who is founding director of the Poetry Center. Alumnae also are playing a prominent role in the anniversary celebration. An alumnae reading in November featured Gail Beckwith Mazur ’59, Eve Grubin ’92, and Gina Franco ’97, and a “Back to Our Roots” reading in December included alumnae poets Meredith Martin ’97 and Abe Louise Young ’99, as well as Elizabeth Alexander and Karl Kirchwey, a former Conkling Poet at Smith. To recognize the importance of poetry in the lives of alumnae, the Poetry Center Web site has put out a call for poems written by published alumnae poets. More than twenty poets have contributed so far. The anniversary year will culminate with an all-alumnae reading on April 22. The Poetry Center began in 1997 as a proposal by Annie Boutelle, senior lecturer in English language and literature, to create a program to bring an ongoing stream of poets to Smith. Since then, renowned poets like Seamus Heaney, Adrienne Rich, Billy Collins, and Mary Oliver have come to campus to give public readings and to meet with students. In reflecting on the role of poetry, Boutelle writes, “We humans know that poetry is mystery, that it speaks what cannot otherwise be spoken, and that it connects to our deepest selves.”—EG VIEW OF MY ROOM Don’t box me in a pink canopy hangs over Cassie Chao’s bed, a growing collection of Hello Kitty dolls fills a shelf, and posters of beaches around the world cover one wall. Cassandra Chao ’10, longtime figure skater and occasional model, is a girly girl, right? Well, yes, but that’s only half the story. Look at the other wall of her Park House room and a more complete picture emerges. Hockey jerseys—some from her favorite team, the San Jose Sharks, and some that she’s worn on various teams in the United States and Taiwan—are draped like wall hangings. She also displays a puck with a handwritten message that explains a lot about her: “Hockey Barbie.” “My room is a place that reflects my passions and outlooks on life,” says Chao, an economics major who plays forward and serves as vice president of the A study in contrasts, Cassie Chao’s room is dominated by Hello Kitty on one side, hockey gear on the other. Photographs by Bob O’Connor JUDY ROBERGE Cassie Chao ’10 defies categories–and her room shows it Smith ice hockey team. She may be passionate about hockey, but she’s just as enthusiastic about her Hello Kitty collection. In addition to the dolls, including one in pirate garb that she got on the black market in Taiwan, Chao displays a string of Hello Kitty lights, a Transformerslike Hello Kitty fan on top of her dresser, and an inflatable Hello Kitty airplane hanging near her bed. “I’ve been collecting since childhood,” she says. “People see [Hello Kitty gear] and get it for me, so my collection keeps growing.” At heart, Chao sees her room as a place where categories fall by the wayside. “People don’t see me as someone who plays hockey because I wear makeup and high heels,” she says. “But I didn’t want to prove myself to others. I wanted to prove to myself that I could play hockey and still keep my girly side intact.”—AN ’08 Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 11 OF COURSES Consider the source Seminar examines resources from different points of view one bottle of water, two vastly different perspectives. Maybe even an argument or two. That’s what transpires as sociologist Leslie King and biologist Paul Wetzel bring their own disciplines to bear in their first-year seminar, “The Science and Policy of Food, Water, and Energy.” Consider it another breach in the boundaries between academic disciplines. “One goal of mine with this class is to introduce students to the idea that different fields have different ways of After collecting the food waste, the next step is to weigh it. 12 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 thinking about things,” said King, an associate professor whose expertise is in population policies and environmental sociology. “We disagree quite a bit, and in front of the students,” said Wetzel, a wetlands ecologist and lecturer at Smith. “Some students don’t like that at all, but I want them to know there isn’t just one right answer.” The course takes its main topics—food, water, energy—and examines them from a number of different First-year students Kelly Pyle, Darcy Dwyer, and Tess Zinnes survey diners at King/Scales about food choices, and then measure how much they throw away. angles. For instance, in the case of bottled water, as the instructors write in the course catalog: “A geologist might wonder about the underground aquifer where the water originated. A chemist might muse on its chemical composition or the process through which petroleum products were turned in to the plastic used to make the bottle. And a sociologist might ask who benefits from the sale of a product that was formerly a public good.” The class came about as King was considering an intro class to a potential major in environmental science and policy, which is now offered only as a minor. A three-year National Science Foundation grant gave her the funds to launch the class last year. That first class, Wetzel and King noted, had several activist students who took what they were learning about the environmental consequences of America’s love affair with bottled water and combined it with their growing skills in persuasive memo writing. The result was a strongly worded memo to President Carol Christ, urging her to reduce the amount of bottled water Photographs by Kathleen Dooher [campus notebook] distributed on campus. “The one small step of switching from disposable bottles to reusable coolers and bottles will stand as a symbol to the students and college as a whole that Smith is serious about sustainability and that they should be, too,” the students wrote. [See below.] “A big theme of this class is ‘where do water, food, and energy come from, where do they go, and what are the consequences of our use of them?’” King said. This year, the class took on the issue of food waste in Smith’s dining halls. Working in teams of three, the students spent one dinner hour weighing the amount of food discarded both by students and the kitchen staff. Results from their study, and perhaps some recommendations, will be shared with Dining Services. “Studying issues like this helps ground them here at Smith, and helps students become citizens of this community,” King noted. “I want students to think about the choices they make,” Wetzel said. “Whatever they do, it ripples like a stone in the pond, from their lifestyle to the natural environment.”—EG ON TAP: REFILLABLE BOTTLES With throwaway bottled water the latest object of environmental scrutiny, a new accessory has hit the campus: blue, hardplastic refillable bottles. Smith’s Dining Services handed out the bottles—emblazoned with a Smith logo and dangling from a carabiner—during fall registration and encouraged students to Illustrations by Jackie Besteman Sociologist Leslie King and biologist Paul Wetzel look at resources differently. FYS 147 READING LIST Books for this course trace the history of our use of natural resources. Odds-on minor The math department has changed its name to the Department of Mathematics and Statistics as a way to recognize one of Smith’s newest minors. Statistics may have its roots in math—its director is math professor Katherine Halvorsen—but it is an interdepartmental program that can be applied to such varied disciplines as biology, economics, social sciences, and engineering. Coal: A Human History, Barbara Freese (Perseus, 2003) Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World, Mark Kurlansky (Walker & Co., 1997) Oil on the Brain: Adventures from the Pump to the Pipeline, Lisa Margonelli (Doubleday, 2007) Water: A Natural History, Alice Outwater (Basic Books, 1996) refill them with tap water. The effort accompanies the renovation of Chapin Hall’s Grab-and-Go lunch site, where bottled water was part of the lunch selection. Now the dining room is equipped with new filtered tap-water faucets so students can fill their own. According to students in last year’s seminar on “The Science and Politics of Food, Water, and Energy,” Smith was buying about 5,500 cases of bottled water a year, and would save more than $32,000 by replacing it with tap water.—EG Media artists A forward-looking new minor, arts and technology, aims to create leaders in the emerging field of media arts, in which computational skills are blended with a student’s interest in visual arts, dance, music, theater, or film. Faculty in the program’s advising group come from the fields of computer science, art, engineering, and music. Five medals The campus will pay tribute to five accomplished alumnae on Rally Day February 20. Receiving the Smith College Medal will be advocate for female prisoners Irene Cebula Baird ’45, priest and health-care pioneer Anne Clayton Brower ’60, American Chemical Society president Catherine Hunt ’77, early-childhood educator Lella Gandini ’78, and U.S. Rep. Tammy Baldwin ’84. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 13 WOMEN’S HISTORY Power of the past KATIE GEIS Gloria Steinem ’56 joins Sophia Smith Collection’s 65th birthday party Who better to lead a conference titled “The Power of Women’s Voices” than one of the most recognized voices for women’s rights? Gloria Steinem ’56 was on hand to help the Sophia Smith Collection (SSC) celebrate its sixty-fifth birthday in September. As she spoke about the future of feminism, Steinem acknowledged the critical role of the collection in capturing and documenting the history of the women’s movement. “Knowledge of the past is the first necessity to knowing its future,” Steinem told a capacity crowd in Weinstein Auditorium in September. Conversely, she noted, “the loss of memory is the root of oppression.” The theme of recalling the past also encompassed the debut of the Voices of Feminism Oral History Project, a new archive in the SSC that documents the histories of activists in previously underdocumented areas, such as labor and anti-poverty activism, lesbian rights, and anti-racism. “All ethnicities, working-class women, lesbians, women of all categories have taken part [in the women’s movement], not just elite white men and women,” said SSC director Sherrill Redmon. “We wanted to correct the record.” The oral history archive joins 575 collections of primary source material, including the newly processed YWCA Records, the Living U.S. Women’s History Oral History Project, and the newly received Women’s Music Archives.—AN ’08 14 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 FACULTY OF NOTE Grace notes Retirement is music to this professor’s ears Pianist Monica Jakuc ends her Smith career with a series of recitals. pianist Monica Jakuc, the Elsie Irwin Sweeney Professor of Music, is celebrating her final year at Smith by performing the music she loves on the kinds of instruments that have become her trademark. Jakuc retires this June after a thirty-nine-year career at Smith. Early in the fall, she performed a series of three concerts, all intended to showcase an 1819 Graf replica fortepiano, which was made for her in 2003. The Sage Hall performances included an all-Schubert concert featuring the So- nata in C minor. In November, she performed on solo piano with the Smith College Orchestra. Her official retirement concert on February 24 will feature Jakuc on fortepiano and modern piano along with music department colleagues playing the Dvorak Piano Quintet, a yetto-be-named piece by a woman composer, and a meaningful tribute. “The special work on the program will be my first performance on fortepiano of Morningside, a musical portrait of me by Scott Wheeler, one of the first students I taught as a young faculty member at Smith in the days when we also taught Amherst College students,” she said. Jakuc regularly delivers lecture-recitals on women composers and has been a featured artist at International Association of Women in Music concerts. Her latest CD, Fantasies for Fortepiano, features pieces by Mozart, C.P.E. Bach, Haydn, and Beethoven. In retirement, Jakuc intends to continue playing with the Arcadia Players, an early music ensemble, Photograph by Leah Fasten Sculptor’s honor Elliot Offner, the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities Emeritus, received the National Sculpture Society’s Medal of Honor, its highest award, last spring during a celebration at Brookgreen Gardens on Pawleys Island, South Carolina, where a sculpture center was dedicated in his name. The Elliot and Rosemary Offner Sculpture Learning and Research Center at Brookgreen Gardens will house and display a large sculpture collection and will also allow public research access to the works. Lifesaving research A vaccine and new drugs to wipe out a tropical parasite, one that is responsible for infecting more than 150 million people, are possible outcomes of an eleven-year research project undertaken by Smith biologist Steven Williams. In 1994, Williams, the Gates Professor of Biological Sciences, began sequencing the genetic code of the filarial parasite, a worm that spreads the deadly virus elephantiasis in tropical countries. Solving the worm’s genetic code eventually involved seventy-one researchers— twelve with connections to Smith—whose names appear at the top of their paper in the September 21 issue of the prestigious journal Science. Distinguished alumna President Carol Tecla Christ received Yale University Graduate School’s highest honor, the Wilbur Lucius Cross Medal, on October 9. The medal is presented by the school’s alumni association to a small number of alumni in recognition of their distinguished achievements in scholarship, teaching, academic administration, and public service. Christ, who earned her doctoral degree in academic administration and English literature from the graduate school in 1970, gave a talk titled “Mapping a Career in the Academy.” [smith time] PHOTOGRAPH BY GABRIEL COONEY, COURTESY OF SMITH COLLEGE ARCHIVES and teaching on a smaller scale. “I look forward to playing concerts in living rooms, as dinner concerts, at museums, in salons, and in large and small halls,” she said. “I very much look forward to having more time to pursue these special interests, and also to enjoy my new husband while we’re still both healthy and strong.” THE YEAR: 1984 a robust american economy lifts the campus as plans proceed for several major construction projects. The Sophian also reports: Big names visiting campus include author Madeleine L’Engle ’41, who speaks at second-semester convocation; presidential hopeful Jesse Jackson, whose message at Helen Hills Hills Chapel is “to retire the repressive Reagan regime”; and the Dalai Lama, who speaks on education and enlightenment at John M. Greene Hall. Focus on teaching Glenn Ellis, associate professor of engineering, can add U.S. Professor of the Year to the growing list of awards that pay tribute to his innovative approach to teaching. Ellis, whose scholarship includes developing effective teaching models, received the award November 15 in Washington, D.C. from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. “We want our students to take control of their own learning,” he said. In 2006, Ellis was honored at Smith with the Sherrerd Prize for Distinguished Teaching. A dramatically improved job market will greet the class of ’84, especially in the fields of engineering, education, and finance. Students stage a sit-in to protest the college’s decision to convert Hover House, a coop, into an annex of Parsons House. Elsewhere, the dining room closes in Dewey House, and Oak House closes, with plans to turn it into a house for Ada Comstock Scholars. President Jill Ker Conway announces her intention to resign in 1985, saying, “Ten years is about as long as anyone can do this kind of job creatively.” Trustees approve plans for an indoor track and tennis facility to be built on the site of existing outdoor courts. Students Margaret Broenniman ’85 and Maura FitzPatrick ’85 [in photo, above] are hailed for successfully swimming twentyfour miles across the English Channel. One student describes a Mountain Day Quad riot, in which trees are strewn with toilet paper and music blares late into the night, as “a nice release of tension.” The college bills the Quad houses for the cost of cleanup and a case of TP. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 15 STUDENT LIFE Alternative Friday night fun Group creates weekend events for ‘non-big-drunken-party’ people Pumpkins get a makeover during a Friday night slumber party. one friday night in September, Paulina Do ’10 was walking through the Campus Center when a room filled with dozens of students working with bright fabrics caught her eye. Not quite an hour later, Do was putting the final touches on her masterpiece—a padded bulletin board decorated with intricate fabric designs and red ribbon. It was a good thing she acted quickly because within half an hour, all the craft supplies were gone. All semester long, students have come out to the novel activities offered by Smith To-Do, a Student Affairs– sponsored organization that provides alternative late-night, non-alcoholic entertainment on Friday nights, said Kelly Johnson ’08, who heads Smith-To-Do. “Pat [Connelly, assistant director of student activities,] said students always came up to him, saying, ‘There’s nothing to do on campus,’” Johnson said. “There were wild things, like a ‘Sex and the Beach’ party, but those are things some people don’t want to be a part of.” Johnson, a self-described “nonbig-drunken-party person,” thinks up imaginative and sometimes off-the-wall events, including a cookie bake-off, a singing bee, a zen garden workshop, and a Halloween slumber party. One event, a pajama party, complete with milk and cookies and bedtime stories read by President Christ and other administrators, garnered so much buzz that Johnson has planned another one for the spring, with professors as storytellers. She’s also planning a Little Mermaid party at the swimming pool. “Smith students are really creative, but that creativity is usually poured into writing eight- to ten-page papers,” she said. “Here, they can be creative without doing the work. We provide everything.”—AN ’08 DIVERSITY Arts through the lens of race Otelia Cromwell Day focuses on contributions and obstacles in American culture Aaron Dworkin JUDY ROBERGE what if the label for a museum painting included not only the title and artist but also what previous viewers thought of the piece? Would it change your opinion of a painting of a colonial-era merchant and slaveholder, for instance, if the tag had bold-faced letters within it that spelled out “D-I-R-T-Y M-O-N-E-Y”? That’s what studio art major Sophia LaCava-Bohanan ’08 added to one label as part of the Museum of Art’s I.D. Tags project, organized for the Otelia Cromwell Day celebration of “The Arts in Col- 16 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 or.” She was part of a committee that wrote alternative tags that reconsider artwork through a lens of racial identity. LaCava-Bohanan focused on portraits of wealthy colonialists. “It was important to me to recognize that although they were upstanding in their time, they took part in practices that I don’t agree with,” she said. The Otelia Cromwell Day celebration in early Novem- ber also included dance, music, film, and theater. At Sage Hall, the color barrier in classical music was addressed by violinist and MacArthur fellow Aaron Dworkin, who described the work of his Sphinx Foundation in bringing music education to underserved schoolchildren. “Our mission is to increase the representation of black and Latino musicians and audiences,” he said.—EG Photograph by Tanit Sakakini Q&A A lesson in objectivity Student documentary puts spotlight on Iraq veterans Last year, Meaghan Nanson ’08 ran a Google search for a journalism internship with the Portland Mercury, an independent community activist newspaper in Portland, Oregon. What ultimately caught her eye, though, was a link to a fellowship with the Northwest Institute for Social Change, a summer documentary filmmaking program in Portland. She took a risk and joined the fellowship program; that leap of faith changed her from aspiring journalist to dedicated documentary filmmaker. Nanson, an American studies major, explains her summer project, a film about Iraq war veterans titled Yellow Ribbons: What It Really Means to Support the Troops, and her thoughts about social change. What was your background in media and film before the fellowship? I had a background in journalism and I was convinced that was what I wanted to do. [For the fellowship], I had a choice between writing or documentary filmmaking and I saw filmmaking would include writing, so I decided to have some fun with it. I fell in love with it. Was this documentary a collaborative effort? n In Yellow Ribbons, Iraq war veterans and their families talk about the effects of the war on their lives. I worked with three students, which is probably the bare minimum I’d feel comfortable going into something like this with. We all learned as we went along. I don’t know what I would have done if I didn’t have someone to fall to pieces with; we had no idea what we were doing. Did your preconceived notions change during filming? One notion was shattered after Photograph by Jacob Sherman I interviewed [one officer in particular]. I went in thinking he’d be a total jerk, not on the ground and not caring about lower-level soldiers; we wanted to make him a bad guy. But when we talked to him, he turned out to be a genuinely nice man. I still don’t agree with everything he said, but I learned that people will act based on what they think is right. He really came from a good place. I struggled with that, with not letting my views into the film and just letting the audience decide. That was really hard for us to overcome, being antiwar and trying to be as apolitical as possible. A war supporter could watch the film and want to help as much as a liberal would. Some say Iraq war veterans have received less attention because of the lack of a draft. Do you think this is true? I do. This is such a high-profile war, but no one is focusing on the people involved. All vets have a fear of being forgotten. John, the main veteran in the film, started crying when he talked about the vets begging on the side of the road. It’s the only time he broke down. You can see it in their faces and hear it in their words; they’re so scared this will happen to them. What do you want people to get out of Yellow Ribbons? I’d like people to realize that enacting social change doesn’t need to feel overwhelming. Sometimes it’s as simple as keeping a group or event in the public consciousness to prevent the tragedy of more forgotten members in our society. I hope we can all learn to separate issues from the people who get caught up with them. We forget that humans are out there witnessing travesties and they will need help dealing with the repercussions for years to come.—AN ’08 Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 17 PRESIDENT’S PERSPECTIVE CAROL CHRIST Their moment in history A generation of women leaders shaped culture and the way we educate young women today with the presidential candidacy of Hillary Clinton, a great deal of attention is focused on issues of gender and leadership. But equally interesting is the intersection of gender and generation, a potent combination if you look at prominent women on the American stage today. Heading many of our most powerful institutions and corporations and shaping our arts and culture are a number of women who began their postcollege lives in the 1960s and the 1970s: • Speaker of the House NANCY PELOSI (Trinity ’62) • U.S. Representative JANE LAKES HARMAN (Smith ’66) • Television anchor and journalist DIANE SAWYER (Wellesley ’67) • Brown University President RUTH SIMMONS (Dillard ’67) • Harvard University President DREW GILPIN FAUST (Bryn Mawr ’68) • Ogilvy and Mather President and CEO ROCHELLE (SHELLY) BRAFF LAZARUS (Smith ’68) • Senator HILLARY CLINTON (Wellesley ’69) • University of Pennsylvania President AMY GUTMANN (Radcliffe ’71) • New York Times President and CEO JANET ROBINSON (Salve Regina ’72) • Xerox Chairman and CEO ANNE MULCAHY (Marymount ’74) • Secretary of State CONDOLEEZZA RICE (University of Denver ’74) • Secretary of Labor ELAINE CHAO (Mount Holyoke ’75) • CARE President and CEO HELENE GAYLE (Barnard ’76) • Oxfam America Chair JANET MCKINLEY (Smith ’76) These women shared a formative historical moment. They came of age, as I did, at a time of social activism, in which college students played pivotal roles. They experienced the civil rights movement and the movement to end the war in Vietnam. They were the first generation with the opportunity 18 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 to join the Peace Corps. As young adults, they felt that they could have a powerful voice in shaping history. Those of us who entered the working world in this period also belonged to the first generation of women to realize the benefits of the feminist movement. When we left college, we had greater access to the graduate and professional degrees that our intended careers required. Between 1965 and 1975 the number of women in law school increased from 2,500 to 27,000. In 1962, fewer than 300 women received MBAs; twenty years later, female MBAs numbered 17,000. In 1963, only 991 women were awarded PhDs; by 1983, that number had increased tenfold. Degrees and credentials in hand, educated women in the ’60s and ’70s entered a professional workplace whose gender composition was changing rapidly. Even as they disavowed labels—a woman writer, a female law partner—they knew themselves to be members of a new cohort. Within a decade—roughly from 1970 to 1980— women’s expectations about the role of work in their lives evolved dramatically. They—we—were the audience for Gloria Steinem ’56’s Ms., the purchasers of the dozens of re-printings of The Feminine Mystique that followed its publication in 1963. “It changed my life,” Newsweek columnist Anna Quindlen [Barnard ’70] writes in the introduction to the most recent edition of the book. “I am far from alone in this.” Many of today’s women leaders—far more than one would expect from simple proportionate rep- Recruit Remarkable Students • Albuquerque, NM • Central Pennsylvania • Corning, NY • North and South Dakota • Hudson County, NJ • Jacksonville, FL • Lubbock, TX • Nebraska • New Hampshire • Toledo, OH • Long Island, NY Alumnae Admission Coordinators and many other Smith alumnae volunteers enjoy helping the Admission Office recruit the best and brightest class for Smith every year. International volunteers worldwide are particularly sought. To volunteer, or for further information on how you can help, contact: Laura Matta, administrative assistant, 413-585-2512, or e-mail smithaac@smith.edu. Smith relies on alumnae to interview prospective students, administer book awards, and attend college fairs. Operating within local Smith clubs or alone in areas without clubs, this volunteer force spans the globe. And, of course, Smith provides the necessary training and support. PRODUCED BY THE OFFICE OF ADMISSION I n s p i r a t i o n e v e r y w h e r e Produced by SCMA resentation—are graduates of women’s colleges, and of the Seven Sisters in particular. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the students at the nation’s leading women’s colleges experienced a heady mix of an institutional philosophy that gave exclusive emphasis to women’s aspirations and potential and a historical moment at which opportunities for women were expanding. It provided a unique crucible for women’s leadership. The world our women’s college alumnae are creating—whether as CEOs, university presidents, acclaimed authors and playwrights, Cabinet members, members of Congress, and, possibly, as president of the United States— is the world for which we, today, are preparing their daughters. It is a world far more welcoming to women leaders than that of the 1970s—and yet one in which, as a 2007 Catalyst study found, gender stereotyping in corporate workplaces continues to foster the mindset that the default image of a leader is the image of a man. During Family Weekend 2007, three pairs of mothers and daughters reflected on the paths of women’s lives in relationship to a women’s college education. Chilton Davis Varner ’65, a senior partner at an international law firm, was joined by her daughter Ashley (Bryn Mawr ’94, Smith MSW ’99), an oncology social worker at Johns Hopkins University. At the conclusion of a rich discussion that ranged from topics of friendship and family to ambition, independence and self-reflection, a parent of a current student asked the panel for advice. How, she said, could she best convince a doubting grandparent about the relevance of a women’s college education today. Chilton’s response, echoed by Ashley, was unhesitating: “Anyone who thinks that women have fought and won all the battles to have equal access and equal opportunity is just mistaken,” she said. “A Smith education will make your daughter, her granddaughter, so much more competent and confident, more inquisitive for all that life can offer her and all that she can be.” “And I still feel that,” she emphasized, “after forty years.” Q interested in contributing? Below are just a few areas that need Alumnae Admission Coordinators: From Classic & museum shop to Classy 413.585.2760 Elm Street at Bedford Terrace Northampton MA w w w. s m i t h . e d u / a r t m u s e u m Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 19 By Jennifer Maddox Sergent ’91 Photographs by Chris Hartlove Shewon’t back down Some say she’s too tough, but Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76, head of enforcement for the Securities and Exchange Commission, remembers well the lessons of Enron. Her aim is to safeguard the integrity of the U.S. investment market 20 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 when linda chatman Thomsen ’76 became director of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement division in 2005, news reports hailed the woman who led the department’s Enron investigation for her brilliant mind and grace under pressure. Both qualities have served her well, especially this year, as the SEC has come under attack from top business groups and Congress for creating an overly litigious and regulatory atmosphere Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76 reviews documents in her office at the SEC’s Washington headquarters. 21 that they say is destroying American competitiveness in world financial markets. Indeed, these days Thomsen finds herself navigating a political mine field. Three major reports—sponsored by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce; Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg; and the bipartisan Committee on Capital Markets Regulation—all called for reforms to securities litigation. Meanwhile, Congress is trying to roll back financial auditing requirements for small companies under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which was passed in 2005 to keep corporate accounting in check. It’s a surprising shift from the early days of Thomsen’s tenure, when her office was on a high, having spearheaded several successful fraud investigations against huge companies such as WorldCom, Enron, and Adelphia Communications [see sidebar, p. 25]. “It’s a difficult time to be in [Thomsen’s] position,” admits Barbara Roper, director of investor protection for the Consumer Federation of America. “After everything that followed on the heels of Enron Smith bio Name: Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76 Major: Government House: Tyler Most influential professor: The late constitutional law professor Leo Weinstein. “He’s always been a rock star. Hands down.” A lesson I learned at Smith: “You can get stuff done. You can do anything if you want to—with a lot of help from your friends.” 22 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 and WorldCom, the SEC was encouraged to be very aggressive. All of a sudden, the rules changed. The business community sees this as their last opportunity to reshape regulatory policy and rein in enforcement, rein in litigation, before President Bush leaves office.” To her credit, Thomsen hasn’t given in to the pressure. Rather, she’s remained steadfast in her commitment to ensuring integrity in the corporate community. “It’s very hard to find an enforcement director who is more dedicated,” says Jim Cox, a securities law professor at Duke University. “She’s a tough enforcement person and she doesn’t back down.” Thomsen’s appointment two years ago made her the first woman to lead the enforcement division, a feat she accomplished after spending ten years working her way up through the ranks of the division, which is the SEC’s largest. Under her direction, the enforcement division monitors the activities of a complex and vast web of investors, brokers, and corporate CEOs to ensure they comply with the nation’s securities laws. Thomsen’s staff of 1,000 investigates reports of fraud, and she has the final say whether there is enough evidence to file a civil lawsuit against the companies and individuals who are accused. The Justice Department steps in if criminal charges are involved. Though Thomsen, as the public face of the enforcement division, has been at the receiving end of barbs from the business community, she welcomes the discussion and considers the public debate an opportunity to get her message of corporate responsibility across to a larger audience. She does that by using familiar references Thomsen doesn’t get a lot of free time, but when she does she enjoys reading, walking, and cooking. that bring the complex and divisive into a more neutral zone. For example, in June, when Thomsen spoke to the Stanford Law School’s annual Director’s College for corporate board directors and senior executives, William Shakespeare was her muse. Reassuring the group that the recent uproar was not unique, she cited the bard’s oftquoted Sonnet 59: “If there be nothing new, but that which . . . hath been before.” Earlier, in March, after the publication of the business groups’ critical reports, Thomsen invoked Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz as she spoke to the Corporate Counsel Institute. “Like most of us, [Dorothy] had a hard time coming to terms with her own role and responsibility for the jams she found herself in,” Thomsen said. “What do these reports have to do with Dorothy? First, it does seem there is a bit of blaming everyone else for business’s issues and looking to anyone else to fix them.” Thomsen’s technique is highly effective, says Joseph Grundfest, a former SEC commissioner who teaches law and business at Stanford. “She relates abstract and difficult legal concepts to everyday life. She has a gift of being able to speak in a straightforward and direct manner,” he says. “She has the capacity to relate to just about everyone. Being charming apparently doesn’t hurt.” When asked about her colorful analogies, which have also included references to the film Jerry Maguire (“Show me the money!”), Thomsen laughs. “I’m not funny. I can’t do the classic ‘tell a joke’ in my speeches. This is what I do,” she says. “We’re talking about big themes, and you want people to remember the big themes.” inspiration for her own law career struck early, when Thomsen was a high school student in Long Valley, New Jersey. A history assignment required her to use original source material for her report, such as old newspapers, deeds, Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 23 “Investing in securities is how people build their dreams. It builds their houses. It pays their college tuition. More households are investing in the market than ever.” and town records. In doing her research, she says, “I discovered the Warren court and decisions about free speech and civil rights and criminal rights. I read the cases and was hooked.” At Smith, she took a class with the late Leo Weinstein, who taught constitutional law and would become an important figure in Thomsen’s life. “He not only introduced me to Socrates but became my personal Socrates,” she says. Yet, securities law in particular never crossed her mind, even at Harvard Law School, where she studied under the “legendary Louis Loss,” who had worked on the SEC staff during the agency’s early years and personally wrote a landmark rule governing the enforcement process. “I was going to do deals. I didn’t see myself going into government. I didn’t see myself going into securities,” she says. But in 1995, after two tours at the law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell, interrupted by a stint with the Maryland attorney general, Thomsen found herself looking for a job that would allow her to litigate more cases. Connections through a friend and former colleague led her to the SEC, a place that 24 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 she says has provided her with the kind of interesting, complicated, and substantive work she was looking for. “[The SEC] has a mission I am proud to be part of,” she says. ensuring the nation’s trust in its financial markets hasn’t always been easy. She bristles, for example, at complaints that her division is filing too many lawsuits and maintains a meddlesome regulatory framework. The fact is the SEC brings about 600 cases a year. That is in the midst of 6,000 broker-dealers, 660,000 registered representatives, 10,400 registered investment advisers, 8,000 mutual fund portfolios, 9,000 hedge funds, and 13,600 companies that file reports with the SEC. “Against those numbers, it’s hard to say 600 is too many,” Thomsen says. Indeed, despite the uproar from the business community, enforcement cases are down this year, and there are doubledigit declines in the number of securities class-action lawsuits being filed, according to Jim Cox, the Duke professor. The reason for that trend, Thomsen argues, is that the penalties for fraud have become sufficiently harsh to deter companies and individuals from committing it in the first place. For Thomsen, who lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland, with her husband, Steuart, and two children, Martha, 22, and Will, 17, that kind of oversight speaks to the larger concept of protecting people’s lifestyles. Investing in securities, she says, “is how people build their dreams. It builds their houses. It pays their college tuition. More households are investing in the market than ever.” The indelible image of scores of Enron employees leaving their offices for the last time, boxes in hand, retirement accounts obliterated, brings home “the reality of the harm that this [fraudulent] conduct can cause,” she says. Looking ahead, Thomsen expects her division to focus on an alarming rise in reports of insider trading, which hasn’t garnered much attention since the “greed is good” days of the 1980s. “Many of these new insider traders are literally too young to have learned the lessons of Ivan Boesky, Dennis Levine, and Michael Milken,” she says. “We in the enforcement division will remind them.” Also on her radar are the extensive actions brought recently against companies for illegally backdating stock options to enrich top executives. In the meantime, though, Thomsen continues to defend the controversial Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which requires companies to audit and certify their yearly financial statements. “[The act] will prove itself to be seminal legislation,” she says. She’s just as optimistic about the long-term effects of her division’s work in enforcing all the other securities laws under its purview. In a speech at Smith earlier this year, she reminded her audience, made up mostly of alumnae in the law profession, that the country’s regulatory and enforcement strategies are being adopted around the world. “If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” she said, “then our securities regulation and enforcement regime is being honored with the highest possible accolades.” Q Jennifer Maddox Sergent ’91 edits specialty publications for Home and Garden Television. GETTY IMAGES « the sec’s investigation into enron, which was led by Linda Chatman Thomsen ’76, resulted in the prosecution of former Enron CEO Kenneth Lay and nearly $440 million in settlements to defrauded investors. Making their case Here are a few of the highprofile cases the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement division has prosecuted in the past five years. Thomsen led the Enron investigation. She was not necessarily involved in all the cases. » Enron, 2002 Under Thomsen’s leadership, the SEC brought actions against more than two dozen Enron officials for participating in a massive fraud to mask hundreds of millions of dollars in company losses by falsifying financial reports and lying to investors and analysts about the company’s financial health to prop up the stock price. Former chairman and CEO Kenneth Lay knew the truth about the losses and sold $90 million worth of his stock at inflated prices that did not reflect the company’s true value. Former president, CEO, and chief operating officer Jeffrey Skilling also sold stock at artificially high prices to make about $63 million in unlawful profits. All told, the SEC has a fund of $440 million worth of settlements, and in April a distribution agent was named to distribute the money to defrauded investors. misrepresented financial results “to thereby enrich themselves and keep their jobs.” A final judgment ordered HealthSouth to pay $100 million in civil penalties. » Adelphia Communications, 2002 » Tyco Interna- The SEC said the cable television provider illegally excluded more than $2.3 billion in debt from its financial statements by hiding it in off-balance-sheet affiliates. Company founders, the Rigas family, and two senior executives were accused of lying to investors about the number of Adelphia subscribers and the health of its operations. The accounting firm Deloitte & Touche was charged for improperly auditing Adelphia during this time, and it later paid $50 million into an SEC fund to compensate victims of Adelphia’s fraud. » HealthSouth Corporation, 2003 In four separate actions, the SEC charged HealthSouth former CEO Richard Scrushy and eight other executives for overstating company earnings by at least $1.4 billion over four years. The SEC said Scrushy and his colleagues falsified and tional, 2005 Tyco was charged with overstating its earnings in the late 1990s and early 2000s by at least $1 billion. In addition, former CEO L. Dennis Kozlowski and two other top executives were charged with dealing themselves hundreds of millions of dollars in secret low-interest and interest-free loans, which they used for personal expenses, such as buying multimilliondollar vacation homes. The executives then “covertly caused the company” to forgive tens of millions of dollars worth of those loans without disclosing that fact. They were also accused of selling millions of dollars worth of stock while the self-dealing was going on. Tyco ultimately paid $50 million in civil penalties. » Insider trading ring, 2007 In March, the SEC announced the largest prosecution of an insider-trading ring since the days of Ivan Boesky. The agency charged ten people, three hedge funds, and a day-trading firm for exchanging and trading on thousands of insider tips over six years, generating at least $15 million in illegal gains. Michael Guttenberg, a managing director for UBS Securities, was at the heart of the alleged ring. Also implicated were Randi Collotta, an attorney in Morgan Stanley’s compliance department, and Erik Franklin, a portfolio manager for a hedge fund at Bear Stearns. Guttenberg was accused of stealing information about upcoming UBS analyst upgrades and downgrades and sharing that information with others in the ring, who would then give him kickbacks from the resulting illegal profits. Collotta was accused of stealing confidential corporate acquisition information and sharing it, in return for kickbacks. In arranging the transactions, Guttenberg and Collotta were said to have used disposable cell phones, secret codes, and discreet meeting places to conceal their actions. Some of the cash was handed off in snack bags. —JMS Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 25 A site of sorrow and strength Sit dolorperos nim velenim vent adit, con venis nullandreet velit do enisse ming esed tat vel dolobor 26 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 By Floyd Cheung top: A memorial stands in the cemetery of the Manzanar War Relocation Center, where 10,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans were interned during World War II. GETTY IMAGES (2) bottom: The first group of 82 Japanese Americans arrives at Manzanar on March 21, 1942, carrying their belongings in suitcases and bags. ALISON YUM ’10 (2) Sixty-five years after nearly 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans were incarcerated without trial, a Smith professor and his students visit the Manzanar War Relocation Center and learn a lesson no textbook could teach them it was : on a Saturday morning last April. Yet even at that hour, as our bus sat parked in front of the Japanese American Community and Cultural Center in a section of Los Angeles called Little Tokyo, a student of mine turned to me and said, “It’s already worth it.” I knew what she meant. Before our journey to the Manzanar National Historic Site had even begun, we’d already learned so much. The previous night, my students and I had flown nearly 3,000 miles to join other travelers on a pilgrimage to Manzanar, where sixty-five years earlier more than 10,000 people had been incarcerated without trial in the middle of the desert in eastern California. We had imagined that this twoday, long-distance field trip would deepen our understanding of this event in American history, but we could not have guessed that so much would have been accomplished before our bus pulled away from the curb. The nine students with me were taking my class “Narratives of Internment.” Throughout the semester, we had been studying the history, politics, and prejudices that led to the incarceration of nearly 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans living on the West Coast and Hawaii. As part of the seminar, we examined the conditions of camp life itself, the resettlement process, the redress movement, the literature that came out of the experience, and the possible connections between World War II America and post–9/11 America. Every student had conducted research on a topic of her own choosing that related to the internment. Some discovered Eleanor Roosevelt’s attitude toward the internment, which diverged from that of FDR; what special rules affected biracial Japanese Americans, for instance that having a Japanese father increased one’s chances of being interned; and which collegeage women were able to leave the top (left to right): Elizabeth Seaton ’08, Huelo Dunn ’07, Floyd Cheung, and Thuy Le ’09 at the entrance to the Manzanar camp. bottom: A marker for where a garden once thrived under the care of internees. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 27 FLOYD CHEUNG (3) top: Alison Yum ’10 and Elizabeth Seaton ’08 help Thuy Le ’09 get through a barbedwire fence. middle: Selena Moon ’09 and Emma Thomas ’10 were among the participants in this year’s pilgrimage. bottom: Students from “Narratives of Internment” with Angela Myers-Rackleff ’02 (in hat), who hosted a tour of the Japanese American National Museum on the day after the pilgrimage. camps to study at Smith—for example, the writer Yoshiko Uchida ’44, author of Journey to Topaz: A Story of the Japanese American Evacuation. In class one day, we were discussing the ten camps and the fact that pilgrimages to some of them take place annually. Thanks to former internees and lifelong activist Sue Kunitomi Embrey and her allies, a pilgrimage to Manzanar has taken place on the last Saturday in April every year since 1969. Immediately, my adventurous students wanted to go. Knowing how much this trip would enhance what we talked about in the classroom, I told them I would look into it, but privately I wasn’t confident that I would be able to find the money for such a trip. My concerns were allayed, though, when Smith’s American studies program, along with the dean of the college’s office, agreed to finance our travel and lodging. So, on a chilly morning last April, we boarded a flight from Hartford and landed in Los Angeles, where a bus would take us the remaining 210 miles to Owens Valley, near the Sierra Nevada. Before boarding our bus, I pulled my students aside and reminded them that while we had learned a great deal about the internment, that knowledge might only have begun to prepare us for this journey. In all probability we would meet former internees and others who were on this pilgrimage for less academic reasons than the ones we had. I urged them to be respectful, to engage with fellow travelers when appropriate, and to listen to the stories they might hear along the way. And there were so many stories. Almost immediately, our fellow travelers began to question us: who were we, why were we there, why had we come so far? One of my students must have said that she was from Smith because the woman next to her soon began telling her how her grandson had wanted to attend an East Coast school but instead had been persuaded by a full scholarship to enroll at Whittier College, a small liberal arts college near Los Angeles. This piqued my personal interest, because I had graduated from Whittier myself. Soon, my student’s new companion offered that she, too, had gone to Whittier, but under very different circumstances than I or her grandson. At the beginning of World War II, she had been attending the University of California at Berkeley. Two months after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered all Japanese and Japanese Americans to “evacuate,” as the government put it. This included retirees in the twilight of their lives, men and women in the prime of their lives, and young people in college or just starting out, as well as children and 28 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 infants. All were deemed potential enemies and saboteurs. Two-thirds of them were U.S. citizens. For this woman, life was “interrupted” (her word) by internment. She described the living conditions at the camp, softening the harshness of some of the details with humor. She told us how, after the war, she got married and fast became caught up in the work of raising a family and rebuilding her community. Later, she managed to finish her education a class or two at a time over a twelve-year period at Whittier College, which she said allowed her to attend classes for free. Her perseverance awed us and taught us that the value of an education isn’t always measured by how much you pay but rather by how hard won it is. Of course, I engaged with anyone who approached me. Some wondered about my heritage. Was I Japanese American? “Floyd? Hmmm. That’s a good Japanese name,” said one man. “No, I’m actually Chinese American,” I responded. “I came to this topic as a professor of Asian American studies.” If someone looked vaguely interested in talking, I would ask, “So, is this your first time on this pilgrimage?” This question always started fascinating conversations about their motives, memories, and experiences. On the drive, I spoke to a former internee who had volunteered in the U.S. Military Intelligence Service (throughout the war, Japanese-speaking soldiers were needed to translate and do other work, in spite of the fact that their relatives were sent to camp—a painful irony). I listened as he told me that a uniformed Japanese American soldier could not walk around alone without a Euro-American escort, lest he be mistaken for an infiltrator. I silently doubted whether similar measures had to be taken with German American or Italian American soldiers. At another point, I struck up a conversation with a former internee who had left camp when he was a young boy. He told me that he had buried his marbles at Manzanar and intended to try to find them on this, his first trip back. His wife, meanwhile, teased him about losing his marbles. My student was right, these simple, but extraordinary stories had already made the trip worth it. when we drove past a sign that read “Manzanar War Relocation Center” and into the camp, the bus, which for the past four hours had hummed with conversation, quieted. Near the entrance were two stone sentry buildings, among the few surviving buildings from the internment era. I could only guess what this portion of the journey was like for former internees. As we passed dozens of parked cars and pulled in next to six or seven other buses, I realized that no one had chartered a Greyhound bus, the company that had been employed in 1942. No one wanted the layers of memory and experience to overlap in that way, at least. In spite of discomfort and pain, the pilgrimage did raise opportunities for confronting the many complicated and conflicting meanings of Manzanar. Our host, Vicky, informed us that the Manzanar site had once been home to Paiute and other native peoples; that European settlers established apple orchards there; that “Manzanar” means “apple orchard” in Spanish; that the orchards were ruined when the city of Los Angeles diverted water from the area; and that the government hastily built barracks to hold about 10,000 internees there. After the war, the government used some of the buildings for storage and sold off others. Eventually, the site was abandoned. Over time, very little remained on the site save for a few foundations, the sentry houses, and a memorial obelisk at the camp cemetery, whose Japanese-language inscription reads, “Soul consoling tower.” On a makeshift stage near the cemetery, veterans and resisters, internees and their descendants contributed their own memories, and music and performances deepened our experience. Taiko drummers and bagpipers played first. A one-man band with harmonica, guitar, tambourine, and voice led us in a rendition of “Sukiyaki,” a surprise hit in America in 1963, since its lyrics were all in Japanese. An interfaith service combined Buddhist, Christian, and Muslim rituals. We felt thrice blessed. And more than one speaker linked the incarceration of Japanese Americans without charge in internment camps with the incarceration of alleged terrorists without charge at Guantanamo. “This should give us pause,” said one speaker, before adding, “No, this should make us shudder.” As a final gesture, all of us joined in an ondo dance, a Japanese folk dance normally performed in unison. The novices among us did our best to imitate the movements of others. Picture us, out in the middle of the desert, in 91-degree heat, dancing to the sounds of taiko drums. on the way out of the site, my students and I took time away from the main group to talk and reflect. We walked along a camp road, noted the locations of firebreaks, and thought about how many internees had used this road to enter, traverse, and ultimately, leave the camp. We recalled in particular the story of Ko Wakatsuki, the father of Jane Wakatsuki Houston, author of Farewell to Manzanar: A True Story of Japanese American Experience. When the camps were ready to close after the end of World War II, Ko Wakatsuki drove his car up and down these firebreaks and this very road, kicking up dust. To keep his dignity, he spent precious money on a used car to spirit his family away from Manzanar rather than take government-provided transportation. “No bus for us,” he had yelled. My students and I also resolved to take a picture by the entrance sign. When we got near the sign, we realized that we would have to climb through a barbed-wire fence. Full of exuberant, youthful energy, my students helped each other get through, and we took several pictures before running back to the bus. Later, I hoped our blithe movement through the barbed wire wasn’t seen as a disrespectful gesture by those who remembered the fence as a restriction on their freedom. Almost immediately, however, I recalled that near the end of internment, the photographer Toyo Miyatake took his son and two other boys out to the fence and had them climb through for a photograph titled “Boys Behind Barbed Wire.” By this point, camp administrators knew that their Japanese American charges were not a threat and Miyatake in particular was to be trusted (though in the beginning he had to smuggle in a camera lens, since it was considered contraband). Miyatake positioned his camera on the camp side of the fence and photographed his subjects on the other side looking in. One of them grasps a wire on the fence. It is a picture about reflection on both what was lost—freedom and innocence—and what was lived—almost four years full of good, bad, and mundane events. That early picture already began to play with the border of internment in terms of space and perspective. The pilgrimages that take place there annually also transform the meaning of the site. While the program certainly brings back painful memories, it also builds unity, strengthens resolve, and even fosters joy. America itself is a palimpsest of contradiction—loss and gain, injustice and opportunity. The pilgrimage reminds me that we can either ignore the past or choose to face it in all of its complexities, draw strength from any source that we can access, and, most important, through our participation in public life transform the present through the stories we tell and actions we take. For me, from beginning to end, the trip was worth it. Q Floyd Cheung is an associate professor of English language and literature and American studies. READING LIST ‘Narratives of Internment’ CITIZEN 13660 BY MINÉ OKUBO An artist, Okubo was interned at Topaz in Arizona, where she kept a sketchbook and journal, which she revised into Citizen 13660. Published in 1946, Okubo’s book integrates wryly drawn images and understated prose, giving us one of the first personal accounts of the internment experience. NO-NO BOY BY JOHN OKADA While his family was interned at Minidoka in Idaho, Okada voluntarily joined the U.S. Military Intelligence Service, working as a radio interceptor and Japaneselanguage interpreter. With remarkable empathy, Okada’s novel, No-No Boy, tells the story of a Japanese American man who had refused to serve in the U.S. military and who, after the war, must find a way to reconcile his choice with society and himself. FAREWELL TO MANZANAR: A TRUE STORY OF JAPANESE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE DURING AND AFTER THE WORLD WAR II INTERNMENT BY JEANNE WAKATSUKI HOUSTON AND JAMES D. HOUSTON Interned as a young girl at Manzanar in California, Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston recalls in this memoir— with the aid of her coauthor and husband—the consequences of internment for her own identity formation and her family’s economic, social, and psychological wellbeing. WHY SHE LEFT US BY RAHNA REIKO RIZZUTO Rizzuto, the daughter of a Japanese American mother and Italian-Irish American father, learned about the internment when her mother invited her to go on a pilgrimage with her to the camp where she was held as a child. Inspired by this experience, Rizzuto wrote the novel Why She Left Us, which traces the effects not only of internment but also the silences that surround it. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 29 Momentum on her side he past several years haven’t exactly been friendly to the women’s movement. For starters, in 2001 the Bush administration closed the White House Office for Women’s Initiatives and curtailed funding to the Women’s Bureau in the Department of Labor. Not to mention the ongoing efforts—some of them successful—to chip away at reproductive rights, curb women’s ability to file claims for discriminatory pay and hiring practices, and gut the safeguards provided under Title IX of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits gender discrimination in federally funded educational institutions. Recent efforts to undermine women’s rights have inspired Kathy Rodgers ’70, president of a leading women’s advocacy group, to educate women about their history and encourage them to harness their collective power on election day By Debra Michals Photographs by Joshua Paul 30 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 The women’s movement is alive and well, says Kathy Rodgers ’70, shown here in Legal Momentum’s New York offices. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 31 Mention these setbacks to Kathy Rodgers ’70, president since 1995 of the highly visible women’s rights and advocacy group Legal Momentum, and she’ll admit that these have been troubling times for women’s rights, but she doesn’t let that fact overshadow the immense progress that has been made in the past three decades. “I prefer to take the long the needs of immigrant women. “We’re the only women’s organization involved in immigration reform and the only ones thinking about domestic violence and sexual assault in terms of immigrant women, who don’t always have access to, and may fear using, the services provided to other domestic violence victims,” Rodgers says. “Many of the barriers women face are intrinsic to our government and institutions. But the arc of history is reaching toward something better.” view and focus on the successes—and there have been enough of them to keep us going,” says Rodgers, a self-proclaimed “eternal optimist” who makes it a point every quarter to note with her staff where the organization has helped make a difference. And that it has done in spades. Since its founding in 1970, Legal Momentum, which was formerly known as the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund, has been one of the most visible forces advancing women’s legal rights, especially in the areas of employment, Title IX, and reproductive rights. Legal Momentum, which has offices in New York and Washington, D.C., works to broaden perspectives and set policy agendas through legislative reform. The organization played a major role in the passage of the landmark Violence Against Women Act (1994) and the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act (1994), which virtually stopped violent demonstrations at reproductive health clinics across the country. In the past eight years, it has fought hard to hold on to rights the Bush administration sought to eviscerate, namely Title IX. In addition, Legal Momentum takes up to seven cases a year—free of charge—that address employment and housing discrimination affecting victims of domestic violence; discrimination against women working in male-dominated fields, particularly firefighting and the skilled trades; and sex discrimination in government-funded programs. The legal team selects its case list from nearly a thousand requests a year, often referring those that don’t fall within their focus to other legal resources. Staff also act as advisers, writing briefs and offering technical assistance in other gender litigation as well. As of late, the group has been a leader in recognizing 32 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 As president, Rodgers has created a stronger identity and wider support base for the organization. That was partly what drove the name change in 2004. “We did some research and discovered that nobody born after ’74 knows what a ‘legal defense and education fund’ is,” she explains. “We also knew that while we have a historic connection to NOW, we’ve always been a separate organization.” Adopting the moniker Legal Momentum not only ended the confusion and brought in younger supporters, but put the focus on forward motion: “advancing women’s rights,” rather than simply holding ground. hat rodgers, who was president of her senior class at Smith, ended up on the front lines of the women’s movement isn’t all that surprising. She may have wavered between a career in law or chemistry during her early Smith days, but a job in a research lab as a student— where she witnessed pervasive sexual discrimination—quickly pointed her in the other direction. She majored in American history, then headed to Columbia Law School. In the mid-1970s, Rodgers became a labor law attorney on the management side in an era when sexual discrimination cases began to test the promises of Title VII, which prohibits employment discrimination. “Part of my job was not just to defend management, but to make them aware that they had to obey the law,” she recalls. From there, she spent fourteen years as the general counsel at Barnard College from 1981 to 1995, before becoming president of Legal Momentum. “I absolutely feel shaped by the times in which I grew up,” says Rodgers, who was raised in Boundbrook, New Jersey, the youngest of three children Milestones of a movement Women: A Celebration of Strength is no ordinary book; it’s actually a mini-museum, complete with pop-ups, pullouts, documents, and other exhibits that offer a walk through the milestones, leaders, and events that have marked progress for women since the first women’s movement in 1848. The book is part fundraiser for Legal Momentum’s efforts to advance women’s legal rights and part call to action about the work that remains to be done. Written in clear, simple language and beautifully illustrated and designed, the book seeks to reach women and girls of all ages, which explains the use of pop-ups and other “realia”—reproductions of documents and letters like Lucy Stone’s Marriage Statement of 1840 arguing for more equality in marriage and the Declaration of Rights and Sentiments, considered the spark for the women’s movement in 1848—that you can pull from sleeves within related sections. There’s also a brochure, “50 Key Cases for Women’s Equality, 1973–2006,” and a pop-up of a corset that marks milestones in fashion and the arts. Despite all of the book’s graphic bells and whistles, its underlying mission is fairly straightforward: to illustrate how women advocated to change the restrictions and laws that kept them from gaining an education, competing fairly for jobs, participating in sports, finding a place in the military and politics and the justice system, and living free from violence—all issues that Legal Momentum directly addresses in its work. “We see the book as a way to brand our organization and start a conversation that tells women that we’re out here, and if you care about these issues, we’d like you to join us,” says Kathy Rodgers ’70, president of Legal Momentum. The idea for the book began to take shape after a conversation about how Legal Momentum could have an impact on the 2008 presidential election. The staff saw the answer in telling the story of how women have come together to make change. “We wanted to celebrate that history but also point out what’s left to be done and encourage younger women to get involved,” Rodgers notes. That’s why, front and center, the book’s cover bears the message, “Women, use your vote.” Lynn Hecht Schafran ’62, who shelved her usual duties as national judicial education program director for Legal Momentum, worked as primary writer and coordinator to get the book out quickly. She and her team started researching in fall 2006 and writing by year’s end. “We wanted the book to be fun and inspiring,” Schafran says. “It’s empowering to see the women who have come before you, and that you can be a part of that legacy, too.” Adds Rodgers, “It’s not just a history book; there’s a message, which is that there is more to do, and you, reader, have to help if you want progress to continue.” —DM Women: A Celebration of Strength is available for $49.95 at www. legalmomentum.org. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 33 with a stay-at-home mom and corporate executive father who commuted into Manhattan. (Her sister Nell Rodgers Beaumont is a member of the class of 1967.) In particular, she remembers being inspired by John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address, in which he gave his famous call to action: “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” “I was in high school when he gave that speech, and it really resonated,” Rodgers says. “You thought about how you were going to Smith bio Name: Kathy Rodgers ’70 Current occupation: Lawyer and president of Legal Momentum Smith major: Art history Smith house: Talbot Most memorable Smith professor: Peter Rose, Sophia Smith Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Anthropology. “He shared his research from his travels about other cultures and how they work. It really got me thinking and made me understand that everything doesn’t have to be the way we do it now in the United States.” Smith taught me: “That I had to go after what I wanted, and if I did, I could probably get it.” 34 make this country a better place.” Her Smith days reflected the political tumult of the times. She recalls anti-Nixon protests on campus because Julie Nixon was a member of her class. Also vivid are memories of the clandestine systems that existed for finding abortions for students who needed them when it was still illegal. These days, Rodgers continues to heed President Kennedy’s call as she attempts to counter the attacks on women’s rights in the legislature and the courts. “When the ’06 elections happened, we said we’re tired that women’s issues and priorities are not even part of the public conversation,” Rodgers says. The solution: LM’s own campaign—Legal Momentum 2020—to put women’s issues front and center in the upcoming presidential election, through both a speaking tour and publication of a book, Women: A Celebration of Strength, meant to inspire women and girls by showing in vivid detail what women have achieved in spite of the odds [see sidebar, p. 33]. “We did major national research and tested the issues that men and women care about, and lo and behold, they are the issues we’re working on: violence against women; equal pay for equal work; access to higher-paying jobs for women, such as in construction, which can pay $25 to $30 an hour; securing the health of women and girls,” Rodgers explains, adding that while Legal Momentum is pro-choice, she wants the media to broaden its understanding of feminism beyond simply linking it to abortion rights. When she thinks about the future of the women’s movement, she has high hopes, especially given the current research, which she says shows that while some people may shrink from the word “feminist,” most people believe in equal rights and equal treatment. “The movement is alive and well, even if we’re in a time of transition. We’re discovering that many of the barriers and stereotypes women face are deep-rooted and intrinsic to our systems of government and institutions,” she says. “Our challenge now is to find new approaches and new solutions. But the arc of history is reaching toward something better, however slowly.” Q Debra Michals, Ph.D., is a writer living in Massachusetts. She is currently working on a history of women entrepreneurs and a novel about love and madness. Her profile of Devin Alexander (Renee Simone) ’93 appeared in the Fall 2007 issue of the Quarterly. *T4NJUIPOZPVSUPEPMJTU 9OURGIFTTO3MITHREACHESBEYONDTHELISTOFTHINGS TODOTODAYTHISWEEKTHISYEAR #ONSIDERTHEIMPACTOF3MITHINYOUROWNLIFEANDHELPOFFER THATOPPORTUNITYTOANOTHERGENERATIONOFTALENTEDWOMEN 5IF4NJUI'VOE 5IJOLPGJUBTBDIBODFUPDIBOHFUIFXPSME 'IVESECURELYONLINEBYPHONEORBYMAIL WWWSMITHEDUTHEFUND OPTION 4HE3MITH&UND %LM3TREET .ORTHAMPTON-! 4HISADWASPREPAREDBYTHEOFlCEOF!DVANCEMENT#LOCKBY3TEVEN"RONSTEINOF "LACKTHORNE&ORGE6ERMONTCOURTESYOF$ON-ULLER'ALLERY.ORTHAMPTON-! update alumnae Your classmates want to hear about you. To share your news, write to your class secretary; she must send her column to the Quarterly by February 15, May 15, August 15, and November 15. Members of classes without secretaries should send their news directly to the Quarterly. 1930 ELIZABETH OLNEY MILLER writes, “I am alive and well and live in a retirement home with many delightful and interesting friends and a great variety of entertainment and activities. I have two sons, both physicians (one whose wife is a Smith graduate); several grandchildren (one a fourthyear student in medical school); and three great-grandchildren. I am very blessed.” Quarterly Office, Alumnae House, Northampton, MA 01063 1933 MARGERY DAVIS BOYDEN writes, “I am very happy to be a member of Mary Woods, a retirement community. We are a very congenial group from all over the United States—mentally active and enjoying the beauty of a large campus adjacent to the Willamette River. I am still involved in my Portland reading club, which meets weekly. We take turns reading aloud and discussing affairs. I have given up driving; I am still painting and exhibiting. Life is still full of exciting opportunities. I can still get to my beach house in the summer.” For myself, I have never forgotten a lesson learned from Philosophy 101 at Smith: Always think of things in terms of the whole. This is the greatest lesson Smith gave me, and my guiding light in all my thinking all my days. Thanks, Smith! Sec., Alice Brown McDonnell, 286 E. Calle Herboso, Green Valley, AZ 85614 1935 My husband, Bill, died peacefully here at Wake Robin, in Shelburne, VT, with his family by his side. Our son and his family, who live in Charlottesville, VA, now own our old house in Malletts Bay, VT. They bought it from us when we moved to Wake Robin, and spend a part of the summer there, easily renting the rest of the year. It was wonderful for my Bill and me to be able to go out to our old house that we built in the ’60s, and be together with all the family. Betsy Ferries, delightful daughter of my dear friend ELIZABETH ANN MCGAFFIN FERRIES, is very much a part of my 36 Alumnae in the Monterey/Carmel, CA, area gather to celebrate the 90th birthday of Barbara Bevan McGowan ’38. From left to right are Kathleen Boscardin Morrison ’68, Barbara Anderson Johnson ’50, Gay Fowler Reimann ’78, Karen Dunn-Haley ’78, Hannah Kirby Priestley ’58, Michele Grogan Williams ’87, and Barbara. life and visits often. She is married to Burlington’s former mayor, Peter Clavelle, and we all worked together when he ran for governor. While I have enjoyed being your secretary, I find I must resign my position. Please send your news directly to the Quarterly office. Written by Barbara Southall Dunnington Quarterly Office, Alumnae House, Northampton, MA 01063 1936 You may not remember HELEN SAPIR LARSON, as she didn’t finish at Smith. Instead, she spent a semester at the experimental Black Mountain College before its artist-alumni became famous, then finished her BA at the University of Chicago. She reports that she took a trip to San Francisco to visit her son John and his wife. She says air travel makes her dizzy, so she probably won’t try it again! One of my best memories of Helen includes a view of her standing at the end of a railroad track atop a mountain— Mount Tom? Mount Holyoke? Do any of the rest of you have memories of Mountain Day? How about sharing them? JUNE BETTS LYMAN, our quite faithful correspondent, admires New Hampshire’s beauty. She would like to volunteer as class secretary, but says, “I am too busy writing another book (at 93) and painting for an art show.” Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 As for me—no news. My health stays stable. Motorized wheelchairs (like the Jazzy) are a great invention! I have enjoyed some visits from nieces and nephews. I have added a few reminiscences in this column—send yours in, too! Although I’m no longer class secretary, I’ll relay any news you send me, until (and unless) someone else volunteers. Written by Kathryn Parke Quarterly Office, Alumnae House Northampton, MA 01063 1937 Here is some catch-up news on those who registered for our 70th Reunion but were unable to join us on campus to celebrate that remarkable event. Not being peas in a pod, we recognize that we are experiencing these nonagenarian years differently one from another. Unanticipated changes in plans frequently do occur. JOAN WISE KAUFMAN’s son had emergency surgery early in Reunion week, so her daughter-in-law had to take care of him rather than drive Joan to Northampton and serve as her aide. Her son recovered quickly, but Reunion was over by then. Joan plays a lot of bridge and still enjoys painting. She used to work in oils, dropped that for drawing, and now has shifted to watercolors, which she loves. BETTY KINGSBURY RIPLEY’s life got back on track in June after a very difficult four months. It went awry in Febru- ary with her appendix bursting, which kept her in a coma for two weeks in the intensive care unit. While in rehab, she had a mini-stroke and a gall bladder attack. Since Betty couldn’t care for husband Rip, her son and three daughters moved him to Langdon Place, an assisted-living center in Keene, NH, where Betty’s brother and his wife live. Betty was well enough to join us for Reunion, but Rip died unexpectedly May 23. Then Betty had to have her gall bladder removed on May 29. Meanwhile the Ripley children removed all the accumulated treasures left at what had been the family homestead for 27 years and moved Betty into a ground-floor apartment with a garden at Langdon Place. Betty’s looking forward to clear sailing from here on out, and playing tennis again with her son. MARY CADLEY BURKE and daughter HELEN BURKE ’62 both missed their Reunions to spend three glorious weeks in Wyoming at the ranches of Mary’s other two daughters and their families. They all went for a long weekend into the Big Horn Mountains, an area devastated by huge forest fires in August that forced the evacuation of many residents. Mary keeps herself in shape with daily aerobic exercise in the pool; crossword puzzles, Sudoku, and bridge exercise her mind. In Mary’s bridge group, three of the players are over 100 (one is 103), and they always end their games with a glass of wine. DEBBY DAVENPORT WHEELER had her heart set on joining the Clark House gang of NANCY BROWN JONES, NICKY PHILBRICK TUCKER , WIGGY WEATHERS GRASSI, and BAR LYMAN MUSSELLS at Reunion. Although she had sent in her reservation and her picture was posted on a King House door, her doctor felt that Debby wasn’t strong enough yet after a hospital stay to attend. I didn’t catch Debby when I last phoned her, but a family member happily reported that she is doing very well now. At our class meeting during Reunion, we voted to retire all class officers and let the college take over whatever remains to be done. However, WIGGY WEATHERS GRASSI volunteered to continue the very successful memorial gifts program that she started at the time of our 50th Reunion, as she feels the personal touch of a handwritten note is very important. I also volunteered to continue as class secretary if you all continue to send me news items for our column! Sec., Nancy Merrick Gilbert, 3374 Meadow Ridge, Redding, CT 06896, gilbertnm@sbcglobal.net 1938 MARION (TOMMY) THOMPSON FULLER BROWN writes that she and her chil- dren have enjoyed 62 years at their beautiful Ram’s Head Farm in Maine. They have just donated their treasure to a land conservation trust. With the use of a walker and a cane she manages to get around. All her family visit frequently. Tommy continues to attend meetings of her favorite organizations: the York Land Trust, Old York Historical Society, Strawberry Bank in Portsmouth, and the Travel Advisory Commission. She says she is fortunate to have a young woman live with her who “does everything.” JANE ALLEN GOODWIN had a lovely 90th birthday celebration with family and friends. She says it was “a last hurrah!” She is experiencing macular degeneration. Other than that, she is doing well and sends her best to “all us old ladies!” DOROTHY KAUL LESLIE writes, “My faithful cleaning woman for eight years retired. The man who kept my house in repair for 23 years also retired. My gardener of 28 years died. These devoted people can never be replaced. So I know it’s time for me to make a change. When I find the right retirement community I’ll let you know.” BARBARA SALMON LONGFELLOW is still blessed with good health. Eighteen in her family will gather in Nantucket for her 90th birthday. In Vero Beach, FL, she continues to play golf and bridge. She also goes to lectures, the theater, concerts, and the beach, and is active in the Vero Beach Art Museum. She continues to be a director of the Minneapolis Museum of Art, and she travels a lot. HELEN SHAPIRO MAISLEN says she is blessed with fairly good health. She has her own home in a retirement complex. She is proud to have 12 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. She is fortunate to have a daughter living nearby. HARRIET EARLE O’DONNELL has given up her home and moved to a retirement community in Philadelphia, and is happy to have no stairs! She also has given up driving. LUCY DANFORTH PARKER lives in a retirement home near enough to Boston that she can attend Boston Symphony concerts. Sadly, she lost her husband, Brownie, in March. Her wonderful daughters live nearby. She plays in a string quartet occasionally and plays croquet and bridge often. JEANNE REIFF PECK lives alone in her home. Her main problem is an arthritic knee, which she hopes to have fixed soon so she can travel. ELEANORE AFFELDT PERLICK says all the family except three grandsons (who had to work) attended her 90th birthday. They all went to church and then gathered for brunch at a nearby restaurant in Milwaukee’s famous Whitnall Park, a huge flower exhibit park. Son Perry is a lawyer; daughter Linda just retired from teaching; Susan is still teaching English. The whole family loves the woods and lakes and summers in northern Wisconsin. EDITH BLAKESLEE PHELPS’s daughter, JUDITH PHELPS FELTON ’65, writes that her mother is in a long-term care facility and is in poor health and very frail. CATHERINE (PEGGY) POLK RABUT is fortunate to still be living in her home of 58 years, and to be surrounded by her husband’s paintings. She sees her family often but has a busy life of her own—string orchestra, violin lessons, yoga, beach walks, gardening, folk dancing, and French conversation lessons. Peggy came out of retirement to do one more project with Global Citizens Network in Kentucky, working with 11 much younger women! Every October, Peggy attends an Elderhostel orchestra program in Hidden Valley, CA. CLARA TAPLIN RANKIN has moved to a small 1836 house four miles from her old farm. She says she has changed from a country mouse to a city mouse. One of the joys is having her eldest granddaughter next door. As her narrow property goes down to the river, she is able to have a small planned garden with evocations of her old Shipman garden. Clara, too, celebrated her 90th birthday surrounded by her family. ELIZABETH REED is one of the few not yet 90! Her village decided, after she served more than 60 years as their physician, that she was “The Most Prominent Citizen.” They gave her a big celebration. Over last Thanksgiving, NELL ANGLE RICHMOND’s whole family, 42 strong, gathered to celebrate her 90th. She says, “All goes well with me in my continuing-care facility. New friends and new activities—I like it!” JOAN HARVEY ROHAN still lives in the home where she was born in 1916, on the shores of Lake Michigan. Last June, her daughter Marcia was married in Racine. It was a wonderful family affair. Last Fourth of July, two loyal friends pushed Joan three miles in her wheelchair; they represented the Racine Coalition for Peace and Justice. Their T-shirts said, “Peace begins with us.” MARY WENTLING WALSH celebrated her 90th birthday will all of her seven children and many of her grandchildren. She sends greetings to all. Sec., Natalie High Loomis, 110 Preston Terrace, Marshfield, MA 02050, anahl@adelphia.net Sec., Bertine Niles Willis, 1103 Grove Street, Framingham, MA 01701 1939 ELIZABETH BROWN FIELDING is living in a retirement community after a career as a gerontologist and university professor. She is writing a novel concerning neo-Nazism based on her experience of living in Greece. Another interest is how to achieve peace and unity of religions. She even preached a sermon about it in her Episcopal church in September. ROSALIND LOUTREL JONES still lives in her house but doesn’t drive. Her favorite hobby is calligraphy. She has a granddaughter who started her first year at Smith in the fall. FRANCES BROWN TOWNES has published her book, Misadventures of a Scientist’s Wife, which explores her exciting married life of 65 years spent in many fascinating places with her scientist husband, a Nobel Prize winner. Her book is available through Amazon, or you can contact her directly. She has also been involved in many other interesting projects. Pres., Mary Cary Rea, 15 Piper Road, J201, Scarborough, ME 04074, mrea@maine.rr.com 1940 JANE GURLEY DENKER writes from her home in Wake Robin, a retirement community in Shelburne, VT, where 15 Smith alumnae currently live. Jane had a visit from the granddaughter of our late class president, JO BUCKINGHAM CANEY, who lives in San Francisco and works for Yoga Journal. PEGGY ERVIN CHILTON enjoys reading news of classmates. She continues to volunteer at the library in Coronado, CA, and sells used books in Secondhand Prose. Son Randy is head of the English department at St. Francis University in Joliet, IL; daughter Kate does production editing for Sage Publications and lives in Memphis, TN. SALLY WATERS FISHER’s 89th birthday was joyously celebrated with her family in Vermont. She suffered an unfortunate fall, however, which fractured her writing arm. Sally would love to hear from classmates. With sincere regret, I report that ALICE DUFFY RINEHART’s daughter called to inform the class of her mother’s death in June. Her obituary appears in this issue of the Quarterly. BARBARA HENDRIAN, who lives in Glen Ridge, NJ, is busy, content, and enjoying a wide variety of events in nearby New York City. I, BARBARA MELLITZ KRENTZMAN, celebrated my 88th birthday with friends and family in Natick, MA. My guests first participated in an informal reception at the Morse Institute Library, site of a retrospective show of my paintings, drawings, and poetry. Most of the work was gathered from the collections of my 10 grandchildren and other family members. Later, everyone enjoyed a delightful luncheon at a local bistro. It was great fun, and I was euphoric for days afterward. Sec., Barbara Mellitz Krentzman, 22 Lakeview Gardens #614, Natick, MA 01760, bkrentzman2005@ yahoo.com 1941 I, SIDNEY SMITH WALKER, your class secretary, attended a meditation retreat led by Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh. In September, I hosted the wedding of my granddaughter at the summer home where I was married in 1945. CHARLOTTE BREST SIEGEL’s husband died four years ago. After selling their home at Stanford University, she moved to the Hyalt Retirement Center. In the fall she closed her clinical social work practice. MAL RICHARDS WATSON still cuts four acres of grass and cares for her pool and tennis court. She has 13 grands and seven greats. NANCY KRUIDENIER SHEPARD enjoys her book club and investment group. She took a Riviera trip in August and plans another circumnavigating South America in January. KATHARINE HOBSON STURTEVANT lives at the Village in Duxbury, MA. CAROLYN COLWELL PALMER keeps busy quilting and making teddy bears to donate to firefighters and police, who give them to kiddies in stressful situations. Water aerobics and gardening get her outside. Her husband is still at home but is struggling with Alzheimer’s. The rest of her family is fine and happy in New Hampshire. LOUISE COOK SAWYER volunteers at the Whaling Museum Library in New Bedford, MA, and is active in the Funeral Consumers Alliance of Southeastern Massachusetts, whose board has worked to establish a green cemetery. SUE WESTHEIMER RANSOHOFF has been an oral historian for three years, interviewing people about their life stories. She writes, “I am quite a good interviewer but a so-so businesswoman. I keep forgetting to carry my business cards.” NANCY MARSHALL STREBEIGH enjoys life at Whitney Center near her son Fred, who teaches writing at Yale. She visited me on Mishaum Point in Massachusetts last summer. Sec., Sidney Smith Walker, 105 RiverMead Road, Peterborough, NH 03458, 603-924-4241, sidneysmithwalker@gmail.com 1942 Twenty-seven gallant members of the class of ’42 attended our 65th Reunion last May. ANN (POOH) MILLSPAUGH HUFF reports, “We had a delightful, but too small, Reunion weekend despite the inclement weather. (No need to worry about tennis!)” They were housed in Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 37 alumnae update Lamont, which she describes as “the perfect house, close to the center of campus with an elevator, a piano, and lots of dining space.” FREDERICA WOODALL ANDERSON, in charge of hospitality, came on Thursday to set everything up and welcome arrivals, with most classmates arriving on Friday. LUCILLE CHARRON RECORD brought flowers and hats. President Carol Christ welcomed them at the dinner that evening, and the class sang a special song to her to the tune of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star,” composed for the occasion by DOROTHY DOSTER FERGUSON. Ann continues, “Saturday morning dawned drizzly, and there was no possibility of a parade. We assembled indoors for Ivy Day and the festivities. After a picnic lunch at Lamont, our president, NANCY LAWSON BROWN, presided at the class meeting and JANE KOCHMANN BROOKS led our class service of remembrance.” The nominating committee, CLARE BEIRNE DEWART, chair; HARRIET BIXLER NAUGHTON; HILDA BOLSTER MASON; HELEN BROCK TOMB; LOUISE HUNN BARKER; and RUTH HIRSCH SILVERMAN (not all of whom were present at Reunion) had drawn up the following slate of new class officers: co-presidents, EDWINA GOLDING LATSON and HELEN BROCK TOMB; secretary, NEAL GILKYSON THORPE; class Fund agent, POLLY BENEDICT BOBROFF; special gifts, SALLY KINGSBURY MAYNARD and DORIS LOW HIRSCH; planned gifts, ANN (POOH) MILLSPAUGH HUFF; and memorial gifts, DOROTHY WATSON. All were elected. SALLY MAYNARD, our campaign chair, reported that 59 percent of our class contributed a grand total of $204,983 to the college. She thanked MARGARET KEELER WALLACE for suggesting that some of our annual contributions go to establish an Ada Comstock scholarship because the Ada Comstock program got its start during our years, and our class had played an encouraging role in the major social changes that the establishment of the scholarship program reflected. Of this year’s total contributions, $26,386 went toward the scholarship fund. The fund has gotten a late start, and she invited us to keep it in mind in future contributions. Others attending Reunion, in addition to those above, were HILDA BOLSTER MASON, ELIZABETH BOUGHTON NOLL, DORIS BRODER KOREY, LILY (NAN) BUCHANAN AGAR, MARGARET HELM LIGHT, NANCY LOWE BORNHOFFT, JANE MOORE LYONS, JANE NEWHALL LYONS (who came all the way from London), BARBARA RAUSCH DEELY, SUZANNE REED NEWTON, BETTY ROGERS RUBENSTEIN, CAROLYN SCOTT/DEJANIKUS, MARGARET STEWART MOSS, DOROTHY WATSON, and ESTHER WINN KREBS. Yes, there is other class news besides Reunion. BETTY-ANNE DAVIS SUNDERMAN, although not present herself, had thoughtfully sent presents of soap 38 for everyone at Reunion. was awarded the prestigious St. Olaf ’s Medal in recognition of her outstanding contribution to promoting Norwegian culture in the United States. ELSE HVISTENDHAHL LEVERING MARY LEAVELL JERMAN TOMPKINS moved into the same Richmond, VA, retirement community where her mother, who reached the age of 108, had lived for 15 years. May Mary Leavell live as long! In her note, she recalled our Reunion back in 1952, when a student modeled a bathing suit from 1903 that had belonged to HILDA BOLSTER MASON’s mother, also a Smithie. SARA PECK BOUCHER, who prepared an interesting questionnaire for the class, wrote a summary of its results, “The World at 86,” which was sent to all. Classmates anonymously but vigorously responded to the questionnaire from Hawaii to Alaska to London to Switzerland. To sum up, yes, we are still a lively bunch, both mentally and physically. Sara writes, “Your replies reflected our diversity, yet possessed a consistency of values and interests.” Our renowned classmate, physician and oncology researcher JANE WRIGHT, was the recipient of two honors this year. The American Society of Clinical Oncology, which now has more than 19,000 members, honored the seven specialists who founded the organization in 1964. Jane was one of those founders, served on its board, and was its first secretary-treasurer. Also, the American Association for Cancer Research established a minorities lectureship in her name. Congratulations, Jane! Your new secretary, NEAL GILKYSON THORPE, welcomed her first greatgrandchild, a girl, born in Philadelphia, in August. Please send me your news! Let’s keep track of one another: changes in lifestyle, changes of address, new greatgrands, and what you’re up to. Sec., Neal Gilkyson Thorpe, 109 Grace Street, Mont Clare, PA 19453, nealthorpe@aol.com 1943 GRACE BEEHLER joined a retirement community in Timonium, MD, six years ago and still enjoys it. ROSE BIRD WATERMAN sees BARNEY POOLEY MILLER frequently, as they both live at Crosslands. She lunched with MOLLY FAIRBANKS STAINTON, who lives nearby. Rose has three daughters, two in Arizona and one in Maine, as well as three grandchildren and one greatgrandchild. Her beloved husband, Ed, died two years ago at age 91, a great loss after 59 years of marriage. PRISCILLA BUCKLEY still skis in Gstaad, Switzerland, every winter, courtesy of two new hips, one new knee, and “lots of foolish pride.” Her latest book, Living It Up at National Review, is doing well. Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 In 2006, CONSTANCE BUFFUM COX moved from a retirement home in Milton, MA, to a different one in Providence, RI, where she is in the assisted-living section. Her vision is severely limited by macular degeneration. Her husband, Andrew, died in Jan. ’07. After teaching history at Dowling College for 20 years, YING-WAN CHENG has retired. She is doing some editing and has been to China four times with some Ginling College graduates. (Ginling was Smith’s sister college in China.) Having given up driving, she finds her activities are greatly limited. SALLY GAVIN SEE claims she gets older every day! Is this unique? She still plays Scrabble and bridge and reads a lot, and she is still in her big house on the beach. One granddaughter is at the University of Rochester; another spent last summer in Japan. In September, KATHERINE (KAY) GILLETT MCCLINTOCK and her husband marked the 14th year of their residence in their retirement village in Wallingford, CT, where they are happy and well cared for. Brower suffered congestive heart failure in 2001, and flunked hospice in 2002! Their children come to visit when they can from Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts. Brower maneuvers the endless corridors in his electric cart and uses a cane in the apartment. So far, Kay walks on her own. They are proud of their six grandchildren and one great-granddaughter. Kay wishes we could turn the clock back—“1943 was a nicer era.” MARTHA-LOUISE GODFREY MACDONALD and BARBARA BRANDT WOOD met at the Met in Jan. ’07 at the “American Painters in Paris 1860–1900” exhibition. Recent travels for Martha-Louise include Nevis, West Indies. Her youngest granddaughter was married in June. She reports good health, so far. PATRICIA GOSS RHODES has five children, their spouses, 14 grandchildren, three stepgrandchildren, three grandchildren-in-law, and seven great-grandchildren. Two artificial hips limit her activity. MARTHA GREGORY TOLLES and husband Roy have been living with their widowed daughter and her 15-year-old son most of the time. “It’s like going back in time,” she writes. “Suddenly we are going to games and matches, discussing homework, and watching American Idol!” Martha had two more stories published in the Los Angeles Times kids’ page. There is not much time for writing now. Because of the death of her son-in-law, Martha is especially conscious of our mortality, and she is glad to serve as chair of planned giving for our class. Putting money into a Smith fund that pays you until you die or leaving money to Smith in your will is such a great way to help our alma mater. ANN HAMILTON ANDERSON enjoys very good health for her age. She really likes living at Bedford Court: good friends, good food, and good concerts. Her grandsons are 13 and 11, and she says it’s fun to watch them change. After 17 years on the awards committee of the New England Wild Flower Society, BEVERLY HUSE RYBURN has retired. Grandson Blake graduated magna cum laude from Colby College. ADELAIDE (TORCHY) PATTERSON COUCHMAN lost her dear friend and golfing partner to a stroke. She still does real estate, volunteers for Smith, and is an airport ambassador at Palm Beach International Airport. She also still critiques movies with BARBARA DAWLEY MACDOWELL. BARBARA (WEBI) WEBSTER BROWN spent her 52nd summer in Isle au Haut, ME. MARY (MAC) WHITMIRE BROWN writes, “At the old folks home, we go early to golf and tennis in the hot weather.” She is a docent at the Telfair Museum of Art. Does anyone in our class have a copy of our 45th Reunion questionnaire? If you do, please send me a copy. Sec., Ellie Del Mar Revill, 460 Old Main Street, Rocky Hill, CT 06067, 860-529-9254, erevill@sbcglobal.net 1944 Greetings, everyone! Here’s this issue’s collection of your news. RUTH CHALMERS, our friendly and diligent fundraiser, sends warm wishes to you all as well as notes to pass along for this column. Ruth summers in Oroque, NY. ELSIE ANN LOCKE CHIVINGTON’s two dogs and two cats get her up in the morning. In addition to her animals, she finds it is good to have younger friends around to keep her equilibrium. BETTY FORT GREIG has an apartment in the Knollwood Retirement Home in Washington, DC, and has found “three Smith ladies” there. HELEN KAEMMERLEN LAWRENCE is “planting roots, staying in the same place” (Park Forest, IL). Helen’s granddaughter is a schoolteacher in Seattle. A book of essays on various aspects of the sculpture at the Abbey of St. Denis, co-edited by PAMELA ZINK BLUM (her specialty for years), is finally in print (Penn State Press). Congratulations, Pam! JEAN ALVORD continues to play viola with the Portland (ME) Symphony. She says that with this 47th year, she is “the last of the old ones.” Jean is delighted that her grandniece is now a Smith first-year. NANCY SMITH BREWSTER ’s fourth grandchild is now at Princeton. CHRIS CLAPP NAFF enjoys her retirement home in San Mateo, CA. She attends the symphony and is in a book club. Chris has also started a weekly joke club! MIMI BLACK SAINT JOHN has had to give up tennis and golf, but she still plays bridge. HELEN FORRESTEL SPINK has 15 grandchildren (12 girls and three boys). She is copying photos of her six sons for albums to send to them. She goes to Chautauqua in the summer. ALICE MURRAY WARD and Ned are in a semi-retirement home on a reservoir—Springton Village in Media, PA. ANNE HOWES TENNEY loves living in Castine, ME, where she has been for many years. She writes, “I count my blessings—a productive life in a beautiful place where I can welcome family visits, do useful volunteer work, and play some golf and bridge.” She adds, “Reach out and make new friends all along who are 10 years younger than you are to keep in touch with the world.” Anne has two sons and four stepsons (one in Washington, DC, and the rest around New England), one grandson, and seven granddaughters. The whole family vacations in Castine in August every year. KATIE GINDELE SCHMIDT writes, “I am still living alone in East Middlebury, VT, and keep busy with yoga, bone builders (weight lifting), and AAUW, and have just gone off the board of RSVP.” Katie volunteers for the local museum, but is most involved with Homeshare Vermont, which matches home seekers with home providers. Katie adds, “It’s a great service for older people who want to stay in their homes and younger people who can offer some services for an affordable place to live.” JEAN HARRIMAN PORTER says to say hello to everyone. She doesn’t get out much but thinks about us and would welcome news. From Lowville, NY, LILLIAN MOLLER BECKER writes that she enjoys staying in touch with people. Her interest in foreign policy and public affairs continues unabated, reinforced by public radio’s coverage of what goes on in the world. Lillian has a new grandson in Connecticut; her actress granddaughter is studying at McGill. ELLEN SAFFORD GOODWIN and George, now settled into their cozy Cape after years in their old colonial, are concentrating on the outdoors. A wonderful backyard with a meadow behind it and a conservation area behind that invite them to study (and add to) the flora and fauna at their doorstep. And, Ellen adds, “There’s the formal garden in front, and gardening is our thing.” She and George spent a week in London visiting CAROL TUTTLE CHRISTIAN and saw the Hogarth exhibit at the Tate. JANET MARCUS GINNS writes, “After having lived in Philadelphia for 54 years followed by nine in Princeton (during which Jay died), I’ve moved back to Boston (Chestnut Hill). My health so far is OK for my age, so I’ve opted for a condominium instead of assisted living. I have family and friends here, one of whom is DOROTHY BRAIDY RUDMAN.” FRANCES THOMSEN NYE and Bob, now married 59 years, still live in their comfortable 50-year-old house in the middle of Norwich, VT. Fran writes, “Life is quiet here, uncomplicated, and I really enjoy stacking wood!” One son is a geologist, one a neurologist, and a grandson works for Pixar movies (his latest is Ratatouille, about a rat who wants to be a chef ). Fran volunteers at the school library, which she started 50 years ago, and in winters takes an ILEAD course. Sister ELLEN THOMSEN WEISS ’41 has eye problems, but lives near enough for Fran to help her when needed. BETTY ROY MONTORI lives at Applewood, a CCRC in the midst of the Five College community, with numerous opportunities for recitals and lectures. Betty also takes a watercolor class. MARY-LOUISE KLIPSTEIN SEE and Alonzo still enjoy quiet retirement in Greenwich, CT, and keep up with their four granddaughters. In her absence, I talked about this with Alonzo. Mariana is still at Hockaday; Victoria is at Carnegie-Mellon; Perrin is at BU; and Megan, out of Harvard, is at Dataw Island, SC, with Turtle Watchers, rescuing endangered turtle eggs. There is now a great-grandson, Alonzo, 3. ANNE BIDWELL MINAFRA enjoys the Italian atmosphere of her apartment complex in Naples, FL—the Italian decor and the Italian food. She plays bridge and bingo and stays in touch with her large extended family of nieces and nephews as well as with MARY JANE ENGLISH SCHMITZ. Two updates of last year’s news: The scars left by Hurricane Katrina on BETTY HARPER CLAGGETT’s hearth and home (and community) have slowly healed. Her home has been re-sided, the roof repaired, the utilities restored, and community life resurrected, including the golf course. Betty still marvels at the tireless efforts of the many volunteers from all over the country who “put my town back together.” And SYLVIA BALCH THOMAS’s Olympic granddaughter, Margaret Hoelzer, in vigorous training with America’s A team for Peking, is now first in the world in the 200-meter backstroke. A special note from president LOUISE SEE BINGHAM: “We enjoyed spending the summer in the Maine woods surrounded by the beauty of lakes and mountains. Our big family event was our granddaughter’s wedding by the ocean in New Hampshire. Now as 2008 arrives, we have been reminded that we are to start thinking about our 65th Reunion. You will soon receive a letter with whatever we know at that time, encouraging you to stay healthy and plan to come. In the words of Garrison Keillor: ‘Be well; do good work; keep in touch.’” That’s all for now. Please check the “In Memoriam” section in this issue because some of us may be there. Thank you for the news you so willingly share; you are what makes this column what it is! Sec., Barbara Wiggin Gent, 3 Vinal Road, Harpswell, ME 04079, bvgent1@aol.com 1945 MIRIAM FREEMAN BLICKMAN lives in Advance, NC, near Winston-Salem. She recently returned from a Caribbean cruise and enjoys reading and playing bridge when at home. She has been reading the great Russian novels, and now is into Life and Fate. ANN GILDERSLEEVE SLOAN writes from her summer home at Lake Sebago, ME, that KAY WUERTH LYNN visited her at the end of June: “It was so good to see her! We had a delightful lunch in Naples, ME. I also had a wonderful visit with SHIRLEY CASS SMITH not too long ago. The last time I saw her was our graduation day! She is as beautiful as ever, and lives in Wallingford, CT.” MARY COCHRAN MOULTON lives in a Quaker retirement community in Sandy Spring, MD, where all those physically able are engaged in a variety of good causes. She writes, “Last summer, I downsized to an apartment from a large duplex. I have a rare condition called erythromelalgia, causing my foot to swell and burn. I get around in a motorized wheelchair and need to employ outside help.” ALICE GILMAN MARZLUFF writes that she and Bill have been married for 63 years, and are well and involved in civic and library activities. BARBARA CLEMENT BREWER’s husband died in March ’07. She lives in Brewster, MA, with live-in helpers for her arthritis. Her children live nearby. Her daughter works for a program for those with disabilities, and travels a great deal; her son works for Northwest Mutual Fund in Concord. MARY MCLAUGHLIN WELLINGTON lives in Chevy Chase, MD, with a son and four male children near, and a daughter who works in New York but owns a house nearby. LOUISE BULL CLARKE is still in the same house after 55 years, and has a lovely view of the Hudson Valley area. She enjoys the concerts in New Paltz, NY, and volunteers at the library. NANCY MOORE is still making music and enjoying her cello, which she took up at age 60—“to see how it works! The tone is beautiful!” She plays in ensembles with some of our classmates and goes to the Boston Symphony, where she sees MARJORIE COLLINS JACKSON. ELIZABETH HERRMANN COWIE is still in the house they bought in 1968. She retired this year from the Ramsey County Conservation Board after 20 years of service (she decided not to file for re-election). She says it has been interesting dealing with water quality and conservation. She now has a new puppy, a Cavalier King Charles spaniel, a toy breed. Her other dog is a 12-year-old English setter. She has eight grandchildren ages 2 to 24, and she and her family spend time at her cottage at the lake in Wisconsin, and use the cottage for skiing in the winter, and Christmas and holidays. She has a daughter in Minneapolis, a son in Los Angeles, and a son in Chicago. HENRIETTA HERNDON TWEEDIE teaches art history and painting at the College of DuPage Older Adult Institute in Glen Ellyn, IL. She takes many tours of seniors to enjoy opera, symphony, and art in other cities. She recently took 45 seniors to Seattle to see the Chihuly exhibit there. Her next trip is to Boston in the spring. BETSEY CONVERSE LEWIS, KAY WUERTH LYNN, and your secretary had a good time at lunch in Scarborough, ME, over the summer. It was such fun to get caught up. Do let me know what is going on in your lives! Sec., Carol Sibley Wolfe, 39 Babcock Drive, Rochester, NY 14610, carolynswolfe@yahoo.com 1946 HELEN BULLOCK PORTER recently moved into Eskaton Retirement Village, not far from her previous home in Fair Oaks, CA. It was a relatively easy transition since she already had friends and acquaintances there. “The hard part was clearing out surplus furniture and stuff before moving into much smaller quarters,” she says. ELAINE LAVAGNINO writes, “I succumbed to the Alumnae Association’s Smith Travel brochure and had a great two weeks in West Africa in February. Two younger Smithies were along, plus one professor, and the others were all Auduboners.” A letter from another Californian, MARY-BROOKS (BROOKSIE) LINTON, reports that she had another hip operation on the same leg. This worked in time for her to go on a trip to Slovenia and Croatia in May. “Beautiful countryside, mountains, seacoast, and energetic younger generation,” she comments. Brooksie ran into PRISCILLA ROBERTSON DIVINE in Concord, NH. She asks, “Do you all know that Julia Stiles in the movie The Bourne Ultimatum is the granddaughter of our recently departed RANDY HUNSAKER STILES?” I noticed a nice letter to the editor of our Maine Portland Press Herald from ALICE IGLEHART MCADAMS, who let me quote from it. The headline was “Kindness of a Stranger Shows Maine’s Quality of Life.” Alice was returning home from Boston by bus to Damariscotta and tried to call a taxi to no avail on her cell phone. She de- Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 39 alumnae update cided to attempt to walk the mile to her apartment, despite the fact that she has two artificial hips and, at 83, had not been doing much walking. As she started out dragging her suitcase behind her in a light drizzle, “a wonderful lady stopped and asked if I needed help. She did a U-turn, loaded my suitcase, and drove me home. She refused money, took my bag out of the car, and gave me a hug. Only in Maine would I have such an experience.” M. ELIZABETH (BET) HARRIS HILLI has been in a newly built retirement home for three years and says that it feels like a resort, with a swimming pool, etc. MARION THOMPSON KERWIN writes that she had a nice visit with MARIAN JACKMAN WARE when she was in Washington for her grandson’s graduation from medical school. She sees SUSAN DRIVER NICKERSON when she comes to town to visit her daughter. MARILEE RUMPF ONDRUS writes of receiving a copy of “A Celebration of Life” (via MARY LOWE PRICE), which MARILYN PIERSON PATTERSON had written as a tribute to recently deceased JEAN PETERSON RHODES , her Smith roommate. A happy great-grandmother is ESTELLE GLATT SOSLAND. Julia Brown was born in Sept. ’06, making Estelle’s daughter, AMY SOSLAND BROWN AC ’90, a grandmother. In May, Estelle became chair of the board of trustees of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, which has a new addition called the Block Building designed by Steven Hall. She encourages all who are interested to come to Kansas City and visit. Sister ELSIE PENDLETON REID writes that she isn’t doing much outside ministry anymore, but spends time at home preparing breakfast and making chocolate chip cookies. She helps out a 99-year-old sister by reading to her, most recently the 900-plus-page autobiography of Bill Clinton. Elsie hopes to be at our next Reunion. In Vermont, ARAXI ALLALEMDJIAN PREVOT had a visit from her eldest granddaughter, Misha, her husband, and their 3-month-old daughter, who is Araxi’s first great-grandchild. In April, Araxi returned a visit to the French Alps, also checking up on Misha’s three younger siblings, for whom Misha has been a “great substitute mom” since the death of Araxi’s daughter in an avalanche in 2003. Her son and family have a second home near her, with three teenagers attending nearby Burke Mountain School. Another daughter moved nearby. Araxi writes, “I keep busy maintaining this farm property and keeping physically fit. Mentally? I do a crossword puzzle every day and read as much as I can, though it’s slow going because of deterioration of my close-up vision. All in all, I feel very fortunate.” After attending Reunion and the 40 Harvesting cider apples in Whately, MA, are, left to right, Suzanne Rykken Medlicott ’49, Allison Bell ’79, Susan Medlicott ’84, Carol Berkley Hillman ’49, Jan Stenson ’72, and Ann Barker ’81. college graduations of three grandchildren, AUDREY WAITE ASHLEY continued to have a very busy 2006. She saw six plays in four days at the Shaw Festival at Niagara-on-the-Lake and attended an Elderhostel in Williamstown, MA, on the arts in the Berkshires. Summers she visits children: first son Stanley, a professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, outside of Boston; eldest daughter C. CHANDLER ASHLEY CLARKE ’79, near Belfast, ME; Lucy at their cottage on Lake Canandaigua; and Debby in Ellicottville, NY. Audrey took a trip to Jordan and Egypt in the fall. Last March, she went to Boca Raton, FL, and had a fascinating visit with LAURIE STEVENSON CAMPBELL and her two daughters, who run a huge farm. She adds, “I am saddened to see how close to the front of the class notes 1946 is getting to be.” BETSY FOWLER WARRICK writes about LAURIE STEVENSON CAMPBELL: “Distinguished as many of our classmates are, not many can claim the title of colonel. However, Laurie has been made a ‘Culpeper Colonel’ thanks to her past and ongoing activities in Culpeper, VA. Two other awards she has received are Outstanding Forage Producer and the June Sekall Media Award for the Virginia Soil and Water Conservation Society. Hats off to Colonel Campbell of Culpeper.” Many thanks to all who responded to my pleas for news. Keep it coming! Sec., Jeanne Caswell Clampitt, 25 Thornton Way #207, Brunswick, ME 04011, Clampitt@gwi.net 1947 Herewith the first column from your new secretary. I love e-mail and will use it instead of the costly postcards for anyone whose address is in the AASC file. I would love to have you use it at any time, even if you have not heard from me. A cautionary note, however, based on personal experience: A year ago I e-mailed news to Nancy, and somehow she never received it so, if I do not reply to your e-mail letter, I suggest you follow up Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 in some fashion. MARY (SIS) LENT AYER and John have moved to a condo in Skaneateles, one block from the lake and village, and urge you to visit that lovely part of central New York. Sis was very impressed with our class at Reunion: “So many vibrant, interesting ladies ages 80, 81, 82—all vivacious and friendly and fun to be with! And what fun we had singing around the piano and putting a show together!” SUZANNE BELCHER BUNZEL has recently been south to the Amazon and north to view the polar bears in Canada, which she says is a sad trip these days. Volunteer work with charter schools, gardening, and tennis keep her busy at home. JULIA BRUCE COYLE reports that her name should be added to the large group of us who winter in Vero Beach. She and Charlie have been going there for the past 10 years. CAREL BERRY LAPORTE writes that she and Cloyd are in good shape, still playing golf and traveling, and that she has a new granddaughter. Since 1953, GRACE GRIFFITH HOAG has lived in the same house, where she and Dave hold big celebrations with their five children, eight grandkids, inlaws, nieces, and cousins on holidays and special occasions. She does lots of crossword puzzles and takes yoga classes. She reports that her husband is doing well and keeps busy. Grace says, “We are blessed.” BETTY JANE HANNON JEROME has downsized to Stonington, CT, near kids and grandkids and Mystic Seaport, where she is a volunteer. MARGIE WILMORE JENKINS was sorry to miss our Reunion but avers that travel today is too much of a hassle. NANCY MCGOVERN WILLIAMS greeted her fourth great-grandchild in Colorado last June. While there, she visited Estes Park and toured Rocky Mountain National Park with two of her daughters. JOAN LEIMAN JACOBSON says that she is happy and well, but that her vision is poor. She serves on a number of boards in New York City. Jack is no longer doing surgery, but is busy, too. They recently traveled to Cyprus, Greece, India, and China. SHIRLEY REESER MCNALLY writes that life continues to be interesting. She attends Santa Fe Opera and visits MARY WITT WYDMAN at Mary’s summer home in Michigan. Shirley is still involved with church work, as well as several nonprofit organizations, and is looking forward to again working in language preservation with Native American groups. Last June, FAITH WILKOFF NUSBAUM and Sidney moved to a retirement facility on the Elizabeth River in Norfolk, VA. The river is part of the Intracoastal Waterway and is used for commercial shipping, Navy vessels, and pleasure craft, as well as cruise ships, so there is something of interest going on all the time. She says, “It’s like being on a perpetual cruise!” SALLY WALLACE RAND has moved from Pownal to a smaller house in South Freeport. She says that the house is perfect, and only a few blocks from MARIAN MORTON WHITE. JEAN LORD JONES’s granddaughter writes that Jean is “doing well but is not terribly social.” She is trying to keep Jean involved. Our condolences to ALLIE BERNSTEIN LOW and KAY GILLESPIE SACHS, who lost their husbands last spring. Oh, yes, my news that was mislaid last year: During summer ’06 I had a tiny but highly visible role in the Glimmerglass Opera production of The Pirates of Penzance. Elegantly costumed and crowned, but unbecomingly bewigged, I poured tea for the major’s daughters and waved from the royal box as Queen Victoria. It was a once-in-a-lifetime regal experience! Keep me posted with all your news! Sec., Barbara Harrison Mulhern, P.O. Box 746, Cooperstown, NY 13326, bhmulhern@aol.com 1948 It is not too late to sign on for our 60th, May 22–25, ’08. Come for a few hours, days, or the entire event. Our chair, SHIRLEY DUSINBERRE DURHAM (shirleydd5@aol.com), and her committee have a grand time in store for us all. Make every effort to come by car, train, or plane; you won’t be sorry. We all need to reconnect; it will be good for our souls (my favorite part of Reunion). I’ll be that person with a pad and pencil in hand throughout the weekend. Bring pictures, items you’ve made, stories to share about the good, bad, and whatever: marriages, children, the grands, volunteer work, political gripes, and business experiences. To start this off, here’s my latest venture into the unknown: I have a paid job (started in July) as monitor at the local senior center two afternoons a week. I have the distinction of being the oldest person on the Hanover, NH, payroll. I love what I do, which is to initiate new, more interesting pro- grams to attract the likes of all of you to join in. A serious challenge! At Reunion, I need your input on this subject, so be prepared. All suggestions more than welcome. SALLY THOMAS DEATLY, events chair for our 60th, writes that our motivation to return has been enhanced by PATRICIA BLEVINS TILL’s anticipated production of Full Gallop, a play that is relevant to our time and curiosity. Patricia’s acclaimed one-woman show will follow the class dinner on Saturday night. Full Gallop is the story of the reinvention of Diana Vreeland after she was precipitously fired from her beloved Vogue magazine. Those in class who have seen the play give it top marks. TERRY LACY is also invited to speak to us about her remarkable accomplishments in her adopted Iceland, teaching and writing, including two Icelandic/English dictionaries. Due to a former appointment in Latvia, we will have to settle for a video, which describes how understanding another culture and people has brought her personal growth and pleasure. At this writing, Eeyore is our mascot; vote pro and con at a daunting tie, 2 for, 2 against. Need more opinions before fate of Eeyore decided. I failed (due to too much stuff piled up in a corner—anyone else have this problem?) to pass on news in my last column from MARJORIE JAMISON DOUGLAS in Orangeburg, NY. Her dear husband of 55 years died in June ’06 after a 14-year battle with Alzheimer’s. Marjorie is still working full-time, assisted by her daughter, in their television commercial location house business. She has also just finished editing and printing out 318 pages of letters written from France by her mother, MARY CARR JAMISON 1909, during World War I, when she served in the Smith College Relief Unit. Travel plays a big part in Marjorie’s life: Italy and Greece in April ’06 with sister LEIGH JAMISON GIFFORD ’42, Egypt and Jordan, and Norway. In August I had my annual summer get-together with SALLY THOMAS DEATLY at Rockywold-Deephaven Camps. Her granddaughter CAITLIN DEATLY-PELUSO ’07 graduated cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, and is in graduate school at Tufts for art history. Sally could not attend graduation due to a second knee replacement on the same leg. Caitlin’s mom is ANNE DEATLY ’77. SALLY BENHAM ALDEN reports that her great friend MARY SNEED PHARRIS died in March ’06 in Freeport, ME. Mary left Smith after sophomore year to continue her education at Cornell. NANCY LUDINGTON HUME reports that daughter Diana lives in Philadelphia, and son Alex is the New York director for the National Parks Conservation Association and lives with his family in Riverside, CT. Nancy celebrated her 80th in Las Vegas. Eileen Rooney Driscoll drops in to visit Priscilla Whitehouse Rand at Panther Pond in Maine. Both are class of ’49. SUSAN MCKNEW CASKIN’s family had a large get-together in Williamsburg. Perhaps the last in our class to make the turn, MOLLY POTTER SCHEU celebrated her 80th in July on Cliff Island, ME, with a big family gathering. The results are in from our 47th Five Colleges Book Sale, held in the Hanover area in March ’07. Equal shares of the $46,500 in proceeds were given to Wellesley, Vassar, Simmons, Mount Holyoke, and Smith ($9,300 each), designated for scholarships for young women from Vermont and New Hampshire. Look for my daughter Cindy Pierce’s new book (co-authored with Edie Thys Morgan), Finding the Doorbell: Sexual Satisfaction for the Long Haul. Keep in touch. You’re a grand group! Until we meet in Northampton soon, cheers. Sec., Nancy Crawford Pierce, piercechalet@aol.com 1949 We have a truly amazing classmate: Swiss-born JACQUELINE MILLER DUNNINGTON, who came to college via Europe and South Asia, and who has had an active career as a scholar in art history and religion. After Smith, she earned a master’s in philosophy at the Sorbonne in France, and subsequently earned several other graduate degrees, including a PhD in Sanskrit, in India. She is fluent in several languages, including Tibetan, French, and Hindi, and mentioned she was leaving soon to lecture in New Delhi and Hanoi. An accomplished author, she has written several books, and is working on two academic nonfiction books, Global Guadeloupe and Tibetan Prayer Boxes, and a novel, The Tattooed Baby, about an immigrant girl, partly based on her own experience. We wish her good luck, and we think Santa Fe is lucky to have her. Another distinguished class member with a wonderful story to share is SABINA GILDEMEISTER COURNOYER of Amherst, MA. She runs a charitable foundation with her daughter as executive director. The Hampshire Foundation supports sustainable goals in education and agriculture in the villages of Peru. Sabina remains busy as well with her research on a biography of the first member of her German family to come to South America. His mode of travel, in 1850, was sailboat. Sabina was raised in Peru with German parents. In addition to German, Sabina spoke fluent English and Spanish when she came to Smith. Sadly, Sabina’s husband, a UMass professor, died last year. Her son is an investment banker in London. A telephone chat with MELISANDE CONGDON-DOYLE of Wilton, CT, revealed an extraordinary lady with a number of fascinating stories. She was in the original cast of My Fair Lady, which opened in 1956, and toured with Tom Bosley in Fiorello. After a decade in the theater, she left, and in 1965 went to work for Harpers Bazaar, the first woman to sell advertising for any magazine in the country! She married Harry Doyle, president of a Revlon division, and in 1971 became the first woman vice president of Cartier. In 1972, George Jensen and Mark Cross made her a vice president as well. Ten years after her first husband’s death, she married Paul Forsman, who remains active in the insurance business. She spoke with pride of her nine stepchildren, 15 stepgrandchildren, and three stepgreat-grandchildren. For the last several years, Melisande’s passion has been environmental causes. On a sadder note, we were informed that SARA SMITH ROBERTSON has died. Please see “Obituaries” in this issue for more. Also, Melvin, beloved husband of JOAN FLETCHER LANE, has passed away. On behalf of our class, we send our deep regrets to both families. We know that most of us are facing (or have already faced) that looming milestone (shhh—the big Eight O). Let us know how you are coping. Denying it totally? Sliding over it as just another day? Gathering the troops? Taking a trip somewhere to forget? Having a real blowout bash? LOUISE DEITZ CRAWFORD celebrated hers in August in New Hampshire, where her entire family assembled at her daughter’s home. Her son came from Paris, where he owns a computer company. Louise shared her story about traveling to Istanbul after graduating from Smith to teach English at Robert College (one of the first American colleges outside the United States). A philosophy major, Louise pursued a teaching career in English at both Hunter College and Columbia University. After 16 years, she made a dramatic switch and began an exciting volunteer career at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. Her work involved taking the remains of dinosaur bones, creating molds, and shipping the replicas to museums around the world. Caught BEVERLY BAIRD WOOD , of Stowe, VT, in July, dripping in a wet bathing suit, on Owatonna Island, in the St. Lawrence River, on the Canadian border. The island is a longtime rallying point for family that now includes grandchildren ages 4 to 26. Her husband visited there “before he was born,” and Bev went there first as a bride in 1950. As for her 80th, she has decreed “nothing public,” but since she’s planning a move to a retirement community in a year or so, she’s told the family that it could be an “occasion to gather at her house and divide up the furniture.” In the meantime, she says, “All’s well.” A report from EILEEN ROONEY DRISCOLL via CALLY FRENCH JUDSON tells us that SOPHIE CHANDLER CONSAGRA “had a lovely party in New York with a charming video of her life made by one of her talented children.” We also caught Eileen midsummer, packing her car for her annual family get-together—this time in Blue Hill, ME. What she’d really like for her 80th is quality time with each of her children, “doing something we especially share.” JEAN GUTHRIE BODINE gave her own birthday party in Philadelphia in August, inviting family and friends for a cruise on the Schuylkill River, followed by a low-key dinner at a riverside restaurant. Son-in-law Randy, master of the quick epic poem, wittily summed up her 80 years in rhyme. CONNIE THAYER LATSON’s four children (from Los Angeles; Tarrytown, NY; Wisconsin; and Long Island) threw a cocktail party at a local restaurant, with a cast of—if not thousands—a lot of people. But then, you only celebrate one 80th birthday! Connie and her husband live in Greenport, at the end of the North Fork on Long Island, where they relish their rural surroundings and frown on efforts to make the place trendy. SESALY GOULD KRAFFT honored another old Capenite, JANE THOMAS NOLAND, your Minneapolis co-secretary, by stopping by from Maryland with her daughter Susan for a catch-up on Lake Minnetonka. Sesaly was visiting a cousin and a son in the Twin Cities, after a trip to Carleton College in Northfield, MN, for a granddaughter’s graduation and a daughter’s reunion. Chatted with NANCY SMITH DURKEE of Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 41 alumnae update Marblehead, MA, who made it clear she has plenty of time to prepare for her 80th. In the meantime, she continues to enjoy life, is active in her church, and manages to get in a golf game now and then. Her husband still goes to work every day at the familyowned Marshmallow Fluff factory, now headed by her son. Nancy reads a lot and recommends In the Heart of the Sea, by Nathaniel Philbrick, based on a true story of the Essex, the famed 19th-century ship rammed by a whale. So that’s the story for this issue. Please call or e-mail us. We welcome any news from you. What are you reading? What is your favorite travel destination? Why? Any new hobbies or career moves? Sec., Joan Rawitser Stormont, 2990 East Avenue, Rochester, NY 14610, 585-381-1418, stormymd@aol.com Sec., Jane Thomas Noland, 1395 Orono Lane, Wayzata, MN 55391, 952-473-8002, bluezooz@mchsi.com 1950 Regretfully, this column must begin with three deaths: JANET MCAFEE WEAKLEY, as reported in “In Memoriam” in the Fall ’07 Quarterly; ROSALIE (RODY) HEFFELFINGER HALL, whose obituary appears in this issue; and FRANCES (FRANNA) LARRABEE LOW. I was actually preparing these notes when I learned that Franna had died unexpectedly. NANCY WOLFNER BAUER writes, “We have moved to a retirement community, which gives me more time to work and teach—my 57th year as a teacher, my 30th at Penn, and the eighth year of WomenMatter. Check out the wiki and the widget on the Website, the only place where you can not only get un-spun information on the life issues you care about, but you can use the latest technology to tell your story and recommend policies that you want government to adopt.” SALLY ANDERSON KITT CHAPPELL’s latest book, Chicago’s Urban Nature (mentioned in the Fall ’07 Quarterly), is out, and she writes, “After years of lonely work, the response is very gratifying. I’ve been on TV and was astonished when I saw the tape that, even though I look my age, I looked pretty good. I have had lots of invitations to give talks. Thanks to Smith, where I learned the discipline necessary to be a writer.” She signs herself as long of tooth and long of name! ROSEMARY JACOBS EDELMAN and Paul celebrated the 56th anniversary of their marriage. Their granddaughter ALITA EDELMAN ’10 finished her first year at Smith and had a wonderful time; she is doing well and has many good friends. SALLY (MARIE) CARSON GORSLINE sent an announcement of the opening of the Musée Gorsline in Paris for its 14th season. 42 CHARLOTTE ROTHBERG KAUFMAN still teaches a little at the New England Conservatory, but is very active producing and directing cabaret performances of American pop classics with her group, Boston Musical Theater. Her three children are doing fine and have produced seven grandchildren, who are a tremendous pleasure. In August, after 23 years of widowhood, Charlotte married Ronald Stillman of New York and Lenox, a stockbroker and avid music lover. The wedding celebration took place in Lenox for three lovely days, with 27 children and grandchildren, culminating in a burst of fireworks when the cake was cut. “We showed all those unmarried grown grandchildren how much fun it could be,” Charlotte says. ELAINE (KOBY) KOBYLANSKI BYRD was hospitalized in July for a series of blood clots and mild strokes. JEWEL ADLER GUTMAN reported in August that Elaine was at home and doing quite well. She had limited use of her right hand but hoped to resume driving soon. She would enjoy hearing from us. JANE THOMSON MACCOLL and Stewart attended their grandson’s (first grandchild) high school graduation in June, and added a good deal of other travel to this trip. She writes, “We are old to have such young grandchildren, but maybe that’s why we are in good health. We have nine more graduations coming, so, if my logic is correct, we still have many good years ahead of us.” CYNTHIA OWEN PHILIP plays tennis and writes “like mad,” including articles and essays, and she finished a book about the riverfront hamlet where she lives, Rhinecliff, NY. MIRIAM (MIMI) SCHOENBERGER PUDER and her husband moved to Palm Beach Gardens, FL. They are enjoying lectures, concerts, reading, golf, bridge, seeing family and friends, and good health “until the dart board calls.” They hope it doesn’t and that they won’t be a concern for their children. Son Doug is a pediatrician; daughter Kathy is an epidemiologist, with two grown sons; other daughter Robin died 20 years ago—they feel healed but miss her a lot. Mimi adds, “I send my regards to my classmates and hope they all will keep on trucking for a long time.” MARGARET (PEG) LYNCH TOMLINSON is chair of the Law of the Sea Committee of the American Bar Association and writes, “We hope that at long last the Senate may act to ratify the treaty. Unfortunately the atmosphere in the Senate is not conducive to expecting much of anything.” Sec., Ann (Fuller) Field Coxe, 125 Clover Leaf Lane, Asheville, NC 28803, afcoxe@bellsouth.net 1951 LOUISE FORTIER APPELL tripped to Belgium and the Netherlands, enjoying Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 perfect weather while cruising rivers and stopping at little walled towns. She spoke recently at Forbes Library about her second book, again set in Northampton. The last of the trilogy is in the works. She also spent time in Florida, seeing PATRICIA FAULKNER VARGAS. Also enjoying perfect weather (except for the Veneto region of Italy) was ANITA BRADSHAW BARKER. Her Smith Travel trip included art, architecture, gardens, excellent guides, and other Smithies for company. She lives in a retirement community in Williamstown, MA, but reports sadly that her husband suffers from Lewy body dementia (similar to Parkinson’s) so her travels will be limited to closer to home. She is involved with affordable housing, county planning, and golf. At the same time Anita was in Italy ALICE (DEDE) BROWN was based near Lucca, traveling to Florence, Pisa, and the Cinque Terre. Franklin King classmates celebrated the Oklahoma centennial in Oklahoma City with JEANNE HOFFMAN SMITH, DEBBY BRIN TUCKER , JUDY LEVENSON CLAPP, ELIZABETH CANNON SIMMONS, BARBARA KING MEIER, ELIZABETH KOHN MOSER, VIRGINIA (GINGIE) PFEFFER ANDERSON, and JANICE SCHICK CLAUSER. They visited a large collection of Chihuly glass, sculptures at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, the National Memorial commemorating April 19, 1995, and the state history center. It was a very busy, fun time for all. MARGARET HINCKLEY WISE and husband John are still farming in Virginia November through April, when they transfer to innkeeping in Maine. Their two daughters are single moms; one, joint master of Old Dominion Hounds. Two grandchildren are shining at Hobart and Avon Old Farms, the rest showing promise. Margaret claims she and John are slowing down, but I doubt it. NANCY HEYNEMAN FRIEDLANDER continues playing tennis, and taking Russian studies and other courses at Sonoma State University. She leads the American Association of University Women’s book group, and writes two columns for the monthly AAUW Grapevine. As with many of us, she reports that she is not traveling at present but “has lots of closets to clean at home.” ELLIE WOLFSON PILGRIM sends word of the death of her husband, Kurt, in July ’05, after a long bout with Parkinson’s disease. Now she is busy substitute teaching in state preschools and child-care centers, often challenging her long-ago Smith Castilian Spanish. She also plays tennis and volleyball. JOAN DUNAKIN SCOTT moved three miles from her home of 40 years in Shaker Heights to a new retirement center. With severe osteoarthritis that precludes travel, her one-floor Cape Cod house makes living there a treat. She says hi to Laura Scalesites and thinks Mrs. Chandler would approve! MARY ANN FREEDMAN HOBERMAN was honored with a Smith Medal in February. She has won numerous awards for her writing, including a National Book Award and a Poetry for Children Award. She volunteers extensively in programs promoting literacy. Her interests also include children’s theater and a drama/poetry/reading group. Her most recent book is Very Short Scary Tales to Read Together in the You Read to Me, I’ll Read to You series. MEREDITH BARNES BABBOTT, like many of us, has celebrated her 60th high school reunion, hers at Greenwich Academy, a girls’ day school. The school honored her by naming her the distinguished alumna of the year. Her second grandson graduated from Amherst, her husband’s alma mater. Another cruise report was received from BARBARA SALINGER FORNSHELL, who traveled with husband Bob, JOYCE JONES BOUCHER and husband Bud, and BARBARA BARRY STRAUT ’52 and husband Barney. Their trip took them from Egypt to Rome with many stops, tours, and wonderful meals along the way. She is still active with her local women’s club and choirs and piano programs in church. Her children and grandchildren live in Connecticut, and the closeness allows for many visits. ANNE-MARIE OSTLING NASSTRAND says the two years she spent at Smith were the most rewarding in her life, and she remains deeply grateful for them. She continues to reside in Uppsala, Sweden. Deer Isle, ME, is the home of E. BRENDA GILCHRIST after years in New York as a senior editor in art book publishing. She has a collection of five illustrated booklets, gathered under the title Opuscula, offering a lively assortment of puns, poems, and wordplay, including poems and stories about a Welsh corgi (“Paws for Peace”). ANN TURNER LUSCOMBE still lives at 8,000 feet in the Mammoth Lakes, CA, area. She travels little but did go to Palm Springs to attend her son’s latest art show. PATRICIA IVINS MOODY has been traveling with Williams College groups, including trips to Vietnam and Kenya. She sees MARGERY (GERRY) ARZONICO CLEMENT and GRACE EAMES HINRICHS in Maine in the summers. Her Florida roommate, RUTH FLEET THURMAN, continues as a law professor at Stetson Law School in St. Petersburg. Pat remains busy with conservation issues, several book clubs, church, tennis, gardening, and enjoying retirement after 30 years of teaching. KATHARINE STEVENS PRINCE and husband Ted moved to a retirement community in Mitchellville, MD, and are delighted with it. There are other Smith women there; she is the youngest, and one is the class of ’34. She volunteers in the library, and Ted runs the movies—a sybaritic life, to quote Katharine. BARBARA GOLDSMITH BLAU has finally moved out of her Staples boxes and, with furniture, is settled after a year of moving. Her son was accosted in his office, and later his family was threatened. She is very happy to report that the disgruntled trial loser was apprehended and life is much calmer. Dogs are important to several of us, particularly to LOIS GODDARD , who shares her retirement with two, and JEANNE (HOLLY) MILLETT BELL, who watches over a yellow Labrador. Lois enjoys the ballet, concerts, the Asiatic Art Association, and the Chromatic Club. Holly, like others, enjoys walks, watching the sun come up each morning, and birds. They both record being grateful for being alive! JO MACDONALD reports that she has enjoyed several mini-reunions with high school and college friends and finds that bodies may change but personalities remain the same. She claims to be retired but continues as a part-time therapist. Vero Beach must be full of Smith women. Another who spends seven months there is FLORENCE MEURLIN CAMPBELL ; the other five months are spent in the mountains of Colorado Springs, CO—the best of two worlds. NANCY COONS TEICHNER also moves in the summer, going to Lake George. She keeps busy playing cello for three orchestras, singing in a church choir, and being near her 4-year-old grandson. Remember to continue sending your e-mails, letters, and clippings to me. Sec., Paula Secor Paterson, 1815 Millbrook Road, Salt Lake City, UT 84106, pspaterson@aol.com 1952 Two weeks after Reunion, ALMA and Frank marked their 40th wedding anniversary with a huge family reunion at their house in Maryland. To celebrate, they got a new boat, an 18-foot outboard runabout; she thinks she will name it Ruby. They still divide their time between Colorado and Maryland, and enjoy visits with their seven kids and 14 grandkids. Alma was just elected a trustee of the Stanley Museum in Kingfield, ME. Congrats! SUZANNE SPENCER GARVIN and husband Jay live in a small, easy-to-carefor house, not far from where four of her grandchildren live. The other two grandsons are in the Philadelphia area. Suzanne can walk to the train (to Chicago), to Walgreen’s, and several good restaurants, so even without a car she could manage! Besides taking care of house, husband, and dog, her main activity is duo-piano playing. She just finished a duo-piano festival OTLEY HIX A class of ’53 Jordan House mini-reunion included, left to right, Phyllis Hyde Howard, Janet Grabosky Demuth, Kitty Ockenden, Priscilla Roessle Grayson, Anne (Nancy) Smith Smith, Betsy Goldsmith Forbes, and Susan Lynn Weitzman. with the Music Institute of Chicago, with five different partners. Lots of fun, and very challenging, she says. If you plan a visit to her wonderful city, please let her know, as she enjoys showing off Chicago with its new Millennium Park. BETTY WISWALL CONLEY loves being back in New Mexico after nine years. Corrales, west of Albuquerque, is really beautiful, and the Balloon Fiesta in October is a big event she can see from her patio. Her view overlooks the Rio Grande, among other Albuquerque landmarks. Her middle son coached a swim team in Brazil in 1987; their oldest child was born there and has dual citizenship. He is starting his sophomore year at the University of Oregon, having lived in Kuwait, Bangkok, and Singapore. Her son learned a little Portuguese in Brazil and is fluent in Spanish. Betty studied French for years, but arriving in New Mexico in 1968, she would have found Spanish more useful. She has learned some just living there. MARIANNA LUBOW LEE moved to Washington, DC, recently, having become a grandma for the first time. Her daughter teaches at Georgetown and Marianna is the newest babysitter (Charlotte is 22 months old). She’s retired and doing freelance editing to fund her travels and greed for culture, in which DC abounds. She lived in Paris on and off since junior year, which began so auspiciously there, and she spent eight months in 2005– 06 in her favorite arrondissement, le cinquième. She’d be very pleased to get together with any Smithies in the area. WAYNE TALBOT HARBAUGH didn’t spend most of the summer in Chaplin, CT, for the first time since she retired because Charlottesville was pleasanter in the summer than she ever could have imagined. Her daughter, LYN HARTRIDGE HARBAUGH AC ’95, lives with her, and they were going to Bloomington, IN, where her family will gather for the first birthday of her twin granddaughters. Their father is an economist at Indiana University; her other son, also an economist, teaches at the University of Oregon. MARGARET PERKINS SKALLERUP lived in Virginia in a house she built overlooking the Potomac River, which she felt was now too large and a bit far from city life, so she bought a 10-foot-wide house in Georgetown called a “spite house.” She is the grandmother of six outstanding grandchildren. Her son lives in Washington and both daughters live in Santa Fe, where she visits often. She is on the women’s committee for the Washington Ballet and on the board of the Society of Sponsors of the U.S. Navy. Her late husband was the general counsel of the Navy, so she was asked to christen an Aegis cruiser named Bunker Hill. Her sad news is that she lost her wonderful identical twin sister, when she died a year ago on vacation in France. That loss has left a huge vacuum, and as a result, she did not attend our 55th Reunion. With a little luck, hopefully she will be there for our 60th. MARY CURLEY VOS does a lot of volunteering, a lot of bike riding (when the weather is good), and, in the summer, a lot of chauffeuring of granddaughters back and forth to various activities. Sounds as though she keeps plenty busy! TRIG NORSTRAND COOLEY writes that Reunion went very well and she was delighted with the terrific job that our author classmates did at our Friday night and Saturday lunch panels. She adds, “We were pleased that MARCIA MOORE HALL’s granddaughter could be with us at Friday night’s panel.” One of our former secretaries, BARBARA CUTCHINS REED, writes that she is “enjoying Vermont’s short and beautiful summers by fitting in as much golf, tennis, running, gardening, and hiking as we can do.” ELLEN (CANDY) TUFTS, another former secretary, is immersed in writing an article for the San Diego Writers Guild. DOROTHY (KIM) QUIMBY GREENE writes, “I continue to spend four months at my Cape Cod home and the other eight months in Larchmont, NY—a schizophrenic lifestyle I thoroughly enjoy. I function as an Episcopal priest, part-time, at churches in both places, and have become an activist for gay marriage through my lesbian daughter, who is legally married in Massachusetts.” JOY SLONIM GLASSMAN asks you all to please contact her if you would like a copy of the pre-summary of our 55th Reunion. Cost is $3.50 to cover mailing expenses. Contact her at 30 Ferncliff Drive, West Hartford, CT 06117 or joyfulijoy30@aol.com. It’s really interesting to read how we reacted to the questionnaire! MARNIE FRANKS HENSEL writes, “I skydived from 13,000 feet and loved every minute of it. One of the really fun experiences of my life.” JANICE JOYCE DAL PRA in Vicenza, Italy, writes, “In April, Paolo and I were invited to meet the Smith Travel tour of the Veneto at the Rotunda in Vicenza, and afterwards to an elegant luncheon at the Castello di Thiene. PAT MOORE ASHTON ’53 and the Alumnae Association’s Smith Travel assistant director Elizabeth Bigwood put their heads together to make possible the most marvelous day for us. JOYCE PETERSON THURMER and Rare Books Room director Martin Antonetti and his wife were also part of the group. A week later, I helped guide a British contingent here for the annual Andras Schiff concerts held at the Olympic Theater in Vincenza—so that meant three more days using English as my main language!” SUE GRAHAM MINGUS was among several women featured in an excellent article, “Still Married to the Music,” in the Sunday New York Times (July 29, ’07) Arts section, regarding their work on behalf of their husband composers/ musicians “keeping the flame alive.” Sec., Marleigh Morland Baratz, 3641 Worcester Lane, Keswick, VA 22947, mmbaratz@aol.com Sec., Robin Rauth Purcell, 106 Tantumorantum Road, Lyme, CT 06371, robinpurcell0403@yahoo.com 1953 Well, here we are, poised to take Northampton by storm during our 55th Reunion, the theme of which is “On the go … not so slow … ’53 at 55.” Mark these dates on your calendar: May 22–25, ’08, and break out the yellow ribbons and the white shoes! Now, on to other news. JUDITH MILLER CHILDS feels affection and respect for her French major because it has taken her many places, including junior year in Paris and considerable time spent in France. It shouldn’t surprise you that Judith would choose French as her major today. Her reading choices range far and wide, from all-time must-reads such as Madame Bovary and Moby Dick, to The New Yorker and journals and essays concerning art. Judith is the manager of the work of her late husband, the artist Bernard Childs, and much of her time is spent arraying and overseeing exhibitions featuring his pieces; the most recent Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 43 alumnae update show took place last June at the Jason McCoy Gallery in New York. SUE MCKEE WIERENGO was an economics major and would make the same choice again, because she thinks economics helped her generally over the long term. She ran for and was elected to a four-year term as city commissioner of Muskegon, MI. She participates in all the planning sessions concerning a wide variety of city issues. Her reading tastes center around history and biographies, and some of her recent choices are Team of Rivals and No Ordinary Time, both by Doris Kearns Goodwin, and One Thousand Splendid Suns, by Khaled Hosseini. STUART HOOPER PECKHAM ’s news focuses on baseball spring training, where you’ll find Stuart and her husband almost every March, joined by DUSTY CAREY SMITH and her husband. They are loyal fans of the Colorado Rockies. CAROL CUSHMAN STRATTON and her husband spend four months of the year in Chiang Mai, Thailand, where Carol researches, writes, and lectures on Buddhist art history, while her husband pursues his many interests. Back home on their farm in Vermont, she enjoys her horses, fox hunting, trail riding, and eventing. Last year she and her special horse (age 26) became “centurions,” where the combined age of horse and rider is 100 or more. They successfully competed in dressage, cross-country, and stadium jumping. Of course, she enjoys having her three children and six grandchildren come for extended visits. SUSAN (NANDINI) LYNN WEITZMAN majored in studio art and remembers Mr. Cohen with admiration, and so too Mr. Sinton, who taught printmaking. What she would choose now she’s not quite sure, and that may be because her life has taken so many different directions. Nandini spent extended periods of time in an ashram in India, and was the director of an ashram in Manhattan for several years. Now Nandini is definitely not retired; she has a New York state license in nutrition, an alternative health practice, a business in therapeutic-grade essential oils, and, the latest, a network marketing travel company, Your Travel Biz. With all this activity, her reading tastes are designed to get her mind off other things, and so mystery writers are her favorites, such as Dick Francis, Elizabeth George, and Tony Hillerman, among many others. CHRISTINE VON WEDEMEYER BESHAR was a government major. Ultimately, she became a lawyer specializing in tax, trust, and estate cases. Without hesitation, Christine said she would major in engineering if choosing now. She was one of the early supporters of the engineering program and encouraged JEAN SOVATKIN PICKER ’42 and her husband, Harvey, in their financial support of engineering and other 44 projects as well. Some of Christine’s recent reads are What Is the What, by Dave Eggers; The Reluctant Mr. Darwin, by David Quammen; The Angle of Repose, by Wallace Stegner; and July’s People, by Nadine Gordimer. Christine will continue to work for the class as Fund agent. CYNTHIA OLSEN SMYTH was an English major, would repeat the choice, and was yet another admirer of Miss Randall. She also wishes she had known Miss Chase. Jane Austen has always been one of her all-time favorite authors. Other more recent revisits are Margaret Atwood’s The Edible Woman and The Handmaid’s Tale, and most recently, Dreams From My Father, by Barack Obama. Cynthia had a visit from SHIRLEY WALDBRIDGE HANCOCK, and keeps in touch with BLOSSOM WILLINGER MILLER. Cynnie also made a visit to her aunt GERTRUDE OLSEN PORTER ’33, still robust in health and with clarity and sharpness of mind. Our class can boast readers galore; authors, too. Read on. LEBA GROSS WINE has written Stitches in Time, a novel that is also the biography of a quilt made by Leba’s greatgrandmother and grandmother in the 1890s and handed down through generations to Leba’s daughter. Leba herself says she “majored in Mr. Page and Mr. de Nood, who happened to teach sociology,” a subject she found “interesting but not terribly challenging.” The carrel Leba had in the library was located near the Ws, so she became very familiar with Edith Wharton and Evelyn Waugh. She counts Patrick O’Brien and Barbara Pym among her favorites, and she recently rediscovered Ann Tyler. RUTH WOLFF BLOOM sends word regarding readings of three of her new plays: The Ardent Philanthropist at the HB Studio in New York; The Sky Pool at the New Jersey Repertory Company in Long Branch, NJ; and The Shakespeare Road, presented by Guild Hall and the East Hampton Playwrights’ Theater in East Hampton, NY—“this last happily reviewed as a ‘highlight of the theatrical season.’” VIRGINIA ROBINSON EVANS is also completing work on a historical novel, The Last Shipment, which takes place during the French Revolution. It is a version of what happened to the last dauphin of France. Virginia majored in English and philosophy and can be added to the champions of Miss Chase and Miss Randall. She has long enjoyed Dickens’s Tale of Two Cities and Tolstoy’s War and Peace. Ginna loved the study of Latin, so she has always admired the Aeneid. And now some parting words: Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is a mystery. Today is a gift—that’s why we call it the present. Stay well. Sec., Joan Ford, 261 Newbury Street Lot 3, Peabody, MA 01960, 978-5352478, classnotes@smith.edu Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 1954 Since the last deadline, my mailbox and e-mail have been void of messages from Smith ’54. I’m grateful to my Laura Scales association for the news in this column. In May, JOAN COWEN BOWMAN organized a lunch and theater outing in New York, with MILDRED MOONEY DAVEY, JUDY MARTIN DORSETT, NANCY HIRTH ORAVETZ, LEE MILLIGAN DIETZER, NANCY DICKSON NEWCOMB, JANE GASSAWAY BONNER ’55, and myself, JANE GUNN FOX. We all enjoyed a performance of Deuce, which starred Angela Lansbury and Marian Seldes as former champion tennis players. There was humor and pathos in the play; the stars were perfectly cast. In July, JANE GRAHAM CHAMP and I spent several days with JOAN COWEN BOWMAN at her house on Martha’s Vineyard, an annual event. MILDRED MOONEY DAVEY was unable to join us due to a hip problem (diagnosed later as a dislocation) but the Janes spent a night en route to the Vineyard and a night on the way back with her at her house in Connecticut and were grateful for Mud’s hospitality in spite of her ailment. That’s it for past news. In the future, JOAN COWEN BOWMAN is entertaining her family in the Berkshires for a long weekend in celebration of her 75th birthday. Since we’re all reaching that milestone, I’d like to hear how others are celebrating. JUDY KING BINNEY planned to meet her daughter in Paris in September, and to go on to Berlin for a few days. Judy says she hasn’t been there since before the Wall went up in the ’50s. Please send me news of family, travels, accomplishments, etc. Anything is of interest! Sec., Jane Gunn Fox, 17 Bridge Hollow Road, Califon, NJ 07830, janeoftewks@msn.com 1955 Was it just yesterday that the class officers met at DIANE NEAL EMMONS’s home in Manchester-by-the-Sea, MA? Probably not, as our house rep chairs, ADRIAN AUSTIN SHELBY and GAIL WARD POWELL, could not have revitalized and energized our house reps network overnight! Our newsletter went out to you via the U.S. Postal Service, and JOAN BUTLER FORD has waved her wand over our class of ’55 Website, www.smith55.com (your suggestions for our Website are encouraged!). For the latest updates on addresses (home and e-mail) see the AASC online directory and doublecheck that all your information is correct so that my electronic nudges are on target! From Mystic, CT, CAY ANDERSON BARRES writes, “Peter and I had a wonderful time with MARY FLOOK BUTTRICK and her fun-to-be-with family on Cape Cod in mid-July. Had an an- nual four-day excursion to the Vermont Quilt Festival with a quilting friend and hope to use the winter days to work on some of my quilting and calligraphy projects. Peter continues his tutoring during the summer, as he has more free time allowing him to putter in the garden and pick the tomatoes and beans!” JANE CANNING ELLIS writes from California, “Tony and I just returned from the Tauck tour you recommended to the Baltic States and Moscow and St. Petersburg. It was a terrific trip and intriguing to see the changes since we had been in ‘Leningrad’ and Moscow some 15 years ago when Tony ran in the Moscow marathon—no marathons this time!” “I am having a great time in my retirement after teaching Latin at the Dalton School in New York for 32 years,” reports CAROL BROWN FARBAR. (Carol and I exchanged other emails as I wrote back that my mother, ROSE MARY MCGINNESS CALDWELL ’15, also taught Latin.) “In the past year I have been to eastern Europe, a second trip to that area in the past few years. I rented a house in West Palm Beach in March with a friend and just returned from a trip to England. All the lectures, museums, and concerts in New York make it such a pleasure to live here. I read several books a week, go to the gym every day, and do some tutoring, so I have not had to let go of the pleasure of teaching altogether. My daughter in the fashion business suggested I do some modeling—whole new world! I also have more time to spend with my granddaughters, 4 and 7, who live in New York and in Amagansett.” JOAN BUTLER FORD vacationed in Maine on Squirrel Island, about three miles out from Boothbay Harbor, where her grandkids are sixthgeneration, and she has been almost every summer of her life. She writes, “I had lunch and a good visit with ANN JONAS MALPASS in late July in Portsmouth, NH, at our favorite meeting place and seafood restaurant. Will do a service and baptism here at the Island Chapel. It is a real privilege to be able to perform the (so far very few) occasional memorial service for lifelong friends and weddings and baptisms for their children and even their grandchildren. Back to San Diego mid-August to resume duties at St. Paul’s Cathedral and Dorcas House, the cathedral’s foster home for children whose parents are incarcerated in Tijuana, Mexico.” ANNE ELMENDORF IMPELLIZZERI enthuses, “Last summer I relished perfect grandparent travel to ‘The Lands of Gods and Heroes,’ with my almost 13-year-old granddaughter Julia, Laura’s eldest. Abundant friends and special experiences for her plus interesting lectures with parents and grandparents for me. It was a great combination of small-ship cruising complete with swimming off the stern and visits to Athens, Greek Islands, Delphi, Taormina, Pompeii, and Rome. We even crossed paths with President Carol Christ and the Edith Wharton trip in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens!” “We have been in Sherborn, MA, for six years, after living most of our married life in Houston,” writes JUDY ETTLINGER COHN . “We love it here, though the two kids we moved here to be near have since taken off for Minneapolis and Houston, taking seven of our nine grandkids with them. Sigh! The other two are in Vermont. We tragically lost our beloved 14-yearold Vermont grandson in a traffic accident in Nov. ’06, and we are all reeling from our unthinkable loss. We had our 50th anniversary in May and remain healthy and active. Hug your families and come see us.” MEREDITH FULLER SONDERSKOV muses, “My life is so full of community boards and committees (this is retirement?) that I should have a personal secretary. I started as a community activist here in Chestnut Hill, PA, when I was 15 and renewed my interest when I returned in 1996, after 42 years living in other places. Husband Bob is still working occasionally in New York City; sons Brian and Steve and their families live two hours away in Maryland so I get to see them once a month. Grandson James, 3, is the love of my life. We read a lot and play with his Thomas trains. A trip with him to the Philadelphia Zoo was priceless. Special good wishes to all the Northrop House classmates.” “Perhaps a cliché, but so true—after being treated for breast cancer last year I delight in every single moment of life,” writes GAIL GARFIELD SCHWARTZ. “In April I visited 12 artists in their studios and homes in Japan, collecting far more than a dozen new friends, as well as some lovely works of art. In New York City, I’m busy with volunteer work advocating evidence-based treatment for breast cancer. Visits to six thriving grandchildren, ages 3–14, and their six parents in Boston, Providence, and San Francisco add spice. Although I am engaged in various events with other Smithies, I haven’t seen many classmates lately; do hope to remedy that soon.” ENID JOHNS ORESMAN writes, “One of the year’s highlights for Steve and me was travel to the former Russian republics of Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan). The site of the old Silk Route is now the bureaucratic remains of 150 years of Russian rule. One of the 20 participants on the tour was a ’56 Smithie. In June we took a 14-year-old granddaughter on a small-boat tour of the inside passage in Alaska. Fishing, hiking, kayaking— America is a wonderful country!” BETTY KENNEDY GOODWIN writes, “Our two sons and their families will join Queen Elizabeth II to Williamsburg (OK—we just waved back to Her Majesty as she rode by!) and joined in the celebration of the 400th anniversary of our nation. A final history lesson: Jamestown, VA, not Plymouth, MA, is where it all began! Sec., Mary Rose (Pattee) Caldwell Schlatter, 137 Highland, Williamsburg, VA 23188, schlatter55secy@smith.alumnae.net 1956 LEANNA YOUNG BROWN and JANE BIRD NISSEN caught up at the newly reno- A recent class of ’55 mini-reunion included, back row, left to right: Winnie Hitz Lumsden, Nadine (Dee) Neuburg Doughty, Laurie Nath Reinstein; middle row: Nancy Anderson Stevenson, Mary Ingalls Mathewson, Virginia (Ginger) Owen Schoder; front row: Barbara Stein Scott, Alice Wayland Cruikshank, and Allie Hoag Kurland. us in Williamsburg for five days to celebrate our 50th wedding anniversary and to tour historic Jamestown, Yorktown, and Williamsburg. Our older son and his family have lived in London for many years. We hope to present a true picture of the American Revolution to his London Ladies. (These girls were happy to meet the Smith College rep calling on their school, Marymount International in London.) It is going to be great fun for the uncles, aunts, cousins, and grandparents to be together—a perfect way to celebrate 50 years!” MARY-KAY LENT FLUCKE in Michigan reports that ROSWITHA LEUTHOLD MCINTOSH published her second book, The Madman & His Mistress. A fast-paced update from ANNE MARSHALL TARBELL about her busy Maine days: “A moment before subbing at a frame shop: My many hats include docenting at a museum; painting sets at a community theater; making polar fleece hats for oncology patients; teaching handicapped skiers downhill (in February had a great week as a guide for blind cross-country skiers with PATIENCE PLUMMER BARNES ’54); doing mailings for chamber music and opera groups; hosting on a train to Boston and back; working at craft fairs and in a studio for a jeweler.” Back in Vermont, ELIZABETH PARKER ROUSE described her spectacular July rafting trip through the Grand Canyon for 187 miles with 28 women on an AdventureWomen trip. She writes, “We rode in two motorized rafts fitted with outriggers and storage space for our needs for a week, including ice for water coolers used all day in the 115–120 degree heat and for our evening cocktails. The scenery was magical as we traveled through geologic time. The rapids weren’t scary even though two are considered class 10 rapids; the short hikes were challenging scrambles, usually over rocks and often to cool grottoes where we splashed about in lovely clear pools; and the food was gourmet.” PATRICIA PETERSON MCCURDY spent last summer in Blue Hill, ME, with children and grandchildren. She writes, “Sandy and I have been sailing a good deal and going to many concerts at Kneisel Hall, a summer music camp for gifted Juilliard, Curtis, and other students. Attended a benefit for the musicians with ALIDA NICHOLAS LOVELL ’57 and saw JUDY EVANS THOMAS and husband Tim. I am working (pen name Patricia Tyson Stroud) on my fourth biography (this one on Meriwether Lewis) and have written a chapter for a book of collected essays on Audubon.” Patsy’s and my Gardiner friend, MARGARET REED MORAN, an avid, diligent, and knowledgeable bird-watcher says her “literary effort is contributing articles to our Audubon newsletter!” She planned to take off from Michigan to Texas in November in pursuit of birds and butterflies. After visiting JOAN SHUTTLEWORTH RUSSELL in Ohio, MIGNONETTE DE LOS AN SAAVEDRA ’54 met JANET CURRY in Phoenix for a whirlwind tour of the great Southwest that included the Grand Canyon (Mignonette’s dream to see “before she dies”), Monument Valley, Mesa Verde, Taos, Santa Fe, and Sedona. Joan adds, “Janet, a frequent visitor to that locale, acted as the tour guide, and Mignonette was the interpreter, as she heard almost as much Spanish as she hears in Chile. The highlight was the helicopter flight over the Grand Canyon.” Last summer in Williamsburg was enhanced for your secretary as we celebrated our 50th anniversary year with family visits and a weeklong gathering of our four children and their families on North Carolina’s Outer Banks. We were 15 out of a possible 16—unusual attendance rate as our children live in California, Nevada, and Luxembourg! In May, David and I welcomed vated Paddington Hilton in London last spring. Leanna was en route to Amman, Jordan, and a conference sponsored by the International Women’s Forum. In May, President Bush appointed Leanna to the commission on White House fellowships, and she participated in selecting the 2007–08 fellows. PHYLLIS NAUTS and husband Hendon have an old stone farmhouse in Vaison-la-Romaine, north of Avignon in Provence. They spend a month there in the spring and fall. Phyllis says, “We look out over a Roman theater, and have a small vineyard. Our neighbor is the vintner. Once a year he comes over with a huge vat on the back of his truck and we bottle the wine with a friend—500 liters or so.” Phyllis and Hendon paint in the huge studio that once stored hay. Their two children live in New York, where daughter Jenny does freelance development work. Jenny’s son is at Vassar. Phyllis’s son, David, is a psychiatrist in private practice and teaches at Columbia Presbyterian. His two children are both at Dalton. Last July, Phyllis had an art show in Cornwall, CT, where she lives. I was so sad to receive the news from CLAIRE HENDRIXSON CLYDESDALE that her husband, Tom, died unexpectedly following surgery in May. Before he died, Tom and Claire had been planning to visit Tom’s sister in Crieff, Perthshire, Scotland. In June, Claire and her family made the trip together, spending two lovely weeks in Tom’s home country. PATRICIA WYERS GAMMON’s daughter, Carla, was deployed as base commander of the Al Dhafra Air Force Base in the United Arab Emirates in May. She was scheduled to return in October to serve as the base commander of the Grand Forks AFB in North Dakota. Carla has two children, John, 10, and Emma, 8, cared for by her husband and the children’s father while she was overseas. Pat and her husband plan to join all four of them in Maui for two weeks at Christmas. Last June, LEE SULLIVAN BORN and her husband joined cousins from Paris for a barge trip on the Seine from Paris to Auxerre. They explored the Chablis region, stopping along the way to visit chateaux, vineyards, villages, and marketplaces. Lee said the cuisine was Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 45 alumnae update exquisite, prompting them to walk whenever possible. In July, they flew to San Francisco to join her brothers, their spouses, and her nieces for a special trip, sharing a private Amtrak railway car to Chicago. Lee said it was a wonderful experience and a most comfortable way to see the country. Best of all, it was a fabulous family reunion. Several months after their exciting 2006 trip to Africa, DARYL MASLOW HAFTER and her husband (a Hispanist retired many years from the University of Michigan) took a sentimental trip to Spain, where they had lived for many months in the ’60s and ’70s when their children were quite young. They had planned to visit friends in France in the fall, and attend a silk conference in Como, Italy. Penn State University Press recently published Daryl’s book, Women at Work in Pre-Industrial France. Daryl had a reading/signing party in June at a local bookstore in Ann Arbor. She said about 40 people crowded into the little shop, and all the copies were sold. MARGOT BRADY GORDON spends winters in South Beach, FL. She and husband Leonard still travel for his medical venture capital projects and have particularly enjoyed trips to the Pioneer Valley to attend the Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts, which is directed by a friend of hers. Margot says she still sees HELENE (NIKI) KULUKUNDIS YEKTAI ’57 and FLORA SCHNALL. NANCY GODFREY SCHACHT and her husband went on the Smith Travel cruise based on a voyage taken by Edith Wharton in 1888 and chronicled in her diaries. The trip was based on ancient centers of culture and learning in the Mediterranean. Because of her expertise in Victorian literature, Carol Christ was one of the lecturers on the trip, along with a professor of anthropology from Bryn Mawr, and Stephanie Copeland, president of The Mount, Edith Wharton’s beautiful estate in Lenox, MA. Participants included alumnae from Smith, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley, and Vassar. Nancy says, “President Christ did us all proud and brought Edith Wharton and the Berkshires to life for all of us.” JANET KELLOGG HUME and her sister took their second Smith Travel theater trip to London last March. Nancy said it was great fun and very well organized. JOAN KRAMER HOLT is working on a new book about superhero costumes and is a bit puzzled about Wonder Woman as our Reunion choice for the 50th. Joan’s research has turned up interesting interpretations of the persona and characterization of Wonder Woman and other well-known characters. Joan recently took a trip to China. JANE TOWER FREY and husband Charlie (Amherst ’51) celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in July with a 46 luncheon at Lake Tahoe for their children and spouses, five grandchildren, and 45 friends. Jane says life has been good to them and they feel lucky to be here to enjoy all that they have. BOBBY WEST WADDELL is still hard at work as a writer and editor. In June she took her granddaughter home to Bali from her school in Connecticut. Through the miracle of computer technology, Bobby managed to continue her editorial work at her daughter’s home in Bali, and on the return trip, she brought her grandson back here for camp. BETSY MCKINLEY ZINK and husband Ben have moved from their longtime farm in Casa Grande, AZ, and are now farming avocado orchards in Montecito, CA. Betsy writes, “They say new challenges keep you young. We’ll see!” Betsy’s daughter Kim and her husband have a daughter, Michaela, who joined big sister McKinley in July ’06. A few months later, Betsy’s daughter SALLY ZINK HARVEY ’92 gave birth to Betsy’s first grandson, Jack. Much to Betsy’s delight, the Harveys will move to San Diego very soon. Sec., Jean Bradley Mooney, 34 Clough Road, Dedham, MA 02026, mooney@bc.edu 1957 The following class officers were unanimously elected at the Reunion class meeting: president, MARGARET BESHORE BOONSTRA; co-vice presidents and 55th Reunion chairs, JUDY SNOW DENISON and MARILYN JOHNSTON MARTIN; secretary, KATHY O’BRYAN CANADAY; treasurer, MT TORRENS TOMPKINS; class Fund agents, FLO MACK KELLY and BETTY GAINES EWING; special gift chairs, GINNY VERRAL WELDON and VALERIE VERGOBBI GROENEVELD; memorial chair, LINA HOLSCHUH COFFEY; planned giving chair, BETTY HAYS TERRY; class Webmaster, VAL GREENMAN CASTLEMAN; and nominating chair, CLOVER MORRISSETT WELLER. Special thanks to CYNNIE CRAWFORD BERNE , retired class secretary, for splendid service in passing on notebooks and albums filled with news clips, announcements, and photographs. The class of ’57 archive is enviable. LEA BARNES ISELIN regrets that she missed the 50th, but she plans on attending next Reunion. The Iselins have a new home in Ghent, NY. Two amazing trips for TIA BRACKETT DRISCOLL and Todd: the whaling island of Bequia in the Grenadines and with Elderhostel from Edinburgh to Svalbard, Norway, 400 miles from the North Pole. Our Reunion co-chairs, HILDY COHEN FLANIGAN and JUDY JACOBI LEVINE, would like to say thanks for everyone’s help and enthusiasm. Our retired class officers had such fun that they plan to continue their get-togethers. “Finally, after two years, I am returning,” writes CORNELIA CREE. The col- Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 lege in China that originally offered her employment abruptly withdrew its offer, but another job in Chifeng City came through for September. She is a language specialist with a good knowledge of American history and politics, so she plans to lecture at other colleges on modern American life. She hopes to stay in China until 2014. A summer trip west allowed her a visit with her daughter in Los Angeles. CYNTHIA CRAWFORD BERNE and Tom celebrated their 50th anniversary in June with family and friends who were at their wedding. In August, they took the whole family to Kauai to continue the celebration. At home in Los Angeles, Cynnie teaches a class for USC foreign grad students and their spouses, sponsored by the office of international students. VALERIE GREENMAN CASTLEMAN has seven grandchildren, ages 5 to 12. The anticipated arrival of twins in 2002 prevented her from attending our 45th Reunion, but she thoroughly enjoyed our 50th. Val is a Photoshop instructor for SeniorNet in Armonk, NY. She also creates, designs, and updates Websites for nonprofits. Remember to check our class Website, http://smith.alumnae.net/homepages/classes/class57, to view 50th Reunion photos and comments. Smith recognized BETTY HAYS TERRY with the planned giving volunteer award at the volunteer conference last fall, for her extraordinary service and support to the college. LINA HOLSCHUH COFFEY enjoyed a family gathering when her son was married on Lake Champlain last summer. The California fires delayed the summer visit of ADELLE LEEDER GERSTEN to her Lake Tahoe house. Ten days in 115-degree Las Vegas were brutal for a native New Englander. JANE LOFGREN PEARSALL and Hank took their 11-year-old granddaughter on the Smith Travel family trip to Alaska. ROSEMARY POLLACK MILD extends heartfelt thanks to all who attended our 50th. She enjoyed reconnecting and making new acquaintances. Publishing news from the Milds: a short story in the e-zine Crime and Suspense; an essay in Chicken Soup for the Coffee Lover’s Soul; and their third Paco and Molly mystery will be published this year. “Getting old is not for sissies,” reports SALLIE MITCHELL BASS, who missed Reunion because of a multiply fractured ankle. Grandchildren, gardening, and bridge provide pleasures. PENNY POPE LEATHER and Dick had a wondrous time at Reunion, then went home to Denver to entertain a crew of 10 family members, attending Cirque du Soleil and the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo. A Baltic cruise in August provided a welcome respite. SUE RADWIN ISAACS is an educational therapist now in private practice after 14 years of working with students at New Canaan Country School. Three of her seven grandchildren are classmates at the school and friends of the three Stevens grandchildren of BARBARA GOW YEAGER. Sue also serves on the Greenwich-Stamford Smith club board coordinating alumnae seminars. MARIAN SEIDNER DEL VECCHIO, who had a five-year stint as cartoonist for the Miami Herald, has been in South Beach for the past decade. JACQUELINE BAKER PRATT says she thought Reunion was great, classmates wonderful, campus fabulous, and the new engineering program really exciting! SUSAN SEIDNER ADLER is still painting, mostly portraits, and living in New York City, where she has a full-time psychotherapy practice. A cheery note from FIFI WALCOTT MACMAHON: “A day doesn’t go by without a ’57 face beckoning fond memories. Reunion brought such tales, smiles, and incredible accomplishments to the forefront. I will long recall its delight.” Sec., Kathy O’Bryan Canaday, 1 Brooklands, Apt. 2B, Bronxville, NY 10708, gammacanaday@aol.com 1958 SUKEY BARBER GROUSBECK is looking forward to Reunion. She recently traveled with her sister, BO BARBER WELLES ’53, to Antarctica and also went hiking in Provence. In June, she went with three grandsons (4, 7, and 10) and their parents to Scandinavia and Russia. Sukey and Irv enjoy summers on Lake Winnipesaukee in Wolfeboro, NH, where she sees JUDY OLIN HIGGINS and NANCY DREIER DAILEY. JODY BENJAMIN HOY quit teaching French and French literature in 2004 and moved full-time into her second career as a professional photographer. She had a show in August in Deer Isle, ME, and was featured in the October issue of Rangefinder magazine. Her son is a bronze sculptor and was juried into the Florence Biennale. They both live in California. EDNA BROWN HIBBITTS went to the Third International Women’s Peace Conference, which she found an amazing learning experience. The emphasis was on peacemaking as a process and the influence of women in civil society. The keynote speaker was GILLIAN MARTIN SORENSON ’63, a senior adviser to the United Nations Foundation. Edna came away with renewed hope for the future coupled with a real sense of the hard work ahead. LOUISE CLARK SMITH was widowed in 1995. Since that time, she has taken several trips with PEGGY MCNEIL BOYER; they’ve gone off the beaten track to Papua New Guinea, Madagascar, and the Galapagos for phenomenal snorkeling. Louise is very active in Community Bible Study and work- ing on the local Smith club’s annual book sale along with GENIE SHERER, SUE SCOTT PATTERSON , and ISABEL GOFF BUNGE. Her three children are all married and have given her five grandchildren. SANDRA DUNBAR PAUL graduated from Butler University in Indiana with a degree in French and a minor in education. She married a Navy man, had four children, and taught at the secondary level in California. They lived on both coasts and later went their separate ways. She and her second husband, Ed, live near Lake Tahoe and enjoy golf, kayaking, tennis, and hiking, and they volunteer with the Reno Symphony Guild. She reports they are healthy and “hopefully, aging gracefully.” CAROL FINEBERG-WILSON and her husband had two weeks sailing along the Siberian coast on a Russian icebreaker, studying the science and policy issues of climate change and global warming. The trip was co-sponsored by the Alumnae Association and several other universities and institutions. Carol reports that even the skeptics on board were willing to admit we have to change our behavior if we want to reduce the CO2 emissions contributing to the extremes of climate change. In addition, Carol completed her threeyear term as board chair of the New York State Alliance for Arts Education and enjoyed helping this organization grow to become a major voice in arts education policy and practice. MARCIA FLASTER VOLPERT and her family have begun a year of celebration. Three grandchildren’s bar/bat mitzvahs will take place between September and January. (Seven down, three to go!) Then, after Reunion, they plan to celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary by taking the entire family to Tuscany. For three years in a row, MOLLY GAYLEY GNICHTEL has had artwork exhibited in the National Juried Small Works Show at 80 Washington Square East Galleries in New York. Her work was accepted in two other national juried competitions in Colorado and in Georgia when all three works she submitted were selected—an unusual honor. Congratulations, Molly! MARY HOLMES BLUME and Henry spent two weeks in Paris with middle daughter Kate and her family, including three children 7 and under. She has a new perspective on Paris having visited unbelievable playgrounds, including the Jardin du Dragon with stratospheric slides emerging from dragon heads! Their lives are busy around Stanford University, interrupted by visits with multiple grandchildren from Evanston, IL, to the Boston area. MARY ANN GOODMAN QUINSON has a private psychotherapy practice in New York City. She works three days a week, which leaves time for other activities, including traveling with her husband and tending to their 11 grandchildren, ages 1–21, who live in Colorado Springs, New York, Stockholm, and London. She is board president of the thriving Barrington Stage Company, which just completed a renovation of an early 1900s theater in Pittsfield, MA. They have a second home in the Berkshires, not far from Northampton. SALLY HUNT FAY writes that she lives a “slower but full” life of tennis, flute, singing, walking, yoga, and, best of all, grandchildren. She hopes to get to Reunion—it will be her first! MEREDITH MARTINDALE FRAPIER co-directed a film, Benjamin Franklin: Citizen of Two Worlds, which appeared as a complement to the Benjamin Franklin 300th anniversary exhibition that has been at five venues in the United States and will be shown in two Paris museums. The Metropolitan Museum of Art called it a “most beautiful and informative portrait of this great man.” BARBARA JENKS HAACK retired from teaching Spanish (language, literature, Latin American history) in 1998. Since then her days are more than full. She is a potter/sculptor/artist with a studio in her barn. She is also an activist, wanting to end Bush’s war of choice, and she belongs to a number of peace organizations. Every Sunday, she is at Market Square in Newburyport, where a large group convenes to show its disapproval of the administration’s policies. She and Peter live in a charming 1750 Cape, known as the Daffodil House due to the thousand or more daffodils she’s planted. The three kids are in Seattle, Colorado, and Boston. In February, they go to Morelia, Mexico, where they helped to catalog an important historical library, and now have many Mexican friends. HANNAH MILDE MARKS ’s daughter, Georgia, was married in May in North Carolina, with brother Michael as her master of honor. The Unitarian Church of All Souls, Hannah’s church in New York City, honored her with its deacons’ award for exemplary volunteer service. MAGGIE NEAL STROHBEHN KENT writes, “In 2005 NANCY WILCOX SMITH and I went to Spain for a long visit with our familia in Madrid. They were busy, fun, active, eccentric, and in all ways a huge and lingering memory for both of us. Saw Jose Mari (that Spanish romance from 1957).” Maggie is still a practicing therapist in San Francisco and Marin. Daughter Eliza adopted a Guatemalan boy, and Maggie says, “We are beside ourselves with love!” LIBBY RHEA VAN DUSEN looks forward to seeing lots of us at Reunion. She has three sons (all married) and four grandchildren. She’s retired, her husband is semiretired, and they travel more than they used to, mostly to see family. SUE SAFFORD ANDREWS is looking forward to Reunion. She and Bob went to his 50th at Dartmouth, which was great fun. Sue finally retired, so now she’s trying to catch up on 40 years of stuff—with time to try to improve her golf game. LILOT SCHUELLER MOORMAN’s son and family (four children under 8) have been living with Lilot and husband Jeff since their return from New Caledonia, much to Lilot’s joy. Jeff retired in July. They plan to spend more time at their cabin in the Cascade Mountains in Washington State and in Seaside, FL. Lilot would love to connect with Atlanta classmates. NANCY SMITH WHALEY married Bill Whaley in Aug. ’06, in Watch Hill, RI. Bill was president of marketing and sales for CTW (Sesame Street) for 20 years. They live in Greenwich, New York, Windsor at Vero Beach, and Watch Hill, and manage to go on golf trips to Spain and California. Nancy’s daughter lives in Dubai and loves it; Nancy visited last May and found it awesome and challenging. VIRGINIA STEIN GREENE writes that she, AUBIN ZABRISKIE AMES, and JOANNE FREYBERG BLATZ met for lunch at Jo’s new home in Scotch Plains, NJ, to reminisce about their time together in New York after graduation. Jo had recently married Frank Blatz and moved to New Jersey from Michigan. Gingie is very happy to have her back on their side of the country. Gingie is still playing lots of tennis, gardening, bicycling, and doing a couple of parttime jobs, as well as helping her husband, who hasn’t been well for three years. She, too, is looking forward to Reunion. CAROL STEVENS KNER recently spent two weeks at their retreat in the hills above Cummington, MA (only 25 miles from Northampton), with her husband, daughter, son, daughterin-law, and 15-month-old granddaughter, Charlotte. She introduced Charlotte to the delights of Joe’s Cafe. Carol enjoys retirement, though she is busier than ever writing poems and singing with the New York Continuo Collective, which recently presented a short opera by Francesca Caccini as part of the Boston Early Music Festival. LINDA STONE KAPLAN and Ed went to China, and what an experience it was, she says, an amazing and varied country. Linda wants to urge as many as possible to attend our 50th. She says it’s heartwarming to reconnect with friends and meet new ones who shared the Smith experience 50 years ago. ANN WHITMAN HACKL spent a wonderful two weeks camping with her whole family on their island in Lake Winnipesaukee (10 adults and five kids, 2–11). A tiny one-room cabin, which her father built in 1939 with salvage lumber from the Hurricane of ’38, has the original propane fridge and a gas range, no electricity, no running water, just an outside hand pump and an outhouse. Four tents on platforms serve as bedrooms. It’s primitive, but no one wants to change anything and everyone likes getting together to enjoy one another and the beauty around them. ALICE WOODWARD FUNNELL is still traveling while she has the will and wherewithal. Last year they went to Vieques for their winter getaway and in the fall to San Tropez and to the Cezanne centennial in Aix. Earlier, they went to Norway to see BIBBY BOCK DITLEVSIMONSEN and to take the spectacular coastal voyage. They spend summers enjoying their grandsons at the family cottage in Chatham. When she turned 70, MARTHA ULLMANN MAY thought she’d retire from volunteering and tend to her garden and needlepoint. But she joined two more boards and has embarked on working to raise $27 million for a local hospital. More fun than retiring! In Oct. ’07, SALLY SZOLD BOASBERG received the LaGasse Medal from the American Society of Landscape Architects for leadership in conservancy of natural resources and public landscapes. She has been fortunate enough to work as a volunteer with organizations in related fields, including the Cultural Landscape Foundation and Green Spaces for DC, which she established six years ago. She writes that there is so much rewarding work to be done with both the preservation and establishment of green infrastructure, and she encourages everyone to get involved in some way. She has a garden-design practice and keeps busy with 11 grandchildren (including three pairs of twins!). See you at Reunion! Sec., Fran Beekley Ames, 3630 SW Patton Road, Portland, OR 97221, franames@comcast.net 1959 We extend our condolences to the family and friends of DI ANN SMITH RIGGS, whose death in March was reported in the “In Memoriam” section of the Fall ’07 Quarterly. Her obituary appears in this issue. SHIRLEY LIU CLAYTON decided some years ago to go to Stanford Business School, after 12 years of raising her family. She then had a procession of top management jobs, ending up in the biotechnology industry for the latter part of her career, working as either CFO or CEO of start-up biotech companies. ANNE NORRIS BALDWIN introduced Shirley to her last company (recently purchased by Merck), and Shirley writes, “It seems the good-ol’-girls’ network is functioning well.” Shirley lives with her husband, an emeritus professor at Stanford, in Palo Alto. They have two children and two grandchildren. In retirement Shirley serves on the board of a bank in Houston and its subsidiary in Cali- Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 47 alumnae update fornia. She also is involved in helping a couple of early-stage biotech companies. A few years ago she went on a Smith Travel trip to Normandy and enjoyed a mini-reunion while on the trip with CHARLOTTE BURKHART KELLER and MARJORIE LAMBERTI. Writing from England, where she and her family live, CLAIRE DAVIDSON PEPPIATT reports that she and Hugh “are enjoying a retirement of sorts.” They have five married children. Claire and Hugh love and feel blessed in all their children, their in-laws, and in their 19 grandchildren, ages 2 to 16; Claire greatly relishes the teenagers, whom she finds a lot of fun. She has worked for four years as a bereavement counselor on the chaplaincy team at a men’s prison. She writes that this has been “a very steep learning curve. The stories some of the men have to tell are truly terrible, and it is no wonder they have turned to drugs and crime.” Claire hopes to get to our 50th Reunion. We all hope so, too. Last June, ELLEN GLEITSMAN TROKEL attended the AASC symposium on women’s health and well-being held on campus and recommends returning to Smith for these events. While Ellen was the only ’59 alumna there, she thoroughly enjoyed the company of the women from their 20s to their 80s who attended. She reports that the campus looked beautiful. MARGARET WOODHEAD KATRANIDES gave the Jonathan Plummer Lecture at the summer session of the Illinois Yearly Meeting. She writes that her stepson is serving in the Navy in Iraq, and that, while he was on duty there, his daughter was born. SHEILA BODINE helped arrange a gathering that took place in July at Mystic Seaport. It included Sheila, KATHERINE (KINKY) ECKFELDT COWLES, NANCY NEWTON WEST, ALICE WATSON HOUSTON, MARY CHRISMAN ANDERSON, and KATHLEEN PARKER O’BEIRNE. They enjoyed sharing ideas about our upcoming 50th Reunion. Last spring AN CLARK SOKOLOVSKA took a three-month exploration of parts of Europe. An invitation to speak at the Expertissues Meeting at the University of Trento in April inspired the trip. She gave a social science lecture to cell biologists and reports that all went very well. A lovely celebration of her 70th birthday and husband Bob’s 75th birthday is the news from ANN LOZIER VON DER LIPPE. She and Bob spent a month in Italy and brought their children and grandchildren over to join them for a week in a wonderful spot outside of Todi. They visited churches, ruins, and museums and feasted on wonderful Italian food. Ann and Bob spend summers in Little Compton, RI, and the rest of the year in Boston. Ann would love to know how others celebrated their 70th birthdays. She is enjoying staying in touch as we plan for our 50th and 48 The Town Point Club in Norfolk, VA, was the site for a class of ’60 mini-reunion that included Kit McCally Ober, Lucille (Honey) Rundin Evans, Jane Yolen, Minette Switzer Cooper, and Nancy Grant Sloan. hopes everyone is planning to come to Northampton. NANCY GUNTHER STEGER is finding retirement from full-time work a combination of trying to clean out mountains of clutter acquired over the years, doing volunteer work, and sailing around their end of Long Island Sound. John pines for a bigger boat but has not yet succumbed to temptation. Nancy says, “Our most embarrassing nautical moment occurred last summer when we managed to capsize our rather tippy dinghy in the middle of the harbor in New Rochelle right in front of the Harbor Police Station. Most amusing for all.” Their daughter is in her third year of a psychiatry residence. LOUANNA OWENS CARLIN and ROSALIND TUPPER MAIDEN made a trip together to France. Roz writes that Louanna swapped her lovely Brooklyn Heights apartment for a beautiful country home on the outskirts of Toulouse, then invited Roz to join her and her daughter and granddaughter on the trip. They had a wonderful time, Roz says, “thanks chiefly to Louanna’s adventurous spirit, which took us into homes of total strangers and justified years of courses in French taken by Ms. Carlin!” LEE ROBINSON TURNER lives in Falmouth, MA, with husband Lou. They are busy there with many activities and some travel, and she is active with the Smith College Club of Cape Cod. CAROLYN FOSTER MCNAUGHT attends meetings with her. Lee has two granddaughters; one is also the grandchild of DIANA PIKE HARDING ’58. The Robinsons recently had a family reunion on the West Coast, which included Lee’s sister, MARY ROBINSON WHITTEMORE ’62. Although unable to see former roommate CAROL LAVENSTEIN WIRTSCHAFTER due to too little time and too much traffic, Lee greatly enjoyed seeing CAROL TURTLE in Oregon. She and Carol had many years to remember and did not get into politics until the end of the visit! Lee’s daughter married in June, and lives in a yurt that Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 she and her husband built five years ago. Lee would love to hear from any of us visiting Falmouth. ANNE BATES LINDEN continues her work in Ukraine. The former minister of family, children, and sport, Yuri Pavlenko, has agreed to sponsor a gathering of individuals working with orphans, orphanages, and street children. Anne has been trying to find someone willing to do this for several years, including writing many proposals, and reports, “Convincing Pavlenko took three minutes.” One of our inveterate class travelers is AMANDA NYCE MCINTYRE. She and Jim traveled to Germany and England in June, and Amanda had a very pleasant trip with a Smith Travel group to Guatemala earlier in the year. LOIS BURRILL is recovering well from hip surgery last May and hopes to be traveling soon again. Sec., Alice Wieland Harrison, 50 Ferson Road, Hanover, NH 03755, johnandalice@valley.net 1960 Your secretary spent the summer in Kirkcudbright, Scotland, where Britain had the wettest weather on record. Extensive BBC coverage of Wimbledon and the golf Open at Carnoustie kept me happy, however. Question for this column: What do you find most satisfying as you approach age 70? JUDY SYKES ARDIS reports complete recovery from a nasty lung infection, and has moved from Greensboro, NC, to Sturbridge, MA, near her son and 3-year-old grandson. JUDY BEEBE GUMMERE finds satisfaction in the happiness and health of her children and grandchildren, her longrunning marriage, volunteer activities with several boards, First Tee, a singing group, and continuing part-time work as a reference librarian. Travel to Peru, South Africa, Costa Rica, the Normandy Coast, and Tuscany complete the list. “Body may betray but my mind still works!” SUSAN LIVINGSTON believes this age is the prime of life, and continues to run a bed-and-breakfast and compete in masters swimming. She recently spent an evening overlooking the Charles with PAT HANSON RODGERS and NANCY BASSETT SMITH. She took a week’s tandem bike tour from Memphis to New Orleans, using the Delta Queen paddle wheeler as her moving hotel. LEE BALDWIN DALZELL downsized to a one-bedroom condo in New York City, in the same building as BENITA BRYANT TRINKLE. She sings and performs at Carnegie Hall with the Oratorio Society, whose maestro’s eyes lit up at the mention of the legendary Iva Dee Hyatt. She and her husband have just published their second book, The House the Rockefellers Built: A Tale of Money, Taste, and Power in 20th-Century America. MARNA HAYDEN finds her professional and community work very satisfying, is proud of her family, and enjoyed a recent cruise with them to Australia and New Zealand. KIT MCCALLY OBER lives in Williamsburg’s Ford’s Colony, where she regularly sees HONEY RUNDEL EVANS and ANN HARRISON-CLARK, who serves on the colony board, as well as MINETTE SWITZER COOPER and HELEN TOWNSEND REED nearby. Their calendars remain full with the many activities there. ADELAIDE SUGARMAN-GREENBERG insists, “I’m just 68. Don’t rush me!” She loves being able to do what she wants with her time, feels more comfortable in her own skin, less at the mercy of societal expectations, and cherishes longtime friendships because they are so full of history, loyalty, and mutual acceptance. JUDY TUTUN EBBY hopes 70 is just a number, and finds grandchildren, with their curiosity, creativity, and humor, most satisfying; least satisfying—our government. She has great gratitude for her Smith education. HARRIET STEVENS TURNER works at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, both as office of international affairs director and as Hispanic studies professor. Focusing on 19th-century Spain, she enjoys using electronic teaching tools for analyzing and appreciating the liveliness of texts, that elusive space between reader and words. ELIZABETH HERRICK WHITE divides her time between California and Idaho, and enjoys numerous outdoor activities. She serves on the board of Whirlwind Wheelchair International and volunteers for Idaho’s land trust, while continuing her drawing and painting. MAUREEN RELLAND RIGGIO continues her Manhattan ophthalmology practice, socializing with PATRICIA ANDREWS STEFFAN and BENITA BRYANT TRINKLE. She weekends and summers in Southampton. LYN GILLESPIE BRAKEMAN aspires to retire, or “reschedule,” and hopes soon to publish her memoir. She now has nine grandchildren and sees LLEWELLYN PARSONS SMITH, SUSAN WHITTLESEY WOLF, and SUSAN GRAY on Cape Cod. ALICE LINEBERGER HARNEY recently moved to a Charlotte, NC, condo, which she enjoys and finds less stressful. She has also seen several classmates there. ELIZABETH BLUMENTHAL, a retirement and leadership coach, finds life has wonderful opportunities at this age. Both KEVYN UNGEMAH GARDELLA and her daughter have recently faced serious illnesses. Kevyn continues her piano, golf, and tennis, however, and volunteers with learning-disabled children, the Save Darfur movement, and raising awareness for early mammograms. ANDREA WRIGHT is busy with Hampshire College women’s Life-Work Planning workshops and Northampton’s Gay Pride march with other Raging Grannies, a group that sings irreverently to promote peace and justice. She also enjoys quieter activities such as reading and area cultural events. TINKER JENNEY SALTONSTALL recently drove around the country, visiting LYNN BURROWS DONALDSON and LAURA DAMON in their environmentally friendly homes. With their downsized house in Marion, MA, they are now free to travel and see nine grandkids. ANN LINEN PROBERT played in Bermuda’s Mid-Ocean Invitational Golf Tournament, and watched tennis at the Coral Beach Club, near where she and your secretary spent a memorable family vacation years ago. CAROLYN MILMOE POMEROY finds most satisfying the time to enjoy family, friends, and good books, with the added benefit of having a husband who enjoys doing the cooking! Her husband, three daughters, and grandchildren are all active in the Episcopal Church in New Jersey, Maine, and Maryland. Vacation time is spent on Maine’s Sheepscott River. SUSAN WHITTLESEY WOLF returned to Japan, where she taught in a private school 47 years ago, visiting with her Japanese family, traveling with her daughter, and seeing her son at his State Department post. She sees societal change for women having just begun there, but finds overall culture and traditional ways much the same as the ’60s and before. JACKIE GARDNER ROLAND celebrates being a grandmother; is proud of her son, a jazz musician who does State Department tours to Asia; and continues to teach history at Pace University in New York, traveling to India and Asia with her work. VIRGINIA COCHRAN RUSCH took a Smith Travel trip to Siberia and Mongolia, where she extended her stay. She returned to a Peace Corps reunion, having been with the first group to the Philippines in 1960. Her ancestors were also from Kirkcudbright, Scotland! Sec., Barbara Newberry Lindsley, P.O. Box 881, Millbrook, NY 12545, bnlgolf@aol.com 1961 I’m happy to report an outpouring of interest in attending our 50th. Many have expressed sadness at the news of PAGE NEVILLE PYLE’s death in May; her obituary was in the Fall ’07 Quarterly. Contact me for a copy of a wonderful New York Times article about her. On a much happier note, BARBARA BROWN GREGORICH LOTT married Charles Lott in Nov. ’06. They met many years ago in Buck Hill Falls, PA. PHYLLIS BENFORD KROLL and husband Alex celebrated their 45th anniversary in Dec. ’06. Son Alex is a writer in New York City; son Michael works for Microsoft in Seattle; and daughter Alicia lives in Vermont near them, teaching part-time high school and raising a daughter and son. Phyllis continues to raise and show English pointers. She and Alex travel and enjoy life on Lake Champlain. IRINI-NIKE SARLIS has devoted much effort to ecologically and culturally sustainable building and planning issues, co-founded nonprofit organizations, and been active in nongovernmental activities. She hopes to work on Friends of the Campus with other alumnae. MARTHA YOST NEWCOMER is still actively involved with skating, primarily as a music technician and announcer at the Detroit Skating Club. She spent five weeks on Skate Detroit last summer. Daughter Juliet works for the U.S. Figure Skating Company in Colorado Springs. The family spent the holidays in England last year, where son Andy was working. Son Jeff is a full professor at Western Washington University and is president of the faculty senate. Martha sings in two choral groups, does water aerobics, and gardens and sews when time allows. SARA MACK is retired from teaching the classics full-time at the University of North Carolina, though she still teaches two courses. She had a large family reunion in Maine last summer that included her son and daughter and their families. Sara does yoga and volunteers and suspects she won’t do research anymore. “Who needs another book on Latin poetry anyway?” she says. CAROL JOHNSON DENT and her daughters are still in California. One is a tenured professor at UC Santa Cruz, one a Hollywood writer, and the youngest has an art gallery in San Francisco and designs theater sets. Carol is a full-time ESL instructor at City College of San Francisco with no plans to retire yet. A cousin’s passing caused her to reconnect with family on the East Coast. LUCY NOYES had a reunion in Placitas, NM, in honor of husband Dick’s 80th, with 32 family members and lots of friends. She wrote from her casita in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, where she and family go several times a year. Renters are there the rest of the time, including Smithies. San Miguel is aesthetically beautiful, interesting, and a delight. Lucy’s real estate business in Placitas thrives. ELIZABETH TARLAU WEINGARTEN reports that daughter Jo is an attorney in San Francisco, having clerked for a federal judge in Houston, and then an appellate judge in the second circuit. Liz had a mini-reunion in Pittsfield with LEE ELLISON ADINOLFI and MARY WOODSON CROWELL. She summers in Norwich, VT, and winters in Houston. ANNE GAGNEBIN COFFIN is still busy full-time at the International Print Center in New York, a nonprofit exhibition space in Chelsea, now in its eighth season. Anne enjoys the art world and loves friends to visit at the center on West 26th Street. Anne and husband John moved back to Greenwich Village three years ago and are having a great time with three grandchildren, two in New York and one in London. She writes, “Looking back, I’m not sure how any of us navigated the young-children stage.” JOAN WANOUS D’AOUST continues very satisfying work, part-time, at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, though she summers in Helena, MT, and winters in St. George, UT. She hikes and bikes in her free time. In May, she floated the Colorado River in a dory boat through the Grand Canyon—14 days, 280 miles. Each year Joan travels to and treks in the Himalayas. Her two sons are doing well in Boulder and southern Missouri. JUDI JOHNSON SCHWEIKERT enjoys retirement with Dan, skiing many days at Park City during the season. They returned to England for the first time since 1962 and were planning a trip to China. She added two new grandchildren this year, for a total of four. LESLIE COLLINS DANIEL writes from her new loft in Astoria, OR, “We overlook the Columbia River and spend our days watching freighters, tankers, and navy ships ply their way up and down the river.” This is their summer retreat from the desert heat. They are getting to know Astoria, “the oldest settlement west of the Mississippi.” Their children are dispersed all over the country, but they try hard to stay in touch. JANE LEE WOLFE does resident relations at Twin Pines Housing Trust, located in White River Junction, VT, which builds and maintains affordable housing in Vermont and New Hampshire. She also runs Bog Chapel, a nonprofit that does spiritual health and training seminars, workshops, and one-on-one work. JULIE PEARCE continues as a psychotherapist with a private practice and adjunct professor of psychology and women’s studies at a community college. Living in Orange County, CA, she thinks “driving the freeways alone here is a good anti-Alzheimer’s workout.” Gardening—a wild one—is one of her spiritual practices. She loves friends and pets and “just taking the time out for fun in all the different forms it comes in.” Julie had to be rescued from a riptide in the ocean, which was humbling, but a reminder that it is “OK to reach out to others if I need to.” She finds it a bit scary to be nearing 70. What do you all think? ELLEN BARTLETT NODELMAN has retired three times in the past seven years, and once again finds herself unretired with two jobs. Ellen has been commissioned to write a history of the school at which she taught for 32 years, and then was persuaded to take on college guidance again. She finds she can do this from Connecticut, with a little pied-a-terre in Rockland County, NY. She plays the cello and sings in local choral groups. Grandsons 14 and 8 and granddaughters 8 and 16 months are growing apace. MARILYN CARLSON NELSON continues as chair and CEO of Carlson, and writes, “These are exciting times. Our corporate travel company, Carlson Wagonlit, is the largest in the world, our hotel company is growing globally, and our restaurant company is now represented in 57 countries.” MARY KILEY NEWMAN is enjoying her role as class treasurer, especially hearing from us all as dues roll in. Mary and husband Fred joined a Smith Travel tour to Japan in June, and it was a wonderful cultural and social experience, with alums and a few spouses. They visited temples, shrines, castles, and museums new and old with both Eastern and Western art. “Everything really does run on time and all the clocks agree,” Mary reports, adding that the organization and leadership of the trip were outstanding. Another class officer, ELLEN STOVER EDDY, writes that after a busy spring featuring her mother’s two hospitalizations (she’s OK now); husband John’s hospitalization with multiple pulmonary embolisms caused by plane travel (“Take aspirin and move around while airborne,” Ellen says); and two weeks in Maine with four generations, she and John headed to Lisbon, then cruised for 10 days in the Mediterranean, ending in Malta. September began Ellen’s busy but enjoyable pre-Christmas retailing season selling fashion and home accessories at Patchpoint Ltd. In Brunswick, ME, ELIZABETH MARR’s gardens were on the garden tour sponsored by Midcoast Hunger Prevention. Elizabeth and her sister, who live there with their two rescue dogs, enjoy doing all the gardening, which was much admired by visitors. Elizabeth hopes “all of you who are free from the ravages of aging appreciate your good health.” In her late 50s, she Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 49 alumnae update was diagnosed with blepharospasm and ocular apraxia, and now painful lumbar stenosis has arrived. More news from midcoast Maine: JOYCE GEIGER SPENCER and her husband have moved into a house on a point of family land near Bath. KITTY NORCROSS WHEELER is close by, and POESY BARLOW and WENDY VOLLERTSON MALLORY are not far (nor am I in the summer). Their first houseguest was NINA YOUNG BIRD, who came from England to attend the 50th reunion at Hopkins Grammar in New Haven. SARA MACK joined them there. Jim and Joyce had an amazing opportunity to tour South Africa with the Yale alumni chorus. They sang with 700 South African musicians and “came away deeply touched by the kindness and hopeful spirit of reconciliation among all we met.” Yet another Mainer (Portland) is BETH STODDARD, who is a licensed Brain Gym instructor/consultant. Beth ran a conference in the summer at which 30 people learned a unique specialty of “neurosensory motor and reflex integration into whole body movement.” Individuals treated after the conference experienced significant change, she writes. Beth introduced the specialty to the Maine Medical Center in Portland. She and husband Doug camped in the summer near Boothbay and highly recommend the new botanical garden there. Their granddaughter, a sophomore at Bates, will spend a semester in Japan, bringing back memories of Beth’s favorite course, which was Oriental art with Mr. McSherry. LIZ SMITH WITTER spent a week at the New England Historical Genealogical Society working 12 hours a day on research, with a few lectures interspersed. Her mother was a Smith and married a Smith so she had her work cut out for her. She and Sophia Smith both descended from a Plymouth John Smith, but sadly not the same one. SALLY SCULLY and husband David McNeil are enjoying their retirement—“time to work on the book!”— spending half a year at their home in Italy, half in San Francisco. She takes her inspiration from HELEN HARDEN CHENUT’s publishing achievements. She and her husband were planning a trip to Bhutan via Singapore. Sally was practicing high-altitude hiking at Lake Tahoe in preparation. At our 50th, she would love a seventh-grade reunion with Helen, JILL RUSSELL BENEDICT, and TERRY TROWBRIDGE GAGNIER. Sec., Betsy Carter, 2475 Virginia Avenue NW, #922, Washington, DC 20037, vanbets@starpower.net 1962 The following is a special note to all from our new president, JUDY TUCHMAN RATZAN: “It still seems hard for me to believe that it’s been 45 years since graduation and that our next 50 Alumnae and former faculty gather at the Morgan Library in New York City to celebrate the birthday of Patricia Weed, professor emerita of French language and literature. Pictured are Elisa Barsoum Losada ’86, Linda Rose ’63, Patricia, Professor Emerita Josephine Ott, Professor Emerita Marie-Jose Delage, Timmie Birge Vitz ’63, and Susan Wetchler Wei ’79. Reunion will be our 50th. Just yesterday we were in the Quad for graduation looking forward to whatever life would bring us. After meeting with classmates during this last Reunion, I appreciate that we continue to look ahead and that 66 has become the new 50. Our previous team of class officers did an outstanding job during the past five years, and I want to thank them for all their efforts on our behalf and for making Reunion the fantastic success it was. I also want to thank the nominating committee and the members of the class of ’62 for the confidence they have placed in me as the new president. I look forward to working with the wonderful group of women who comprise our new officers—JULIE KEITH, vice president; SUSAN TEOMMEY RYDELL, returning secretary; and PRISCILLA JENKINS BENSON, our veteran and much-appreciated treasurer—and representing all the wonderful women in the class of ’62.” NANCY GOODMAN SIMON says Reunion was great fun! She saw old friends, met new ones, and noted that we definitely get more interesting as we get older. She hopes everyone who can, makes it to the 50th. She is still busy with the Washington, DC, Smith club and its school partnership, and they have been very involved with their library renovation. She tries to see her granddaughter, 2, as often as she can. ANDREA RICE sends some Reunion quick notes: “Some of the Scales ’62ers ate at Wiggins on Thursday night: JOANNE FOSTER, FRANCIE GARBER PEPPER, JUDY BOWMAN, and I. Art gallery was great. Staying at Gillett/Northrup showed a new side of campus to Quad dwellers; it was easier getting around! Alumnae College very fine, quality food in Seelye basement. Rare Book Room session very enlightening. Followed with a Smith Travel trip on the Trans-Siberia Railroad and Mongolia and Gobi Desert.” LURA MYERS BROOKINS sends an update on her radical move from Man- Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 hattan to Santa Fe to begin a landscape-design business. She is now a part-time design consultant and full-time artist—a plein aire pastel painter. It is totally unimaginable living on the edge in her own adobe house. Both adult children have their own businesses: daughter Lindsay lives on Long Island with three sons, and son Body lives outside of Boston with a son. Lura’s art is now shown in Santa Fe and East Hampton. She wishes everyone the best. LOIS BLITZER BERNSTEIN plans to attend our 50th Reunion; a friend’s wedding prevented her from getting to our 45th. She played last summer for the first time ever, but got back to work as a fundraiser in the fall. Retirement is not yet calling, and her husband is still working. She loves being a nana; her son’s children are 11 and 5 and live nearby. She is busy working out; walking with friends; going to the theater, movies, and concerts; and enjoying the excitement of New York, with East Hampton on the weekends. ANNE CLARKE GABEL was sorry not to be able to get to Reunion, but she has had some great times with Gillett friends she hadn’t seen for a while: SALLY ROSS SCHROEDER ’61, who visited Boston with her husband; JULIE JOHNSON LINDQUIST on her way to Maine; and DIANE CAMINS SIEGEL, who was visiting with JILL GREENSPAN SCHIFFMAN in New London. Jill prepared an elegant luncheon for her and Diane, and they chatted for hours. It means a lot to stay in touch and realize how lucky we are to have enduring friendships. GINNY REX DAY was sorry to miss Reunion. As a parish priest, her weekends are full. By the 50th, she will be retired, and able to attend. In the meantime, she is looking forward to a mini-reunion on Cape Cod with FREDDY COBEY, SANDY BENSEN CALHOUN, JANE CHRISTIE , and SHIRLEY SLATER CROSMAN. Life in parish ministry is a blessing and a challenge. It is like being a CEO with multiple bosses— much responsibility and many folks with ideas about what is to be done. Life is good. Her husband, children, and grandchildren thrive. BETTY BYRNE writes, “I’ll try to be off to Phuket twice this winter, [but] I want to spend Christmas at home. Symphony work is expanding to yearround. Jacksonville, FL, is a really booming metropolis. Love my small 1921 home!” Editor’s note: Due to a fact-checking error at the Quarterly offices, BETTY BYRNE was incorrectly identified in the Fall ’07 Quarterly as BETTY TURNER BURNE. We apologize for the error. Sec., Susan Teommey Rydell, 4422 Gaywood Drive, Minnetonka, MN 55345, susan.rydell@metrostate.edu 1963 Greetings to all you busy classmates! I can’t believe that we have no news for this edition! I will add my own proud announcement: Granddaughter number two, Katelyn Elizabeth, arrived on Aug. 16. Mom JENNIFER MYERS WELLS ’94, dad Jacob, and sister Emily are all very excited. Get your bags packed for our 45th Reunion coming up in May! Sec., Nancy Tipton Myers, 7 Sheffield Court, Beaufort, SC 29907, nancym6241@aol.com 1964 Vice presidents GINNY HAYMAN COHEN, LILE RASMUSON GIBBONS, and TONI GROTTA WOLFMAN are at work on our 45th Reunion in May ’09. They tell us, “We have plans to make the Reunion creative, meaningful, and fun, and we hope that many of you will attend. If you are interested in helping out in any way, large or small, please contact Ginny at vcints@optonline.net.” SUZANNE WOOSTER WILSEY and JENNY KELSEY attended a beautiful 97th birthday celebration for BETTY ROBINTON, MA ’42, given by DELIGHT WING DODYK ’59. Suzie reports, “Betty was remarkable and had wonderful conversations with her many guests. She wants us all to know how very much she appreciates the flowers we sent as a class and the many notes and messages she received.” NORMA TODD DODGE comments, “Even though I may not have known you, I could relate to most of you who contributed to the Summer ’07 column. I am happily retired from a job I loved, and I am traveling the world and enjoying my children and grandchildren. I have been widowed for four years. My husband was given seven wonderful years due to a kidney transplant. I am among the few not dealing with health problems of the older generation. My parents died young, and my mother-in-law (my best friend) is going strong at 93. I do disaster recovery work through the Methodist church. I worked locally when Pittsburgh flooded and tornadoes hit nearby and also traveled to the Gulf Coast. I have spent time in a Moscow orphanage as well. God has richly blessed me.” MARGIE BARCLAY writes, “I continue to divide my year between summers in New York City and winters in Oaxaca, Mexico. Ignore the overwrought news stories about Oaxaca—it’s safe and a wonderful place to visit. I created a Website in English that is a daily events calendar of Oaxaca City.” KATE ALDERMAN RUBY retired two years ago after many years as a legal research librarian; husband John has his eyes set on retirement later this year. Daughter Susannah is a horse trainer in Wilmington, NC, and Becca is in vet school in New Zealand. GRACE KAUFMANN writes, “Several years ago I gave up my practice in psychotherapy and moved to my house in Cutchogue on the North Fork of Long Island. I was in the midst of a debilitating depression and could barely function. Fortunately, I’ve found wonderful help out here and am doing much better. This is a beautiful and peaceful area, which I find very calming. I’ve done some literacy tutoring, sing in a choral group, and belong to a wonderful quilt guild. I’m currently doing a lot with glass, especially fusing and jewelry; it’s a fascinating medium. I see KATHY KEHOE RUHL often and went to the premiere of her daughter’s play, The Clean House. Wonderful!” EVELYN WOLFF reports, “After working for 42 years, most of them in the affordable-housing finance field, I decided the time had come to shift gears. I left my most recent position at Centerline Capital in May, took the summer off, and plan to get involved on a part-time basis (voluntary and/ or for pay) in a challenging and fun endeavor. Am open to new ideas and adventures—bought a kayak, an iPod, and a red sports convertible! I feel free as a bird and love it.” MARY LAWRENCE TEST writes, “SUSAN WHEELER and I met in Paris for three days around my birthday in May. It was a lot of fun to celebrate turning 65 in the city in which I spent junior year (where I celebrated 21) and also to explore Paris with Susan. I go fairly often, but she had not been back in years. Last year we were together in Rome and Malta.” JEAN HOWELL says, “I’m still married to my wonderful husband, Rudy Knauer. As a board member of the Phoenix affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, I attended the organization’s annual convention in San Diego in June.” CAROL SUDHALTER comments, “Since 2002 I have made several tours of Italy as a jazz saxophonist/flautist, giving more and more concerts and eventually doing a recording with a label in Rome. My last trip was a big first for me. Besides a month in Italy, I was hired to play in Paris, and then in England at Birmingham Festival, Swanage Festival, and a series called The Friends of Upton Jazz.” Carol received top billing and paired off with several saxophone greats, and plans to return soon. She adds that she was stranded for two days by floods in Great Malvern (the home of Edward Elgar). LINDA ROSENBAUM BUSCH retired a year ago as an environmental planner for Middlesex County, NJ, where she worked to preserve farmland. She writes, “I love retirement and do all the things I could not do previously. I take courses in New York City on global politics and attend art lectures in galleries and museums. I joined a book club, take bridge lessons, play golf, and travel. Our youngest daughter was married this year, and our older daughters are married and have three children each. They all live within an hour of our home, and I spend a lot of time with each family. Bert plans never to retire, but he does take time off to travel and be with family and friends.” SUSAN SCHLANSKY KEITH reports that her husband, diagnosed with chronic myelogenous leukemia in Feb. ’07, is responding well to an investigational medication he is receiving through the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. Susan marked her sixth anniversary of kidney dialysis in July. She says, “We are indebted to our lovely friends for support and encouragement.” JOAN MCLAUGHLIN BOUCHARD left the day after her 65th birthday to fly to San Pedro Sula, Honduras, where she teaches middle school science in a bilingual Episcopalian school. She writes, “I’ll be away for a total of 30 months. I have good tenants, who are letting my dog, Buddy, stay at home with them while I’m gone. As much cycling and bird-watching as can be arranged will fill school holidays. I tried for the Peace Corps but was disappointed that their view of me seemed to be of some future healthcare liability—their loss! Sadly, I won’t be attending our next Reunion—the first one I will have missed since graduation. Someone else will have to gather French House together.” ANGELA DANIELS CARTER writes, “I retired twice and am on another mission as family life consultant at the Wake Correctional Center, a minimum-security prison in Raleigh, NC, under the auspices of Lutheran Family Services. One of my interests is to obtain my CTM, Competent Toastmaster Award. There are so many stories to tell, I have no problem finding topics for my speeches. My greatest joy is my family, especially my two granddaughters, 11 and 8. My husband, John, and I moved to Raleigh from Trenton, NJ, in 1999.” JUDITH TICK reports, “I served as the consulting scholar in residence for this year’s Festival of Contemporary Music at Tanglewood in Lenox, MA, the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. The festival, directed by composer John Harbison, was devoted to the generation of 1938, a remarkable year that yielded many important American composers of contemporary classical music. I had a great time interviewing 19 of them and being around so many young amazing virtuoso orchestral players and singers who study there.” WENDY OSSERMAN writes, “The Wendy Osserman Dance Company is in residence at the Chelsea Art Museum. After appearing there five times last season, we look forward to continuing to respond to their exhibits. The company will appear at the Hudson Guild Theater in New York City, March 26–30. Daughter Liz will complete her MFA in fine art at Columbia University next spring.” Sec., Arlene Stolper Simon, 200 East 90th Street #27E, New York, NY 10128, asimon1964@aol.com 1965 Last summer was a busy one for She visited her Sessions roommate SUZANNE HICKMAN PRATT at her parents’ memorial service on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, and with PAT KEREN MANNING at her mother’s memorial service in Washington, DC. Diana retired from the stage and moved with husband Bob to Texas Hill Country to enjoy Lady Bird Johnson’s wildflowers. Daughter Anne was married in July in Houston, and son Woody, his wife Karin, and their 7-year-old daughter and new baby live in Denver. Stepson Chris teaches in Germany. He brought his two sons for a visit, and all of them went to the Grand Canyon. In June ’07, JONA BURGESS HAMMER attended her 45th gymnasium reunion in Iceland. The gymnasium is similar to our junior college, and people identify with their gymnasium forever, which makes reunions great fun. Jona had hoped to see SVANFRIDUR LARSEN, but Svanfridur was busy with her granddaughter, visiting from California. They talked at length on the phone. In 2006, Svanfridur published an interesting book, Af erlendri rot (From Alien Roots), based on her master’s research into 19th-century translations of foreign texts into Icelandic. The book has been favorably received and is considered an important contribution to the field of translation studies in Iceland. Jona heard an interview with Svanfridur on Icelandic radio: She spoke very positively about her Smith experience and how important it had been to her even though she was only here one year. Both Jona and Svanfridur entered Smith as sophomores and both are published authors. ANN CLARK still teaches philosophy at Saint Mary’s College in Indiana. In fall ’06, they had a great time reading Elizabeth Spelman, who at the same time was mentoring Ann’s niece KATIE ANN CLARK ’10. Ann thanks Smith for giving Katie such a wonderful first year. In March, Ann and CharDIANA BLAND LINDER. ley had a wonderful time with MARTI in San Francisco. Ann has become a registered yoga teacher and loves teaching age 50-plus students. “We have fun and feel lighter and at home in our age.” PRISCILLA (PIXIE) EAVES REISS reports that the impact of Katrina in New Orleans is still enormous and in 2007 they were still repairing damage caused by Katrina. “Nothing is as it was,” she says, “but life goes on and we are working to make improvements.” Women of the Storm and Citizens for One are two organizations created by women to address all the issues. Her son is a junior (a scholar and a football player) at the University of Virginia. Last spring, MARTY ENSEY CARNEVALE purchased a condo in San Diego as a getaway to visit family and friends. During the summer in Sun Valley, she enjoys hiking, biking, and tennis. Since moving to Manhattan more than six years ago, JOANNE (CHICHI) FOX BRUMBERG has become immersed in life there. ADELE SCHWEITZER REBELL helped her take advantage of so many things; it is hard to believe Adele passed away more than two years ago. Chichi has reconnected with SUSAN JACOBSON EPSTEIN, and one day a week, Chichi volunteers for the Paley Center for Media. Another day is spent with her daughter in Westchester and her two boys (2 and 5) and “the light of our lives!” Len and Chichi celebrated their 40th anniversary. He works for an REIT, which was purchased by an Australian company. Their son continues interpreting for the deaf. On July 4, ’06, SALLY HANFORD DAVENPORT became a grandmother to Elsa, born to Sally’s daughter and her husband. “Being a grandmother is all it’s cracked up to be and then some!” says Sally. Her son, Luke, is in his second year of graduate school at Columbia. JANDY JONES BIRD and Jim continue to enjoy their snowbird life, with winters in Florida and summers in New Jersey. Nov. ’06 brought the arrival of twin granddaughters. With the twins’ 6year-old brother, they now have three grandchildren. “We are busier than ever in retirement,” she writes. PAT KEREN MANNING’s mother passed away in April just two months short of her 96th birthday. She requested that her life be celebrated at a party, which DIANA BLAND LINDER , PAULA FERRIS EINAUDI, NAOMI LYNN HURWITZ GERBER, and WILMA (WILLIE) RICHLIN ANTMAN attended. In September, daughter Sarah entered UCLA’s School of Public Affairs in urban planning. Now everyone (including Jay, Maria, and the two grandchildren) is in Los Angeles. In July, GLORIA MISHURIS BUXBAUM and Larry Brand traveled to Alaska to celebrate the wedding of her son, Evan. They were married at their home in Eagle River overlooking a beautiful waterfall and river scene. LITCHMAN Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 51 alumnae update Evan is a pediatrician in Anchorage; new wife Valerie has three children (10, 7, and 5). Gloria is crazy about her new daughter-in-law and instant grandchildren. She just wishes they lived a little closer. Her daughter, Deborah, lives in Waltham and works for a consulting company. Gloria and Larry spent another wonderful summer at Cape Cod. She continues to take watercolor classes and loves the magic of the paint. When in New Jersey, Gloria teaches English to a lovely young Korean woman. They continue to enjoy football games, concerts, plays, and their two rescue greyhounds. BEVERLY PARKER BINGHAM’s husband, David, was diagnosed more than a year ago with an Alzheimer’s-type problem (severe short-term memory loss). Says Beverly, “Because he has always been a take-charge type guy, I am having to gradually take over running everything, including him.” Their daughter, KIMBERLY BINGHAM KNOPF ’79, moved from Severna Park, MD, to Mill Valley, CA. Kimberly’s husband is an oncologist, and they have two children. Life has been eventful for MARIANNE SCHWARZ BENTLEY. In 2006, both her daughters married wonderful young men. In Aug. ’06, Marianne and her partner, Willi, took a three-week trip in their VW pop-top camper from Tennessee to the Bay Area of California and up the coast to Portland, OR, and back. They thoroughly enjoyed the wonderful state and national parks they visited and only spent four or five nights in real beds. She writes, “I am amazed at what a vast and beautiful country we live in.” They visited ANNE HARDING WOODWORTH and Fred at their cabin near Brevard, NC, and hiked and took bike rides along the Blue Ridge Parkway. Marianne has experienced the delight of becoming a grandmother for the first time and feels very fortunate. At the 82nd commencement at Brooklyn College, ROBERTA SIEGAL MATTHEWS was honored for her six years as provost and vice president of academic affairs and received the presidential medal. Commencement marked the start of Roberta’s retirement. Sec., Marcia Schofield, P.O. Box 686, Solana Beach, CA 92075, marcia@smith.alumnae.net, www.smith65.org 1966 My pitch this time invited comments about the value of being in a women’s group. For the past 20 years, I’ve sat with different groups of women to do personal writing, explore dreams, search for our own creative vein of gold, meditate, expand our inner and outer peace, and share favorite books. The friendships with these women ebb and flow, but each has added something unique to my life. Some are my forever-count-on-for- 52 Some class of ’66 officers gather in Berkeley, CA. Pictured, left to right, are Ann Shapiro Zartler, Diana Kopp McDonough, Ellen Roop Fisher, and Sarah Cross Mills. anything cohorts. I include my older sister as an important member of my larger sisterhood, although we’re separated by a continent. We shared a memorable trip to Ireland in June, along with a small group of hobby sheep breeders. (We don’t have sheep, but we love knitting!) On my flight east, it took only about 10 minutes to discover that my seatmate was EMILY MITCHELL THACKER, even though we had never met! We started talking about good books, then Maine, where I was heading, which led to her mentioning Colby, although that wasn’t where she went to college. Where did she go? Smith. What year did she graduate? Such a tiny world! VIVIAN JARRETT HARROWER writes from Toronto, “I have been part of a monthly book group for over 10 years now. It really is a support group, and sometimes we feel that we should just ’fess up and call it an eating group. The basic group includes five women. We always start with wine and hors d’oeuvres as we catch up on our latest news and emotional state. There have been significant changes for all of us. We have celebrated with one another, and we have cried with one another.” She’s grateful to her women friends for “their strength, compassion, and wisdom” in tough times. Vivian says they tend to read books by women authors. She recommends Lori Lansen’s The Girls, about conjoined twins, and says an all-time favorite is Jill Ker Conway’s The Road from Coorain. ELLEN MOORHOUSE, also from Toronto, says, “Somehow, retirement goals get sidetracked. I’ve taken up a new career, teaching English as a second language at a Toronto community college, hoping to take short-term jobs overseas. My daughter is in her last year at the university, while husband Ken continues to work at the Toronto Star, where we met more than two decades ago.” EVELYN ROTH FOGARASI shared this important recent experience: After a wonderful winter in Naples, FL, returning to Baltimore in April, Evy writes, “I was diagnosed with breast Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 cancer. Luckily it is stage I and my prognosis is good, but it was a whirlwind of activity getting the diagnosis (it did not show up on a mammogram or sonogram), choosing the doctors, and getting the necessary treatment. I am lax about self-exams but for some reason did one. I felt a thickening, not a lump, and went to the gyn right away. My mother was a gyn and I remember her saying that it didn’t necessarily have to be a lump, any changes should be investigated. A very persistent breast surgeon did her own sonogram and finally found an area that she said looked a little different and biopsied it. I am very grateful she didn’t just say, ‘Let’s watch it for three months.’ Daughter Simone is a pediatrician at Children’s Hospital in New Orleans.” DIANA KOPP MCDONOUGH writes, “I have just been on an amazing vacation with my mother, the Garrison Keillor Prairie Home Companion Cruise to Norway! The cruise was round-trip from Copenhagen to Norway. The scenery was spectacular, and the entertainment unforgettable: the complete Prairie Home cast, fabulous operatic performances, the Kreutzer string quartet playing Grieg, a Swedish New Orleans jazz band, and ragtime piano. My mother, who is 86 and half Norwegian, had never been to Norway, so she was thrilled with everything. She even talked to Garrison Keillor in the elevator!” NANCY WHITTIER BERGER recently celebrated her 40th wedding anniversary to Walter and 40 years of loving life in San Francisco. She continues to enjoy walking and practicing obedience with her Westies and has been busy lately with four adorable Westie puppies. NANCY THOMPSON GODFREY writes, “I’ve been wedging work in between wonderful visits back East to Greenwich, CT (daughter and her family, my mom, sister, and friends), and to Traverse City, MI, where my son and his family have just moved. Tennis camp in Telluride and some explorations in Colorado with husband Peter rounded out the summer. My mom sent me an article about the late BETSY EDWARDS from the July 13 Manchester (VT) Journal; she left a gift of $1 million to Planned Parenthood of Northern New England.” It says that Betsy had been involved with the organization, but had never indicated that she intended to make this bequest. LARAINE LEBERFELD FERGENSON writes, “I’ve been enjoying retirement, but still keeping a hand in. I gave a talk on Wuthering Heights to a local book group recently and have an essay in a book on teaching this fascinating novel. The book is part of the Approaches to Teaching series published by the Modern Literature Association.” “John and I are still in Washington, DC,” writes MARY SPIECZNY PODESTA, “but the center of gravity of our family is moving west. Megan and her family are in the Bay Area, and son Gabe is in law school at Berkeley. Mae is still doing foundation work in Africa (Liberia now) but likely will be in California next year. We log airline miles getting together, often in Truckee, where we see PAM SCHWARZ. We think we will retire to the little place we’ve got there and see if we tire of the dry air and smell of pine needles. And that’s when I’ll finally learn to knit.” NANCY KROPP GROTE reports that she and Bob moved from Pittsburgh to Seattle last February: “Our children, Sara and Hobey, live in Seattle with their spouses and our five grandchildren, ranging in age from 4 weeks to 4 years old. Being with our family was the main reason for moving.” Nancy is an associate professor in the school of social work at the University of Washington with a joint appointment in psychiatry. Bob is retired. Says Nancy, “We love visitors and especially welcome Smith friends!” TOULA CHRISTAKI TOMESCU , MSW, writes, “I have been in Dallas for the last 30 years and have only kept in touch with CATHY FITZGERALD BARNIER in California. DIANA ZACARIAN was a dear friend, and I still miss her.” Toula has a full-time private practice and is active with professional organizations. She regularly visits Greece, her native land, and spent a month there last summer with her husband and son. She writes, “One book we discussed in a book club I started a few months ago is The Faith Club. It is the account of three women, a Jew, a Muslim, and a Christian, who formed a group after 9/11 to discover more about the other faiths because their kindergarten children were asking questions.” Toula started the club to engage in a deeper level of discussion, and it seems to be working. RUSTY TRUE BROWDER reports the birth last May of granddaughter Ruby, born to daughter Sarah and her husband. Rusty was grandmothering in Austin, TX, while daughter and sonin-law explored the city for a possible future move. ALICE VAN BUREN KELLEY writes, “My external life is flowing along its familiar channel, but my inner life is manifesting the sort of choppy water that comes when an outgoing tide meets an incoming tide. Imagining retirement on Cape Cod raises all sorts of tumultuous questions: How do I keep my important friendships alive when I move far from those who have been a regular part of my life? What will my marriage be like when my husband and I really share a house rather than living very busy and very different lives? I know that many of us have already worked through these questions, and I would love to hear about their experiences.” Sec., Sarah Cross Mills, 55 Brodea Way, San Rafael, CA 949011, sarahcrossmills@cs.com Sec., Deborah Eaton Keeney, 71 Blueberry Hill Lane, Sudbury, MA 01776, debeatonkeeney@smith. alumnae.net 1967 Sec., Dee Hopkin Lundberg, 120 Uncas Point Road, Guilford, CT 06437, deelundberg@earthlink.net Sec., Joey Boise Budell, 2370 Leafmore Drive, Decatur, GA 30033, jboise67@earthlink.net 1968 Sec., Nancy Hertz Ellis, 21 Zamrok Way, Morristown, NJ 07960, nancyhe@aol.com Sec., Carol Spielman-Ewan, 666 Upas Street #1603, San Diego, CA 92103, cray746@aol.com 1969 MARGOT LEVY finished her second term on the Crested Butte town council in November. She writes, “It has been an exciting, challenging eight years, serving while Crested Butte struggles with the growing pains and pressures that assail so many idyllic resort communities. I plan to celebrate by traveling to South Africa for almost four weeks of bird-watching, safari, and exploration with friends.” PAT TARZIAN is returning to school to receive a degree and then certification as a homeopathic practitioner. She says, “I’ll be attending the Homeopathic Community School in Seattle and hope to receive my degree in three years and my certification around the end of the fourth year.” Pat continues to teach yoga and will participate in a yoga teacher-training program. Son Kristofor has moved back to Portland, OR, pursuing the formation of businesses productive for the environment. JUDY NEISWANDER writes, “Bill and I and our cat, Fergus, continue to flourish in Minneapolis. I had a book published last year by a small British press on glass as an artist’s material, and Yale University Press will publish my next book in fall ’08 (finally!): Rooms with a View: Cultural Liberalism and Mary Seibert Goldschmid ’69 (left) visits with classmate April Hoxie Foley ’69, U.S. ambassador to Hungary, and her daughter, Catherine Foley ’02 (center). the British Home, 1870–1914. It will feel good to have this lengthy project completed.” BARBARA LAUREN still lives in Rockville, MD, and is associate director of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. Her work has involved her as editor-in-chief shaping and shepherding two new professional books, The Registrar’s Guide, which came out last year, and The College Admissions Officer’s Guide, which will come out next spring. SUSAN SMITH still works in the mental health field, doing social work for the state of Connecticut. Family and friends are fine. The school in Haiti founded by a priest in her church is doing well, with 300 children and plans to build a bigger school in the future. In July, JUDITH FERSTER visited Smith, with a stop at the new art museum, appreciating its easy access and its striking bathrooms (rightly listed as exhibits). She then revisited the Boston area and caught up with LUCY MACK and her husband. ANN WOLKEN says that Venice was beautiful and she enjoyed growing tomatoes and walking along the beach. Daughter Cassie is in an MEd program at UC Santa Barbara. JANET WILLIAMS HARRISON writes that her family celebrated the early August wedding of oldest son Trent. The couple live in New York City, and are pursuing degrees respectively in history at Columbia and neuropsychology at Stony Brook. MARY SEIBERT GOLDSCHMID recently retired as an economics professor and business consultant, while husband Harvey continues as a professor at Columbia Law School. She writes, “Three sons are almost off the dole: one is a lawyer in Washington, DC; another works for a hedge fund in New York; and the third is in his senior year at MIT.” Mary and Harvey dined with APRIL HOXIE FOLEY, the U.S. ambassador to Hungary, when April and Harvey spoke at the same conference. A highlight of the evening was viewing two portraits on loan from the Smith art museum. Another was meeting April’s daughter, CATHERINE FOLEY ’02, a freelance writer. CHARLOTTE SQUARCY is celebrating her 60th with her sister on a Mediterranean cruise, then visiting Welsh relatives. She is looking forward to hosting a Holland Dames reception and rare map lecture at the New York Public Library. MARJORIE BARKIN SEARL and husband Scott celebrated turning 60 with ANN EBERLY CALVERT, whose children and grandchildren hosted a surprise birthday party. Meghan is a neuropsychologist at Brigham and Women’s in Boston; Rebecca, married in June, moved to Phoenix as a newly minted vet; and Jamie is a bass guitarist with a reggae band. Marjorie writes, “I have completed 20 years at the Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester, and Scott is now the oldest ophthalmologist in his practice.” JUDITH VANDERKAY writes, “I will make the big shift from one demographic to another—scary! But I guess 60 is the new 40? That’s good, come to think of it, because we will be working many years to come to pay off that horrendous college tuition bill.” CLAIRE FREEMAN WOLKOFF has been an actuary and consultant at Buck Consultants, specializing in pension plans and other employee benefits, for more than 30 years, and is not ready for retirement yet. Husband Allan is chief of the new division of hepatology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore. Son Steven (Dartmouth ’97) lives in Santa Monica, with the goal of being a movie director, but has had success as an artist. Daughter Hilary (Dartmouth ’00) graduated from NYU Law School and is an associate at Cahill Gordon in New York. MARGUERITE SMITH is very busy with family; law practice; work for the Shinnecock Indian Nation, of which she is an enrolled member; and various volunteer efforts, including Cornell Cooperative Extension in Eastern Long Island, NY. PEGGY WOODBRIDGE DENNIS says her husband, Bob, continues as director of the macroeconomic analysis division at the Congressional Budget Office. Son Peter is in his third year at Catholic University Law School; Alex is at McDaniel College. Says Peggy, “After years of being treated for ADD and clinical depression, Alex spent a summer having neurofeedback therapy, and it worked!” Peggy is involved with civic projects. She and her husband are still working on the house they built 17 years ago and took a great, three-week vacation in Tanzania last summer. MARGI WITTIGSCHLAGER NAREFF has a new woman in her life—granddaughter Eleanor, born in July, in Minnesota, where Margi spent a week taking care of 2-year-old brother Sawyer Jon. Margi says, “At 60 we were tested keeping up with a toddler, but we had a ball.” NANCY CHARLES MILLER is the interim rector at Trinity Episcopal Church in Williamsport, PA, and expects to be there about a year. LIZ GOODENOUGH finished work on an hour-long documentary, Where Do the Children Play?, produced by Michigan Public Media, which will air on public television. Liz is also editing a study guide that helps parents and teachers envision a better world of outdoor play for children and would love to hear from those of us who might want a showing of the documentary in their community. SUSAN STILLMAN would like to hear from anyone who might be considering serving on the next slate of class officers. If you are interested and have time to devote to Smith, please let Susan know at stillmansj@aol.com. Sec., Kathy Golden, 14 Knollwood Road, Rhinebeck, NY 12572, kgolden@hvc.rr.com Sec., Rosa Leader Smith, 257 Park Hill Avenue, Yonkers, NY 10705, rleadersmi@aol.com 1970 Lots of news arrived for this issue. ERIKA ROSENFELD moved to Riverside Drive in New York City in fall ’06, and enjoys a lovely view of trees and the river. She says it’s like having the country house she always wanted, with the advantages of the city. Her book Thomas L. Bosworth: Building With Light in the Pacific Northwest. NANCY FORREST is happy and healthy in Arlington, VA, with husband David. She spends weekends in Middleburg, VA, trying to learn to ride her horse, Jackpot. Son Joakim is terrific, living with his wife and two children in Lake Bluff, IL. MARTY CATHCART, NINA SHAPIRO, and SUSAN BUTTERWORTH LORD live nearby and they see each other regularly, and she’s been in touch with JUDY DWORIN. She also saw MARIE MONACO in New York recently; NANCY NEEDHAM HATHAWAY when she passed through town last year; and LUCIA KITTREDGE last year at her home in New Hamp- Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 53 alumnae update shire. You can see she’s serious about staying in touch, and she invites you to visit if you’re coming to DC. When I (co-secretary SUSANNA NATTI) sent out a broadcast query for news, I mentioned that I’d be doing some mother-daughter bonding by helping my older daughter, Lydia, paint her apartment in Nashville (she’s starting a PhD program at Vanderbilt in religion), so ELAINE DIEFENDERFER’s first words made me laugh out loud: “Welcome to that famous group, PWP, Painters Without Pay. And yes, it’s great bonding and testing of patience.” She writes that her mother and mother-in-law passed away. Eldest daughter Pam received her master’s from SAIS/Johns Hopkins in international relations. Middle daughter Beth received her MD from Baylor and is doing her residency at Washington Medical Center in DC. Elaine and husband Tod visited youngest daughter Nancy in Strasbourg, France. Elaine’s first grandbaby was born in June. HELEN LAZARUS FREEMAN has lived in London since 1989 and now has dual citizenship (as do her husband and children). Husband Ron has retired from investment banking, and is on a number of boards. Their elder daughter, Hadley, is deputy fashion editor of the Guardian newspaper and a contributing editor to British Vogue. Nell, their younger daughter, is a photojournalist, specializing in public health issues, and just won an American National Press Photographers Award. Helen’s been studying European art history at the Victoria and Albert Museum—a course she was introduced to by HELEN HEARD HETHERINGTON ’72. When in Washington, DC, she sees LAURA ROSS BLUMENFELD, her sister-in-law ROS AVNET LAZARUS ’64, and NINA SHAPIRO. She also sees ROBERTA ROSENBERG WEINSTEIN ’67, the best friend of Helen’s beloved sister, MARTHA LAZARUS WEIDEN ’66, who died of breast cancer in 2001. JILL WOODROFFE BRÉHON is enjoying her return to France after several years in Beijing. She and husband Daniel are delighted to be able to see their sons more regularly. Yannick defended his doctoral thesis in May. Both he and brother David work fulltime and have apartments in Paris, so Jill and Daniel are revamping the interior of their house in the Paris suburbs. JULIE CAILLOUET MAY has been performing and stage directing. She is the stage/artistic director for the Philadelphia Gilbert & Sullivan Union, which recently took its production of Iolanthe to England for the International G&S Festival. She writes that since the death of her son 10 years ago, she has thrown herself into local community theater. She has played Vera Charles in Mame and Katisha in The Mikado. She also sings at weddings and funerals. Her husband of 54 An Albright class of ’70 mini-reunion in Mycenae, Greece. From left to right are Helen (Ellie) Weist Karl, Margaret Joss Stathopoulos, Peggy Devine Moore, Nancy Nathan Hair, Marcia MacHarg, and Mary Caroline Parker. almost 38 years has a successful feeonly investment advisory firm in West Chester, where Julie works part-time, and daughter Angeline lives next door to them. Julie underwent cataract surgery in both eyes, and, for the first time since fourth grade, no longer needs glasses. She says, “It is strange to be on stage and actually able to see the audience!” LYNN TORNOW GOODHUE’s younger daughter graduated from Wheaton College in 1999, finished her master’s last spring, and got married in October. Her older daughter moved to Ithaca, NY, with her husband of 10 years and their two children. ROSALIE GROSS FOX and husband Lee relocated to Dorset, VT, after more than 30 years in the Boston area. She’ll continue her writing business while Lee expands medical device manufacturing for a local company. They “remain enchanted by the varied interests and myriad accomplishments” of their three children. She’d love to hear from any ’70 Vermonters or travelers in her area. MARION VERP’s daughter, Karen, was married in May. SUSAN COHEN attended the wedding. Marion says, “Talk about a mother-daughter bonding experience!” MARIANNA WOOD RICHARDSON and husband Douglas celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary in the summer, and she writes that they’re celebrating it as an achievement, “just because there’s so much hard work involved.” (Amen!) They’re most proud of their two sons, Alexander (Brown ’07), who is studying Mandarin in Beijing, and Theodore (RISD ’06), who is a furniture designer in Manhattan. Marianna recommends Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love. ALICE BOROWSKI LAFOND did some bonding of her own with her older sister, Carol. They spent the summer together, first in Florida (Alice’s place) and then in Nebraska (Carol’s). Their summer plans included a visit to Poland to sample the castles, culture, and cuisine of their ancestors. Expectations were that they would have a grand time; one of her sister’s Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 Nebraska friends told Alice, “You two could have fun sitting together in a ditch.” DEIRDRE JACOBSON is recently divorced and has two daughters at home. She’s still in the insurance business, working for a property/casualty broker as an account executive and also working on private equity due-diligence projects. What really excites her, though, is dance; she’s one of the directors of an annual Israeli dance camp held in the Hill Country in Texas every spring. And she’s “trying her hand (well, wrong part of the anatomy) at belly dancing.” Life is good! In May, PEGGY DEVINE MOORE met MARY CAROLINE PARKER, ELLIE WEIST KARL , MARCIA MACHARG , MARGARET JOSS STATHOPOULOS, and NANCY NATHAN HAIR in Greece for a four-day Albright House ’70 mini-reunion. She reports that Marcia is a partner at Debevois and lives in Frankfurt; Margaret is a retired teacher and lives in Athens; Peggy is retiring from PepsiCo and lives in Connecticut; Nancy is the CFO for Bechtel and lives in California. Mary Caroline runs several Montessori schools and lives in Texas, and Ellie is a doctor and lives in Washington. MARY CAROLINE PARKER, writing about the Albright mini-reunion, adds that they enjoyed an introduction to Greek history and culture as they visited Corinth, Mycenae, Tyrins, and Epidaurus. She says, “MARGARET JOSS STATHOPOULOS’s well-annotated and perfectly preserved photo albums and 1970 Smith yearbook brought back a flood of memories.” MARGARET MCCURLEY GILLIAM retired in July ’06 from a long career in the federal government, mostly with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. She spent her first year of retirement touring Denmark and Russia with elder daughter Beth, reconnecting with friends, “getting the house back together after years of slapdash maintenance,” and planning Beth’s wedding (last June). Beth is a medical student at the University of Maryland, and Mary is at Cornell. David plans to retire in 2009. They are still singing (for now, in an excellent church choir). GLORIA WEISSMAN had a year of “terrible lows and wonderful highs.” Her father died in March, and her ex-husband died suddenly in June. Her daughters, who live in Chapel Hill, are happy and well, and “the path from her house to theirs is well worn.” Three years after retiring as a Fed, she finds herself swamped with consulting work and busier than she thinks she’d like to be. NANCY OFFENHAUSER has attended lots of seminars: Living Medicine in Texas in May, The International Herb Symposium near Boston in June, and a chiropractic and yoga seminar in September. Her health continues to improve. She’s been corresponding with women with endometrial cancer who are not having hysterectomies. DEBORAH SHAPIRO BARRY didn’t succeed in retiring in 2006. An opportunity to get back to her first love, publications, resulted in an original magazine called six00threefive, after the ZIP code of her hometown, Highland Park, IL. She has spent much time rehabilitating from fibromyalgia: 10,000 steps on a recumbent machine and up to 6,000 pounds of resistance per health club visit! Son Bram and his wife are in Chicago. Daughter Aurora, an elementary school vice principal, and her hubby are in Norfolk, VA. On the way home from a family wedding in Baltimore, she and Al saw SALLY COULTON and husband Sandy in Annapolis. She talks often with Smith roommate DEB WOLFE LIEVENS. She’s always happy to hear from Hubbard lassies! And we’re always happy to hear from you! We welcome your news anytime. Sec., Susanna Natti, 32 Independence Road, Bedford, MA 01730, susannanatti@smith.alumnae.net Sec., Margaret Clark, 3126 38th Street NW, Washington, DC 20016, margclark@aol.com 1971 BETSY GARDNER JOHNSON writes, “Left my job as interim executive director for the American Community Gardening Association in June (the interim was into the third year!), but continued to be very busy for ACGA by being the lead organizer for the annual conference in Boston. Had the fun of showing off many of our community gardens. Last March enjoyed a two-week safari in Kenya and Tanzania. We met up with my daughter, who had been working at a hospital.” MARY O’KEEFE KELLOGG ’s daughter started at Smith last fall. Mary says, “Visitors welcome, as always, in our corner of France on the border with Geneva.” Congratulations to KAREN ROSENBLUM LAWRENCE, who was named the 10th president of Sarah Lawrence College. OLIVE LIECHTY-DEPONTE writes from San Rafael, CA, “We bought a house a year ago and successfully concluded one college and one high school career, and are embarking on the next chapter in our lives. Son James graduated from Occidental College and works for a geotechnical consulting firm in Los Angeles. Daughter Lani [started] Bennington in the fall.” Olive and husband Kelly (Stanford ’75, UCLA ’81) took the Smith Travel trip to the Dordogne, led by her former government professor, Charles Robertson. She continues her volunteer activities (membership/database) with the Smith College Club of San Francisco and Marin. LENORE KRAMER MOHR writes, “My daughter Michelle graduated from Johns Hopkins University in 2004 and is starting a graduate program in psychology. My daughter Lindsay graduated from Trinity College in May, is working in New York City, and plans to go to graduate school next year. I am a judge of workers compensation in New Jersey. My husband, Mark, is a lawyer with his own practice close to our home in Springfield, NJ.” KATHY DUFF RINES continues to split her time between Detroit and New York City, where she recently got an apartment on the Upper East Side. Kathy’s older daughter, Jackie, lives in New York and is establishing herself as an artist. Her younger daughter, Ellie, is a first-year at Union College, outside Albany. Kathy continues to serve on museum boards and National Endowment for the Arts visual arts grants boards. Sec., Elizabeth Soyster, P.O. Box 153, Gibson Island, MD 21056, smith71news@yahoo.com 1972 I asked, “What did you do on your summer vacation?”—a chance to get in a few vicarious activities myself! Here’s what came back, but first, remember that question I posed right after our Reunion: “What has given your life its distinctive quality?” or the option, “Can you see where a crisis in your life ultimately resulted in the birth of an opportunity?” Two intrepid ones answered: SUSAN SOLOYANIS: “Smith prepared me to be the first woman to earn a PhD in geology at the University of Massachusetts. Since then, I have assumed that anything is possible. I pioneered working from a remote location almost 15 years ago and just convinced the company that I retired from to hire me back as a contractor. My most difficult transition (at 40) combined job loss, business failure, career change, translocation, and divorce. From that came a new career that has allowed me to retire from full-time work at 55.” SUSAN GUTCHESS: “Almost every bad event has turned out to have an excellent outcome, e.g., being dumped by my former girlfriend gave me the opportunity to meet Helen and have a much better relationship, and being relieved of my finance duties at the National Trust gave me the opportunity to advance into planned giving. So, if you want to be a Pollyanna about it, it’s always good to look for the silver lining. I once made a list of how I made significant decisions, and almost all of them have been opportunistic—responding to potential crises rather than as a result of a deliberate life plan.” KAREN CHANDLER talks about her summer: “Mostly, I hosted other vacationers. Part of the time, I teach yoga, meditation, stress management, creative visualization, swimming (for kids mostly), and outdoor skills at the spa of a luxury hotel on the island of Hawaii. But, here, most of us only leave to visit family (is that a vacation?).” Karen was headed for Cape Cod, where her family still has a home in Chatham. Then there are the worker bees. DIANA ZUCKERMAN: “I have spent my summer nonvacation meeting with congressional staff in the House and Senate, trying to improve a soon-topass new law to make prescription drugs, vaccines, and medical devices safer. I’m working with other nonprofit organizations to fix this bill, including breast cancer groups, consumer groups, advocates for good science, and groups representing patients whose loved ones were killed by prescription drugs that they thought would help them.” BETH TAYLOR SOBILOFF: “I’ve been so focused on building my business that the only time I even went away was to go camping with some friends one weekend and watch one of our friends who was drag racing in upstate New York. Granted, we had a great time!” IVY EBERHART BANNISTER: “This year it was a cataract operation in a hospital near my home in Dublin, Ireland. I am making up for it by accompanying my husband to a conference in Spain in September, and then going on to New York for a month to hole up writing.” Londoner ROBIN ZIMMERMAN STEPHENSON: “Having a great time in France. Just back from Cape Cod for my niece’s wedding. Believe it or not, Peter bought us a flat in Boston! Send a man shopping and you never know what he’ll come back with! It’s on Commonwealth Avenue, just three blocks from Boston Common, so it looks like I’ll be in the States a bit more frequently. I’m now the sole president of the London Smith club, so I’ll have a challenging year ahead. I do look forward to meeting Boston Smithies when I settle in.” CATHY EATON : “This summer on top of visiting Nova Scotia, Colorado, Maryland, and California to see over 40 family members, I went to Pugwash, Nova Scotia, to attend the 50th anniversary meeting of the Pugwash Peace Conferences against nuclear proliferation. What a shame we haven’t made more progress in that time. Let’s work to end nuclear bombing and the storage of nuclear bombs.” KIM SMITH NILES: “John and I have moved from our wonderful farmhouse on the Groton School campus to our own house on the other side of town. We are now in the process of consolidating furniture and stuff from two houses; it’s a wonderful feeling to have made a decision about where we want to live upon our retirement.” Kim’s mother died in June, so Kim is also helping clear out her stuff. After 30 years, John is moving from admissions into a new post he created, director of communications. Son Ben is teaching English at Pomfret School in Connecticut. Kim is finishing up her last season of shows and reorganizing her business after 20 years. ANN LEMON is close to having her name in lights: “I was an extra on the set of Eddie Murphy’s movie Starship Dave. I was discovered at a hiphop festival in New York City.” I feel younger already! LUCILLE SPERA: “This summer, my children and I spent some time with my brother and his family on Cape Cod. Getting away from home helped us to get back together and gave me some perspective on life. I am happy for the choices I’ve made in life, even though those choices have made life harder in so many ways. Single parenting a 12- and 16-year-old is very difficult, and gone are the fantasies of vacations in the South of France. Yet I am so very glad that I have had the courage to do what I wanted to do. No doubt there are many of us who feel that way.” Keep in touch. Sec., Mary Lindley Burton, 12 East 97th Street, New York, NY 10029, maryburton@earthlink.net 1973 Planning is under way for our 35th Reunion. SANDRA FERGUSON MCPHEE is leading the planning efforts in consultation with other class officers and would welcome your involvement and suggestions. To learn how you can volunteer, please visit our class Website by going to the AASC Website (http://alumnae.smith.edu) and clicking on “connect” and then “class Websites.” One of the exciting things happening is a class survey we hope you will participate in. There will be opportunities to explore the findings at Reunion. Announcements about the survey and Reunion planning have been e-mailed to the class. If you are not getting these messages, please go to the AASC Website and update your contact information so you can be a part of our communication network. Who says you can’t go home again? With the restructuring of her husband’s investment management firm, MARY ANN ALEXANDER LENTZ and husband Preston moved last summer to Mary Ann’s hometown of Honolulu. Mary Ann will be the director of development at the Mission Houses Museum, where she had her first job as a 16-year-old museum guide. SUZANNE FOLDS MCCULLAGH has spent 33 years at the Art Institute of Chicago, where she is the Anne Vogt Fuller and Marion Titus Searle Curator of Earlier Prints and Drawings. Suzanne is involved in a major building program that will include new galleries for her department. Elder son C.W. (Rice ’05) is an analyst for British Petroleum in Houston. Younger son Gibson graduated from Groton and is premed at Hobart. Suzanne is on the visiting committee of the Smith art museum, which gets her to Northampton on a regular basis. I received a lovely postcard of the Amalfi Coast from E. HOPE FREEMAN HUDNER. Hope has an art studio in Rhode Island not far from her homes in Providence and Little Compton. She designs clothing and jewelry. Her husband of almost 32 years, Mike, continues to run his company and own ships. Daughter Bay is a senior at Harvard. Sadly, their son, Ripley, died in a car accident in 2004. Hope sends best wishes to all. I’m thrilled that ANNE SMITH VOSBERG sent news for the first time. She and husband Don have been married for 33 years and reside in Tucson, AZ. In 2006, Anne received an EdD in educational leadership from Northern Arizona University. The best part was that her two brothers and a nephew traveled from her hometown of Northampton, for the graduation ceremonies in Flagstaff. Anne is in her 13th year with Pima Community College, where she is serving a one-year term as dean of student development for the downtown campus. Anne has quite a history with Smith: her father, uncle, aunts, and brothers all worked with the College, and her mother, RITA SMITH AC ’93, graduated at 75. Another new contributor is JANET BENN. For many years, Janet lived in New York City, working in animation production, first by hand and then on the computer. She has worked with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles TV series, Courage the Cowardly Dog, and MTV. She also served as an adjunct lecturer in the arts department at the University of Massachusetts. She now lives in Boston, where she is writing and illustrating a chapter in a book titled How to Draw 50 Manga Babies. The book is about drawing Japanese-style characters. Janet would like to broaden her contacts in Boston so she can do more writing and illustrating. CONSTANCE CUNDY BERGSVEN retired last summer after 34 years in the financial services industry. Connie Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 55 alumnae update says the time was right since husband Dave had been retired for six years, and daughter Lindsey graduated with high honors from the University of Wisconsin in Madison with a degree in environmental engineering. She works with an engineering firm in Kansas. After retiring, Connie and Dave drove through North Dakota and Montana, then headed north and traveled to the end of the highway in North Pole, AK, where Connie sent her message to this column. Their plans called for meandering through Alaska before returning home after two months of traveling. Connie stays in touch with WENDY SHAW, KATE KANTER, and MARGUERITE MICHAEL BEASER, all of whom she hopes to persuade to attend Reunion. HOON ENG KHOO relocated from Singapore to Cambridge, MA, last summer to work with the Asian University for Women Support Foundation as vice president for academic planning. This new university will be established in Bangladesh in late 2008, at which time Hoon Eng will move to Bangladesh. On a personal note, Hoon Eng’s sons graduated last spring: Ming from Hastings Law School and En from Dartmouth. ELIZABETH KILCULLEN BLAKE is happily remarried to someone she met at law school 33 years ago. She is settled in Atlanta and her three sons are flourishing: Addison (Williams) works in Boston; Asher is a senior at Vanderbilt; and Taylor is a first-year at Emory. Elizabeth is at Habitat for Humanity International, where she is responsible for advocacy as well as government relations and the legal department. She says that seeing slums in Manila, Mumbai, and Guatemala City has changed her life: “Work is wrenching but rewarding.” SUSAN HODGE had a wonderful minireunion last April with MARTHA BALDWIN, who was visiting Aiken, SC. Having missed our 30th Reunion, Susan is looking forward to seeing everyone at our 35th. Take care and write. We love hearing from you. Sec., Mary Sneed Hinkel, 1718 Mason Mill Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30329, hinkelfamily21380@earthlink.net 1974 This is your class secretary, pleading! Keep in touch! We are shooting for 100 percent participation for the 35th Reunion, so I need your help to keep us connected. Visit the Alumnae Association’s Web page at http://alumnae. smith.edu, and log in under “Alumnae Directory and E-mail” to update your personal information. The directory is most effective when information is current. To ensure that your information is correct, log into the online directory, then click on “Personal Information” at the top of the screen. I would be forever grateful! 56 In Needham, MA, at the bat mitzvah of Jan Stager Cohen ’75’s daughter are, left to right, Andrea Feld ’76, Jan, Tina Lafiosca ’75, and Jane Warner Micou ’75. KAREN BOLTON DANENBERGER writes, “For the first nine years, I taught art at a middle school on Cape Cod. While doing this, I enrolled in a master’s program in painting for teachers at NYU that featured two summers of study in Venice, Italy. In 1983, I married Bud, a petroleum engineer. We spent five years in California, where our daughter, Kristin, was born. She is a senior at James Madison University. Since 2001, I have been teaching oil and acrylic painting to adults here in Reston, VA, where we have lived for 19 years. I have been busy painting scenes from my travels, particularly of Venice. My artwork has been exhibited in solo and group shows.” Karen and her husband traveled to Venice in September in celebration of their 25th wedding anniversary and the 30th anniversary of her first visit there. MELINDA BILLS STEVENSON writes, “In February, I had major abdominal surgery (the fourth time since 1984), and it was serious enough to keep me hospitalized for three weeks and unable to eat anything for almost five weeks. My husband was wonderful, and so were Smith pals. This Smith community is there when needed, and as so many write in these notes, we always just pick up where we left off. A particular thanks to AMANDA WALLIS BLUE for reams of jokes, JENNY TUFTS ’76 for telephone yoga, MATHILDE (TEIL) SILVERSTEIN, MARY ANNE FISCHER, CATHY LEBLANC HIERSTEINER, KATHLEEN LEE, DEBBIE GOTTHEIL NEHMAD, JANET SULLIVAN STEIN, and DEBBIE BAHN HAGLUND. Their encouragement got me through some dark times. Meanwhile, I continue with the European Union’s delegation to the United States (for more than a quarter century now!) in Washington, somewhat tied by health requirements, and also by the very humane treatment that Europeans give their employees, particularly when illness strikes.” SALLY COLLINS HONENBERGER reports, “SARAH MEREDITH BOUCHER continues to counsel in the Andover schools, Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 using her language skills. She and husband Don took a break from new grandparenthood to visit Italy and Greece. ELISA MASELLI lives and works for an international consulting firm in Somerville, NJ. PEM COVINGTON’s husband’s bank went public last year. She has a daughter studying nursing in Virginia Beach, and three other children still in Rhode Island.” ELISA MASELLI says, “I enjoyed seeing SARAH MEREDITH BOUCHER in August. Sarah grew up in Somerville, NJ, where I live, and on a recent trip to visit family, took time out to have lunch and see my house and yard. During a trip to Rhode Island, I had dinner with PEM COVINGTON and her husband at their home in Barrington. SALLY COLLINS HONENBERGER is coming to do a reading from her new novel, White Lies, at the Princeton Smith club. I am also enjoying being a business writer, earning a consultant’s wages while sitting at my desk in New Jersey without having to travel like the road warriors who work with our company.” BARBARA BOCKHAUS KLAAS was at an education conference in San Francisco in April. She had lunch in Sausalito with ROCHELLE CABOT. It was fun to remember old times at Smith! BARBARA LAURAIN was named language arts curriculum program coordinator of the South Windsor, CT, schools. She also received a grant to offer curriculum workshops to Hartford teachers in integrating the arts into all curriculum areas. She rendezvoused with NANCY CAPLAN DOW in New York in June. LINDA GRAY writes, “My Fulbright in Ukraine has been renewed for an additional 10 months. Five months in Dnipropetrovsk, and then the last five months in L’viv. This will give me a good understanding of both eastern and western Ukraine. I have found this experience to be fascinating. I am teaching history and memoir in a place where both are not quite accepted disciplines. I would love to have visitors, or to hear from others who are in Europe, Eastern Europe, or the former Soviet Union.” GAIL CHANDLER GASTON sent a picture of a chance meeting with BETH KONKER WESSEL ’75 in Botswana! She writes, “Jamey is spending the fall in Florence, Italy (Colorado University). Daughter Frances will be a sophomore there this year. I see a lot of SUSAN NICHOLS FERRIERE ’73, and SHARON VOROS came up from Philadelphia over my June birthday this year with her daughter. Always fun to see her, though not often enough.” LESLIE ADELSON has just begun a three-year stint as director of Cornell University’s Institute for German Cultural Studies. She is studying Turkish to complement her longstanding interest in German culture, which began at Smith. KAREN ABELMANN GROSS writes, “I am entering my second year as president of Southern Vermont College, a small liberal arts college in Bennington, VT. It was quite an amazing first year, and I was delighted to meet several Smithies at the Harvard New Presidents Institute. My husband commutes to Vermont from our home in New York for weekends. Other than business travel, this is the first time in our 26year marriage that we have commuted—another interesting adventure. Our son is obtaining his PhD at the London School of Economics.” JENNIFER ARTHUR reports from San Francisco, “I just celebrated the 16th anniversary of working for myself out of my home office as a health-care consultant. The freedom of working for myself allows me to take a lot of vacation time. This summer I did my fifth house exchange, this time in Normandy, France, for two weeks. Previous exchanges included two in Italy and one each in London and Puerto Vallarta. A year ago I adopted a 4-year-old male whippet named Maestro. He keeps me active with our long walks in Golden Gate Park, but also keeps me company while I’m working.” AMY WROBEL LYONS reports that she and husband David took a trip to Israel with radio talk show host Michael Medved: “The ongoing crisis in the Middle East demands the attention of serious people.” Amy marked her 25th year in private practice of law. ANDREA GRAHAM was voted president of the board of Stageworks Theater Company in Tampa, FL. She says it is a pivotal year for the company as they raise money to build in one of the newest entertainment districts in downtown Tampa. Expected opening of the new theater is fall ’08. ADRIANE ISENBERG was a featured singer at the theater’s masquerade ball in January. A summer vacation to Glacier National Park in Montana was filled with hiking, boating, biking, and ATVing. ELLEN SANDHAUS writes, “My hus- band, David (Amherst ’71), and I spent 10 days in June in Glacier National Park. Hiked for miles in the mountains. In the resort town of Whitefish, we kayaked the lake and went to a fundraiser and met Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer (first Democrat elected in 20 years). We just missed the 100-degree temperatures and wildfires!” BILL WALTON, MFA, writes, “Thanks to the SAQ class notes, TIM BUCHMAN called and we are meeting in New York for a mini-reunion. All are welcome!” STEVY MASSOFF FELDMAN writes, “The boys graduated from college in May; Nate from the University of Tampa with a degree in marketing and Matt from Adelphi University in education. Matt plans to pursue his master’s in health ed; Nate decided to put off grad school. In June we also celebrated the graduation/ordination of my brotherin-law from cantorial school. Michael and I had another wonderful trip out west last summer, trading in our beloved canyons of Utah and Arizona for Yosemite. Of course we ended in Vegas as always. I continue to write and edit tests for state ed and teach sixth-grade Latin in Lynbrook—five more years to go.” DEBBY SCHAUFFLER reports, “I skipped the first week of school last September to drive my son Alex to Appleton, WI, to start his first year at Lawrence University. Brought back many memories of arriving at Smith with my Aunt Winky in fall ’70. My daughter Robin graduated from University of Puget Sound with a degree in theater two years ago. She is now working at the university as the scene shop supervisor. I am still teaching English and humanities and working as a dean at Oregon Episcopal School. With Alex off to college, it’s just me and the cat at home. I joined a peacenik women’s choir, Aurora Chorus, which has been a wonderful experience.” CHRISTY JONES BITTENBENDER writes, “Chuck and I are heading to a biking trip in Provence. We have been biking in the beautiful Cleveland Metro Parks all summer to get in shape. All is going well for Peter, who is in his first year of an internal medicine residency at the University of Michigan. Jeff is getting some experience in the field of landscape architecture before possibly heading off to grad school next year.” PATTI JONES LANG reports, “Daughter Katharine spent the summer in Georgetown as a Placido Domingo intern at the Washington National Opera. She will graduate early in December and is now job-hunting. We celebrated my dad’s 80th birthday in July, with a backyard barbecue, banjo player, and lots of cousins, aunts, and uncles.” Sec., Martha Redeker, 3041 South Sequoia, Salt Lake City, UT 84109, mredeker@aol.com 1975 Sec., Lyn Wehmann Magness, cwehmann@juno.com 1976 Lots of news this round, so here goes. LUCY ASHTON VAN ATTA happened by her neighborhood Baptist church in Greenwich, CT, and, when they discovered her college connection, ended up speaking about the late YOLANDA KING at the Sunday service in which Yolanda was memorialized. SUSAN BABCOCK lives in Riverside, CT, pursuing executive search/executive coaching opportunities, playing tennis, and road biking. The documentary film Farmboy, for which she was executive producer, won a New York Emmy in April for original soundtrack and is being shown on various public television stations and at screenings across the country. KIM BERGESON HORTON and family took a two-week safari to Kenya to celebrate son Cliff’s graduation from Columbia (engineering) and daughter Laura’s graduation from Greenwich (CT) High School. Laura is now at Boston University. JEANNE BLAUNER lives in Lancaster, MA, with daughter Allie, 14, and is just back from leading two Sierra Club trips in Maine. TOM BOYER, MA, went from music at Smith to Columbia Business School, to product management, to Harvard to revisit musicology. Now he is remarried, living in Florida, singing professionally as a church soloist, and teaching marketing management at the University of South Florida. CONNIE CONTANT KNAPP has been with U.S. Customs for 31 years and was recently promoted to supervisory import specialist in Champlain, NY, a major port of entry, where she will be in charge of textile imports. Connie and husband Perrin celebrated their 25th last year, and have two daughters at Clarkson. They enjoy their summers at Cayuga Lake in the Finger Lakes. JENNIFER LENOX CRAIG’s son Mike is a first-year at Princeton, Andrew is a junior at Lawrence Academy, and Jessica is a high school first-year at St. Mark’s School. Jennifer has gone back to work part-time at Harvard Business School. SUSANNE DUNLAP became a grandmother in January to Sofia, her daughter’s first. Susanne is in advertising in New York City, and her second book, Liszt’s Kiss, was published in April. SUZANNE FURLONG HIGGINS is a thirdgrade teacher in Longmeadow, MA. Tom still works for Baystate Medical Center in Springfield. Daughter Amy graduated from Dartmouth, Matt is a senior at Boston College, and Will is a first-year at Middlebury. Suzanne and Tom celebrated their 25th with a long-awaited trip to Europe. MARYLOVE HEARTY MOY is a financial planner for MetLife, and is studying for her CFP designation. Architect husband Eric spends a lot of time in Dubai. Oldest son Liam is married; two grown wonderful sons with special needs are thriving. SHEILA HEFFERNON is in her 28th year at Northfield Mount Hermon School in Massachusetts. One daughter graduated from Connecticut College and is teaching in northern California. Her oldest son is a senior at Babson, and her younger son is on the college hunt. Congratulations to Sheila, who was honored when a new rehearsal hall in the Northfield Mount Hermon Rhodes Center for the Arts was named in her honor. The naming announcement was made on the occasion of Sheila’s conducting of her 25th Sacred Concert at the school, where she chairs the performing arts department and directs the choral and music programs. MARY HUGHES BICKERTON has been a lawyer for the Federal Reserve for 23 years. The twins are seniors at Wesleyan and Hamilton. Mary is studying German and learning to knit, as well as serving on the boards of two law-related nonprofits. She and Scott recently celebrated their 27th anniversary in Seville. LOUISE JONES MCPHILLIPS and Frank celebrated their 30th on a driving tour of England. Louise and her sister CAROL JONES GUTHRIE ’72 took their 86-year-old father to Paris in the spring. Mom BARBARA HOPKINS JONES ’43 is in a nursing home in Birmingham, AL, where the McPhillips family lives. One son is in law school, another graduated from Harvard and covers the Red Sox for a Major League Baseball Website, and the third is a sophomore at Harvard. REBECCA JUDGE chairs the economics department at St. Olaf College in Minnesota, the first woman to hold the position. She was happy to see MAURA O’DONNELL KELLY when she came to Minnesota to attend the confirmation of her goddaughter, Rebecca’s daughter Emilie. PATRICIA LEE is a partner at Kelley, Drye & Warren in New York City, specializing in corporate finance and securities work, especially international commercial transactions and project finance. She has been married for 21 years to a professor of political science at Purchase College, whom she originally met while in Peru during college, and was later reintroduced to by LIZ BAUCH ’77, who ended up a bridesmaid at their wedding. Their daughter was adopted in Peru 15 years ago. ELISSA LICHTENSTEIN leads the public services division of the American Bar Association in Washington, DC. She lives in Silver Spring, MD. Daughter Jennifer is a high school junior. After a 10-year struggle with major family health issues, the loss of her mother, and a divorce, VICTORIA LYON MARTIN is moving both her interior de- sign business and herself and two kids into a new location in Old Greenwich, CT, after many years in Stamford. CECILIA MARINO GARRITY and family live in Milton, MA. Son Jon is at Harvard; daughter Jackie is a firstyear at Tabor Academy. CONNIE MENAND MARGOWSKY lives in Somersworth, NH, where her daughter is a high school senior. Connie is a mortgage consultant; her Egyptologist husband is a writer. Connie has been active on a local political committee, and has helped to open The Democracy Factory, a nonaffiliated information station about Democratic campaigns for national office that also provides voter registration information. LIZ OATES was appointed chair of the department of diagnostic radiology and is a tenured professor of radiology at the University of Kentucky Medical Center in Lexington. Her husband is a radar systems engineer; daughter Victoria is at Colby-Sawyer College; Olivia is at Brown; Cecilia is a seventh-grader at North Country School in Lake Placid, NY. FRANCES OLIVER spent four weeks in China studying Zhineng Qigong, recognized worldwide for its healing power. A highlight of the trip was the week spent in the ancient Fuhu Nunnery on Mount Emei, one of four sacred Buddhist mountains in China and a UNESCO World Heritage site, in Sichuan Province. LILLIAN PLINER was recently named acting division director of hematology/oncology at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, and is also senior medical director for Care Alternatives Hospice. In her spare time, she is a road cyclist and had planned to participate in the Pan-Mass Challenge. Daughter Kate is a Juilliard precollege violinist; her younger daughter is 13. Their activities have allowed her to have a lot of contact with Smith friends JAN BARBOUR CARHART ’75, HELEN MROSE, and, during a recent trip to Paris, MACEY BIERMAN SMITH ’75. CINDY REED VELTRI’s daughter entered Smith this fall. Cindy’s younger sons are both at DePaul Catholic High School in Wayne, NJ. Cindy works as a child study team social worker in West Milford, NJ. She and husband John (Holy Cross ’75) celebrated their 27th anniversary this year. CATHERINE STIRLING has moved to Annapolis, MD, where she spends a lot of her free time sculling or sweep rowing on the Severn River, and working in disaster response for animals. SUSAN TALSKY PASTER and husband Ken visited us from Scarsdale, NY, and JANE MURPHY SARGENT came over from Moorestown, NJ, for dinner. Susan works part-time for Snaidero Kitchens in Greenwich, CT, as a kitchen designer. Her two daughters live in San Francisco; her stepdaughter is Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 57 alumnae update at Indiana University; her stepson is a high school junior. Jane works for Comcast Corporation. One son is a sophomore at Loyola, the other is a high school senior. NEILA WOODWARD BROWNSTEIN and Mark and daughter Hannah live in Londonderry, NH, where Neila is an instructional aide at North Londonderry Elementary School. Hannah is in sixth grade, and Mark works for an environmental engineering firm in Boston. Neila and Hannah enjoyed our 30th Reunion, sharing a great weekend with JENNIFER GOLD LEVY and her daughter, CLARE OLLAYOS, and ROBIN KELLY MCCANN and Chuck. Thanks again to all who have responded to my e-mails. I really enjoy hearing from you! Sec., Sally Scott Moser, 301 Caversham Road, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010, Ssm301@aol.com 1977 Greetings from your new secretary and many thanks to all who wrote to share your news for my first column for the Quarterly. Please continue to send your news, no matter how grand or trivial—we all love to hear from you! I enjoyed the entire summer in our newly renovated home in Chatham, MA, along with husband John, daughter Ashley, 11, and new Welsh terrier puppy Maggie. It was the first summer I have not been working in as long as I can remember and it was heaven to have the summer off, to run and take walks every morning, to lounge at the beach, and to enjoy nights in Chatham! LYNN FRUEHAUF CHARLTON writes to announce her marriage to Lev Wood in June. They honeymooned in Bermuda and live in Grosse Pointe, MI. PENELOPE CORCORAN is still reveling in the gray skies of Seattle, WA. After three years as the restaurant critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer Penelope returned to Amazon.com to manage site merchandising for its online gourmet food store, which made her realize (again) why she’d left Amazon the first time. After a short trip to Oahu in January, she joined Brooks Sports Inc., as its content manager/marketing copywriter. Belatedly celebrating her 50th birthday, Penelope visited Vietnam at the end of August with a small culinary delegation organized by PeaceTrees Vietnam. Penelope enjoys spending time with MARY LOCKHART ’78, who relocated to Seattle in 2006. FRAN BLACK writes that after 12 years with Paramount Pictures, she moved crosstown in Los Angeles to become senior vice president of Columbia Pictures. She says, “It’s a challenge to learn new ways of doing a very familiar job but it’s been great to shake life up a bit.” Children Cora and Ian are now 12, and she and her husband anticipate that life as they knew it will 58 be shaken up quite a bit as the teen years approach. Fran enjoyed Reunion and reconnecting with old friends SUSIE SIVARD, ANNE BARNUM ALEXANDER, and NANCY GLOWA. JAN VACHULE SHEEHAN writes, “Reunion was amazing and I only wish more of us could have made it to Smith to reconnect and enjoy what has to be the most beautiful college campus on the planet.” Jan writes that she saw Aix-en-Provence roommate BARRETT ASHTON ANDERS twice in May, once at Reunion and again in Los Angeles. Jan took her youngest daughter to Washington, DC, for a summer politics program and had a great time visiting with PAT TAZZARA and MARY HAINES . Jan and Mary pored over her Paris junior year abroad photo album and memorabilia: “We talked about the idea of having a Paris JYA reunion for ’77s as well as those from other colleges.” Jan wonders if anyone would be interested. Jan’s oldest is at Stanford. Jan reports she is happily divorced, still working in public relations, and very happy to be moving into a newly renovated Spanish circa 1930 duplex in Beverly Hills. SHARON JUNGREIS BOWERS and husband Nigel continue to live in Charleston, SC. LAURIE GODFREY writes, “The big news in my life is that I just completed my doctorate in psychoanalysis from Vermont Graduate School of Psychoanalysis, and it feels great.” Laurie’s work included a study that looked at emotional obstacles to second-language learning for immigrant children in elementary school, and demonstrated the value of play therapy in helping these children learn. Her study opened up new career avenues, and she is deciding what else to do besides her clinical practice in New York. BETSY BYERS writes that her 11-yearold son played All Stars, and she took him to Washington, DC, to show him the sights. RACHEL COAN writes about the July 29, ’07, article in the New York Times special education section about unofficial slogans of institutions of higher learning. The article mentions the double entendre celebrating Smith’s centennial—“a winner of a slogan contest and still quotable more than 30 years later.” MICHELE GAGNE KINNER met up with VICKY LYNCH KNIGHT and KAREN DAY. Michele and Karen meet regularly in Manhattan, but they had not seen Vicky, who lives in Los Angeles since her marriage 17 years before. They had a great time catching up (all are mothers of boys) and discussing their respective careers. Michele writes that she and her family have now lived in Greenwich, CT, for 15 years. Michele commutes to New York City to manage private equity fund investing for a global multifamily office. Husband Steve teaches tech ed at a Greenwich Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 middle school. Son Christopher is a sophomore at Harvard, and Ryan is a senior at Green Mountain Valley School. Michele’s mother-in-law, HELEN AFFHAUSER KINNER ’39, still lives in Florence, MA, where she grew up. CARLIN LEEPER KNIGHT writes that after many years in social work administering the legal department of her county child welfare agency, she went to law school, graduating in 1994. She is in private practice with her own firm in Media, Delaware County, PA, concentrating in family law and adoption. She reports that her social work skills have been invaluable to her law practice. She adds, “My children are grown and have children of their own (one a senior in high school, one a senior in college, and another graduated from college a year ago and is a labor and delivery room nurse).” HARRIET MADOFF OSWALD writes to announce her marriage to C. Jefferson (Skip) Parker in July, in Greenwich, CT. The service was held in an outdoor chapel of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, officiated by Rabbi Richard Chapin. The bride’s attendants were Harriet’s daughters, Sascha and Charlotte, as well as Harriet’s niece Amelia, all granddaughters of JANICE DIETZ MADOFF ’39. Smith friends at the wedding included GRACE YEOMANS THALER, FLORENCE QUINN, and Harriet’s sister, who started at Smith but transferred to Brown. MARJORIE MEIMAN-ROBINOWITZ loved Reunion and enjoyed her summer at home in Scarsdale with lots of swimming and barbecues, and a getaway to the Cape. Her daughter, Lara, is 7. Marjorie has begun a new career taking photos for the local newspaper. She writes, “Photography allows me to be with Lara whenever she is home and to pursue my own interests simultaneously. Photographing kids is very rewarding.” Husband Joe (who was with Marjorie at Reunion—remember the karaoke sing-along?) was appointed editorial director of Rupert Murdoch’s recent publishing ventures in the New York area. Sec., Sandy MacGregor O’Brien, 70 Apple Blossom Lane, Lynn, MA 01904, smobrien5@gmail.com 1978 Thanks for your news! Herewith, 1978 continues to celebrate as we enter the “51-derful” realm! First, three of us send news of their publications and their lives. KATIE CHAMBERLIN COMPTON (aka C.R. Compton) is the author of two mystery novels: Holy Comfort, published in 2006 by Hilliard & Harris, and Leaven of Malice, coming soon. She writes, “As for real life: Children include one college graduate (Mary); one in college (Wheeler); and one with a year more of high school (Susie). Husband Paul is a vice president at Smith Barney; I still work at Washington University in St. Louis—gotta keep that day job.” NANCY HIRSCHMANN writes, “I spent my 50th in Florence and Rome, where my husband and I splurged at expensive restaurants and shopped for paintings. My 50th year has gone well professionally: I was given a named endowed chair (the R. Jean Brownlee Endowed Term Professor in the Department of Political Science) by the University of Pennsylvania, and two of my books were published (Feminist Interpretations of John Locke and Gender, Class, and Freedom in Modern Political Theory). I’m now working on a political theory of disability and illness—hey, why not turn the lemons of an aging, declining body into the lemonade of another publication! Seriously, it’s fascinating stuff that we’re all going to be facing all too soon, if we haven’t already faced it. I’m looking forward to our 30th Reunion, though dreading seeing how many are using Botox, upping the ante in the battle against middle age!” ELLEN MANDINACH recently took a position as a senior research analyst at the CNA Corporation in Alexandria, VA, where she commutes two days a week from New Jersey. She is anticipating the publication of her third book, Linking Data and Learning, by Teachers College Press. She was also elected president of the American Psychological Association’s division of educational psychology. When not working, she travels the world with her husband, this year to Scandinavia; plays competitive tennis; and enjoys the company of their beloved cat, Sir Maximilian. Many of us are involved in college applications for our children, getting kids to college, helping kids and adopted Smithies postcollege, etc. What were the experiences like for you? And what’s next as those nests empty out? I hope to report after getting our son, Adrian, to Brown University this fall. He was accepted early decision for the class of 2011 and is excited about this new venture. His sister, Zoë, a first-year at East High School in Denver, is watching his every move for planning her high school and college adventure. DOT MARKS BROWN writes, “We attended college graduation for our son, Andy, this year, and the P-rade at Princeton was very like Ivy Day except for all the beer. I felt old enough to have a kid graduating from college, but when we met his future in-laws I really felt like Methuselah! Now he has moved to Santa Clara, has a new car and a job and an apartment. His girlfriend is a lovely Princeton ’07; her aunt is BEVERLY BAYNES TOMB ’75. Our daughter, Beth, had a successful first year at Cornell. The dogs are aging badly, but at least they don’t talk back! I look forward to seeing all of you at Reunion next spring!” LYNNE BUSH writes, “I’ve been working at UC San Diego for five years, as senior editor for the Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation. Prior to that I was managing editor for the political science journal International Organization. I finished my MFA in creative writing in May ’06. Cindy and I will celebrate our 21st anniversary in September. We bought a house in Normal Heights, an older neighborhood in San Diego, 13 years ago. (Yes, it’s really called Normal Heights!) Have an excellent network of friends, including KATIE MICHELMORE ’98.” Katie contacted Lynne through the Alumnae Association for advice about careers in publishing, and they struck up an e-mail friendship. Katie came out to visit and has lived there ever since. Lynne writes, “I consider her an adopted daughter and am very pleased with how being open to helping the next generation of Smith women paid off so beautifully.” Sec., Stephanie Urban, 2560 South Garfield Street, Denver, CO 80210, sburban@hotmail.com 1979 NANCY AGNEW writes, “I celebrated my 50th on a Caribbean cruise in June. I’m finishing the first year that my mother moved to Chapel Hill from Wellesley (after 52 years). She is in her own house, and I’m enjoying having her here to do things with (and make her attend concerts of the choral society I’ve sung with for 22 years).” Nancy works part-time for a software company and part-time as a Feldenkrais practitioner. DEBRA BARBEZAT chairs the economics department at Colby College. Husband Jim is an economics professor at rival Bates College and is an economics consultant. They have a son, Conor, and Debra is preparing herself “for the agony of separation when Conor goes off to the University of Chicago this fall. As he told us when he was 10, he plans on being a ‘real scientist,’ none of this social science stuff that occupies his parents. In honor of my 50th birthday (and the empty nest) I bought my first horse. Best wishes to all celebrating their 50th this year!” BETH DEVINE HART writes, “I am still a library media specialist with the New Haven public school system, a job I love. Husband John (UConn ’79) lost his job with Bayer after 23 years as a research scientist, as did all Bayer employees in Connecticut. What a shock. Fortunately, he found another job in his field (bioinformatics) but now has a long commute. Son John (Gettysburg ’06) started his first job as a high school music teacher. Son Christopher, a senior in high school, has started his college search. Tuition payments start again soon!” BECKY FOUST was looking forward to attending the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference at Middlebury College after a summer at the Cape. She writes, “It’s been a great year, with Michele Gagne Kinner, Vicky Lynch Knight, and Karen Day, all class of ’77. Brian running competitively again, all three kids thriving, and my new writing career taking off. You will find my poems in the fall ’07 issues of Atlanta Review, Margie, Nimrod International Journal, North American Review, Taproot Literary Review, and, sometime next year, in Poetry East and South Carolina Review. I’ve also published two short essays, but poetry is really where my heart is.” SIAN GIBSON ROLLWITZ writes, “While doing graduate work in English literature at the University of Toronto with Northrop Frye, Bloom, and the like, I met John (now my husband of 25 years), who was studying ancient languages. He morphed that into a career at BMC Software. Here in the ’burbs of Houston, I recently hung up my PTO president cap and have returned to teaching English lit at a local college. We have three amazing kids: Andrew, an accomplished watercolor artist, begins his junior year at Texas A&M; Geoffrey (named with fond recollections of Bucky Harward’s Chaucer class) is finishing his last year of high school. He is our tech wiz. Emily is in seventh grade. She is lovely, athletic, and extraordinarily strong, having conquered bone cancer when she was 7.” MEG GREENE MARABLE writes, “My daughter, Esme, is preparing to start her sophomore year at Barnard, having adored her first year there. One of her best friends from high school and that friend’s sister are at Smith and loving it.” Meg continues work on her novel, now an adult tale, set in Dark Ages Scotland and England. Her primary reason for “choosing an R rating: If life expectancy in early medieval Britain is something like 30–35, a body is about halfway there at 17, so one better get busy. The other reason is that it’s fun to write the naughty bits.” CINDY HARRIS writes, “After our older daughter, Sharon, left for college (UMass), we adopted an exchange daughter, Eva, from Germany so that Rebecca would have some company. That worked out so well that Rebecca and I spent a month traveling around Europe, ending with nearly two weeks with Eva’s family in central Bavaria. On our way home through Frankfurt, we spent a day with our incoming exchange daughter, Juliane, who arrived in Pittsburgh a month later and was another joy to have around. Meanwhile, Rebecca was accepted early decision at Smith. So my husband and I are now the proud parents of a class of 2011 Smithie.” BARBARA JACOBS WOLF writes, “Still enjoying working for Kubera Portfolios, investment management for individuals, foundations, and small businesses that focuses on global, environmental, and economic sustainability. Turned 50 and decided to celebrate all year! I am blessed with wonderful friends and family and have enjoyed celebrating with them. Watched my oldest, Will, graduate from high school. He will head to Penn State’s college of engineering. My three boys (Will, 18; Jordan, 15; and Evan, 11) are happy, healthy, and safe (most of the time). Still have the same great husband, who is one day younger than I am.” CAROLINE KEENEY MEYERS writes, “Two years ago we moved to Amherst, MA, where I’m the pastor of the South Amherst Congregational Church. Construction on Route 9 (hasn’t that been going on for the last 30 years?) still makes getting to Northampton a pain, but I get over there on occasion to remember what big-city life is like. Husband Tom works in the trust department at Greenfield Savings Bank; daughter Rebecca (who came with me to our 25th Reunion) is 13; son Sam is in sixth grade. I’m in the planning stages of co-authoring a book on church stewardship with a seminary friend, and am embarking on my first experience in helping to lead a half-million-dollar capital campaign. I’ve been both awed and moved by SUSAN HOAG BADEAU’s writings in Sojourners’ online magazine. Far too irregularly I see JUDY HANSON HUEBER, who runs the Chesterfield Inn in New Hampshire; SUSAN TOWNSLEY ’83, a colleague in ministry; and KATHLEEN PEETS ’91, godmother to Sam. DARYL MCGREGOR ROBISCEK is faithful about sending Christmas cards and letters each year.” SUSAN LEARY writes, “I am still an executive assistant at Accenture and living in Boston. My significant other, Bob, and I just bought a condo in Brookline, a 100-year-old, totally renovated, and charming place with stained glass windows, a leaded glass dining hutch, antique moldings, combined with all the modern amenities! Bob and I have been together 10 years and still going strong. Living in Brookline, I am still close to all my family and friends. I keep in very close touch (daily IMing!) with MARY ANN HILLES SQUIRES, my Smith roomie. We have been friends for 32 years and are as close as ever. I am also in close touch with my junior-yearin-Geneva dear friend SANDY SWEENEY GALLO, who manages a hotel in La Jolla and is president of the San Diego Smith club.” DONNA MARIE LEE was appointed to Maine’s state rehabilitation council by the governor. She adds, “I also was accepted to the Disability Leadership Institute, a two-year program sponsored by the Maine State Office of Developmental Disabilities. I am an autism information specialist for the Autism Society of Maine and also on the board of directors of Justice for Autism with Community and Kindness, a grassroots organization aimed at improving the quality of life for children on the autism spectrum in my community.” Donna Marie adds that if anyone wishes to contact her regarding autism, they are welcome to do so. KAREL JOYCE LITTMAN, an attorney for the city of Teaneck, NJ, was given the Chapel of Four Chaplains Legion of Honor Award by the U.S. Marines Corps League for her “selfless service to humanity without regard to race, religion, or creed.” ANN LYON writes that daughter Deirdre started work on her master’s degree in English at Boston College. After three years in a centralized role for San Francisco Unified School District, Ann is teaching algebra at a high school “in a neighborhood that is, um, not usually visited by tourists, or even most locals. The school climate has improved considerably in the last couple of years, though.” Ann had two weeks at the Cape; saw the Hopper exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, which was wonderful; attended a couple of professional development workshops; and spent a week in the Sierra foothills taking care of a farm. KATHY MILLS writes, “After two seasons of agricultural bliss on organic farms, I am working at Maine Audubon as a grants officer, with one of the best conservation teams in the state.” Kathy maintains strong ties to local organic farms and serves as an adviser to the Cambodian Arts and Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 59 alumnae update Scholarship Foundation, a Portlandbased nonprofit which helps put atrisk Cambodian girls in school. KATE SIEGAL OLENA went to Hong Kong for the International Drama Education Association World Congress, and took workshops with, and saw performances by, teachers and students from all over the world. Then she and her daughter traveled by train to China. Kate has a blog on her trip at Blogspot. PATTY PRUE DYKSTRA writes, “After Smith, I went to medical school at Emory University. I met my husband, Kevin, at the University of Michigan, where I was doing my pediatric residency and he was completing his PhD in biochemical engineering. We have been happily married for 18 years. After four years in the Baltimore/Washington, DC, area for fellowship and postdoc training, we moved back to Massachusetts and started our family. We have three great kids: Caroline, 15; Ben, 12; and Nate, 9 (and Ruby, the Schnoodle, 2).” Patty practices part-time, general pediatrics, but also helps with a clinic for children with HIV. DEBORAH RADWAY writes, “JACKI-SUE KATZMAN and I hosted a tubing expedition on the Deerfield River in August for a group of friends from GE in Lynn, MA.” In September, Deb, MARTHA JAZAK GALLEY, and SUZANNE KOSSAN LOWMAN gathered at Suzanne’s house in Richmond, VA, to celebrate Martha’s sabbatical from Microsoft, Suzanne’s fabulous tennis game, and Deb’s home renovations—“I replaced four rotten termite-ridden sills under the house for less than $20K.” JANE SIMONI COOKE’s mother succumbed to Alzheimer’s in August, after a 13-year battle with the disease. Although not a Smith graduate herself, Barbara Simoni was a great supporter of Smith, and to that end, she established the Jane Elizabeth Simoni Scholarship Fund in honor of our Jane. Prior to that sad day, Jane and son Ronan, 8, spent an exciting July vacation flyfishing in King Salmon, AK, returning home with 2,400 pictures of fish, bears, walruses, seals, and eagles. Two hours into the trip, Ronan was chased by a grizzly sow and cubs! CHERYL SPEAR FROMULARO and twin sister Kate took a birthday trip to Sedona, AZ. Her oldest daughter just graduated from the University of West Florida, and “now feels that a graduate degree is the thing, found a job on campus that will pay for it, and is back to school, at someone else’s expense.” Cheryl is battling tendonitis in an elbow, a shoulder not quite back from surgery in February, and a jammed ankle. They lost their house to Hurricane Ivan in 2004, rebuilt on pilings, and moved into their new home in Nov. ’06. She adds, “Max the giant slobbering Irish setter is finally old, and since I am his queen, that is 60 Wilder class of ’80 alumnae celebrate the wedding of Alison McCrone in New Castle, NH. Pictured, left to right, are Lisa August, Thea Lee, Maureen Durkin O’Connell, Alison, Margaret Moreau, Debbie Monegan McClelland, and Susan Gadecki Tibedo. very sad.” Two daughters (13 and 16) are still at home. JENNY STAUFFER SHEW writes, “I have two children in college now (artist and engineer), and the third is a young teen who is thorough in doing his job! I continue to find satisfaction working for state government, in aging services. How it has become 17 years of living in Georgia is amazing, but the Decatur community has transcended being in the Southeast. I have been single since the divorce in 1999, and the journey has been one of healthy growth and various adventures. Now in a quality relationship, I relish having a partner again.” LISA UNTERBERG DELAFONTAINE writes, “I fulfilled a lifelong dream and surfed in Hawaii on the last family vacation.” The Delafontaines spent much of the vacation on the Big Island of Hawaii, where Lisa’s husband met growers and agronomists for his biodiesel feedstock project. She adds, “On our way home, we visited SUZANNE SWANSON NOFZ ’78 and family at their woodsy vacation home in Big Bear Lake, CA.” Sec., Anne Macaulay, P.O. Box 50, Falmouth, MA 02541, jclinanes@comcast.net 1980 Many thanks to all who sent news. Apologies for having had to cut some of you short this time, but space has become tighter. Nevertheless, please continue to send in your updates! ANITA CHARLESTON PARKER has worked as an analyst for the Department of Defense for the past 17 years. Her oldest son, Malachi, recently graduated from high school, got his first real job, and is attending community college part-time. Daughter Ariel has just started high school and is already considering Smith; younger son Malik is in third grade. Anita and husband Anthony continue to enjoy the surprises and challenges of parenthood. CARRIE COLEMAN STRASBURGER is now a resident of Brunswick, ME, and loves it! She and husband Frank are Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 officially empty nesters, with all three children either in college or graduated. Frank has retired, but Carrie is still under contract with her school in New Jersey for another three years to do professional development and training. She looks forward to having time to enjoy kayaking, biking, skiing, and travel. Checking in from Farmington, CT, GINNY DOTY WOLF writes, “Our daughter, Annie, is in her sophomore year at Barnard, looking at becoming a veterinarian; Alex is in his senior year of high school, so the next college search is under way. After being a stay-at-home mom and volunteer extraordinaire for a number of years, I’ve launched my new career in broadcasting, with a radio show on arts and entertainment out of Middletown, CT, and an Internet radio show. I’ve also returned to my love of acting, taking classes, auditioning, and even landing a part! I’m still married to Steven (brother of our classmate NINA WOLF), and see Nina, the best aunt in the world, quite often.” Kudos to DEBORAH DURHAM, whose book Generations and Globalization: Youth, Age, and Family in the New World Economy (coedited with Jennifer Cole) came out this year. Deborah was promoted to full professor of anthropology at Sweet Briar College, and received a Fulbright grant to undertake research on aging and class in Turkey. MAUREEN DURKIN O’CONNELL reports that ALISON MCCRONE married Rob Baum (Cornell ’69) last summer in New Hampshire. Present from Wilder House were DEBBIE MONEGAN MCCLELLAND, MARGARET MOREAU, THEA LEE, DOT DI NICOLA NOYES, LISA AUGUST, SUSAN GADECKI TIBEDO, and ALLISON JOHNS BRADFORD. ALISON MCCRONE herself reports that she and Rob honeymooned in Turkey and the Greek Isles, and are now working on selling their respective houses and finding a new home. She adds, “My life, as I approach the big 50, has taken a new direction. I look forward to it with much excitement.” JULIA ERICKSON is finishing up her MBA, which she did completely online through Ellis College (part of the New York Institute of Technology). She plans to focus on building a coaching and consulting business geared toward helping clients make life and work transitions. She loves living a door away from her twin sister and her family, and being Auntie Julie (the almost mom) to 5-year-old niece Julia. Touching base from Wiesbaden, Germany, where she is a lawyer in government policy, NANCY GAGE-LINDNER reports that she had a peer-reviewed article published in an international nursing journal, and that she also presented papers to health researchers and clinicians in Edinburgh, Salt Lake City, and Bern, Switzerland. Nancy has been involved in multiple global efforts in violence prevention for some years and cofounded the WHO initiatives, the Violence Prevention Alliance, and the European Violence Prevention in Health Network. She and husband Peter struggle to make mortgage payments and keep their garden and 13- and 17-year-old sons in check. Congratulations to CELESTE GUDAS on the great success over the past seven years of her company, 24 Seven, a staffing and recruitment agency for the fashion industry. The company has grown from one office to eight worldwide offices and recently won the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year award. Celeste resides in Brooklyn Heights with her partner, Stuart, and three children, Ellie, 8, and twins Jack and Kate, 6. RONNIE KRACHMALNICK WAGNER continues to work as a deputy district attorney for Marin County and enjoys being a trial lawyer. Son Madison is a sophomore at California State University, Northridge, majoring in media composition; he plays piano and clarinet in the CSUN Wind Symphony. Twin brother Spenser is a sophomore history major at UC Davis, and is co-president of the UC Davis Aggies ice hockey team. The class multitasking award unquestionably goes to KARI (KELLY) KUERSTEINER-BECK, who is homeschooling her six children, ages 5 to 17. She shares, “Using that Smith Spanish degree, I took the gang to Spain for a month to speak at a University of Madrid conference, on the subject of homeschooling. I just returned from another month in Africa with husband Mike and the whole entourage. I got off to a great start with a minireunion, en route, with STEPHANIE ALLGAIER in Washington, DC. We are still dividing our time between Tallahassee, where we import and sell Thoroughbreds for eventing (look for our Charley Farley on the short list for Beijing!), and Sarasota, where we’re building a polo yard. Five of the kids plus Old Mom were recently profiled on TV as the Beck Polo Team.” Best wishes also to LEE-ANN LARSON MCQUILKEN, who married George McQuilken in May on Mayo Beach in Wellfleet, MA. Lee-Ann, who lives in Portsmouth, NH, will earn her certificate in digital design and animation from New Hampshire Community Technical College next spring. She is a contractor for Port Technology in Amesbury, MA, and loves it. Her 25 years in financial services in Boston gave her great technology experience, so she feels at one with the computer! CINDY MILLER continues to enjoy her practice in pediatric radiology, and has begun attending once a week in adult chest radiology, a welcome new challenge. While in Israel in March, she was inspired to become a bat mitzvah and is working toward that goal. Deepest condolences to LAUREL PALEY on the unexpected passing of her beloved father in July. Wilder and Dawes residents may remember Albert Paley as the dad who cut out the daily Doonesbury comics and sent Laurel her weekly fix of the strip, which she would pass around the table at breakfast. Laurel gave the third and final (and funny) eulogy at his funeral. On a happier note, Laurel’s artwork has been on the move, in traveling shows in Korea and China, as well as in the Los Angeles area. Laurel also did some summer traveling in Japan. TOBY SCHERMERHORN ’s daughter spent last July in the Smith science program and hopes to go to Smith. Toby and husband Rob (Syracuse ’84) have been married nearly 20 years, and have worked together designing hotels for the past 10 years. Apologies to ABBY SLATER , who, through an editing error, was selling stocks instead of socks (she and husband Morry own a sock business in Canada). Abby’s older daughter, Maya, is a junior at Smith; younger daughter Emma is at Yale. JACKIE YANG had a mini-reunion in July with some of her Dawes first-year housemates at the home of HELENE POWERS in Florence, MA. The group included JANE CHUNG, SUSANNAH GAL, KIT DODGSON, and AIDA ABBOUD GENNIS ’78. That’s it for now. I hope this news inspires others to send in theirs. Sec., Eda Martin Joyce, 3909 Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase, MD 20815, eda.joyce@att 1981 Greetings! We bring you the latest class news. ANDREA BERMAN writes that KAROLINE ADLER, DEBI ZONIES, and she had a minireunion in May in New York City. Andrea flew in from the San Francisco Bay Area, and Karoline came from outside Philadelphia to meet up with Debi, who lives in New York City. Andrea says the threesome toured the city, visited the Met, tasted local cuisine, and saw Spring Awakening on Broadway. They had such a great time that they are thinking of making it an annual event. STEPHANIE NOWAK writes that she and MARCY WESTERLING traveled to Tucson, AZ, for a mini-reunion with SUSAN ROBERTS in 2006. Steph lives in Minneapolis with her husband and two dogs and writes that she is in her 20th year as a public school art teacher and is celebrating her seventh anniversary of ending chemotherapy for breast cancer. She has walked nearly 300 miles since April in training for the Susan G. Komen Walk for the Cure. KATHLEEN LYU RYAN and husband Kevin spent their 25th wedding anniversary in June in Puglia in southern Italy, “a quieter Tuscany with abundant, fabulous food, grapevines, and olive trees.” Kathleen’s oldest son, William, is at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. Also celebrating her 25th anniversary was PEGGY POGUE STEINER, whose two oldest children are now in college. DEBBY MITTELMAN writes that daughter Dove is a senior at the University of Arizona, and just returned from a semester abroad in Italy; son Nash is a junior at Northern Arizona University and planning a semester in Australia. Debby says she enjoyed taking her daughter back to school and sitting in her room at her sorority “remembering the anticipation at the beginning of each new school year at Smith, seeing old friends after a long summer and thinking about new classes and experiences about to happen.” Continuing with the college theme, LAURIE POOLE CHESTER writes, “My news is empty nest.” Son Tommy is at the University of Colorado in Boulder and David is at St. Paul’s School in Concord, NH. Laurie says she hopes to spend her time “regaining some lost ground on health and home while working lightly” at her art publishing and licensing company, Wild Apple. Laurie says she and LISA FINGERET run into each other and share pictures of their dogs: “No doubt we are turning into the crazy old women who fixate on their dogs.” MARYLOU COYLE writes from Vancouver, where she lives with husband Brent; daughter Sierra, 12; and son Dylan, 8. Marylou completed her master’s-level training in Pilates rehabilitation in 1999 and now operates a Pilates studio, the Refinery, in Vancouver. Marylou made this career shift in 1999 “as the kids were growing up and my world travel and public company life as a CEO was hindering my time with the family.” PAM EUSTIS MILLER writes from New York that she enjoys the many activities of son Ben, 3, as well as her work with the Blue Hill Troupe. She is on “a zillion committees” and wonders how she will complete everything, “but so far, like Ado Annie in Oklahoma, I’m just a girl who can’t say no.” Finally, CAROL BIRNEY DE WET, on the faculty at Franklin & Marshall College, writes that she spent the past 18 months serving as the special assistant to the provost and president on women and family issues. Underscoring one of the fundamental issues that women face, Carol says, “Perhaps surprisingly, small liberal arts colleges tend to have few policies relating to women or family issues, but women tend to make good use of those that are in place. In contrast, large universities tend to have a suite of policies on the books, but few women take advantage of them for fear of ending up on a negative mommy track or being viewed as uncommitted to their careers.” Her oldest went off to college in the fall. Please send us your news, especially if we have not heard from you in a while. Until next time, all the best to everyone. Sec., Mary Louise Wagner, 5458 30th Street NW, Washington, DC 20015, marylouisewagner@aol.com Sec., Gigi Pooley Helliwell, 620 Lafayette Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14222, gigih@acninc.net 1982 Greetings from your new secretaries! You’ve got a bicoastal team here to help share news, with Nancy on the East Coast and Jody on the West to keep us connected over the next five years. We welcome your news anytime, but watch for and reply to our periodic e-mails. Meanwhile, check out the online alumnae directory at www.smith.edu/alumnae—register, update your info, and keep in touch! Fund co-chairs LIZ CLARY CHOW and LESLIE BROOKS SOLOMON send the following exciting milestone: “Our class raised a comprehensive gift for Smith of $1,454,698, setting a new record for a 25th Reunion class by besting the record set last year by the class of ’81! That amount is well ahead of our goal of $1,200,000, and reflects the support and generosity of many classmates. Our class participation rate was 43.6 percent, which means that 284 of us contributed to this exciting result. Through our generosity, the class has not only helped support financial aid and other important programs at Smith, but also has raised the bar for the classes that will follow us. May they be inspired to set new records of their own!” SUE ALTSHULER NORTON writes that her youngest started kindergarten this year, so “I finally feel like we’re making some progress!” Reunion “was fabulous and it was great to see everyone that attended. The BETTY GOLDSTEIN FRIEDAN ’42 discussion was outstanding and as always I reconnected with old friends and made some new ones as well. I admit I had a little trouble reentering the real world after the four days in Northampton, but the trip was worth it!” MELISSA COHN, president of the Manhattan Mortgage Company, earned top ribbons in the hunter ring at the Vermont Summer Festival and was later featured on both CNBC and the NBC Nightly News as a leading expert in the mortgage field. Daughter Sarah is also an accomplished horsewoman, earning top honors at several summer events. Melissa has been collecting accolades in business, with a Stevie Award for Women in Business, and she was named top mortgage originator for 11 years in a row by the editors of Mortgage Originator Magazine. She was also honored in May with the Spirit of Life Award from City of Hope. JOANNE COREY’s younger daughter, Trinity (a high school senior), spent four fantastic weeks at Smith with the summer science and engineering program, a great program for high school girls with an interest in any scientific or engineering field. Eldest daughter Beth is in her senior year at the Sunderman Conservatory of Music at Gettysburg College, and spent the fall semester in Vienna. SUSAN DANDRIDGE and husband Bruce (current chair of the National Lung Association and president of Elite Racing, a sports marketing and management company), traveled to Cape Town, South Africa, for a conference on lung disease as it is complicated by HIV and TB. She’s in her 17th year at Morgan Stanley. Daughter Kristine is a first-year at San Diego State University. ANN DOWNER-HAZELL writes, “My middle-grade fantasy novels are still riding the long coattails of the Harry Potter phenomenon, and it was especially gratifying this spring to have Hatching Magic nominated for the Nutmeg award, whose winner is chosen by Connecticut school kids, and to receive an award from the Boston Authors Club for The Dragon of Never-Was. My husband and I are kept busy with our editing careers, Ed at Houghton Mifflin, me at Harvard University Press, where I sometimes get to do things like go kayaking with 40 arachnologists on the Susquehanna River. Our 7-yearold, Ben, is ambitious to be the CEO of Lego and a movie director, so he can take over Toho studios and make Godzilla movies.” LAURA MATTES COX was married in Dec. ’06, in Tuxedo Park, NY, with BARBARA HORAN ’81 as a bridesmaid. BETSY PICKEL HEARN writes, “The 25th in NoHo was the best ever, and I continue to be amazed/impressed by my classmates! As a result of Reunion karma (yes, it’s true), I started a new position, at a new company, in August, and am now director of sales operations for Acceller. Michael and I celebrated our 14th anniversary in Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 61 alumnae update August, and our 13th year in Atlanta. As a fifth-grader, Katie advanced to the Georgia state semifinals in the Scripps National Spelling Bee, and Jack continues to tear up the diamond as a Little League dynamo.” HOLLY WELCH SULLIVAN’s son, Daniel, started college at the Boston Conservatory, and James is in high school, while her two girls, Bridget (fifth grade) and Nora (fourth grade) remain eager and excited about school. She shares a common sentiment: “Somehow, everything will get done, but I’m sure I don’t know how at this point. One day at a time is our mantra around here.” Holly was delighted to see so many of us at Reunion, especially CYNTHIA GRAY CONENA, who made a heroic effort to attend before passing away from cancer shortly after. Holly writes, “She was a lovely, caring person, and I can’t believe she’s gone.” TRACY MITCHELL-MACKOID writes, “It was an incredibly rewarding Reunion on all levels: seeing old friends, remembering those who are no longer with us, and being reminded of how many smart and funny women we lived with during our years at Smith. It was such a great feeling. Call me crazy, but the rain even added to the reminiscing aspect of the weekend. I especially enjoyed my ride up with FLORIE SEERY ’83, and seeing JODY BROCKELMAN TOLAN , SUZY SCHIFFER PARRASCH, ELYSE LAZANSKY, MELANIE HATCHELL TAYLOR, and so many others again. In honor of LOUISE LOWE’s passing, Suzy and her family all came to visit us for a long weekend in July, and we enjoyed getting to know each other’s families. It’s amazing how easily we all jumped right back into our lives of 25 years ago. I can’t wait for the next one.” A lovely message to conclude our first column! Sec., Nancy Davis O’Hara, 17 Merrill Road, Cranston, RI 02920, ndoesq@aol.com Sec., Jody Brockelman Tolan, 1591 Oakdale Street, Pasadena, CA 91106, jodybt@aol.com 1983 We welcome some first-time correspondents this quarter! CECILIA THOMPKINS RENDER writes, “I decided to write in because I never have and the class notes are always the first thing I read in the Quarterly.” Cecilia was just promoted to director of the Nordson Corporation Foundation. She also reports on a mini-reunion of Jordanites last August at the home of AMY TUTTLE SWEENEY in Portland, ME, with Amy, Cecilia, CLAIRE PEACHEY, SUZANNE GARROW ’84, and SARA ERICKSON ’84. She says a group has been getting together almost every year, and has included ANNE RICHIE HOHL ’82, DEIRDRE PAONE COHEN, JULIE BAIRD LILLYS ’81, ANNA GANNON ’85, CARRIE STEWART ’81, and NICOLE ARBUSTO. 62 A class of ’83 mini-reunion in Portland, ME, included, left to right, Amy Tuttle Sweeney, Cecilia Thompkins Render, Suzanne Garrow ’84, and Claire Peachey. In July, another mini-reunion took place in Middlebury, VT, when CAROLYN JONES MARKLAND met up with ALISON GARRETT MUSE, LAURA BELLSTROM, LISA COUNSELMAN HOAG, and ALETHEA WILLIAMSON HARDY. Carolyn writes, “We are all looking forward to our 25th in May. I am now divorced and live in North Adams, MA, with my partner, Lucy, and two daughters, Katy and Jenna. Lucy and I own our own small-business-services practice in Williamstown.” LINDA MORGAN writes, “I married Phil Haws in August in an outdoor celebration at a lodge in the Adirondacks. I’ll be a stepmom to two children, Lucas, 8, and Miranda, 5, and we look forward to many happy years together. I recently joined Cogswell Realty Group to facilitate an 18-acre mixed-use redevelopment in downtown Newark, NJ.” Another Adirondack wedding took place earlier in the year, when NANCY HUTCHENS was married to Steve Reif, with MARTHA CLOUGH ENGEMAN in attendance. Nancy writes, “It was beautiful, fun, and very moving to come full circle and marry my high school love. We were married at our camp in the Adirondacks with our entire families and camp friends. The circle of life continues as I’m busy preparing my two sons, 20 and 17, to leave for college and fashion shopping with my 13-year-old daughter. Martha and I are planning on Reunion!” LISA BILBREY HYDER writes, “I made contact with the wonderful Smithies here in the Chattanooga Smith club and truly enjoyed the luncheon we had a few months back. I’ve since gotten together with club president FLOSSIE WEILL ’73, who’s a partner at a law firm and a great woman with whom to talk. I’m starting a new job as a technical writer for Life Care Centers of America, a long-term health-care company headquartered in Cleveland, TN. My husband, Mark, an internal auditor, is constantly on the road, so I run our chaotic household solo much of the time. Andrew is in seventh grade at our church school this year; Ben is in Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 second. Sparky, our Cardigan Welsh corgi, and I have gotten our feet wet in animal rescue by helping transport an injured corgi to his foster home. It’s a very rewarding way to help dogs that need a second chance.” KIM VANGE BOESTAM writes, “My husband and I have moved to Stockholm after 12 great years in London; it was just time for a change. Still working on McDonald’s Happy Meals, have a new office, am renovating a new place, and learning Swedish. So far, all is going well, but check in again once the snow comes!” JOANNE BENNETT JEFFERS has returned to the States, to Sarasota, FL, after five years in Zagreb, Croatia. She writes, “We want our third-grade daughter, Ann, to learn about being American from a new perspective.” Joanne’s husband, Bill, will continue as director of the U.S. Agency for International Development Mission to Croatia and will join them as soon as he can. SYLVIA HENDERSON had a wonderful family celebration in NoHo with her mother, SHELLEY LINDNER HENDERSON ’50; eldest niece, SARAH-NEEL SMITH ’07; both sets of grandparents; four aunts; and Sarah-Neel’s parents and sister. Sylvia also caught up with former housemate ALEXANDRA RISLEY SCHROEDER ’86 and with LAMA ABUGHAIDA KAMAL. Sylvia has been a chef at the Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington, DC, for six years. CAROLYN SCERBO KAELIN writes, “2007 has brought with it a bridesmaids trifecta. LEIS ROSE and I attended this year’s Rally Day ceremonies. DARCY NAUMOWITZ GUSTAFSON visited me in Boston with her adorable 5-year-old son, energetic mother, and ever-handsome brother. CARRIE NOTARI ’84 and I attended the spring Alumnae Association health symposium (where I gave the keynote address).” Carolyn’s second book, The Breast Cancer Survivor’s Fitness Plan, was published in the fall by McGraw-Hill and launched a 12-week exercise program for breast cancer survivors approved by the American Council of Exercise. [Editor’s note: See “A Surgeon’s Jour- ney” in the Summer ’07 Quarterly for more on Carolyn and her work.] The program is up and running at YMCAs in New England and has already expanded to as far as Colorado. She and Bill are looking forward to their 20th wedding anniversary, and enjoy traveling with their children, Kathryn Grace, 15, and Tripp, 11, and as a couple. She is looking forward to Reunion. AMY RESNER writes, “In June, FLORIE SEERY and I visited NORA FITZGERALD in Moscow. We had an amazing time together. Nora’s Russian language skills are impressive, and she was an excellent guide.” Besides visiting museums and the Kremlin, they hung out with Nora’s kids, and had countless conversations with Nora and Peter and their colleagues about Russia’s politics and society. On a side trip to Kiev, they made sure to see the huge Babi Yar memorial, the site of a massacre of 34,000 Jews in the 1940s, and then visit Uman, where the famous Rabbi Nachman is buried, whose teachings are still a great source of spiritual inspiration for many Jews. Amy’s family comes from Nemirov, near Uman, and she is only the second person from her family to return to their roots. FLORIE SEERY sends an addendum: “I had surgery at NYU Hospital and had the good fortune of having IN KYUNG YOOK as my anesthesiologist. She took excellent care of me, and we had a chatty time in the operating room talking about our families and reminiscing about Smith.” KATE YOUNG’s chapbook, Gentling the Bones, was scheduled for publication by Finishing Line Press in late November. Kate’s poems have appeared in several publications, including The Massachusetts Review, The Iowa Review, and Shenandoah, and many places online. She is a visiting poet in the Arlington, VA, public schools, and cohosts a Washington, DC, poetry reading series. Kate also recently hosted “Beyond Sylvia Plath,” a DC-area reading featuring Smith Poetry Center director Ellen Watson and poets ANNE HARDING WOODWORTH ’65, NANCY MENEELY ’65, and PAMELA HARRISON MCCULLOUGH ’68. JEAN CARTER RYAN writes, “The big change in my life this year is I switched jobs after 18 years with the state of Ohio’s development department. I am now the executive director of the Columbus-Franklin County Finance Authority, an organization in the start-up phase. I’ve had to learn all kinds of new skills, which has been both nerve-racking and exhilarating. On a personal level, husband Tim and I have three girls: Nora and Kieran are in high school and Kate is a fifthgrader. Nora is a junior and starting to look at colleges, so I plan to bring her to Reunion so she can check out Smith. Tim and I continue to work on our 115-year-old Victorian home in our spare time. The kids swear we’ll never finish. We’ll prove them wrong!” JOANNA PARKER EVANS ’81, MEd ’83, writes that she has changed careers and is now the director of admission and financial aid at the White Mountain School in northern New Hampshire. She writes, “Twin sons Miles and Dylan are first-years at the college preparatory boarding school, where global sustainability is emphasized. Visitors and inquiries about the school are welcome! Husband Michael is a tenured faculty member at Indiana University and will commute between homes in Indiana and New Hampshire.” First-time correspondent ELIZABETH RANDELL UPTON writes that she was a government major, but as a singer became fascinated with early music. She sang in professional choirs and ensembles in New York, earned a master’s in historical musicology at Columbia University, and received her doctorate from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, with a dissertation on an Italian manuscript of late 14th-century French songs and motets. She is now a tenured assistant professor in the musicology department at UCLA. Husband Brian Upton designs video games; son Sam is 10; daughter Rose is 7. “We love living in Los Angeles—who knew humidity was optional?” Your secretary certainly wishes the option button could be pressed in New York City! My news: My associate in private practice retired in June, and I am now setting up an art conservation facility for the Staten Island Museum. For eight years, I was an extreme commuter, traveling three hours a day for work in Manhattan, and am happily looking forward to working just five minutes from my home when the museum studio is ready in January. Meanwhile, I’m really enjoying having the time to work on my own art, and doing a bit of freelance conservation work. Looking forward to hearing from everybody next quarter—get ready for Reunion 25 in May! Sec., Lenora Paglia, paglia@smith.alumnae.net 1984 Hello again! Thanks for such prompt responses to my e-mail requests. I want to mention that according to the Alumnae Association privacy policy, secretaries are to limit inclusion of third-party information. Also, we are not to include address or e-mail information unless it pertains directly to class business, as below. LEIGH PEAKE, our class vice president, writes, “Although May ’09 and our 25th Reunion seem ages away, planning is already under way and we are eager for volunteers! We have plenty of small tasks that can be accomplished with a minimum amount of effort, so please contact me (leigh. peake@comcast.net) if you’re willing to lend a hand. I’m still hanging out on the farm in Maine with four horses, four goats, two dogs, an iguana, and my partner, Angie. I’m also still at Heinemann (an educational publishing company) as vice president and editorial director. Big news from the fall was starting my 2-year-old filly under saddle. My first time, and all went well, so I’m relieved.” JENNIFER ABRAHAMS reports on two Talbot mini-reunions: “First I got together with MARTHA CALVERT REYNOLDS in June at Stinson Beach. Martha, Jonathan, 11, and Olivia, 6, were back from China visiting the States and joined me, my husband, and our daughter, Natalie, 6. Second, I drove to San Francisco to meet MARTHA POST ANDERSON while she was out from Buffalo for an ABA conference. I love being able to just pick up with my Smith friends, even though we may have had a span of several years since we last got together. I’m still with GeoTrans as a consulting hydrogeologist—I’ve been doing this for 21 years!” JANE BAINTER recently joined Clive Wilkinson Architects in West Hollywood as office manager/public relations contact. JULIE BAXTER married Bert Cornelison in Houston, in June, and has three stepchildren (16, 21, and 23). AMY KIRKHOFF CARLSON writes, “The Noteables celebrated the founding of the group 25 years ago this past spring. It was a real hoot and several of us older alums returned for the jam, including NANCY LEE JACKSON, CAROLINE MCDANIEL ’85, SUSAN BECKER AZIZ, STEPHANIE TSANDIKOS, and MARY VON HERRMANN ’85. Mary came with her niece, a fourth-generation Smithie! Noteable alums out there, please contact me, as we want to have a good working list!” JOANNE LISKIN CLOUTIER and family are going on year 13 in sunny Phoenix, AZ. Joanne is pursuing her second master’s degree, this time in education, while working in secondary special ed. Her three children all attend the local K–12 charter school where she works, which she finds wonderfully convenient. Husband John recently formed his own financial/legal services company, Cloutier Capital Consulting, after working at Merrill Lynch. PATRICIA LOWE GARVEY writes , “GRETCHEN LOEW NOLAN hosted a Smith pool party last summer. One friend in attendance was MARTHA CALVERT REYNOLDS, who has been in China for the last two years. It was fun to reunite with the Talbot crew and to hear about the exciting adventures that Martha and her family have been on. CAROL THOMAS, husband Doug, and daughter Sarah were in attendance as well as the Garvey five (Jeff; Patty; Jim, 15; Jack, 12; and Tom, 11). Gretchen and husband Ed have four children (Max, 15; Lucy, 14; Teddy, 10; and Charlotte, 8). It was a great day!” SABINA MARTIN HARVEY writes, “I was married in April, here in Charlottesville, VA. My daughters, Nina and Emma, were my maids of honor, and my son, Joseph, walked me down the aisle. It was such a wonderful day!” JADE HAWKINS VALDIVIESO and FLORENCE WALKER FITZGERALD ’59 were guests. BRITT LIDDICOAT HASELTON writes, “Celeste, 15, will be a sophomore and Alecia graduates from eighth grade in the spring—two teenagers, will I survive? Glad I have my office to escape to sometimes! My husband and I work together at our law firm in Soquel, CA. My other therapy is my horse. I enjoyed representing the Los Alto Hounds in the Masters of Fox Hounds of America Championship in Middleburg, VA. My horse, Cruising Altitude, or “Clive,” and I competed in the four-phase event. The champion was a Virginian, but we had a great time competing.” CATHY BAIRD KUSMIN and husband Lorin live in Silver Spring, MD, with daughters Lynn, 7, and Abigail, 5. ROBIN LLOYD went on a six-day safari in Tanzania last summer. She saw all of the Big Five, including a black rhino. These are becoming increasingly difficult to see in the wild as their numbers are dwindling. The leopards also were spectacular, as well as an amazing diversity of birds. MISSY LOVING has one daughter who is a junior at Northwestern and one who is a first-year at Boston University. She is still in human resources at Chrysler and also working on her dissertation in organizational management. LISA MARIE MARKS writes, “I took Samantha, 9, to Paris in June, where we caught up with ELENA IRIBARREN and son Juan, 6. The kids went rowing in the Bois de Boulogne and Elena and I tried to catch up on so many years in one afternoon! Elena works for a French publishing house and her husband is close to finishing his PhD. Son Ben, 5, is very social and curious about everything. Their dad and I separated last summer after 13 years of marriage. I have been very busy with my art advisory business, with private and corporate clients, and am just finishing up a project on Viacom’s executive floor. I also had the pleasure of seeing ERIN FRAY KERR, who was in New York for the fancy food show. Erin looked great and seems very happy with her life working at Republic of Tea, still painting as well and parenting two teens.” LYNN MCGREW visited JANE SOKOLOSKY in Barrington, RI, and met Jane’s three boys and new golden Lab. CARRIE NOTARI exhibited her work at the Museo del Mare at al Castello di Santa Severa, Italy. DEBBIE OSTROW ESSEX writes, “I think I have finally achieved a happily balanced life! I have a part-time psychotherapy practice, volunteer as a writing coach, and serve as a board member for an Albany schools’ fundraising organization. I spend as much time with my kids (Sam, 10, and Sarah, 13) as I can, while also running over to play Scrabble with my 97-year-old grandmother. I’ve had several fun gettogethers in New Hampshire, California, and New York with my old Tyler House roommate, the ever-dazzling and energetic KIM NORBECK KEATING. Also, I have been corresponding with PAULA KAENEL-FAITH, who moved to the Lucerne area of France after marrying Andre Kaenel, whom she met at Smith when he was studying abroad from his native Switzerland. Paula has two teenage boys and teaches English in the French schools.” AMY WILKERSON, associate vice president for research support at Rockefeller University, spent a weekend last summer on Queen Anne Lake in western Massachusetts at the family retreat of CAROLINE MCDANIEL ’85, accompanied by MAGGIE NOBLE ’81. She included a stop in Northampton, which served as a clear reminder of why she chose to major in geology while at Smith—the incredible topography of the area. Sec., Mimi Wiegand Fargo, 539 Pointe Essex Court, St. Louis, MO 63122, mimifargo@sbcglobal.net 1985 Greetings! Hope all is well in your corner of the world. I got to go on an awesome trip to Germany in June, with my mom and my daughter Dana, 16. It was a genealogical-themed trip that my mom wanted to go on, and we were her luggage carriers. However, we made her get wheelies, and off we went for three weeks. I have a new appreciation of all the hours my mom has put in to assemble our family history. It has spurred me on to get my husband’s side of the family started while the older folks are still around to chat with. We met and traveled with cousins from eight generations back, and I had the treat of visiting three German families of third cousins that I hadn’t seen since I was 16. That, along with our annual trek to the Northeast, Maryland, and North Carolina beaches has rounded out my travels for now. JEANNETTE JACKSON writes from Ann Arbor. She, LYNDA MAILLET NORTON, and PAT DILL RINVELT stay in contact through the Ann Arbor Smith club, lunches, and kid activities. Jeannette, who has a 12-year-old daughter, and Lynda both have children at the same elementary school, work on projects together, see each other during afterschool pickup, and their children attended camp together last summer. Jeannette and her business partner continue to work with Smith students as faculty in the Smith Leadership Program, running the Smith Leadership Pre-Orientation program, which has been a gift. They have a consult- Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 63 alumnae update ing practice focused on organizational change and leadership development, and they find this part of their work truly refreshing. It has been interesting to see the generational changes through the years, especially as some of the new students at Smith were born the year we graduated! Send me news when you can! Sec., Diana Swift-Monroe, 3224 Running Springs, San Antonio, TX 78261, dijada@aol.com 1986 Hi, everyone! Here’s what your fellow ’86ers are up to. ANNA FREITAG-KEDERSHA, a board-certified endocrinologist with a private practice in Stamford, CT, and active hospital privileges at Norwalk and Stamford hospitals and St. Vincent’s Medical Center, has been voted a top doctor in endocrinology and internal medicine for the last three consecutive years by Connecticut Magazine. Last summer FRANCES CHESTER and partner Sylvia moved to Providence, RI, where Sylvia will start her medical residency in pediatrics at Brown. Frances writes, “I have been in Louisville, KY, for 13 years and have loved it, but will be happy to move back to New England so I can see my Smith friends, like MARY MARTONE , who lives in West Springfield, MA, with her beautiful daughter, and LAURI MEADE ’87 in Northampton.” Frances has been a nurse practitioner at a community health center serving primarily uninsured patients for the last 13 years and has been working on her doctorate in public health at the University of Kentucky for the last four years. She will be happy to stop commuting the 80 miles to Lexington from Louisville, and writes that she passed her comprehensive exams in the fall and is now a candidate for the degree. LISA-ANNE CULP writes that in March she left academia after 14 years of teaching English at the university level to return to technical editing, this time at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. She writes, “The move from Florida to Maryland has been quite a change (less NASCAR and hurricanes, more power suits and $20 yoga classes), but so far I’ve done some fun things, like meet one of my favorite actors, Gene Wilder, at his book signing.” Lisa-Anne couldn’t attend Reunion, but she did manage to get a student’s daughter interested in Smith with riveting tales of nighttime pranks between Wilder and Comstock and totally female-focused classrooms. “She was accepted to Smith last year, and it was a thrill for me to think of her starting her life there.” Lisa-Anne would love to hear from Smithies from Wilder House or anyone in general. Sec., Mia Tanella, 1457 Gwynmere Run, Carmel, IN 46032, miatanella@aol.com 64 1987 Hello, classmates. Your co-secretary SHARON VAUGHN WILLIAMS just returned from the 2007 Smith Volunteer Conference, the highlight of which was the Volunteer Recognition Awards dinner. What an exciting and inspiring event! Also in attendance were our president, MELANIE ROSENTHAL MARGOLIS; treasurer, DIANA SIMPLAIR; and club officer, MARTHA PHELPS. In addition to the presentations, training sessions, and discussions, we learned about our new roles, met with students, networked with other volunteers, and met members of the staff who will assist us in carrying out our respective duties. Kathleen and I did not receive any news to report this quarter; for class secretaries, no news is certainly not good news. For future issues, we want our inboxes overflowing with updates. We are especially interested in hearing from those of you who haven’t submitted an update before. Start spreadin’ the news! Sec., Sharon Vaughn Williams, 5824 Tehama Avenue, Richmond, CA 94804, svaughnd@yahoo.com Sec., Kathleen Pulsifer, 1121 Dorchester Street, Orlando, FL 32803, drpulsifer@yahoo.com 1988 Dear classmates: I’m hijacking the column this month to put in a plug for our 20th Reunion at Smith, May 22–25, ’08. Reunion chairs KRISTY GERTSEN KETELTAS and ERIN SHEEHY are putting together a terrific program, with help from the very able Reunion committee: ASHLEY PAYNE EASON, BETSY CODDING, CHERYL LASOTA BUNDY, CHRIS ALAIMO, JENNIFER GRAY JACOBS, MELISSA CODISPOTI BURLING, MONA GHOSH SINHA, NICOLE PASQUINI HEPBURN, TONI TOMLINSON BURNHAM, and VICTORIA HARRIS. You can find details on our Reunion Website via the AASC Website (http://alumnae. smith.edu). Click on “Connect,” then “Classes.” In addition, MERILYN CH’NG CHESLER has set up a terrific online community for us (http://smith88. moriahweb.com), so please take a moment to log in and start reconnecting. Why should you come to Reunion? Indulge me while I offer my interpretation. Some of you know that my mom is BARBARA STUETZER LAUTERBACH ’57. She had her 50th Reunion last spring, and I went to see ’57 in action. My daughter and I left the house at 6 a.m. in order to make it to Northampton in time for the Alumnae Parade on Ivy Day. It was raining, cold, gray—not a day for whites, but I wore them anyway and dug out my sash; I knew I was expected (by Mom) to march. Due to the bad weather the parade was in the ITT. The facility was packed and impossibly loud, with hundreds of delighted seniors and their proud Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 families, the marching band, and the Reunion classes. Around we marched, and darned if I didn’t get just a wee bit choked up. There was a lot of speechifying and then more cheering of students, alumnae, and faculty. We celebrated one another and the institution, and it felt great to be a part of it all. When I was growing up, I moved around a lot, so coming to Smith is like coming home for me— every time. I can’t wait to do it again next year, and look forward to seeing my old friends and making some new ones. So, reconnect, reengage, reenergize, recharge—however you review it—Reunion! Written by Pres., Lisa Lauterbach Laskin Sec., Linden Rhoads, linden@seattleventures.com 1989 Sec., Gabriella Judd, 3534 Jefferson Avenue, Redwood City, CA 94062, gabriella_judd@smith.alumnae.net 1990 Hi, everyone! JENNY BORNHOLDT HAMMOND writes, “After Reunion 2005, I kept in touch with a bunch of Capenites. I have seen JEAN CHO at least twice a year. We enjoy going to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, especially the Sunday brunch! Ah, our true Smith upbringing shines through—fine art and food! In Aug. ’06, Jean and I attended a mini-reunion at MAYEN LAGDAMEO-HOGAN’s home in New Jersey. We had fun by the pool and watching Mayen and my sons dancing to ‘YMCA.’ In Jan. ’07, I met with MICHELE MARTIN in downtown Philly and enjoyed an amazing Italian dinner. She is working at Morgan, Lewis and Bockius LLP after living in Connecticut for a short time.” Jenny is director of alumni affairs at Abington Friends School, her alma mater, which she says is wonderful, as is the opportunity to be involved with the Smith alumnae admission program. MARY ELLEN CUSACK MCDONOUGH reports, “DOROTHY ADLER BRANIFF lives near the New Jersey shore, is married with two adorable sons, and is doing that Avon 3-Day Walk for breast cancer. I met CHRISTINE SWYMER BOYLE in May. We took all six kids on the train to Boston to the Children’s Museum. We’re hoping our youngest ones, Madelyn and Molly, will be at Smith in 2020!” Mary Ellen likes selling real estate, despite the downturn: “The job gets harder, but more interesting, plus, the flexibility can’t be beat.” AMANDA ORR writes, “I had my second baby, a boy named Augustus Miller, in March. He joins Madeline, 3. He is a great baby—that rare breed that sleeps 12 hours a night—and he has a great, happy personality. He’s also a boy with many nicknames—Gus, Guster, Gustafer, and Augie are among the frontrunners. Parenthood is so much easier the second time around.” In closing, please join me in making a generous gift to the Smith Fund, so that future generations of accomplished women will have endless opportunities at Smith College. And, of course, send me more information for our column in the Quarterly! Sec., Annie Steeper Morita, 225 Fifteenth Street, Manhattan Beach, CA 90266, 90sec@smith.alumnae. net, anniemorita@yahoo.com 1991 Happy Sweet 16, Smithies! We’ve been out of school that many years. Just think of it as four short years till our 20th Reunion. Thanks to everyone who responded to the call for updates. We love to hear from long-lost Smithies, so everyone please urge at least one classmate to e-mail me with updates. And all of you, keep writing in. We all love to hear how everyone is doing. And what a far-flung group we are. Last summer I saw REBECCA MORRIS’s art studio in Los Angeles; caught up with ANNE DUROE, visiting San Francisco from Ann Arbor, MI; and wondered at KELLY LINDNER’s round-faced son, Finn, when she was visiting Southern California from Brooklyn. I check in regularly with ALISON CONN ’92, also in Brooklyn. CRISTINA CHESTERMAN SIDHU moved to Nova Scotia in Jan. ’06 when husband Paul was offered a promotion there. She writes, “Loving life in the Maritimes, busy with two boys, 6 and 4. I got a surprise reunion with my former roomie JENN THOMSON ’92, when she attended the Global Microcredit Summit in Halifax in November. We hadn’t seen each other in over 15 years! She was accepted into the Canadian Portrait Academy’s ninth annual juried exhibition and the Catherine Lorillard Wolfe Art Club’s Members and Associates juried exhibition.” TAYA SWENSON was married in April; she and her husband live in Minneapolis with a cat and two kittens. RACHEL BROWN-CHIDSEY , MAT, is spending the academic year in Alaska on a yearlong sabbatical from the University of Southern Maine. She will write research articles, work on revisions to one of her books, and enjoy more time with family. LISA LOWREY TOMIHIRO’s son Connor, 7, is in his fourth year at the Academy of Dance, and youngest son Ian, 3, started there last summer. Her husband is with the same company but switched from programming to administration. CHRISTY HARDIN SMITH writes daily for Firedoglake, a progressive political blog. She attended the YearlyKos convention in Chicago and was on the advisory board for the Democratic presidential debate of Aug. 5, ’07. Christy is married (14 years and counting), with one child, Fiona, born after several years of struggle with fer- tility issues. Christy lives in West Virginia. She is writing full-time, taking a break from her legal practice and her previous work as an assistant prosecutor. She has appeared on C-Span, CNN, Air America, and WNYC. AIMIE SMITH CHAPPLE works for Accenture and made partner in 2005. She now leads a group of 200-plus in the UK. She has traveled to Southeast Asia, India, Japan, the United States, and France. Her daughters, 11 and 7, are at girls’ schools. She and husband Ed continue to work on their 1870s house. She enjoyed seeing LARA TALARICO ANTHONY and CHRISTINE JACKSON HOHLBAUM at Reunion last year. JACQUELINE BETHUNE MCNEIL was married last spring to Gregory, a senior kitchen designer with Contemporary Cabinetry and Closet Concepts. They honeymooned in Keystone, CO, and live in Sarasota, FL. TONI HOCHSTADT moved back to Northampton in spring ’06 with her two daughters, 8 and 3. She is a paralegal for Western Mass Legal Services doing outreach and case management through the Housing Court Intervention Project. In 2003, she earned her MEd from UMass, Amherst, in multicultural teaching and curriculum development. CHUMA MBALU KESWA writes from Johannesburg, South Africa. After living in Pennsylvania for years, she moved to South Africa to take a job with De Beers. After a five-year stint in Johannesburg, her husband, Mduduzi, and four kids are relocating to Pennsylvania. She spends time with SIPHOKAZI KOYANA ’89, THANDI MVAKALI, and DESIREE LALBEHARIE ’90, who recently moved back to South Africa. NATALIE HANSON completed her PhD in anthropology while working fulltime. She is still at SAP’s headquarters outside of Philadelphia, most recently as director of business operations. After nearly 10 years in Philly, she and partner Stephanie bought a house in the suburbs and are now the proud moms of Auden. RUTHIE GOLDBERG HILTON lives in Brookline, MA, with husband Steve and their two kids, Ana, 9, and Donny, 7. They also have been doing foster care for infants. She has been working part-time as a social worker, and also has a small private practice involving adoption support. They spend their vacations in Westminster, MD. SARA BAQUERO-GARCIA is still in Tokyo enjoying her job at the American School in Japan. She and Doug had a son, Roberto, in Feb. ’06. They spend summer vacations in Oregon and in Utah with family. ANU VYAS returned to India after graduating from Smith and worked for different software/consulting firms. She married and had a son in 1997. She came back to get her MBA at the University of Washington. She is now back in India as a stay-at-home mom and is homeschooling children A potluck dinner at Ann Burke Mikula ’90’s house in Winchester, MA, enabled alumnae from many different classes to connect and discuss Smith. Pictured, left to right, are, back row: Lois Goddard ’51, Anne-Marie Scholer ’85, Laura Anderson Henry ’76, Lisa Thyson Craig ’83, Ainsley Gould Donaldson ’65, Gloria Gehshan Liias ’69, Stephanie Smith ’90; front row: Terry Sheehy Marotta ’70, Ann, Fritzie Nace ’84, Brenda Chamberlain Reishus ’80, and Virginia Miller McDonough ’85. Abubakr, 9, Aisha, 6, and Abdurrahman, 3. She says the most significant decision in her life after Smith was to convert to Islam in 1994. TIFFANY TURCO MCCLENAHAN and husband Chris are celebrating their eighth wedding anniversary. They spent some time at the Jersey Shore with their four future Smithies: Mahon, 7, Breacain, 5, Deaglan, 3, and Quinlan, 2. In June, NATASCHA BIEBOW ’93 visited the States from England and came to see them. At the end of July, KATHY BURKE stopped by on her way home to Tennessee after being with family in New England. They had a great time reminiscing and discussing the new look of campus. ROBIN MEYER KRAUJALIS and husband Mike welcomed their second child, Sophia Marie, in March. Robin has been at home with the kids since Henry was born in 2002. Before that she worked at the Saint Louis Zoo as director of major gifts and assistant director of development and helped successfully complete a $70 million capital campaign. Sec., Claudine Zap, claudinezap@smith.alumnae.net 1992 Hello, class of ’92! I’m excited to be your new secretary. I hope you’ll share your news and that you enjoy our column as much in the future as you have in the past. KINA KIM MIN writes that she went back to Smith recently “to see The Frog Princess in Theatre 14. KELSEY FLYNN ’93 is part of PaintBox Theatre, a children’s theater group in the summer there. The show was sold out and we loved it!” BIZ DANA AC wrote to say how much she enjoyed Reunion: “Once again this time I charged the old friend battery and got an invigorating jump-start by meeting new friends from my class.” Biz still works at the Brattleboro Retreat, a psychiatric hospital in Vermont, and she and husband Randy are raising a mixed-breed dog they adopted through the local humane society. Randy also greeted his 10th grandchild over Memorial Day Weekend. BRIANNA LATHAM AC ’97 writes, “Nothing much going on here in Nashville. I am blessed to work as a fundraiser at a house for recovering moms and their children. The home of ERIKA MANNINGHAM has become my second home. SUE KIM has adopted my bipolar dog, who tries to scale trees chasing squirrels. WENDI JACKSON SMITH is a part of my personal board of directors, as are those above. I stay in touch with MARIA ELDRIDGE WALLACE and RICKI POLLACK FRAYMAN, who are wonderful friends. Reunion (my first one to attend) was one of mixed feelings (took me 10 years to finish). But I’m glad I did and to have been elected Fund team coordinator.” As for me, I’m still living in Denver with my husband, Jeff, and our two cats. I had a great time reconnecting with old friends and meeting new ones at Reunion, and I hope to hear from you in my new capacity as secretary. Please share your news; I look forward to hearing from you! Sec., Sara Metz, 1485 South Jay Street, Lakewood, CO 80232, secretary@smith92.org 1993 Hi, class. Where are you these days? Of the four updates I have for this column, two are from New Hampshire and one from Vermont. While these are beautiful locations, it makes me wonder if we don’t have classmates in faraway lands as well? As we approach our 15th Reunion, who’s living farthest from Northampton? STACY TEICHER still works at the Christian Science Monitor, where she started as an intern right after college, though she took a two-year break in the late ’90s at the University of Missouri for a master’s in journalism. In April, she married Zia Khadaroo. A family friend who attended Smith and lived in Baldwin House decades ago, SANDY FELKNER ’61, played piano for them at the wedding in St. Louis, MO. Stacy writes, “Zia’s originally from England but has lived in Nashua, NH, since he finished college. I’ve just moved to Nashua and am working from home a few days a week and carpooling to Boston on the other days—a big change from living in the city, but I’ve quickly discovered the joys of a quieter neighborhood where I can watch baby birds in their nests and grow cherry tomatoes on the deck. Zia’s in the computer business. A week after our wedding, we had another reception in New Hampshire, which was attended by my good friend and Baldwin housemate HEATHER MACCHI. Heather is a teacher and recently took a job in Wellesley, MA.” ROBYN OSTRANDER lives in Westmoreland, NH, with husband Jerry and son Ian, born in March ’06. Robyn is a child and adolescent psychiatrist, and the medical director for kids’ services at the Brattleboro Retreat, a nonprofit psychiatric hospital in Brattleboro, VT. She lectures to psychiatry residents at Dartmouth Medical School, and “viciously protects” her fourday work schedule! She visited with MELANIE HANNON, her husband, and their daughter born in Feb. ’06, when they visited from Germany. In fall ’06 she got to see KATE WING ’94, who is married and fixing up her house in Oakland, CA. Robyn says that Kate is a policy analyst with the National Resources Defense Council’s ocean protection initiative. Robyn also spends lots of time with MAGGIE BERGIN ’95, who lives in Holyoke, MA. JODI PARROTT FRENCH provides her first update. She landed in a law office support staff position in 1996 and obtained paralegal certification in 1999. On July 3, ’99, she married Walter, an attorney with a general law practice in Brattleboro, VT, and in 2003 she commenced the Vermont four-year law office study under his supervision. On May 30, ’07, she was admitted to the Vermont Bar, and is now an associate attorney with a Brattleboro firm, concentrating in family law and municipal and probate/estate work. Jodi and Walter are building a home in Newfane. She is on the executive board for the Windham Regional Commission, representing the town of Newfane as a commissioner and sitting on several committees. Jodi had lunch with JESSICA RICCI ’94, with whom she has been friends since grade school. MICHELE NEFF-FRANKE gave birth to her first child, Thatcher Kent, in February. He weighed almost 10 pounds Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 65 alumnae update when he arrived. Sec., Laurie Ann Phillips Ryan, 5918 Chesterbrook Road, McLean, VA 22101, lryan@smith.alumnae.net 1994 Hello, class! I hope this Quarterly finds you all well. I continue to be impressed by the wonderful work you are doing, both professional and volunteer. My husband and I spent last summer moving (and trying to downsize our belongings!) so I could not track as many of you down as I wanted to. Please note that I have a new snail mail address below. Also, in the past I have encouraged you to send in updates not only about yourselves, but also about anyone else you can. I hope you will continue to do that, but please keep in mind that I will need to verify any news you submit with the source. Keep that news coming—hey, you could even send me an e-mail today! SARAH KASOWITZ PHANOS writes that her daughter, Lily Isadora, was born in April, and weighed seven pounds. Sarah and husband Spiro are simply overjoyed. The Phanos family is settling into a new family routine with Lily and enjoying visiting with family in New York City. JEN POLLACK MCNALLY enjoyed a trip to Ireland last summer with her husband. She reports a mini-reunion, coinciding with MARA BONFELD’s 35th birthday. Mara’s mother hosted a lovely tea at the King’s Carriage House on the East Side in New York. Smithies present included LIZ KASE JOHNSON, DEENA GREENBERG, ERIN PEYTON, CHARLYN LUSK ’95, MONSTERRAT COUGHLIN KIM and new daughter Kerala Kim, JENNIFER POLLACK MCNALLY, and MARYLIN BENDER ALTSCHUL ’44. Jen enjoyed catching up with old friends, especially since several are living abroad. Monste and husband George were visiting from Hong Kong, so everyone had the chance to meet Kerala. Also, Deena was back from a few days in Italy. Finally, Jen reported that Mara went to the Atlantis resort in the Bahamas for a work/fun trip that coincided with her actual birthday! JENNIFER KARON-FLORES is in her fourth year at the National College of Natural Medicine in Portland, OR, earning her naturopathic doctorate. She also just celebrated her seventh wedding anniversary with husband Bill. Jennifer and Bill have a daughter, Sadie, who keeps them laughing. They also have two hamsters and three rabbits to round out their family. Jennifer loves living in Portland and hopes to stay after she completes her ND, since, she claims, “It is worth staying for the fresh salmon and berries alone!” ELIZABETH MARLOWE and her husband recently welcomed their second child, Dahlia, who joins sister Arielle, 3. Both Elizabeth (an art historian) and her husband (a historian) are teaching at the University of Maryland at 66 Cristina Chesterman Sidhu ’91 enjoyed an unexpected visit with former roommate Jenn Thomson ’92, when she attended the Global Microcredit Summit as a delegate in Halifax, Nova Scotia. College Park. spent 10 years coaching figure skating in San Francisco and living a full and fast-paced city life. She recently relocated to Quebec City with her new husband, Nicolas. She absolutely loves it there. In July, Heidi gave birth to twins Beatrice Oline and Marguerite Frances! Heidi says she is in touch with RACHEL KOTOK , whom she is missing very much since Heidi’s move. Heidi reports that Rachel is married, living in Oakland, and teaching ESL at Hayward State. HEIDI OLINE PRUETT YASMINE (SAIRA) DARYANANI KARNANI lives in Barbados with her husband and their two daughters, 5 and 7. Yasmine and her husband celebrated their 10th wedding anniversary in July. Yasmine’s husband is the CEO of the Barbados branch of a German reinsurance company; Yasmine reports she is “currently employed by my two kids.” In her free time, she volunteers at her children’s school and is an active PTA member. Last summer the family made their first trip to Orlando to enjoy the Disney experience. STEPHANIE KAMPEL WILSON lives in Atlanta with husband Josh and their son, Jacob, born in Sept. ’06. Stephanie would like to share that she and Josh had great difficulty conceiving, and that had it not been for reaching out for help she never would have had Jacob. She is happy to talk to anyone having infertility issues. Thank you, Stephanie, for offering to be a resource! In her professional life, Stephanie launched two new companies in September. One is called Signatures by Stephanie and offers invitations, announcements, and gifts. The other, Innovative Marketing & Design, deals with corporate marketing and promotional items. LAURA MATHEWS finished her master’s program in oriental medicine in 2006. She is cofounder of the Neighborhood Acupuncture Project in Austin, TX, a clinic that seeks to remove financial barriers to obtaining acupuncture by providing treatments on a sliding scale. Not only does Laura provide Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 this elegant, effective, and sustainable medicine to an interesting cross section of people, but she gets to educate people about alternatives to Western medicine. Laura also works with a local nonprofit that provides treatments to patients with cancer, HIV/AIDS, and hepatitis. In 2006, after Hurricane Katrina, MAYA STANFIELD-MAZZI moved to New Orleans from California, with her husband and 2-year-old daughter, to teach art history at Tulane University. Maya reports that the city is still recovering but is incredibly beautiful and culturally rich. She would encourage anyone curious about New Orleans to come and visit, and look her up if they do! Maya is interested in meeting Smithies in New Orleans, especially those with young children. CARLA FANTINI-CESPEDES spent two years in Japan as a Rotary World Peace Fellow and completed a master’s in peace studies last year. As a part of her studies, she traveled to Cyprus and the Middle East. The real highlight of her time away, she claims, was traveling to Tucson, to attend my wedding! Carla has spent the last year working in the Boston area on projects with different organizations, such as a dialogue program for U.S. and Middle East university students and an after-school program for low-income Latino youth. She is now turning her attention to a new project, and is returning to Vermont to build a green house with partner Eric. She thinks her Smith work-study job as campus recycling coordinator might have set her on this green path. JOANNA MANECKJI has lived in Singapore for the past seven years with husband Paul. They have a son, Mikko, 4. Joanna works in learning and development at Standard Chartered Bank. ROSEMARIE KOUNTZ sends her first update. She recently celebrated her fifth anniversary as a financial adviser for Edward Jones Investments in Newburyport, MA. She also recently completed an accredited asset management specialist program. To celebrate her career anniversary, she traveled to Portugal with friends. Finally, it is with deep regret that I inform you that JENNIFER DELVECCHIO GUSTAFSON passed away in August, after a battle with breast cancer, leaving her husband, a son, and a daughter. You may recall her submission to the Summer ’07 Quarterly, when Jennifer happily reported that her daughter had recently been born (June ’06) but that, while pregnant, she learned she had breast cancer. My deepest condolences to those of you who knew Jen personally. A memorial fund has been established in her name; contact me for more information. Also, an online memory board has been set up for Jennifer’s children so they may be gifted with as many tangible memories of her to read and see as we can provide to them. Friends are encouraged to post remembrances at www.jennifergustafsonmemorial. com/memory.php. Thank you again, everyone, for your contributions to this issue. Sec., Tamzin Sawyer Sugiyama, 3760 North Camino Leamaria, Tucson, AZ 85716, tamzin@mindspring.com 1995 My head is swimming with to-do lists (we just put our house on the market and are preparing for an extended family vacation and a crosscountry move), so I’ll dispense with the clever introduction and just jump right to what you turned here for anyway—news from our class. MAGGIE GIAMMARCO HOLIHAN writes, “In Nov. ’06 I had a baby boy. The baby keeps me busy, but I am really enjoying being a new mom. I still live in Virginia Beach and work part-time as a senior defense analyst for the U.S. Government Accountability Office.” TRACY GREGG WHITE and husband Paul bought their first house in Pearl River, NY, the suburbs of New York City. Their first son, Blake Gregg, was born in March. Tracy writes, “Blake is named after William Blake, proving some favorites discovered at Smith last a lifetime—Pat Skarda and the English department can be proud. I was recently promoted to integrated marketing director at American Express Publishing corporate sales and marketing.” DEBORAH CHAD and husband Tony welcomed their first child in April. Eamonn Kenneth came early, weighing two pounds four ounces, and is doing great. STEPHANIE WISELEY FOX is a marketing manager for the United States and Latin America at Newell Rubbermaid. She writes, “My husband, Michael, and I live in a house in Stamford. Our 2-year-old son, Jackson, is so much fun; we love every minute with him. Life is great and I couldn’t be happier—unless of course I heard from my fellow Smithies.” KIM RATLIFF HALL and husband Matt welcomed their second child, Lydia Margaret, in April. Big brother Jack is enjoying his new role, and Kim enjoyed her summer maternity leave “filled with the simple joys and sleep deprivation of life with a new baby and a preschooler.” NICOLE GOODE gave birth to a healthy baby boy in May. Jonah Bear was born in the comfort of their Steamboat Springs, CO, home with a midwife attending. Nicole resigned from her job as a high school French teacher to be a mom for a few years. Any Smithies passing through the gorgeous Rockies are welcome to stop by! JAMI PARRISH is a grief and spirituality therapist at Sierra Tucson, one of the top rehab facilities in the country, treating all addictions, trauma, eating disorders, and mood disorders. She is also trained in Interfaith Spiritual Direction. Her position affords her time to work on her painting and bookmaking/binding. Jami writes that she has reconnected with several Smith friends and says, “It is wonderful having friends where you can just pick up where you left off, no matter how much time has passed.” That’s all for this time. Don’t forget to keep in touch! Sec., Kristine Mueller Kidder, kristine@smith.alumnae.net 1996 Hey, ’96ers! Thanks for your fantastic updates from all corners of the world. It’s great that so many of you are able to connect via class notes. Please ensure your information is updated in the Alumnae Association online directory, so classmates can contact you directly. Also, many of you now have Websites and blogs, and because Quarterly policy prohibits printing Website addresses—or any other personal contact information that is not specifically related to class business—be sure to check the Alumnae Association’s online directory for that information. On to the news. It’s always thrilling to hear from those submitting news for the first time! MELISSA NOONAN-MAZZEI is catching up on 11 years’ worth of news. In February, Melissa and her husband of eight years, Ricardo, welcomed new son Nilo, who joins sister Flavia, 3. The family recently moved to Brooklyn, after a decade on Mulberry Street, and are enjoying borough life and being across the street from Prospect Park. Melissa continues to work in the jewelry field, and is director of product development for Tiffany & Co. Among those she is in contact with are SHIVANI KANNABHIRAN ’95, MOLLY TAMBOR, GINA-LOUISE SCIARRA, JULIA HOGGSON, ELAYNA BEREAN HO, and GWEN BROWN. Another wonderful first-time update comes from KRISTI ECKARDT . After a circuitous post-Smith route that took her for a master’s at Harvard Divinity School and stints in hospital chaplaincy and church ministry, she is now happily living in Boston and on the health communications faculty of the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences. She has an adorable dachshund puppy, Duke, who has a special affection for alums—so please feel free to be in touch! CAROLINA ORTEGA BARRALES sends her first-time submission from the Lone Star State. She moved to Houston from Chicago for a job with an oil company in the field of corporate social responsibility. She says, “I absolutely love my job. I’ve been working in this area since I got my master’s in New York five years ago, and I am passionate about it. I’m happily single with no children, so most of my free time is spent traveling. I remain in very close touch with NATASHA PARDO, who is also in Texas, pursuing her graduate degree in marine biology.” Also writing in for the first time is STEPHANIE HILL MOLINA. She worked in Washington, DC, for a number of years, received a master’s degree in international development, and joined the Foreign Service with USAID. A year ago, Stephanie was posted overseas to Lima, Peru, with husband Santana and son Enzo, 5. Stephanie writes, “I work on a program helping Peruvian farmers in the jungle develop licit, sustainable livelihoods. Any Smithies coming to Peru are welcome to drop me an e-mail and stop by!” Stephanie is in frequent contact with NICOLE HUBER, who lives outside Chico, CA, with husband Jim and toddler Allie, and is getting another master’s degree, this time in biology. Stephanie also reports that ELIZABETH KELLEHER just moved back to the East Coast outside Philadelphia with her husband and her two boys. Stephanie says, “Elizabeth is still working her techie magic doing IT project management work.” Finally, Stephanie shares that ROXANNE FINN is back in the Pioneer Valley, after several years each in Japan and Italy, followed by a long stint in New York City. Congratulations to LAURA HANSEN MARKS, who, with husband Jeff and son Henry, welcomed new baby Willa Kathryn to the family. Laura reports everyone is doing well. Lucky JAMI MITCHELL spent last summer in beautiful Innsbruck, Austria, finishing her coursework for her master’s degree in peace, development, and conflict transformation. She did the bulk of her studies in Spain, and is now enjoying the change of scenery. Her husband and 4-year-old son are also in Europe, spending the summer traveling around in their VW camper van. In May, CHRIS PARKER and partner Penny welcomed twins: Taylor (a girl) and Jordan (a boy)! Chris carried the babies, and they were big for twins; one was over five pounds, the other over seven. She reports, “Everyone is doing great and we are hanging in there, despite sleep deprivation.” Chris and Penny have a great blog with lots of pictures and news about the babies, so contact Chris via the AASC online directory for more information. Chris and Penny moved from California to Montpelier, VT, in the fall, and Chris is especially looking forward to reconnecting (in person) with JESSICA FINCK, RAJNI SAMAVEDAM, SASHA KRAVITZ, and AILEEN PARK. EMILY GEE writes, “I am still living in London and working at English Heritage. I just finished a thesis on the housing of working women in late 19th- and early 20th- century London for the building conservation course at the Architectural Association. The Smith College Club of Great Britain is very active and I encourage others in London to get in touch with the club.” BETH CHARBONNEAU writes that she and husband Deron welcomed daughter Joy into the world in June. Beth says they all hung out at home for the summer before Beth returned parttime to her psychotherapy practice. Beth also says, “I had such a great time at Reunion last year, and really loved catching up with old housemates and classmates. It’s hard to believe how fast 10 years can go by. With news of so many other babies born recently, maybe we’ll be able to have a minireunion during orientation for the class of 2028!” STACYLEE KRUUSE received her MPH with a concentration in health law, bioethics, and human rights from Boston University in May. Congrats, Stacylee! She continues to work at Boston University as an international development officer with responsibility for India, Canada, Israel, and South America. MELANIE BROWN VIANNA writes that after living and working at Fort Leonard Wood, MO, as a personnel specialist processing the paperwork for soldiers heading to Iraq, she returned to her home state of California. For three years, Melanie has worked as a special education teacher in San Jose, CA. She teaches seventh- and eighth-grade students with mild mental retardation and autism. She speaks with MARY VARAGIANNIS COSTA ’94 regularly. The last year has been busy for SARAH DEVOTION GARNER, who moved from Cairo to Hanoi, Vietnam, last summer. Then she welcomed her third child, Sander, in October. Sarah says: “If anyone comes to Vietnam, please give me a call.” Congratulations go out to STEPHANIE KENDALL, who married partner Jennifer (George Washington University ’96) in May in a beautiful ceremony during a huge thunderstorm in Washington, DC. Stephanie shares, “As we exchanged vows, the sky turned dark with rain, and gusts of wind blew the windows and doors of the hall wide open—the drama was a wonderful addition to a perfect day.” Smithies in attendance at the wedding included KATE BARRAS MANNING, ELIZA (PIPPA) SHULMAN , and REBECCA BELL . Kate and Pippa delivered a “very meaningful toast—a true reminder of how important and enduring my Smith friendships are.” In early August, the couple relocated to Massachusetts; Stephanie will pursue licensure as a psychologist in Massachusetts and plans to open a private practice. BETH PERRY lives in Boston and works for the state as a health-care data analyst. She is also busy with health-care reform work. Beth and her husband had planned to leave for a six-month trip to Southeast Asia in October. She says, “We are very excited for a real adventure.” Beth has met some great friends through the Boston Smith club, like ELIZABETH BARRY, JENNIFER RHOADES, and ROSEMARY RIPLEY. She says, “We never knew each other at Smith but are great friends now and hang out often. I will miss them while we’re away!” JULIA HOGGSON is launching a photography business focused on weddings and family/baby/maternity portraiture. Julia says, “I am super excited about having my own business and look forward to photographing these happy times in women’s lives.” Julia has an amazing Website for her business. After many adventures, including volunteering for Hurricane Katrina relief with the Red Cross as a driver, and some work with a career coach, MONICA FREUND KAUFMAN writes that she’s applying to dental school. To that end, Monica did a prehealth program over three semesters at Worcester State College, working full-time during the day. She submitted her application for fall ’08, hoping to end up in Los Angeles at USC or UCLA so she can be a part of her 2year-old nephew’s life. She says, “It’s definitely weird to contemplate going back to school for at least four years, but it feels good to know I’m on the right track now and working toward a career that is a good fit for me.” ESTELLE REDDING LAWRENCE recently returned to work after maternity leave. Jayden Nester was born in March to much fanfare and love from brother Preston, 6, and sister Renata, 10. Estelle says, “Life in the Poconos is still grand, even after spending five months at home, but I’m glad to be back to work. I started a home-based business selling candles and accessories and love it.” After teaching college in Rhode Island for almost three years and teaching for Trinity College Elderhostel programs in Italy for eight, SABRINA BERENT recently moved back to the States to a full-time position teaching Italian at North Quincy High School. Sabrina is pursuing a doctorate in modern languages at Middlebury, Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 67 alumnae update where she will be for the next few summers. Sabrina reports that she already misses her dearest friend in Florence, ELIZABETH NAMACK ’91, but looks forward to seeing more of friends like ALEXANDRA YURCHYSHYN ANATH ’95, SIOBHAN CALLAHAN, and Nick Rutkiewicz, the honorary Smithie of ’96, now living on the Vineyard. MEG FLANAGAN gave birth to baby Elanor in May, and says Elanor is “happy, healthy, and very cute!” Meg and her husband are relocating to the Washington, DC, area, where Meg will work at the Pentagon. She looks forward to connecting with Smithies in the area. HEATHER LINK and husband Kevan welcomed their first son, Jacob, in May, on Kevan’s birthday! Heather finished her pediatric residency and worked part-time attending over the summer. She occasionally runs into AILEEN PARK, who is finishing up medical school in Buffalo. Heather recently connected with LEAH VOIGT-ROMANO, who lives in Ann Arbor, and keeps in touch with CARLA WALBURN LITZELL and MIIRA HAKKARAINEN VELIA. Heather welcomes visitors to Buffalo. SUSAN SLINGLUFF reports, “After years of teaching eighth grade, I went back to grad school and completed a master’s degree at UC Berkeley in city planning in May ’06. I am an urban planning consultant in the Bay Area. I live in Oakland, CA, with my husband and train for triathlons for kicks. Our wedding took place here in Oakland last July, and was attended by JESSIE GUNNARD ’94, who provided fabulous event-planning services for our rehearsal dinner! I am looking forward to my first visit back to western Massachusetts this fall, and seeing the fall leaves and visiting Northampton!” ELENA RIVELLINO is in the midst of a great Alaskan adventure: “I’ve been doing commercial interior design for the last few years, and then lost my job in March. After a trip to Europe to visit my sister in Switzerland and my good friend MARY ANN VILLAR, who is married to a Brit and lives in England (we also traveled together in Italy to do some hiking in the Dolomites), I decided to go on an adventure for the rest of the summer since I had not come up with another job offer. I flew to Alaska to finish out the summer season at a lodge on the Kenai Peninsula, waiting tables for the first time in probably 12 years! I will travel around the state for another few weeks, then just see what comes up next.” Check out Elena’s great blog about her travels. Thanks to everyone who submitted news. To those who haven’t in a while, drop us a line and let us know what you’re up to. Remember, you can send us news at any time! Sec., Katie Phillips Clark, 77 Converse Street, Wakefield, MA 01880, katietcd98@verizon.net 68 Sec., Nancy Vanasek, 294 Fifth Avenue, Apt. 302, New York, NY 10001, nvanasek@yahoo.com 1997 Hi, ’97! I’m excited to be your new secretary. Already I’m having a great time hearing from lots of members of our class. Keep those updates coming! HEATHER BARNES is in the midst of graduate studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she’s pursuing an MLS. She’s still living in her Carrboro, NC, tree house, with her partner in time, Elaine, and their two portly kitties. She also makes documentary videos and is slowly (and finally!) reading all the Harry Potter books in her copious spare time. JENNIFER WALLACE was married in Sept. ’06 in San Jose, with three Smithies in attendance: her sister, CATHARINE WALLACE ’07; ALLISON FALK; and DARYL HARRISON HAESSIG ’98. She and husband Larry then moved to just above the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, and Jennifer started a new job with Wells Fargo. HEATHER GORDON lives in Las Vegas and works at Vegas.com in its business operations department. RACHEL KRAUSS SMITH has two children, Hannah, 4, and Tyson, 2, and lives in Mountain View, CA. Currently a stay-at-home mom, she had graduated from UGA School of Law in 2002, and is now studying for the California bar exam in anticipation of reentering the job market next year. She also teaches a children’s yoga class. MELANIE AUSTIN and her husband relocated to the Boston area and welcomed their first child, Aimee, in July. Aimee is healthy and perfect and was welcomed with open paws by Katrina, the dog, and Brooklyn, the cat. EVIE HAMMER is an actress living in West Hollywood, with a day job in interior design at Plantation Custom Furniture. She has received strong notices in both the Los Angeles Times and Back Stage West. CHRIS KAPLAN earned her LICSW in 2006 and became clinical director of the Massachusetts Department of Social Services’ STARR (short-term assessment and rapid reintegration) program in Beverly, working with teenagers and their families. She occasionally crosses paths with ERINA WHITE, also a therapist working in the emergency services field. Chris is working on adopting a furry friend from the local animal shelter. FARZANAH GANGJEE and LISSA SCOUTEN GANGJEE welcomed Amaya Miriam in March. Farzanah delivered Amaya after four ferocious days of drug-free labor. In May, the couple relocated to Oregon, where Lissa took a job running the Portland office of the Threshold Group, an ultra-high, net worth, multifamily office. Farzanah Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 left LanguageWorks, where she had been since graduation, and is now home with Amaya full-time. Lissa reports that JOANNA SLATER was married in July, outside Toronto on Joanna’s family farm. The couple live in New York, where Joanna works for the Wall Street Journal and her husband is a graduate student at Columbia University. GENEVIEVE THIEL lives in the Roadrunner Hostel in Tucson, AZ, on work exchange, and is preparing for a sixmonth trip through Mexico and Central America. She promises to provide updates of interesting and exciting adventures along the way. ANNE BANDES still lives in Cambridge, MA, with husband Matt, two cats, a horse, Tuna (stabled in Dover, MA), and the latest addition to the family, an adopted year-old pointer dog. Anne is finishing up her third year at the law firm Bingham McCutchen in the financial institutions department but still manages to ride Tuna four or five times a week. ABIGAIL RUPP was sorry to miss Reunion, but had a great excuse—she and husband John welcomed their fourth child, Maria Benjamin, at the end of May in Washington, DC. They also have Hannah, 4, and Alexander, 2; Francisco died in July ’06. ELAINE BROWN STILES recently took a position as a program officer with the Western Regional Office of the National Trust for Historic Preservation in San Francisco. She works on historic preservation issues in Alaska, Washington, Oregon, and Idaho and is enjoying getting to know the fabulous people and historic resources in the Pacific Northwest. STEPHANIE BEJUNE had a fabulous time at Reunion, catching up with old friends and making new ones. She is looking forward to serving as our president for the next five years and to staying more connected to our class and to Smith. She is transitioning from her position as a chemist for BASF to a new role as a production engineer. MONICA MOLL COLEMAN and husband Matthew are proud to announce the birth of their son, Alexander, born May 6, and weighing in at six pounds three ounces. Monica was delighted to have ANNE ACTON CONNELLY and HEATHER FONTAINE MERTON ’98 attend her baby shower in March. The Colemans live in New York City. SILKE SCHADE has moved to the West Coast for a job at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. ROBYN TAMURA lives in New York City, and is director of strategy and creative development at Clinique. Since her last update, she has been fortunate to travel for work, visiting many countries—sometimes studying the markets, sometimes traveling with a celebrity makeup artist for store appearances, press events, and makeup application classes. She is looking for ALLYSON MOORE BORING ’99, who is listed in the online directory as lost. As for me, I relocated from Brooklyn, NY, to Albany in 2004 to pursue a graduate degree in public health. I finished in May ’06 and am a research associate for a public sector research and consulting group. In my spare time I enjoy my Netflix subscription, try to read more nonfiction, and am working on perfecting my tamari almond recipe. I’m also the book awards coordinator for the local Smith club, so I feel thoroughly plugged in to the Smith scene! Until next time. Sec., Maria Ayoob, mayoob@smith.alumnae.net 1998 KATHERINE BUFFINGTON writes, “After graduation, I spent three years in Japan with the Japanese Exchange and Teaching Program. I met my husband, David, there. Later, I obtained my master’s degree in women’s studies and gender relations; my thesis was focused on Japanese popular culture (particularly comics, as those who know me will not be surprised to discover). I teach English composition and humanities at two local colleges in San Diego, my hometown. I would love to get in touch with any fellow Smith Science Fiction and Fantasy Society members and Lawrence House residents.” SARAH CARMICHAEL has this exciting update: “In 2006 I finished my doctorate in earth and planetary sciences at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, and moved back home (literally) to start a postdoc at the University of New Hampshire, studying hydrothermal vents at midocean ridges. I spent much of my last year at sea on the R/V Atlantis, where I met KATE BUCKMAN ’01 on board, and I had my first Alvin dive to the ocean floor (over a mile and a half underwater) later that year. On top of that, I met a documentary filmmaker named Tom, and after what can only be described as a whirlwind courtship, married him 10 months later in June ’07 (MARY MCDONOUGH and HEATHER MCCLURE LENOX attended). I accepted a faculty position at Appalachian State University in Boone, NC, and Tom and I now live in the beautiful mountains just outside the Cherokee National Forest.” SARAH LYON was married in July, in Killington, VT. GIULIANA GILLETTE VLASAK was a bridesmaid. CAROLYN HINKLER-HARARI was married in 2002 and lives in Columbia, SC, with a Dalmatian and four cats. She is a second-year student at Mississippi State University College of Veterinary Medicine working on a DVM. Carolyn would like her Wilson housemates to know that while she does have a Volvo wagon, there are no kids yet! SHANTE SMALLS writes, “Life in Brooklyn is as good as ever. I’ve left my job to focus on my doctoral dissertation full-time and to work on my solo album. Being in the studio again is so fantastic, and I can’t wait to see what develops. I had a great summer of touring and was featured on MTV Canada, which was very exciting.” DEBORAH HANOUSEK was married in Sept. ’06, in Bronx, NY. REGAN VIELE and EMILY SPENCER FEAGLE were bridesmaids; REBEKAH HANOUSEK-MONGE ’95 was matron of honor. Also in attendance was KATRINA VON HOLLEN WEAVER ’99. Hurricane Ernesto was blowing through town that day, which Deborah says “actually made the day more fun.” Deborah lives in San Francisco and is an editor for an education nonprofit. ALEXANDRA BECKER FOSTER earned her law degree from the University of Maine School of Law in 2002 and is now a lobbyist for several large corporate clients at a law firm in Augusta, ME. She is the proud mother to two affenpinschers, one an AKC champion. REBECCA POWER graduated with an MLS in 2005 and is a science reference librarian at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. VICTORIA MURADI writes, “I’ve just moved from tiny Chatham, VA (population 1,000 and one traffic light), to Durham, NC. My husband and I love the Triangle area—the universities, abundance of super-smart people, gourmet restaurants, and diversity make us feel like we are in the center of the universe! I’m working as an administrator at a local PK–12 school and am eager to connect with local Smithies.” KAREN KRAMER has a new position at a law firm in Oakland, CA, doing civil and workers’ compensation defense, and lives with her boyfriend in Marin County. BRYNA KEENAN SUBHERWAL lives with her husband and two cats in the Washington, DC, area. She works for Amnesty International USA. KRISTIN HEYDENBERK HALSELL gave birth to a healthy baby boy, Brennan Alexander, in February (he actually arrived on his due date!). She and her family still live in Lansing, MI, where she works part-time as a family practice physician assistant. REBECCA METZGER gave birth to son Noah in May, in Allentown, PA. In July, Rebecca, husband Paul, and Noah traveled to Vermont for SIRI KAUR’s wedding. NAOMI ASUKAI writes, “After graduating, I pursued a master’s degree in international relations at the Université de Genève; I graduated in 2000 and since then have been working at the Geneva headquarters of the International Labour Organisation in the elimination of child labor department. There are quite a few Smith alums in Geneva and I had two Smith JYA interns in my office this year, so the Smith bond is alive and strong! In At the wedding of Joanna Slater ’97 in Arkell, Ontario. Pictured from left to right are Maya Guttman-Slater ’09, cousin of the bride; Pilar Davila-Murray ’98; Elaine Wechsler Slater ’47, grandmother of the bride; Joanna; Lissa Scouten Gangjee ’97; Farzanah Gangjee ’97; Lisa Slater ’73, mother of the bride; Ronnie Janoff-Bulman ’73; Abby Slater ’79, the bride’s aunt; and Smith philosophy professor Elizabeth Spelman. July, I married a Geneva grad school classmate, in a beautiful hotel on Lake Leman. I look forward to hearing from Smithies in the area and any King House Savages.” DONNA ABELLI writes, “In addition to my other national and regional design awards, last spring I was awarded an ADDY from the Western Massachusetts Advertising Council for my design work in the publication George Bellows: A Ringside Seat. It came as a pleasant surprise.” Donna reports she is building her freelance design business, recently completing the Amherst Chamber of Commerce Visitor Guide, working with the Amherst Art Walk, and promoting the arts in Amherst. She also has a new position as the development and marketing manager for the Emily Dickinson Museum. GENA SCHWAM lives in rural Hamilton, NY, and works for the Picker Art Gallery at Colgate University as the museum’s registrar. Gena says Colgate reminds her of Smith in many ways. JENNIFER BLEIKER writes, “Last month, LUNA SPELMAN took a break from her hectic schedule to drive up from Portland, OR, and meet me for a day in Seattle, where I was vacationing. Although she’s on the West Coast, Luna seems to keep an East Coast pace about things, between her full-time commitment to her budding massage practice, and the classes she teaches at Ashmead College. Seattle’s weather is much like the North Shore of Boston, where I work at home for my family’s business, and as a fulltime professional firefighter.” Questions about Reunion? Ask me or Reunion co-chair CHRISTINE KORONIDES or visit www.smithclass1998. org. Sec., Monique Daviau, 1504 Alguno Road, Austin, TX 78757, mdaviau@smith.alumnae.net 1999 Greetings, everyone! If you’re not receiving the reminder e-mails I send out in advance of the deadline, chances are your e-mail address is not on file with the Alumnae Association. If this is the case, please visit http:// alumnae.smith.edu and update your contact information in the Alumnae Directory. While you’re online, you might also wish to peruse our class blog at http://smithcollege99. blogspot.com, or catch a glimpse of your classmates at http://www.flickr. com/photos/smithcollege99. MEGAN HOOVER, writing from her home in Milan, reports that she is thrilled with the birth of her wonderful baby boy, Michele Todd, who rang in at a whopping eight pounds nine ounces. Megan notes that he is doing well, with a diverse agenda of eating, sleeping, and crying. HILLARY THOMAS SHAW and husband David joyfully welcomed the birth of their first child, Brogan Robert, in April, in Annapolis, MD. Earlier in the spring, Hillary had a beautiful baby shower, attended by SOPHIE CANTELL, PRIYA THANIK, GINA CALIA-LOTZ, INGRID HOWARD, and BETH AMBROSE ’97. Hillary also reports that she was hired by ELIZABETH BARNES to design the Website for Holway and Barnes, Elizabeth’s St. Petersburg, FL-based catering company. Though they have yet to meet in person, Hillary and Elizabeth managed the successful launch entirely by way of telephone and e-mail. ELIZABETH BARNES herself reports that son Quincy is approaching his third birthday. Writing that it is a small world with Smith bonds that are stronger than one might imagine, Elizabeth notes that she has been hanging out with BRIDGET SEKERA TAYLOR ’83, a new friendship born of a play group. ISHAH JANSSEN-FAITH writes that she is doing well in New York City and is pursuing acting. She most recently appeared in Not From Canada, a film shown at the New York International Fringe Festival, and has also appeared in the ensemble Not Just For Shock Value: A Femmes Clowns Assemblage, with eight other women clowns. Ishah also writes that she both produced and appeared in Turning Tables, a production by her theater company, Coffee Cup, and looks forward to the show’s 2008 run. JESSICA BECKER sends warm regards to the class from Charleston. She is happy running a Pilates studio at the medical university. Jessica spent August in Maine to dodge the sultry heat down South, and though she had a great time, she missed her work terribly. Jessica also reports that she and partner Joe and their son, John, 2 (whose initials spell “jewel”), are excellent company. They manage to squeeze in lots of vacation, and are always happy to entertain, so Jessica invites Smithies in or passing through Charleston to give them a shout! Jessica also writes that LAUREN WETMORE ’97 rolled out the red carpet when Jessica and her family visited her in Oakland, CA. AUDREY TANG married Matthew Sousa on July 7, ’07, in Seattle at the Newcastle Golf Club. In attendance were PHOEBE BARTLETT INGRAHAM , ANNA CAREY COLLETTI, LINDA SIU, KATIE HO, LORI KAUFFMAN, JULIA CASSANITI, and DEBBIE TAY ’98. Audrey and Matthew had a fabulous time at their wedding and honeymooned in Tahiti for 10 days. Audrey also reports that fellow Smiffenpoof MEGAN NEUMEISTER got married the very same day in Maine. KATE CROWE reports that as fast as she moved to Los Angeles, she turned around and left, and her lungs are still recovering! Kate now lives in Putney, VT, in a cute house on the campus of the Putney School, an independent, coeducational boarding and day high school, where Kate primarily teaches math, but also knitting and drawing as evening elective classes. She also looks forward to her role as the assistant Nordic ski coach. She writes that the school is quite impressive; it is on a farm and works to develop the artistic, athletic, and intellectual talents of high school students. AMY ADAMS, one of my fave and fellow Smithereens, reports that she is still in Shanghai, China, and has been there for eight years now! Just over a year ago, Amy launched Occam, a cross-cultural training company that teaches those traveling to China for business how to work more effectively with the Chinese people and their culture. Amy returned to Massachusetts for KELLY CZWORKA’s wedding in July, which she reports was a great opportunity to catch up with other Smithies for a very fulfilling weekend. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 69 alumnae update Amy hopes to meet up with Smithies in China, and invites any who might be in the neighborhood to drop her a line. GINA CALIA-LOTZ co-chaired the Smith College Club of Baltimore book sale in the spring, and has been handed the reins to coordinate the club’s 50th annual sale in 2008. Gina invites Smithies in the Baltimore/Washington area to check out this spectacular sale and the club’s Website. KAREN ZAIDBERG and wife Rachel purchased their first home in the spring, and renovated the kitchen themselves. Karen writes that though she and Rachel “gave in” and relocated across the Hudson River to Jersey City, they are happy to report that they love their new neighborhood. Karen also did some relocating of a different kind, deciding to leave the classroom after four years and join Teach for America’s New York City regional program team. Karen also reports that she took a week’s vacation in Provincetown, along with ELEANOR CARTELLI, CAROLINE FOURNIER ’02, RACHEL POTTER ’01, and RACHEL VORKINK ’01—a great mini-reunion and a much-needed break. LEDA NORNANG writes that she recently married Ryan Kampe on the beach in Rincon, Puerto Rico, and was happy to have so many Smithies make the long trip to celebrate with them. In attendance were MADHURII BAREFOOT, O’HARA TUDOR, DIANA JENSEN, HILARY NELSON ’97, HEATHER FONTAINE MERTON ’98, and CHRISTINA JIMENEZ ’98. Leda and Ryan took a three-month honeymoon to Tibet, India, Central Asia, and Europe. They live in Williamsburg, in Brooklyn, and work in feature film production. KATHRYN DIX ABELL writes that she was married in fall ’99, and began work with a company developing antibodies for cancer research. Kathryn is currently product manager, troubleshooting experiments undertaken by a wide variety of PhDs, MDs, etc. She gave birth to a son in 2003. Kathryn keeps in touch with JOHANNA LINDSAY, LYNN LI ’98, and ALICE TANG ’98 and notes that all are living on the West Coast and doing very well. JENNIFER RILEY is pursuing a master’s degree at the Fletcher School in Boston. As for myself, I’m finally an attorney, beyond the rat race of law school, and, as Lionel Ritchie once sang, “Oh, oh, what a feelin’”! Hope you are all well. Please keep me posted with your news and take care. Sec., Ingrid Howard, smithcollege99@gmail.com 2000 Sec., Sarah Trabucchi, trabucchi@gmail.com 2001 ANISA LANGLEY BACZEK runs a day treatment program for pregnant/parenting women with substance abuse 70 Classmates at the wedding of Audrey Tang ’99 (center) in Seattle included, from left to right, Linda Siu, Debbie Tay ’98, Lori Kauffman, Phoebe Bartlett Ingraham, Anna Carey Colletti, Katie Ho, and Julia Cassaniti. and mental health issues. She gave birth to her own daughter, Madeline Rose, in May. Everyone is doing well and adjusting to life with less sleep! Smithies in attendance at her baby shower were KARI DETWILER, AMY CONLY, JUSTINE SULLIVAN ’02, ELLEN WIEWEL, ERIN NORTHEY, and ELIZA HAYES. SARA REEVE of Morris House hosted a mini-reunion for her wedding. Smithies flew and drove in from all over the country to rural Vermont to celebrate the momentous occasion. Since leaving Smith, Sara was in Seattle for three years but returned to Vermont in 2004 to be closer to her family. There, she met her husband, got her master’s degree in early childhood education, and bought a home. She now works for a small independent school teaching and creating curriculum for students with disabilities. ALLISON VAN STEENSBURG ’99 of Morris House was Sara’s maid of honor. Allison is an actuary for an insurance company in Bermuda and has taken up field hockey again, in a women’s league. Also in attendance were JEN JOHNSTON ROMAN, CAITLIN FOITO, and ROYA MILLARD ’02 of Morris House, and MEG LEARY of Talbot House. Jen lives in Massachusetts with husband Jay. She has her master’s in education and is teaching kindergarten. Meg lives in Chicago after a stint in Seattle, living with Sara. She moved back East to get her master’s in performance art at NYU. She has since gone on to get an MFA from the Chicago School of Art. She is still fabulous! Caitlin lived with Meg and Sara for a year in Seattle before moving to Los Angeles, where she works for Fox Productions, the leader in her division of script production. She is very excited about her work, on shows that have premiered on the FX and USA networks. Roya lives in Massachusetts and works in publishing, after being a behaviorist in public schools for several years. She and her partner recently purchased a house in Marlborough, and she is attending divinity school. Sara writes Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 that even though they don’t see each other often, the fact that they maintain their relationships despite their life changes speaks to the everlasting friendships that Smith helps create. ALLISON EBERHARD ULMER of Gardiner House lives in downtown Denver with husband Keith and dog Cougar. She is a real estate attorney at Isaacson Rosenbaum with CARA GREENGARD LAWRENCE ’93 of Wilson House. Allison recently connected with KSENIJA BROKS of Gardiner House when Ksenija passed through Denver on a road trip. PATRICIA PREWARE of Gardiner House works for the Research Triangle Institute on a malaria-prevention project as part of the president’s malaria initiative. So far she has traveled to Mozambique and Ethiopia and will also work in Mali and Benin. Patricia also adopted a dog, whom she describes as both the bane and the joy of her existence at the moment. ALICE JAYNE has finished law school in New York and (happily) relocated back to the Boston area. As for me, Dania, I was promoted to group relations manager for the greater San Francisco Bay Area region of Enterprise Rent-A-Car. I’m looking forward to doing public relations activities like shaking hands and kissing babies. Also, after a year’s worth of technical difficulties, the class page is up and running at www.smith2001. com. As always, please send in updates. We love updates! Secs., Dania Frank and Jessica Heinzelman, admin@smith2001.com 2002 JULIE HERRICK completed two semesters on campus at Michigan Tech University and began a three-month internship in Colima, Mexico, where she continues to focus on volcano monitoring techniques. This work (infrasound and seismic monitoring) on Volcán de Colima will help her prepare for master’s thesis research. She has been investigating volcanic hazards in developing countries since entering the master’s international program for geological hazards. In August, she joined the Peace Corps in Panama; for her two-year stint, she will work on environmental education strategies and geologic hazard mitigation at volcanic centers in Panama. LEILA EMERY (Sessions) writes, “I live just outside Washington, DC, where I am managing editor of a nationally known literary journal, Potomac Review, and a creative writing teacher. I received my MA in creative writing from Johns Hopkins University in May. I have had some of my poetry published, and am also writing a memoir.” ASHLEY SHAVER writes from Minnesota, where after finishing grad school in May, she started a new job with a philanthropic consulting firm. She and KATHERINE OTTO visited THARA RAGHUTHAMAN in Brooklyn, NY. Ashley writes, “We had tons of fun catching up and reliving the good old times, though we really missed NIKA GRIGAITIS, who was busy finishing her dental school residency in San Francisco. Hoping for the whole crew next year! I’ve also been in touch with ANNI ELWELL, now married and living in Albuquerque, NM, after completing a stint with Teach for America, where I’m sure she was the best fourth/fifth grade teacher in the school!” JULIE BABER writes that her theater company, The 20% Theatre Company, is doing well in its fourth year. The company produced Parallel Lives: The Kathy and Mo Show in January, starring ELIZABETH BRADLEY-HOWARD. In May and June, they had a great run of the show On the Verge, which PORTIA KRIEGER ’03 directed, and starring JOHANNA WELLER-FAHY ’01. Julie is doing a new play, Tender, by Shapour Benard, for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. She is looking forward to moving to Prospect Park, with ROBIN MORK ’00 and her boyfriend. Despite battling illness in February, life is good. In other theater news, ABIGAIL BOUCHER writes, “I recently moved back to Paris, France. I’m back to working for a translation company based in Chicago, and am still actively involved with The 20% Theatre Company in Chicago with ELIZABETH SCHWAN-ROSENWALD and SARAH OSTMAN. We’re producing a great festival of short plays by women playwrights titled Snapshots and couldn’t be more excited about the response we’ve received and the awesome lineup we’ve put together. I recently performed in a little music festival with some friends, which was great. Now I just need to start getting involved with the theater scene in Paris and all will be well.” ADIA HOAG had a recent mini-reunion with Philly Smithies DAWN DANIEL ’03, ERICA KHAN, and OLA ALADE. She also met all the Democratic presidential candidates and one of the Republican candidates as well. writes, “I live in Lyme, CT, where my husband, Erik, and I are renovating our 1850s house—quite a project! I have my own massage therapy practice in a neighboring town and recently traveled to Thailand to study Thai massage. Erik and I were married June ’06 in Branford, CT.” ALISON DUREN-SUTHERLAND is in a midwifery program, having taken a break from her previous abortioncare work. She recently assisted a state legislative lobbyist in Olympia, WA, helping to pass paid family leave and same-sex domestic partnership legislation. Returning to the clinic to work part-time, she took on a sixmonth apprenticeship at the Puget Sound Birth Center. After the apprenticeship, she will focus on midwifery school. LYDIA PEABODY recently moved to Australia with her partner, Dave. She will apply for residency in New Zealand and should be in Wellington for quite awhile. BENNETH PHELPS loves her job directing a community-supported agriculture program near West Chester, PA. She graduated with a master’s degree in city and regional planning from UMass, Amherst this year. She appreciates being near other Smithies working in rural and urban agriculture projects in and around Philadelphia. She enjoyed attending the wedding of SARA FELDMAN last summer in Princeton, NJ. KATIE REED writes, “After working for the Corporate Executive Board (CEB) in Washington, DC, for five years, I’m heading to London to pursue a master’s degree in international employment relations. On a recent visit to London to scope out housing, I saw ALYSSA MERWIN, who is happily working in the London branch of CEB, and KERI LIJINSKI, who is finishing up the first year of her master’s program at LSE. I’ll be joined overseas by EMILY RAZZANO, who is moving to Amsterdam in September.” Katie also recently saw ADRIENNE CAHILL, DANIELLE HUSSEY, ALICE MOTES ’04, KATE HOBBS ’04, and KRISTIN THORNBLAD, who are all doing very well. SANDY COLVARD AC graduated from the Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine in 2006. She moved to Tacoma, WA, to open her medical practice, a nonprofit with an outreach specific to the LGBTQ population of Seattle/Tacoma/Olympia. Sandy is the medical director of Bridges Health, a family practice for naturopathic medicine, massage therapy, and acupuncture. She would love to hear from any Smithies interested in this type of health care. LYDIA JETT reports that after two years at Goldman Sachs and a summer traveling, she is attending Stanford Business School. She spent July in Asia and August in South America. LINDSAY EISENSMITH Sybil Dunlop ’01 was married with plenty of classmates on hand to celebrate. Pictured, left to right: Victoria Fort, Kara Ralston, Sybil, Sadie Dingfelder, Holly Burke, and Erin Sikorsky-Stewart. Before leaving New York, she grabbed drinks with KRISTA GILL. JILL MCCULLOUGH is working for New Horizons, a wilderness therapy organization in rural Maine. They take at-risk adolescent girls backpacking, canoeing, and snowshoeing as part of a holistic treatment program. “It’s challenging, but ultimately really rewarding,” Jill says. She also spent a couple of years in northern Minnesota working with the International Wolf Center and Outward Bound Wilderness and completed a graduate program in environmental education through the University of Minnesota, Duluth. “The highlight of my time in the Midwest was three weeks of dogsledding through the Boundary Waters,” she writes. ELIZABETH WILEY writes, “After graduation, I taught seventh grade for two years in Detroit with Teach for America. I returned to school and graduated recently with both a JD and MPH from the University of Michigan. I am leaving for Norway on a Fulbright next month to study long-term care and will begin medical school in fall ’08.” Jordanite ANGELA DICORLETO was married in June to Faisal Khan in Cleveland, OH. The happy couple live in Brooklyn, NY. Angela is a social worker with the Legal Aid Society’s juvenile rights practice. Present at the celebration were ANNE NOYES, an MA student in journalism at NYU; LISA KANAREK, a recent graduate of the University of Florida Law School; SASHA WEISER FREEDMAN, in urban planning at Rutgers; and MELISSA SOONG ’01, a social worker at a New York human service organization. ALLISON SANCHEZ decided to leave midwifery training after her mother passed away from Lou Gehrig’s disease. She moved with partner Jeremy from Portland, ME, to Portland, OR, falling in love with the Northwest and working for a trademark lawyer. She debated a future in law and played competitive Ultimate Frisbee. In April, she visited HILLARY LOWENSTEIN in Krakow, Poland, where Hillary was finishing medical school. Now Allison and Jeremy are in Long Beach, CA, where she is at USC Law School, pursuing health law. She’s also playing beach Ultimate, “enjoying the sand and sun, and exploring the Los Angeles lifestyle.” KATIE WOOD still lives in the Philadelphia area, working her way through school. She’s just finished her MA at Winterthur with a focus in 18thcentury American sculpture, and is continuing her PhD at the University of Delaware’s program in art history. All is well. She loves Pennsylvania, and thinks of Smith all the time! ANNA FRANKER BRELJE writes, “Penny (my dog) and I just celebrated her oneyear adoption birthday. I am back in Minneapolis, working as the political director at the Minneapolis labor council. Also, I have not been arrested for skinny-dipping yet this summer. Life is good.” Life is indeed pretty good. Louisa and I are oh so excited to serve you for the next five years as your secretaries. Send in those updates! Secs., Moliehi (Mo) Pefole and Louisa Bradtmiller, scwebsite2002@yahoo.com 2003 Wow! We have so many updates this go-round that my mailbox has been full! It is a real pleasure to finally have some news to publish, and I know my 2003 readers must have been as frustrated as I was. I’d like to remind you about our brand-new Website, http://web.mac.com/smithsecretary03. Please feel free to submit news via the Website blog comments function. Also, Reunion is just around the corner. We are looking for volunteers to help plan the big weekend, and an artist to draw the 5th Reunion logo. You can put the date in your calendars now as May 22–25, ’08. It will be amazing to see all you lovely ladies again! And now news from you! The bells are ringing for weddings left, right, and center: NICOLE BOWERS reports that DAWN DANIEL was married to her high school sweetheart, Robert, in June, in Brooklyn, NY. Nicole writes, “It was a beautiful ceremony. She wore a beautiful off-white and taupe wedding dress. She looked stunning. After the exchange of vows and lighting of the unity candle, Mr. and Mrs. Robinson jumped the broom, an Afrocentric wedding tradition.” KELLI SMITH was Dawn’s maid of honor and KIANA TERRY ’05 was her wedding planner. Among other Smithies in attendance were AYOKA STEWART ’06, CRYSTAL ADEGBOLA ’04, KIANA TERRY ’05, KNIA TANNER, GENEVA PAUL, and MAYA RAMOS. In a lovely midday wedding, ANNE MILLER married Michael Bello with lots of Smithies to help celebrate, including her mother, PRUDENCE WHITE MILLER ’66; cousin LIZ DEAN ; and maid of honor NANCY MARTIRA. Also in attendance were MARIN KRESS, ALEXANDRA KLEYMAN , GRACE RYDERO’MALLEY, GRETCHEN UNFRIED ’01, and ALLISON CROSBY ’04. The Bellos live in Northampton and honeymooned at Disney World. Our third wedding occurred in June, when ANNE MORRIS was married to Hannah Logan in Atlanta. In attendance were BRITTA GUSTAFSON, ALEXIS LAMB , CELESTE CAVINESS ’05, BRITA ZITIN, ERICA SANDBERG ’04, EMILY GERSTEIN, and ALLYSON BOGIE. Anne was thrilled to have so many Smithies present to help her celebrate her wedding. Anne and Hannah live in Miami, where Anne dances with Brazz Dance Theater and works as a teaching artist through Arts for Learning, Miami. She is applying to MFA dance programs for fall ’08. Last but not least, SARAH CUSHWA DIVINE was married in Aug. ’06, in Sheffield, MA, to David Divine. Smithies attending included KATHERINE D’AMATO, ERIKA PARKER, SHARON HOROWITZ ’02, LYDIA JENNER ’01, AUDREY MANNING, ROBYN BLUESTEIN, and ANNA PIERCE. Since receiving her master’s in early education and child study from UMass, Amherst in 2004, Sarah taught special education in New Milford, CT. David and Sarah now live in Hillsdale, NY. BRITTA GUSTAFSON still lives in Washington, DC. She works in the lobbying department of a law firm downtown. ALEXIS LAMB is pursuing a doctoral degree in clinical psychology at the University of Rhode Island. BRITA ZITIN lives in Portland, ME, and works for the Born to Read program at the Maine Humanities Council. EMILY GERSTEIN lives in Tempe, AZ, and is getting her PhD in clinical psychology at Arizona State University. After graduating from law school and taking the bar exam in summer ’06, ERICA BALL relocated from San Francisco to Southern California to be closer to her family. She finally settled down in Rancho Cucamonga. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 71 alumnae update Erica’s been working at a midsized law firm that specializes in public law, representing cities and other public agencies throughout Central and Southern California. Erica writes, “I really enjoy my work! I make an effort to visit LINSEY MCMILLAN down in San Diego as often as possible, and keep in touch with SARA BALDWIN and NADINE SCHNEIDER, who both live in the Philadelphia area.” SARAH GOTTESDIENER has lived in Portland, OR, for almost three years, after moving from San Francisco. She lives in her own home with her girlfriend and pit bull (“both adorable”). Sarah works at a design firm and magazine called Plazm, and keeps busy with two bands, playing the drums for one, and singing and playing bass and guitar for the other. She also has art shows around town and has a Website. She keeps in touch with KATERINA LLANES’04, at Bard for grad school, who visited Sarah last summer; BARBARA JOO, an award-winning DJ in Washington, DC; and former roomie JANE SCHON ’04, who is almost finished with her PA degree. ALLYSON BOGIE has lived in Berkeley, CA, since graduating. She began teaching through Teach for America, and is in her second year of teaching middle school English in Oakland. She says, “I love teaching and I plan to keep teaching for awhile.” Finally, a bit of personal news: I have now moved from Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, to Aberdeen, Scotland, where I started a three-year training contract with Ernst & Young in August to become an accountant. More important, I gave birth to a daughter, Bel (short for Isabel), in July. My elder daughter, Cora, 3, is thrilled, and loves to play with her new sister. I hope everyone is doing well and enjoying the holiday season. Don’t forget to share your news. Best wishes, and I hope to see you at Reunion! Sec., Autumn Kidd Green, autumn_green@hotmail.com, http://web.mac.com/ smithsecretary03 2004 Lots of news to share about starting grad school, finishing grad school, weddings, performances, relocations, and mini-reunions! ALEX LYON writes that over the last several years, her interest in small farms and local food has grown, and she is working on an MS in agroecology at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. “My grad program is one of the first of its kind, and I’m excited to be a part of it,” she says. She keeps in touch with, among others, MARGARET SEMISCH ’05 and KAT RICKENBACKER. SARAH KEHOE relocated from Seattle to Boston to attend grad school at Tufts; she lives in Cambridge. MARIA VELAZQUEZ of Gardiner House is starting the doctoral program in American studies at the University 72 Amy Getchel ’94, Meredith Walsh ’00, and Yumi Aikawa ’04 in Thailand, where they provide medical care to Burmese refugees. of Maryland, College Park. MEGHAN FLANAGAN moved out to Minneapolis to begin grad school studying water resources in the civil engineering department at the University of Minnesota. CAITLIN SCAFATI is in Santa Monica, CA, working toward a master’s in psychology. The National Eating Disorders Conference in October featured her independent photography project on people in recovery from eating disorders. MARIAN KRAMER moved to Duluth, MN, to start a master’s program in water resources science at the University of Minnesota Large Lakes Observatory. “I am excited to be so close to Lake Superior and back in my home state!” she says. Last spring, CANDICE CORNISH graduated from American University’s Washington College of Law. After WIEBKE HENNING, DIPL, finished the Smith diploma in American studies program, she returned to Germany, where she received a master’s in American studies, musicology, and political science from the University of Hamburg in 2006. Still in Hamburg, she is a project assistant at a large ship classification society there. Wiebke reports, “In late June, EMILY JONES came to visit while she stayed in Berlin for the summer, and we took a lovely trip to Amrum, a tiny island in the German North Sea.” SUSAN JENNINGS MCLAY graduated from the MGH Institute of Health Professions with a doctorate in physical therapy and is now working at MGH’s outpatient physical therapy department in Boston. She continues to dance with SoulFelt Expression, a local gospel dance group. HEATHER DYSON was married in June to longtime boyfriend Matthew Williamson in their hometown of Swarthmore, PA. BECKY ALEXANDER was her maid of honor and ANNA SERGEL ’03 and ELISA HITT ’06 were in attendance. The Williamsons now live in Evanston, IL. EMILY JACOBS reports that her sister Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 ’02 married Jonathon MacCarthy on July 7, ’07, in the Jemez mountains outside Santa Fe. Also present was EMILY DOMAN ’01. All three are Gillettites. MOLLY PARSONS tied the knot in June in Greenfield, OH. Her dear friends and fellow Ziskind House classmates CARA STEPP, ALICIA VANDEVUSSE, ADRIENNE KICZA ’03, and XIN LI attended, “making the day even more special,” she says. DESTINY MONTAGUE spent the fall touring with her band, Shock Cinema, following the August release of an EP titled Our Way Is Revenge. Poet, playwright, and performance artist LENELLE MOÏSE, MFA, recently released her debut spoken-word CD, Madivinez, which Time Out New York hailed as “powerful.” She was excited to return to Smith in September for New World Theater’s workshop production of her two-woman play about race, art, and infamy, Expatriate. COURTNEY CHOI moved back to Southern California at the end of July to be closer to family. “I miss New York,” she says, “but I’m looking forward to getting to know SoCal as an adult, since I haven’t lived here since high school!” KELLY SHIPMAN just moved from Boston (where she hung out with ELIZABETH KNOX, KRISTEN ZEISER, and EMILY JONES) back home to Philly, where she works in the development of gynecologic cancer research. She’s enjoying her new job, and is contemplating grad school for next fall. “I’m glad to have moved, but I do miss my Smithies in Boston!” she says. LAUREL DAMASHEK reports that six New England Havenites got together at the end of July for a mini-reunion in York Harbor, ME. “We made sure to ‘ding’ at dinner,” she writes. Laurel has a new job editing Chinese textbooks and reports that ALLISON KENYON is finishing her nurse practitioner degree at Yale School of Nursing; MIRIAM QUINTAL is working toward a chemistry PhD at Harvard; AIMEE PETROSKY opened her own day-care MEGAN JACOBS business in Northampton in the fall; and LIZ LIEDEL was promoted to major gifts coordinator at Combined Jewish Philanthropies. Also present was KAT RICKENBACKER, who writes to say that she spent August on a cross-country road trip and is trucking away on her sociology PhD. YUMI AIKAWA spent her summer working at Mae Tao Clinic in Mae Sot, Thailand, and was ecstatic to meet AMY GETCHEL ’94 and MEREDITH WALSH ’00, who have also been working in the area. “It’s exciting to know that three generations of Smithies are helping the displaced people of Burma,” says Yumi. She reports that Meredith works at the Burma Medical Association, and Amy is a midwife at the Umpiem Refugee Camp. Sec., Shannon Hunt, 8 Chauncy Street #1, Cambridge, MA 02138, shannonlhunt@gmail.com 2005 Sec., Alicia Duffin, aduffin@smith.alumnae.net 2006 Hello, class of ’06! Come this May, we have been alumnae for two full years! We’re no longer the newest alums on the block. JENNIFER TRINKAUS-RANDALL is a nanny in Boston, to three young boys, and fell in love with London after spending a six-day tour in the city with her mother. In addition to her nanny job, she plans to volunteer at Children’s Hospital in Boston in the Child Life Program. SARA BARZ spent last summer riding her bicycle across the country with Habitat Bicycle Challenge, and plans to move back to western Massachusetts. After three months of applying for positions in the VA, EDWARD ZAPALA, MSW, accepted a job in Madison, WI as a part of the homeless program. Edward will act as an intermediary between the VA and partners in the community that have set up transitional housing programs for homeless veterans. After graduating, CAROLINE ROBERTS moved to Boston and worked as an art conservation assistant at the Museum of Fine Arts. Now she is a conservation technician at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, helping equip the art objects lab and lending a hand with various conservation treatments. Caroline is looking ahead to graduate study in art conservation. KAITLIN NORTHEY teaches at the Smith College Center for Early Childhood Education, after a first year of teaching art at the Elias Brookings Museum Magnet School in Springfield, MA. She was given a surprise birthday party by ASHLEY SUTTON ’08, MOLLY SHEA, ABBY WALTON ’07, ELEANOR GRANO ’09, and JILLIAN BAUER ’09. ELLIE KLIMAS is Janet Reno’s research assistant in Miami. LANA SUNDMAN is working on several novels and a screenplay. In 2007, she moved to the Dallas area. After graduation, SOPHIA SAVAGE lived in Florida, then joined her partner in New Zealand, where she is now a PA for a respected private project management company, which is proving a new and interesting experience. In Wellington, Sophia has acted in lead roles in both Dangerous Liaisons and Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus. She reunited with several of her closest Capen friends before heading overseas, but still finds it hard to live so far away from them. Sophia encourages all alums to visit New Zealand and see how beautiful it is firsthand. AILEEN MURPHY still lives on the West Coast and works in the San Juan Islands, WA, as a sea kayak guide. In the future she will continue to bring together her passion for adventures and the ocean as she works toward becoming a sailor. NICOLE MARCEAU AC has taken and passed her LICSW exam! She is employed full-time as a clinical social worker on an inpatient adult psychiatric unit. She works with three Smithies who have been a tremendous support both professionally and personally as she adjusts to postgrad life. Nicole lives in western Massachusetts with daughter Ashley, 13, who is thrilled that her mom has finally finished school! ALYSSA DOODY and DANIELLE MOST have made their home in Denver. Danielle is a legal advocate for victims of domestic violence at the municipal courts. She recently helped organize the nation’s largest pro-choice auction for the Colorado chapter of NARAL. In addition, she teaches a GED class at a day shelter for impoverished women. Alyssa is doing a medical preceptorship at the Denver Health Association, specializing in gynecology and internal medicine, and also works in the medical ward at the Denver County jail. After a wonderful year with AmeriCorps VISTA at Wittenberg University in Springfield, OH, MOLLY RITCHIE moved to Washington, DC. She works for her home district’s representative, Congressman Brian Higgins, and loves it. Molly writes, “It has been great to catch up with all the Smithies who live in Washington!” SANDRA HALL lives in San Francisco and is a child and family therapist at Burt Children’s Center, a level 12 residential treatment center that serves severely emotionally disturbed children ages 6–12. MAGDALENE GOBLE works in the office of constituent services for Governor Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas. She really enjoys it, but is interested in trying something new, so from Aug. ’07 to Aug. ’08 she is volunteering with the Mennonite Central Committee Brunching in Berlin are Kerstin Koch, DIPL; Nora Pittis; and Lillianna (Lilly) Joseph, all class of ’06. in Cairo, Egypt, where she teaches English to children and adults at a school run by the Egyptian Coptic Church. Magdalene is to live with Coptic nuns—most definitely a new and unique experience! RUTH MILLER has finished her master’s in elementary education at the University of Michigan and is now heading to Beijing to teach first grade at an international school. KERSTIN KOCH , DIPL, graduated from Smith as part of the American Studies diploma program, a graduate program for international students, and is still in Hamburg, Germany, working on her master’s thesis at the Universität Hamburg. She also went to Berlin for a weekend with LILLY JOSEPH and met NORA PITTIS, who is studying in Berlin. AYOKA STEWART was hired with CollegeWorks of Oakland, CA, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing the enrollment of low-income, highachieving students in four-year colleges. Ayoka and her organization will be bringing 14 of their most gifted female students to Smith so that they can become exposed to the wealth of resources at small colleges. She has also been revising her honors thesis in preparation for graduate school applications. EMILY DALY returned from Spain but was lucky to hang out at the Feria de Cordoba with JENNIFER GIVENS. She has started a new job as a Spanish teacher at the Stratton Mountain School in Vermont. In July, her buddy CAROLYN MARTIN visited from Florida, and they went to a Scales mini-reunion in Boston, where they saw ALLISON HINDMAN-HARVEY, EMILY LEONARD, REBECCA SPALDING, and CATHERINE MILLERLITTLE. Keep the updates coming! Please note that my contact mailing address has changed. As always, the best way to reach me is by e-mail! Sec., Tegan Ahmed, 409 Willow Brook Court, Mebane, NC 27302, tahmed@gmail.com 2007 Hello, class of ’07! Although it has only been a few months since we parted ways, everyone seems to have gotten a great start to their new lives and seems excited to share their news! A large number of us are on the East Coast, with many of us in New York and Boston. FRANCES GUTTER LISK works for Christie’s house sales department in New York. LEONORA EPSTEIN works for Cosmopolitan. NKECHI NNEJI works with CNN New York. JAMIE NOLAN is applying to law school and hosting a radio show on WVOX. SARAH MATARI works at a law firm and plans to attend law school in fall ’08. MELISSA MACDONALD teaches firstgrade special education in the Bronx through Teach for America. MARIA FRENCH teaches middle school students with disabilities in Brooklyn with the New York City Teaching Fellows. EMILY FARQUHARSON lives with GRACE POKELA ’06 in the city. Emily works as a paralegal, and Grace has just been accepted to the NYC Teaching Fellows. MAGGIE SOWELL is a Columbia University graduate student. Just across the street from Maggie, KATE ROOD is a stewardship officer in the department of institutional advancement at Barnard College. Outside the city, JULIANA ROBERTS lives on Long Island, where she works for a nonprofit battling suburban sprawl. KATHERINE HARTMAN is a recruiter for a Long Island Macy’s department store. Farther north, SYLVIA SANCHEZ AC lives in Somers, CT, with her husband and two young boys, and teaches fifth grade. MARY HINES works in Windsor Locks, CT, at Hamilton Sundstrand as an IT business analyst. VICTORIA BRAM, ERIN SCHAEFER, ERIN LOUGHNEY, and ANEESHA GANDHI all recently moved to Boston. SHANNON STRUBLE is in graduate school at Simmons College in Boston, pursuing a dual degree in library science and history. TALYA DAVIS-JOHNSON is in graduate school at Tufts University. ALISON PIETRAS is a clinical research assistant at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. EMILY STACKPOLE lives down the road in Somerville and is a technical research assistant at McLean Hospital. CLAIRE (JYOTHIR) JOHNSON and STEPHANIE JARVI both work at Children’s Hospital in Boston; Jyothir is an ophthalmic technician, and Stephanie is a research assistant. BETHANY KULCZEWSKI works at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center as a research coordinator in the sleep medicine department. NINA WILKINSON works at Tufts-New England Medical Center and as the men’s client specialist for J.Crew. EMILY GARVEY is in her first year of law school at Northeastern University School of Law. LYDIA RAINVILLE is a junior economist for the U.S. Department of Transportation Volpe Center in Cambridge, MA. Just outside Boston, DEBORAH SANZONE teaches ninth-grade biology at Milford High School. West on I-90, KATE WINANS is employed by Historic Deerfield as a historic house guide. ASHLEY BARTON is a programs and education assistant at the Children’s Museum of Holyoke. AMA ADUSEI is in Springfield at the Center for Human Development as an assistant case historian. Apparently TARN MARTIN could not get enough of Smith. She is now a student at the School for Social Work and counsels students at the JFK Middle School in Florence. JUAN LI is at Cornell University for PhD study in operations research. AMANDA BIRD is in Middlebury College’s Spanish graduate program and teaches Spanish at Scituate High School in Massachusetts. MARY-MORGAN CHILDS is also a graduate student at Middlebury for her master’s in French. ELIZABETH JENSEN is in graduate school at Dartmouth College for mechanical engineering. CHRISTIANE WOLSKI lives in Ashfield, MA, and is studying for her master’s degree in applied psychology at Antioch University New England in Keene, NH. MIRA GREENE is a literary management intern with the Trinity Repertory Company in Providence, RI. HILARY MARTIN lives in Maine and is an accounting assistant for a company that processes blueberries and Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 73 alumnae update cranberries. ANGELA FOSS returned to her home state of Maine and works at the Muskie School of Public Service Institute for Health Policy and at a local bookstore. In the Washington, DC, area, LAUREN INGEGNERI attends George Washington University Law School and plans to practice intellectual property and patent law. Also in Washington, THEODORA DWORAK is volunteering through AmeriCorps at Christ House, an inpatient health-care facility for homeless people. JENNA LOVAAS has begun her twoyear stint as an IRTA Fellow at the National Institutes of Health. GINNY SLAUGHTER is a public relations specialist for the Commonwealth of Virginia. Trading East for West, GARRETT BRADLEY left her hometown of New York and attends UCLA film school. ANA-FLORINA VOICA is in graduate school for chemistry at the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego. KRISTI CLOSSER is in a chemistry graduate program at UC Berkeley, where TERESA GONZALES is in a graduate program in sociology. FRANCES BELL lives in Berkeley and works at Bechtel in Oakland. In San Francisco, ALEX BOOTH works at Google AdSense as an embedded tools developer. BECCA DANTON is a recreation director for Project Insight, a small organization run by the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department. JESSICA CHIANG is interning at the UCSF AIDS Health Project in the research department. JANNA WHITE and JANE BERKELEY have both moved to the area to get started on their new lives. ZAINAB RAZA works with AT&T in San Ramon, just outside of San Francisco. Otherwise, Smithies have been spreading themselves across the country. ALYSSA MCCANNA and her husband bought a house in Colorado Springs, CO. She is a prelitigation assistant at a law firm. KARA SOSA attends Barry University School of Law in Orlando, FL. LAUREN MILES lives in Fort Myers, FL, works at the state attorney’s office, and has applied to law school. In Las Vegas, KATE SHEFFIELD works as an electrical engineer for Bechtel SAIC, while BRYNNE CRAIG is a field organizer for the Hillary Clinton campaign. TYLER DAVIS lives in St. Paul, MN, and is studying for her master’s in counseling psychology. SABRINA BEASON lives in New Orleans, where she works for a downtown passport agency. VIRGINIA PHILLIPS is a student at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law. KATHERINE DUNBIER teaches secondary English in Elim, AK. KATE ROGERS is in Phoenix, AZ, studying for the LSAT and saving up for law school. JENNIFER LAVANGA is in medical school at the American University of Antigua College of Medicine. CATHERINE HOUSHOLDER lives in Santiago de Chile and teaches two English classes at the Universidad de Ciencias de la Informática. She writes, “Landing this job, interacting with Chilean students and teachers, and earning my first real paychecks has been a thrilling experience so far!” FRANCES KINGSBURY moved to Puebla, Mexico, in the summer and works for Smith’s study-abroad program in Mexico. She wants her friends to come visit her! In London, JENNA AUGENLICHT is in a three-year acting course at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. Across the water, ALLISON SCHEIN is pursuing a master’s in French language and civilization at NYU in Paris. SARAH-NEEL SMITH is also in Paris as a fellow at the École Normale Superieure. BRITTANY ROGERS and ELIZABETH LABELLE are in Spain teaching for a year. NINA PALMER is in a Johns Hopkins program in Nanjing, China, pursuing a one-year certificate in political relations. She will then be in the Smith area around January or February. REBECCA PAGE teaches English in Japan with language school GEOS and lives in Iizuka, a small city in the Fukuoka Prefecture in Japan. HANA VIDEEN and GABRIELLE HUNTERENSOR are also teaching English in Japan for a year. DANA BERTE lives in Tsugaru City, What you can do at SAQ online... † Submit a class note † Read back issues † Update your address † Submit a story idea or letter to the editor 74 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 Visit us at www.saqonline. smith.edu SAQ Online Japan, and is a coordinator for international relations at city hall through the JET program, run by the Japanese ministry of education. As for our Fulbright scholars, KRYSTAL BANZON is in the Philippines doing research on postcolonial Filipino theater, working with activist theater companies in Manila. JULIE GOSHE is in Taiwan doing a Fulbright English teaching assistantship and working on her Chinese. Unfortunately, FRANCES SAUNDERS’s mother died shortly after graduation. She is taking some time off from job hunting and writing a play. Please keep the updates coming! Sec., Elisabeth (Lizy) Sexton, elisabethsexton@gmail.com Ada Comstock Scholars BRIDGET ANDREW ’88 practiced family medicine as a physician associate (Yale School of Medicine ’96) with the Indian Health Service in Zuni, NM, for nine years. She completed her MPH in international health at Johns Hopkins in spring ’05 and in July joined the CDC’s epidemic intelligence service. For two years, she will work with the Montana Department of Health in Helena. She writes, “I am sad to leave New Mexico but really looking forward to the EIS and living in Montana—great department of health, mountain biking, running, and snowboarding all within minutes of town. Doesn’t get much better!” KATHLEEN DUNN ’06 has worked at Enterprise Bank in Lowell, MA, as an assistant vice president in human resources since graduation. She is also the alumnae admissions coordinator for the greater Lowell area, and says, “I love playing a small part in the decision process, and it’s a great way to give back to the Smith community.” She is on the board of directors for the Brush Art Gallery in Lowell and volunteers at the Career Center of Lowell, teaching resume and interview skills to disadvantaged women. She loves spending time with her two granddaughters in New Hampshire. AUDREY TANNER ’91 moved to the San Francisco area in 2002, after 11 years in Boston working, raising her son, and completing both a second bachelor’s degree in psychology and a master’s in organizational management. She recently completed an EdD in higher education leadership and is associate vice president for financial aid and career services at Dominican University of California. She would love to connect with other Adas in the Bay Area. MARY DAMIANO PINNEY ’80 writes, “The big event of my summer was the wedding of my oldest granddaughter in my gardens in June. We had a perfect day and the 200 guests all seemed to have a good time. SUSAN SMITH ’80 played a keyboard before the wedding and for the processional and recessional. All my children and grands were there at one time, which doesn’t happen often these days! After it was all over, I spent a peaceful five days in the Adirondacks with NANCY HURD SCHLUTER ’83. I am kept busy by my work on our township environmental commission and on the planning board. I also continue to be the Ada representative to the Alumnae Association classes committee.” P. LOUGH O’DALY ’84 closed her antique restoration/custom wood finishing business of 20 years due to regulatory changes in the industry. She is now training and working as a dental lab technician. She has also been hired part-time at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma as a mechanic for one of the race car repair shops. Some of you may recall that she arrived at Smith fresh from an Air Force career as a jet engine mechanic. MISTINGUETTE SMITH ’00 commutes between Northampton and New York, pursuing her MPA at the Wagner School of Public Service at NYU. ANNAMARIE (ANNIE) PEDERSEN ’05 will receive her master of arts in marriage and family therapy from Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, WA. Upon graduation, she plans to stay in the Pacific Northwest and provide counseling for couples, children, and families. HEATHER NEAL ’05 has a thriving massage practice in Northampton and teaches massage at Greenfield Community College as well as being involved in restructuring the program there. She and wife Kristin became preadoptive foster parents of a 4-dayold girl in May. DEBORAH WILLIAMS ’99 will spend the next year at Roehampton University outside of London, working toward her master’s in dance anthropology. She will miss her life and friends in Baltimore, especially PATRICIA WHALEN ’88 and husband GREGORY BULLEN, MA ’83, with whom she has had the pleasure of working for the past several years. ANGEL WILLIS BAYLISS ’99 writes, “I have lived my life here in Oklahoma on Indian Trust land and am once again back on Indian Trust land trying to make a difference for my people. I am registered Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma Indian roll #0527. We are a federally recognized tribe. I was so fortunate to graduate from Smith and then go on to get my master’s in psychology and religion from Andover Newton Theological School with cross-registration with Harvard Divinity in 2001. I was in my PhD program at the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology when I became ill and returned home in 2003. I wish all the sisters greetings from Indian country here in Oklahoma.” Sec., Kelly Loringer ’93, 1117 Morgantown Road, Point Marion, PA 15474, acsalumnae@smith.alumnae.net WINNING through charitable giving As a member of the Class of 1958 volunteer team, Rose “Rosie” Converse Morgan is eagerly anticipating her upcoming 50th reunion. Reunion allows Rosie to revisit close friends and re-live memories. In anticipation of this memorable occasion, Rosie wanted to make a lasting gift to her alma mater. She’s already played an important role on campus, serving as a fund-raising volunteer, but she wanted to make an even larger impact. Rosie and her husband, Cub, decided to fund a charitable gift annuity. Both Smith and the couple benefit from the gift – The Morgans receive a fixed income for life and enjoy tax advantages, while the college will be able to utilize the funds for its greatest needs. It is a gift that Rosie described as a “win-win situation” for her and Cub, and one that will benefit a future generation of Smith students. Rosie is thankful for what Smith College has given her. During her junior year, she reaped the benefits of studying abroad, and throughout her years on campus, Rosie enjoyed learning from Smith’s talented professors. Following graduation, she served in various volunteer roles in her community such as coach, committee chairwoman, and board member. For more information about charitable gift annuities and other life income gifts, please contact Smith’s Office of Planned Gifts & Bequests at planned_giving@ smith.edu or (800) 241-2056, option 5. Additional information and a schedule of gift annuity rates are available at www. smith.edu/future/ planned. When Rosie marches in the Ivy Day parade next May, she will do it with pride. Through her volunteer work and financial support, she is able ensure the next generation at Smith enjoys the experiences she once did. PRODUCED BY THE OFFICE OF A D VA N C E M E N T OBITUARIES OBITUARY POLICY Obituaries may be submitted by family, friends, or classmates to the SAQ office at classnotes@smith.edu; Smith Alumnae Quarterly, Alumnae House, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063, Attn: Obituaries; fax: 413-585-2015. An alumna must be confirmed as deceased by the college records department in order for an obituary or death notice to appear. Obituaries can be a maximum of 150 words. Newspaper obituaries cannot be reprinted. 1930s MAY GOULD SHERRILL ENGLISH ’33, July 6, ’07, peace- fully in her sleep in Bedford, MA, at age 95. Her mother was EMILIE CREIGHTON GOULD 1904, and her eldest daughter is SARAH SHERRILL ’57. She married Gibbs Sherrill in 1934 and was twice widowed. She is much missed by her five children, three grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. —Sarah Sherrill ’57 JOSEPHINE EMORY BELL ’34, June 1, ’07, following a brief illness. She was still living at her home in Cazenovia, NY, enjoying life to the fullest. Jo had wonderful memories of her time at Smith, and kept up with several classmates, exchanging e-mails with another Smith alumna on her 90th birthday. In her 50s, she learned Braille, and initiated a program for blind children at a local school. She and Gordon, her husband of 55 years, made friends wherever they traveled, and their home was always filled with friends, family, and a wide assortment of pets. Jo grew up in Morristown, NJ, and graduated from Kent Place School before attending Smith. She wrote charming short stories, some of which will be published. She loved poetry, and often recited poems learned at Smith. She also wrote a number of poems. She leaves her daughter, two sisters-in-law, and numerous nieces and nephews. —Jody Reynolds, her daughter GLADIS BARBER INNERST ’36, May 19, ’07. After graduating cum laude from Smith, she attended the Bank Street College of Education, at Columbia University. In 1939, she married her first husband, an aeronautical engineer, and the couple settled in La Jolla, CA. Gladis taught, using Montessori and other creative methods with young children. Always politically active and especially concerned for world peace, in the early ’50s she joined the Religious Society of Friends or Quakers and held positions of leadership, especially with regard to activity on behalf of peace. In 1965, she married J. Stuart Innerst, also a Quaker, who hoped to promote better relations with China, where he had been a missionary in the ’20s. Gladis is remembered as a vigorous fighter for justice and peace, an imaginative teacher, and a very generous hostess, entertaining friends at her lovely seaside home in La Jolla. English literature and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Jane joined the Office of Strategic Services in 1944 in support of the war effort. Her early assignments took her to wartime London and postwar Germany. For much of her later career, she worked as a counterintelligence officer, serving as a liaison between the agency and the FBI. After 27 years, Jane retired and was awarded the CIA Intelligence Award for distinguished service. She married a CIA colleague, the late Howard Roman, in Switzerland in 1954. Upon retirement, they divided their time between Washington, DC, and Stockbridge, MA, where Jane volunteered her time to many organizations. She leaves two daughters; three grandchildren, including SIENNA MCLEAN LOGRECO ’90; and two great-grandchildren. B. GEHRING (GAY) COOPER PITTMAN ’37, Dec. 29, ’06, in Rochester, NY, where she, like her friend and classmate the late CYNTHIA HOGLE LITTLE ’37, lived her entire life. Gay married John Pittman three months after graduation. Both worked for the Eastman Kodak Company. Life changed for Gay after 1943 with the addition of her son Jay; two daughters followed, as well as assorted pets and wildlife. In 1960, Gay earned a master’s degree in math at the University of Rochester and taught high school math for the next 17 years. She spent summer vacations touring the United States, Canada, and Europe with her children. After retiring, Gay and her husband traveled for months at a time, year after year, wandering all over the globe, often by bus. Gay finally slowed down 10 years ago after her husband passed away, spending more time with her children, grandchildren, and friends. RUTH RICHARDSON PARADISE JANE ATHERTON ROMAN ’36, Sept. 6, ’07, at her retire- ’37, May 8, ’07. Ruth grew up in Maine and attended Colby College before transferring to Smith. She worked at the Harvard Business School before marrying William Paradise in 1942. His work with the National Cash Register Company required them to move five times to five states with their five children before settling permanently in Concord, MA, in 1968. There, Ruth worked for the Sentry Insurance Company until she retired. She then turned her boundless energy into volunteering for her church and community. Ruth was keenly interested in women’s issues, politics, her extended family, her bridge club, and in keeping fit by swimming well into her 80s. She leaves five children and seven grandchildren. ment community in Bethesda, MD. She graduated magna cum laude from Smith, where she studied VIRGINIA CLEGG GAMAGE To report the death of an alumna, contact the records department, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063. Send full tributes directly to the Smith Alumnae Quarterly. 76 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 ’37, Sept. 23, 2007. A full obituary appears in “Beyond the Grécourt Gates” in this issue. ANNE STRAHAN DRUMMOND ’38, April 4, ’07, in Gorham, ME, following a lengthy illness. In 1940, she married attorney Josiah Drummond, and settled in Portland. The family spent summers at their East Sebago cottage, where Anne and Josiah enjoyed spring trolling for Sebago landlocked salmon. Anne was an active volunteer and board member for numerous community organizations, including the Northeast Hearing and Speech Center; the Community Counseling Center; the Community Chest and its successor, the United Way of Greater Portland; the National Society of Colonial Dames in Maine and its Tate House Museum; the Smith College Club of Maine; and Maine Medical Center. A longtime member of State Street Congregational Church, she more recently became a parishioner at Portland’s Anglican Cathedral of St. Paul. Her husband predeceased her in 1991. She leaves two daughters, three sons, 15 grandchildren, 14 greatgrandchildren, two sisters, and two brothers. KATHERINE (TAPPY) FAIRLEY CLOSS ’39, July 5, ’07, in Fairport, NY. Her mother was CHARLOTTE CHASE FAIRLEY 1905. She was born in Brooklyn, in 1918, and married Harvey Closs of Canandaigua, NY. They lived in both Canandaigua and Honeoye Falls, during their 62 years of marriage before Harvey’s death in 2003. She leaves three sons, a daughter, seven grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, and a sister. 1940s JANE MARKLE ROGERS ’40, Sept. 18, ’06, at the home of her daughter in Clayton, WA. Jane was born in Feb. 1919, in Northampton. After graduating from Smith, with a major in French, she earned a master’s degree in botany from Washington State College (now WSU). There she met her husband, Thomas, a high school biology teacher and later founder of the Dishman Hills Natural Area. Jane, a full-time mother, was an enormous help to Tom with his plant collecting. He preceded her in death in 1999. Jane lived in the Spokane Valley from 1957 to 2000. She leaves five children, 11 grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren. ALICE DUFFY RINEHART ’40, June 22, ’07. She was a professor of education at Lehigh University, from 1965 to 1984. Previously, she was a social studies teacher and the first guidance counselor at the Amherst (MA) junior and senior high schools, where she worked for six years. After her marriage to Robert Rinehart, an electrical engineer at PPL, and raising three children, she earned a doctorate from Lehigh University Graduate School of Education, becoming a full professor. She taught the sociology of education and was director of Lehigh’s intern teacher program, helping hundreds of aspiring teachers to launch their careers. Her community service included several PTA presidencies and eight years on the advisory committee of the Lehigh County Agency on Aging. She was the author of two books and co-author of another two. She leaves two sons, a daughter, a grandson, two brothers, and a sister. EULALIE (LEE) MACFARLANE NOBLES ’41, March 22, ’07, at her home in El Dorado, AR. She was born on Sept. 2, 1919, in Houston. She graduated Phi Beta IN MEMORIAM “In Memoriam” contains the names of alumnae who were confirmed deceased by the records department at Smith College since the last issue of the Quarterly. To report the death of an alumna, please contact the records department, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063. Submit full obituaries for publication directly to the Smith Alumnae Quarterly. 1923 Ruth Leberman Bandler Florence Munsie Woodward Perchik Melik Sara Jobson Moonaw Vera Baker Roberts 1925 1927 Marie Major Saylor Evelyn Gildersleeve Schoonmaker Helen Emery Cook Margaret Sprout Peirce Mary Reynolds Helen Ross King Virginia Sohlberg Bland Charlotte Mason Margaret Ward Lauffer Margaret McMillan Reynolds Mary Deal Drake Caroline Newman Sternberg Emily Sturges Miller Darthea Davis Derlien Gladys Bidwell Barker Helen Hahn Smith Elizabeth Anable Bettina Blodgett Anderson Helen Hahn Asbury Marion Ball Dorothy Damon Beggs Emma Payson Bradley Gertrude Kendig Brooks Miriam Burdett Mary Vilas Burnett Ray Calvert Helen Allen Camfield Frances Morton de Rheims Nancy Derr Doris Dunning Julia Morrissey Fuller Helen Geer Helen Waterhouse Gotschalk Juliet Kind Herrmann Martha Montgomery Jenkins Katharine Lee Knowlton Naomi Loucks Giovanna Mancini Evelyn Queen Miles Elisabeth Millet Lillian Niman Gertrude Cuscaden Perrigo Dorothy Bruce Salomon Karoline Simon Ethel Smith Josephine Stewart Augusta Rosenthal Strauss Dorothy Cullen Thompkins Alice Thompson Sarah Ramsey von Schrader Katharine Phealan Hadley Katherine Connell Cunningham Muriel Rothschild Scott Georgiana Kline Davidson Mary Coolidge Jones Edith Trussell Hill Constance Walter Hubbell Anna Davis Ruth Lilly Fouch Dorothy Libaire C. Marie Simpson Sullivan Edith Rau Levy 1929 Florence Chapin Garrity 1930 Emeline Shaffer Warren 1931 Helen Merritt Stene 1932 Julia Dorn Heflin 1933 May Gould English Jean Babcock Chappell Evelyn Gerstein Winer 1934 Barbara Stronach Perryclear Louise Doyle Ruth Cohn Segel 1935 Elizabeth Borst Smith Ruth Sayre Lechner Margaret Sample Sugden Jean Potter Chelnov Esther Setlow Kenigsberg Barbara Vaughan Garside 1936 M. Virginia Woodward Houghton Lucile Norton Corwin Harriet Smith Dresser Jane Skiles Griggs Jane Atherton Roman Margaret Lumbard Mercer 1937 Elizabeth Nichols Carter Mary Way Sohngen Mary Bridgeman Zehnder Virginia Clegg Gamage Mary Burke Margaret May Harwood Louise Vanderbilt Quarrier 1938 Helen Summer McCann M. Rosalie Warriner Bate Kathryn Smith Huss Elizabeth Poole Christopher Mary Bray 1939 Cordelia Cole Wilson Katherine Fairley Closs C. Lois Stoffregen Carhart Rosamond Riley Bennett Beatrice Julian Cohn Jeanne Weil Spiller Barbara Brainerd Crane Dorothy Pugsley Alley Jane Parker Mook 1951 1940 1952 Mary-Ann Weld Bodecker Nancy Scrimgeour Curran Ann Richards Huntoon Alice Duffy Rinehart Katharine Fisk Bogle Jeanne Isaacs Taylor Helen Duke Ash Helen Hirschbein Marilyn Fish Munro 1953 Mildred Nahum Nossal 1954 1941 Madeleine Camp Franklin Mary Gruman Beauregard Elizabeth Hasselman Foye Marjorie Froehlich Wolfe Frances Brown Caroline White Fenn Helen Kingman West Faith Witte Munson Eddye Aitken Wetherell 1942 1955 Sara Bull Wood Margaret Weltmer Phinney Barbara Smith Griffen Dorothy Davis Delman Nancy Farr Solley Esther Strong Holway 1943 1956 Nancy Matthews Wood Mary Smith Jerez Sally Lambert Parriott 1959 Lillian Shoffstall Carawan Harline Ward Hurst Barbara Levine Cutler Jean Churchill Moore Rosalind Robinson Benford 1960 Elin Hannigan Crowley 1944 1962 Elizabeth Stine Plimpton Giovanna Stewart Mullis Nancy Leslie Griswold H. C. Abbe Lack Sawabini 1945 Karen Grounsell Smith Mary Nelson McFarlane Susan Lemel Powar 1964 Anne Kinsolving Talbott Susan Taylor Menges Irene Goodman Sorokin-Bobrow Ellen Eichenwald Switzer Ellen-Fairbanks Diggs Bodman 1966 1946 Sherrie Echols E. Louise France Werbe Sarah Sulger Pickering Mary Hurley Di Sciullo 1947 Marie Bittner Hayes Polly Osborne Smith 1948 Marcia Williams La Riche 1970 1973 Margaret Murray 1974 Margot Louis 1978 Loretta Lorusso Elizabeth Ewald Sandman Harriet Hall Provost Betty Beehler Hunter Elizabeth Hay Margery Cobb Wright Margaret Blatchford Parke 1987 1949 Dana Kovaric Sara Smith Robertson 1950 Elizabeth Christensen 1994 Jennifer DelVecchio Gustafson 1996 1998 Roselle Hoffmaster Nancy Knight Lyon Anne Chase Manderson Rosalie Heffelfinger Hall Frances Larrabee Low Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 77 obituaries Kappa from Smith, where she majored in French. Lee was a homemaker who loved opera, traveling, and entertaining. She was a member of MacFarlanes Company–USA, LLC, and was a lifetime member of the First United Methodist Church of the El Dorado, where she served in the choir. She was also a member of El Dorado’s Lady Golfers Association. Her husband of 60 years, James, passed away March 24, ’07. She leaves a son and two granddaughters. BARBARA BALENSWEIG WILK ’44, April 2, ’07. Barbara was an art major at Smith and lived at Haven House. In 1949, she married Max Wilk, a writer; they had three children and later six granddaughters. After Smith, Barbara studied at the Art Students League of New York, as well as in Paris and London. She earned a master’s from the University of Bridgeport and taught art history and practical art at Bridgeport, Fairfield, and Connecticut universities, as well as at Norwalk and Housatonic community colleges. She also owned an art gallery and exhibited in many juried art shows and galleries across the country. For many years she summered in Westport, CT, and wintered in Santa Fe, NM. She received a Guggenheim fellowship, and, in 1993, she received a President’s Volunteer Action Award for starting New Mexico’s Eyes for the Future program, which provides complete eye care for Navajo and Hopi children. H. C. ABBE LACK SAWABINI ’44, July 16, ’07, in Shelburne, VT, of pneumonia. After Smith, she earned a master’s degree in Christian education from Union Seminary and completed postgraduate work at Columbia University. She accepted a position as director of Christian education at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Burlington, VT. There she met her husband, Wadi Sawabini, a beloved dentist in town, whose patients included all the Von Trapp children from Stowe. They were married in 1949, and her Wallace House roommate, KAY KEELER SMITH ’44, and I were both bridesmaids. Abbe and Wadi had four children and entertained many friends in their summer camp on Lake Champlain. She was active in many programs that served children, and was a founder of the Vermont Mozart Festival. She and Wadi both worked to promote justice for Palestinian refugees. Wadi died in March ’06. She leaves three sons, a daughter, and eight grandchildren. —Janet Kedney Woodhull ’44 ’44, Sept. 12, ’07, in Billings, MT. After Smith, she did graduate work at the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania State University, and Southern Methodist University. Gina then taught history and geography in Dallas, and in her hometown of Ridgway, PA. James Gosnell became her life partner in 1946. During World War II, Gina joined the Navy WAVES and worked as a code breaker and Russian translator. In keeping with her husband and daughter’s interest in horses, Gina herself became a horsewoman and traveled to horse shows around the country. She was also her son’s first passenger after he acquired his pilot’s license at age 16. She pursued knowledge and was always surrounded by good books. She had a talent for scouting out obscure authors and following their careers into the limelight. She is celebrated by her husband, her daughter, her son, and her granddaughter. VIRGINIA (GINA) KELLY GOSNELL ELLEN EICHENWALD SWITZER ’45, July 30, ’07, at home in her beloved New York City. Ellen immigrated to the United States from prewar Berlin, and was proud of her status as a full-scholarship student. After Smith, she worked as a reporter for Time magazine and married sculptor Gilbert Switzer. A working mother in Connecticut, Ellen was a reporter for the New Haven Register and wrote for several magazines, including Vogue, Newsweek, and Ladies Home Journal, where for many years she wrote “Can This Marriage Be Saved?”, which appeared in each issue. She is the author of more than a dozen books, including several dealing with the world of ballet, most notably The Magic of Mo- What you can do at SAQ online... † Submit a class note † Read back issues † Update your address † Submit a story idea or letter to the editor 78 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 Visit us at www.saqonline.smith.edu SAQ Online zart, which she collaborated on with photographer Costas. Ellen’s husband died in 1975. She leaves two sons and four grandchildren. ’49, June 27, ’07, of cancer. An excellent student, Sara is remembered by classmates for her ability to leave a three-hour exam a half hour before the allotted time had elapsed, invariably getting better marks than the rest of us. She was also known for a keen sense of humor and quiet wit. A lifelong resident of the Glens Falls, NY, area, she participated in many community activities, including the Glens Falls Hospital Guild, the Hyde Museum Council, and High Peaks Hospice. She was a member of the Chepontuc chapter of the D.A.R. and the Glens Falls Country Club, where she played platform tennis, golf, and duplicate bridge. She leaves her husband, Daniel, a son, a daughter, and two grandsons. SARA SMITH ROBERTSON 1950s ROSALIE (RODY) HEFFELFINGER HALL ’50, June 24, ’07, of an aneurism, near her home in France. Rody’s complicated, sometimes tragic life led to her ordination at age 60 as an Episcopal priest, a journey she described in her memoir, A River Echoes in My Ministry. She was born to a powerful Minnesota family and married after graduation to the son of presidential candidate Wendell Willkie, but the story turned soon to grief, a difficult divorce, life as a single mother, and a battle with breast cancer. In her 40s she married Bob Smith, the love of her life, then publisher of the Minneapolis Star Tribune, who died suddenly seven years later. So began the quest that led to the priesthood and another battle with breast cancer. Her crowded memorial service in Minneapolis was a tribute to her benefactions to her native city and her numberless friends. She leaves three sons and three grandchildren. —Peggy Lynch Tomlinson ’50 MARILYN FISH MUNRO ’52, Aug. 29, ’07, at her home in Point Judith, RI, after a long illness. Marilyn was the daughter of the noted oceanographer and Smith College Medal recipient MARIE POLAND FISH 1921. She came to Smith from Mary C. Wheeler School and National Cathedral School. After graduation, she taught at the Wheeler School before joining her ensign husband at a naval facility in the Bahamas. An avid mystery-story reader, Marilyn became the mystery-book buyer for a bookstore in Westport, CT. She was a nationally ranked crossword puzzle contestant. When her youngest son went off to college, Marilyn pursued a law degree, receiving her JD in 1983. She and her husband established the law firm of Munro & Munro in Westport. In 2001, after 28 years in Westport, they retired to Point Judith. She leaves her husband, three sons, and six grandchildren. NANCY DAWSON-SMITH BIAGIONI ’53, June 16, ’07, in Zurich, Switzerland. Her Chapin friends and classmates will recall her enthusiasm for her English major, her passion for crossword puzzles, her commitment to coffee and cigarette breaks at Totos, and her love of pickup bridge games in the Chapin living room. Following graduation, she joined her sister in Milan. There Nancy found a good job and met her future husband, Marcello Biagioni. Over their married life the Biagionis lived in Milan, Genoa, Rome, and, for the last several decades, Zurich. Their three sons, all graduates of American colleges, now live in the United States, where Nancy visited them and her three grandchildren frequently. Nancy was a loyal attendee at class of ’53 reunions and was active with Smith Europe activities, attending most of the biannual meetings, and taking many Smith Travel trips. She was Smith to the core. —Emily McKnight Corry ’53 KAREN GROUNSELL SMITH ’55, Jan. 3, ’07, in Newtown Square, PA. After graduation, Karen worked on Capitol Hill for four years. She married Robert Smith in 1959 and moved to suburban Philadelphia. Karen joined the Junior League of Philadelphia and was active with Wheels for Welfare. She also was the program chair for the Junior League of Philadelphia’s 60th anniversary celebration. Karen was a devoted volunteer for the Bryn Mawr Hospital and was a comforting influence in the green room and surgical center for many years. She chaired several committees of the Devon Horse Show and assisted with Operation Gold Mine. Karen was a talented seamstress and crafter and enjoyed sharing her work. She and her husband were lucky to travel the world with the USTA and USOC. She leaves a daughter, son, four grandsons, and many friends who will miss her kindness and sense of humor. MARY ANN SMITH JEREZ ’56, June 30, ’07. To her friends in Comstock House, she was known as Smitty. A graduate of the Kent Place School in Summit, NJ, Mary Ann lived most of her life in Monmouth County. After graduating from Smith, she became a registered nurse and worked at Monmouth Medical Center, later becoming a member of its board of trustees. Mary Ann was active in the Blood Bank of Central Jersey as well as the Mental Health Association of Monmouth County. Many friends and neighbors counted on Mary Ann’s help in coping with medical problems. She was generous with her time and managed to bring humor to most situations. For most of her life, Smitty retained the wonderful, wacky sense of humor she had in college. She leaves a daughter. —Barbara Zevon Berlin ’56 EMILY HILL ’57, May 26, ’07, of cancer. She majored in history at Smith and had many friends in Northrop House. After marrying and raising her three children in California, she moved to Sarasota, FL, where she became involved with the Smith club there and served as president. She was a devoted member of the Church of the Redeemer, served on the vestry, and was director of the altar guild for three terms. She was an active member of the Founders Garden Club of Sarasota, and was serving as treasurer at the time of her death. She loved doing needlepoint, stitching treasured Christmas ornaments for her children and grandchildren, and belonged to a weekly stitching group at her church. Emmy was a lifelong birder and participated in the Audubon Society’s annual bird count. She loved history, reading, and travel, especially to Alaska and California to visit her children and grandchildren. —Cynthia Walz Doggett ’57 BETSY HILYARD WHITESIDE ’57, March 17, ’07, of ovarian cancer, in Temple, TX. An economics major, Betsy was a Morrow House resident. She married George Whiteside III, and they lived in Durham, NC, and Milwaukee. Betsy was active with senior citizens as part of RSVP. She is survived by four children and 11 grandchildren, and was thrilled to be a great-grandmother three times. ’57, Feb. 13, ’06. She was the daughter of the late ANN HAMILTON LOCKWOOD ’30. One of five women in her Yale Medical School class, Sally met and married classmate Vincent Marchesi. They studied at Oxford, where she SALLY LOCKWOOD MARCHESI received a doctorate. After receiving her medical degree, Sally spent several years at the National Institutes of Health, where she was one of the first to isolate and study the blood factor responsible for hemophilia. After adopting three boys, Sally had four children of her own, raising them to successful adulthood while a full-time member of the Yale Medical School faculty. She leaves her husband and children as well as her sisters, MARY LOCKWOOD SPELMAN ’55 and NANCY LOCKWOOD COOKE ’58, and cousin ELINOR LOCKWOOD YEO ’55. ’57, April 24, ’07, in Philadelphia. After receiving a degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, Myrna worked as district counsel for the Philadelphia office of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and served as president of the Mid-Atlantic Legal Foundation, a nonprofit public interest law firm. She was later named judge of the court of common pleas. Survivors include her husband, a daughter, and four grandchildren. MYRNA PAUL BAUM DI ANN SMITH RIGGS ’59, March 29, ’07, in Oklahoma City, where she had lived since 1982. Di Ann married Randy Ney in 1961, and they raised their two children in his hometown of Fort Smith, AR. Following their divorce, Di Ann moved to Oklahoma City, and later married William Riggs, who survives her. In addition to her husband, she is survived by a daughter and a son, two grandchildren, and a sister. —Peggy Phelps Atherton ’59 1960s LESLIE INNIS MCCOOK ’65, April 13, ’07, at her home in Wyndmoor, PA, of ALS. Leslie grew up in Providence, RI, majored in history, and spent her junior year in Geneva. After graduating, she spent two years in Tunisia with the Peace Corps. There she met and later married Ned McCook, a native of Philadelphia. Leslie earned her PhD from Temple University and had a successful private practice working with couples and individuals with marital and other concerns. She was a beloved person who touched the lives of everyone she met. In addition to her husband of 39 years, she leaves her daughter, a sister, and two brothers. 1970s ’70, June 13, ’07, in Avebury, England, after a four-year struggle with ovarian cancer. Sherrie was a valued member of the class of ’70 and Albright House, though she did not graduate with the class. She received her BA from Barnard, an MA in English from the University of Virginia, and a PhD in clinical psychology from the California School of Psychology. She touched many lives as a clinical psychologist in institutional and private practice in California, Wales, and London. Sherrie had a generous, adventurous spirit and traveled widely. Her greatest legacy is an extraordinary group of loyal friends around the world. Within weeks of her death, there were three celebrations of her life in different places, and at least three more planned. Sherrie’s warmth and energy captured the imaginations and hearts of many. We will miss her. —Helen (Ellie) Weist Karl ’70 SHERRIE ECHOLS AMY FRASER BRAGG ’78, May 4, ’07, at home in Grosse Pointe, MI, after a valiant four-year battle with lung cancer. A graduate of Ulster Academy, she majored in art history, living at Comstock, then Albright as head resident. Amy designed a centennial poster for Smith, and a logo she created for her hometown of Saugerties, NY, is still used today. Her executive search career began at Spencer Stuart. She became research director at Heidrick & Struggles, then a partner at Canny, Bowen & Associates. Amy married Scott Flood in 1988. The unofficial gardener at their Upper West Side co-op, Amy maintained gardens that were greatly admired. The family moved to Grosse Pointe in 1999. Amy leaves her devoted husband; two teenage daughters, who share her passion for horseback riding; two adored brothers; and her mother. Witty, gorgeous, with an intriguing bohemian/prep style, Amy is loved by her many chums. —Jennifer Newlin ’80 1980s ELIZABETH CHRISTENSEN ’87, Aug. 7, ’07, at the Uni- versity of Arizona Medical Center in Tucson, following a lengthy and courageous battle with cancer. She was a math major at Smith, and earned a second bachelor’s degree in engineering from the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College in 1989. She was employed until her death with the U. S. Army as a communications engineer assigned to Fort Belvoir, the Pentagon, and Fort Huachuca, as well as numerous tours of duty worldwide, including Iraq. She had lived in Reston, VA, but, for the past 10 years, was a resident of Sierra Vista, AZ. She was a member of the Society for Creative Anachronism and participated in reenactments of medieval battles in various locations nationwide, and was a voracious reader. She leaves her father and stepmother; two brothers; two sisters (one her twin); a stepsister and stepbrother; and 10 nieces and nephews. 1990s DANA KOVARIC ’96, June 22, ’07, after a courageous battle with cancer. She was a geology major at Smith and graduated cum laude. Born in Santa Monica, CA, Dana displayed an early love for science and astronomy (pointing out gibbous moons to fellow 5-year-olds). Gillett House was Dana’s home, where she was known for her mischievous ways, boundless generosity, sardonic humor, and zeal for travel, photography, figure skating, puppetry, pop culture, and Harry Potter. Her career in terrestrial and planetary geology included a master’s degree from UCLA and work on the ill-fated Mars Polar Lander project. Yet Dana’s true calling was to make science “cool” to young children. She developed educational materials for Bill Nye the Science Guy and DragonflyTV. She also wrote several original screenplays and novels. She leaves her loving parents and adoring family, friends, and Smith sisters. —Sara Smolek Filipek ’95 ROSELLE HOFFMASTER ’98, Sept. 21, ’07, while serving as a surgeon and U.S. Army captain in Iraq. Roselle died of noncombat-related injuries in Kirkuk. She had been assigned to Headquarters Company, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, at Fort Drum, NY. A native of Cleveland, Roselle majored in biochemistry at Smith and earned Academic All-Conference honors as a member of the cross-country team. She received her medical degree from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland in 2004. That same year, she was commissioned into the Army Medical Corps, following a residency in internal medicine at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, TX. She was assigned to the 10th Mountain Division in July ’07 and deployed with her unit to Iraq in September. Her awards and decorations include the Army Superior Unit Award, the National Defense Service Medal, and the Army Service Ribbon. She leaves her husband and her parents. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 79 ALUMNAE EXCHANGE To place an ad in “Alumnae Exchange,” e-mail your ad to ads@smith.edu or fax to 413-585-2015. Deadline for the Spring ’08 issue is January 15. Please include your full name and class year or your affiliation to Smith in your ad. Ads are $2 per word, 75-word maximum. Please make check payable to Smith College and mail to “Alumnae Exchange,” Smith Alumnae Quarterly, Alumnae House, 33 Elm St., Northampton, MA 01063. The Quarterly is not responsible for the products and services advertised. FOR RENT CAPE COD, MA Private waterfront home overlooking beautiful, bayside scene in artistfavored Wellfleet. Picturesque view of tidal inlet from three sides with spectacular sunsets from wraparound deck. Staircase leads to private beach for sunning, nature walks or kayaking. Ocean is 1.2 miles away. Spacious home, with 5 bedrooms, including water-view master suite with private deck, 3 full baths, and outdoor shower. Accommodates 10. For details write Kaliperman@ comcast.net. Melanie Foster Robert ’77. CAPE COD, MA Wellfleet. Summer- and off-season rental. Private, beautiful, 4-bedroom contemporary, skylights. Immaculate, comfortable home, large deck, on 1-acre wooded lot on cul-de-sac. Phyllis Berman, mother of Madeleine Migenes ’86, 315-445-2935. BUZZARD’S BAY Cape Cod waterfront. Completely renovated 2bedroom cottage shares beach and 30 acres with our family home. One hour from Boston or Providence; sleeps 6; $1,800 per week, May 15–Oct. Contact John Christie at 202-663-6368 or john.christie@wilmerhale. com. Margaret Barker Christie ’61 and Athalia Barker Esty ’59. MARTHA’S VINEYARD Knowledgeable and conscientious service with 20 years’ experience. Short-term, seasonal, and off-season rentals. Listings from prestigious waterfront to modest apartments. Owners: new listings welcome. Contact John Best, husband of Margaret Curtin ’75, johnbest@ vineyard.net, 508-693-5566. NANTUCKET Nostalgic for your grandmother’s house? Tired of antiseptic rentals? Rent our family’s historic (1765) Centre St. cottage next summer. Sleeps 10, with 6 bedrooms and 3.5 baths. New appliances, large yard, wraparound porch. Great for multigenerational families. Walk to Main St., or Children’s Beach in 6 minutes. Well-behaved dog OK. $3,500 per week; discount for longer stays. Please contact Sandy Morgan ’65, 860-561-3124, morgan@hartford.edu. “Starboard Watch,” our welcoming family home on serene private cove. All amenities. Sleeps 6, pets negotiable. $2,000 per week, summer; $900 per week, winter. Margaret Gay Lavender ’73, jmslavender@ comcast.net, 847-446-3485. NORFOLK, CT SOUTH FREEPORT, ME Private getaway in beautiful foothills of the Berkshires on pristine lake with private beach, surrounded by forest preserve. “Birchfield” includes a main house and 3 sleeping cottages (6 bedrooms total; 3 double, 6 single beds); dishwasher; and washer/dryer. Available for Aug. ’08 and select weekends July–Sept; $500 per weekend, $1,250 per week, $5,000 per month. Call 917-375-3309. For photos go to http://www. cyberrentals.com. Margaret Jessup, digital resources archivist, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College. MAINE, MIDCOAST Family vacation, stress relief, nature, and waterfront activities abound year round at Waterfront rental with spectacular views, 20 minutes from Portland. Ideal for couple or individual. Available summer ’08 weekly or longer; by special arrangement other times. Mary Lou Michael ’68, marylou.michael@gmail. com, 207-865-2121. MOUNT DESERT ISLAND, ME New 3-bedroom, 2-bath home with stunning views of Blue Hill Bay and surrounding islands. Carol Carson AC ’89, mainecottage@gmail.com, www.mtdesertisland.net. SANIBEL ISLAND, FL Our beloved retreat for 20 years, this spacious, airy 2-bedroom, 2-bath, beautifully furnished beachfront condo has every creature comfort. Direct beach access and breathtaking ocean views, large screened patio, elevator, and pool. Shelling, bike paths, nature preserve. Perfect for two couples or a family of four. Available by week or longer. No smoking or pets. Valerie Fitch ’79, 212-858-1718, valerie. fitch@pillsburylaw.com. SARASOTA, FL Exquisite, charming 1920s Craftsman cottage. Three bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 porches, designer furnished. Quiet street, minutes from Siesta Key beaches and downtown; secluded garden with outdoor dining. Available monthly or weekly. Lara Embry ’91, ciullaproperties@comcast. net. SANTA FE, NM Architect’s house on secluded 12.5 acres, sleeps 6. Stunning views, 15 minutes to plaza. No pets or smoking. Weekly. Bonnie Orr Miskolczy ’60, 978-369-2647. SANTA FE, NM Casa Siempre, charming adobe, with 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, full kitchen, and kiva fireplace, all modern amenities. This cozy ski retreat is 16 miles from Ski Santa Fe, one of the highest ski areas in the continental United States, with a base area elevation of 10,350 feet and great facilities. Ski the day and enjoy evenings in historic downtown Santa Fe. Also, 3 blocks from Canyon Rd. Linda Albright ’07, Albright65@msn.com, 415-717-1172. KEYSTONE, CO Luxury mountainside condo, ski-in/ski-out, sleeps 6. Log on to www. loneeagle3033.com for photos, rental information. Owner is son of Lila Silverstein Rosenblum ’52. PORTLAND, OR City center. View 3 peaks from huge windows of newly renovated, high-rise condo. One bedroom, 1 bath, deck, and brandnew kitchen flow into airy dining and living room. Willamette River Marina VeridianVillage at HAMPSHIRE COLLEGE Live. And Learn. Combine Home Life with a Life of the Mind. EXPERIENCE THE EXCITEMENT and camaraderie of a new and unique community organized around the intellectual, cultural and social vibrancy of the Five College area. Veridian Village homeowners can benefit from college programs and facilities and a variety of amenities at the Veridian Commons, providing many opportunities to interact with professors, students and neighbors. Adjacent to the exciting town centers of Amherst and Northampton and surrounded by the natural beauty of Western Massachusetts, your new flat or townhome has been thoughtfully designed to adhere to green principles while providing the best in comfort, convenience and design. You’ll look good in green. CALL TO JOIN US FOR AN EXCLUSIVE PREVIEW. 1.888.253.3903 www.veridianvillage.com 80 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 3 blocks away; easy walk to art museum. Light rail to zoo, Woodland Park, International Rose Test Gardens. Trolley and bus stop at our building, but rental includes parking. Mid-April to mid-June ’08, $650 per week. Susan Schneckloth Whereat ’61, whereat@comcast.net, 484380-3500. 927-2322 or reservations@ coralstoneclub.com. ST. JOHN, U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS Roussillon, Mediterranean, Pyrenees region. Wonderful villa (sleeps 6, with foldout couch), high-up, nonstop view of Pyrenees; 2-hour drive to Barcelona; 15 minutes to the Mediterranean. Please visit www. villa-chiapella.com for more information or e-mail bwp@exbsi.com, associate of Lisa Franklin ’73. ELEUTHERA, BAHAMAS Two-bedroom villa on exclusive Double Bay, with secluded pink sand beach and 55-foot lap pool. Photos at www.dianepage. com. Diane Page ’68. ISLA VERDE, PUERTO RICO Pretty 1-bedroom condo, ocean view, prime San Juan-area beach. Long- or short-term. Diane Miliotes ’81. Contact Andrea Torres, andreatorressj@hotmail. com, 787-642-4481. SAN MIGUEL DE ALLENDE, MEXICO Beautifully located, charming, and colorful home in Mexico’s 17-century colonial treasure/artist colony. Three bedrooms, 3.5 baths; maid and property manager; short or longterm stays; high-speed Internet. Contact Lucy Young Noyes ’61 at her real estate office, La Puerta Real Estate Services, LLC, New Mexico; 505-8673388; lucy@lapuertallc. com. See property on www. newmexico-land-homes. com. YUCATAN-CARIBBEAN Vacation house in Akumal, Quintana Roo, Mexico, on the sea, where the Caribbean meets a beautiful lagoon. Four bedrooms, 4 baths, servants. Lovely gardens, snorkeling, diving in 82-degree turquoise seas. Total privacy and peaceful beauty. Owner is Ann Lindenberger Christensen ’56. For information contact Cindy at 208-725-5551 or rancho401@cox.net. GRAND CAYMAN FRANCE SOUTHWEST FRANCE AND PARIS Restored spacious stone farmhouse northeast of Bordeaux. In-ground pool. For information: www. charente-maritime-home. com. Also, 2-bedroom Paris apartment in 13th Arr., www.relaxinfranceonline. com/ile/75001.htm. Katherine Hoffman ’69, 603-924-9535, glnward@ gmail.com. ITALY AND FRANCE Picturesque villas and apartments, all personally visited, in desired locations. Enhance local flavor with concierge services. Contact David Geen, nephew of Patsy Jerome Korten ’49. 800-593-6350, www. villasandvines.com, dgeen@ villasandvines.com. Island-wide real estate sales. Knowledgeable and conscientious service with 20 years’ experience. Member of LINK real estate listing network. New listings welcome. Contact John Best, husband of Margaret Curtin ’75, johnbest@vineyard.net, 508-693-5566. TRAVEL ONE-OF-A-KIND, SMALL GROUP TRAVEL Discover Europe, Scandinavia, Central and South America, Asia, and the United States. With only 6-12 travelers, we’re able to visit locales inaccessible to larger groups and encounter people you might never meet on your own, perfect to deepen your understanding of another culture. Hotels are small gems; dates chosen to avoid crowds. No wonder we’ve been cited in Newsweek, Travel, and the Los Angeles Times. Horizons, Jane Amster Sinauer ’61, 413367-9200, horizons@ horizons-art.com. COOKING IN THE PERIGORD One-week, hands-on culinary adventure in the Perigord. Enjoy France’s finest food and sights at “La Combe,” a charming, restored manor house. Limit 8 people. Barbara Stuetzer Lauterbach ’57 and Lora Brody instructors; www.lacombe-perigord. PRODUCTS AND SERVICES CATERING, NEW YORK CITY Stylish, elegant catering for social and corporate functions. Entertaining Ideas, owned by Diane Gordon ’82, caters to Apple Computer, NYC Ballet, Air France, and the Frick Museum. Visit www. entertainingideascatering. com or call 212-289-1230. PECANS The Smith College Club West of Boston announces its annual pecan sale for its scholarship fund. Contact Mary Barbara Alexander ’73, 508-6471631 or mbas@verizon.net. Mammoth pecan halves (16 oz.) or chocolate-covered pecans (12 oz.); six for $65 includes shipping. SAVE MONEY ON YOUR MORTGAGE Looking for a mortgage? Thinking of buying or refinancing? Then you should contact Eris Perese Saari ’84. As president of Amerifund Home Mortgage, licensed mortgage bankers in NY, NJ, CT, VA, and FL, Eris specializes in offering personalized service and low rates. Amerifund offers mortgages for the purchase or refinance of 1–4 family homes, condos, and coops; $250 off closing costs. Contact her at 800-922- 8440 ext. 203 or esaari@ amerifund.us. THE ORGANIC MATTRESS People- and planetfriendly bedding, for baby, too. Free of bio-accumulating fire retardants and other unhealthy chemicals; 10% off until March 15, ’08, mention this ad. Diane Jamrog ’93, www. theorganicmattress.com. FICTION Debut novel published by Women and Men Books looks beyond women’s public presentations and beyond closed doors to the inner person itself. Equality Ascended by Marilyn Jane Babcock ’53. Read part of chapter 1 at www. womenandmenbooks.com. DOLCE DESIGN Gorgeous Websites, logos, brochures, etc., from Dolce Design, www.dolcedesign. com, a Smithie-owned design studio. Discount for Smithies. Belinda Darcey ’00, darcey@dolcedesign. com. MODERN MEMOIRS, INC. PRIVATE PUBLISHING SERVICES Memoirs and family histories for clients who care about high quality and personal service. Writing, editing, design, and book manufacture. Kitty Axelson-Berry ’71, www. modernmemoirs.com; 34 Main St. #9, Amherst, MA 01002; 413-253-2353. SMITH PHOTO NOTE CARDS, BOOKMARKS, AND GIFTS Beautiful color photographs of favorite Smith scenes grace high-quality 5 X 7 note cards (blank inside), bookmarks, and gifts. Great for fundraisers. See them at milescapesart. com/smithcollege.html. Available for purchase individually, in quantity, and in assortments. Contact Marianne Miles ’87, 315-638-4190, mmiles@milescapesart. com. WANTED AGENT WANTED Seeking a literary agent for Philosophical Dieting: The Why As Well As the How of Losing Weight, a completed nonfiction book aimed at the general public. Caroline Wiseblood Meline ’63, carolinem1@verizon.net. ANNOUNCEMENTS LOOKING TO ADOPT We want to adopt a baby. If you know someone who is pregnant but unprepared to parent, please tell her about us. See our family profile at our Website, www. BabyToAdopt.net or email us at BabyToAdopt@ hotmail.com. Our home phone, toll-free, is 800-9223574. Our adoption home study is approved by the state of Minnesota. Thank you! Kathy Skeffington Ollivier ’79 and husband Daniel. TUSCANY Magnificent stone house in hilltop village near Lucca, formal garden, fabulous panoramic view includes marble mountains. Peaceful, private. $1,150 per week. Solace Wales Sheets ’60, 415-459-8980, solaces@ comcast.net. For photos go to www.Tuscany-Rental. com. unexpected treasures TUSCAN HOLIDAY Spacious, comfort-filled family home perched in 13th-century walled village, with Cortona in the distance. Utterly tranquil yet immersed in the pleasantness of Italian village life. Contact Victoria de Grazia ’68, vd19@columbia.edu, www. hilltownholiday.com. Featuring an unusual array of hand-selected items for every occasion. Visit us when you’re on campus or stop by our website: www.smithmuseumstore.com VOULIAGMENI (ATHENS), GREECE Stay in Mimi’s Place. Our ocean-view, fully furnished 2-bedroom (sleeps 4), 1-bath apartment is close to Athens and yet a world away. Just steps from two lovely beaches, plenty of tavernas, tennis, and playgrounds; 30 minutes by cab to the heart of Athens and all its archaeological treasures or the ports for island hopping. Approximately 20 minutes from the airport. Available April–Oct. Victoria Harris ’88, vjharris@ epix.net, 908-251-1196. BED-AND-BREAKFAST BETHESDA, MD Washington, DC, tour guide’s home, 15 minutes from downtown. Good transportation, safe parking. Joan Hinsch Searby ’58, (301) 229-4835. museum SHOP Inquiries & orders: 413.585.2779 or email: smith college museum art nfleming@smith.edu 413.585.2760 WWW.SMITH.EDU/MUSEUM ELM STREET AT BEDFORD TERRACE NORTHAMPTON, MA Produced by SCMA Beautifully renovated 1,800-square-foot condo with prime location on Seven Mile Beach. Deluxe kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. Ground-floor unit ideal for family or 3 couples. Walk directly out to patio, pool, and beach. Tennis, exercise, grills on site; short walk to shops and restaurants. See photos at www.coralstoneclub. com and check unit 21 owned by Roz Smulian Schwartz ’56. Call 888- Sunny 2-bedroom condo in Arcachon, a great beach resort, 45 minutes from Bordeaux. Ann Sanford ’75, AnnieS75@aol.com, 877848-0087. On the Web, go to www.vrbo.com/25312. com, www.lorabrody. com/classes, www. barbarlauterbach.com. of Tranquil paradise with spectacular views of Coral Bay and the British Virgin Islands. Comfortable, modern, 4-bedroom home, with 2 separate living areas. Ideal spot for families or vacationing friends to enjoy the Caribbean breezes, white-sand beaches, hiking trails, and snorkeling of St. John’s unique national park. Winter: $1,695 per week; summer: $1,345 per week. See our Website, www. spyglasshill-stjohn.com, for availability and details. Molly Robinson, senior laboratory instructor, retired, 413-628-3361. FRENCH ATLANTIC REAL ESTATE SALES MARTHA’S VINEYARD Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 81 news from the alumnae association BEYOND THE GRÉCOURT GATES ‘A bond that never ends’ Longtime volunteer honored with John M. Greene Award after a long day of meetings on October 18 with the Museum of Art’s visiting committee, JANICE CARLSON ORESMAN ’55 was looking forward to a nice, leisurely dinner that evening with Smith friends, fellow committee members, and trustees. Unbeknownst to her, they all had something a little different in mind. At the end of the meal, MARY PATTERSON MCPHERSON ’57, chair of Smith’s board of trustees, announced that Oresman was the latest recipient of the prestigious John M. Greene Award. “It took my breath away,” Oresman said. “I had no idea any of this was going to happen. But it truly was the most wonderful surprise. I was so honored and moved. I could barely speak.” What stunned her even more than the presentation of the award was how well everyone had managed to keep it secret. “Not one person slipped,” she said. “It was a giant plot that was very closely guarded. [My husband] Roger knew since June, and kept quiet about it.” To those who know and have worked with Oresman, honoring her with the John M. Greene Award seemed only natural. The award is given to people whose service to the college has gone “beyond the call of duty.” In Oresman’s case, that has meant more than fifty years of volunteering for Smith, including serving as president of her class; fundraising for a host of campus initiatives, such as the renovation of Seelye Hall; serving on the board of trustees and leading its advancement committee; serving on the search committee that brought President Carol Christ to Smith; remaining active in the Smith Club of New York City; currently chairing the Janice Carlson Grecourt Society; and even selling Oresman ’55 and pecans. Mary Patterson In her citation, McPherson noted McPherson ’57. that Oresman’s efforts have benefited countless Smith-related programs. “Virtually no corner of our campus [has remained] untouched by your energy and commitment,” she said. For Oresman, an independent curator and art adviser to corporate and private collectors, the inspiration to give back to Smith struck early. “I was a young girl from Minneapolis who came to Smith on scholarship,” she said. Classes such as Art 100 opened her eyes to “a world of ideas” and ultimately enabled her to discover her passion. “Art history was a gift,” she said. “It became my life’s work.” Beyond the academics, it has been the close friendships with classmates and other alumnae that have motivated her to stay so connected to Smith. “We always talk about how grateful we are for everything Smith has given us,” she said. “It’s a bond that never ends.” —JM Day on a tree farm Oregon Smith club celebrates its own Mountain Day On October 14, more than twenty members of the Smith Club of Oregon, along with their families and friends, celebrated Mountain Day at the World Forestry Center Magness Memorial Tree Farm just outside Portland. This year’s celebration, which is the club’s annual fall event, was inspired by the work Oregon club members and their friends and family tour the tree farm. 82 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 of BARBARA WALKER ’57, a trustee of the center and a longtime activist whose work has contributed to the many open spaces in and around Portland. At a reception, Walker spoke about her preservation efforts around the world. Alumnae also enjoyed guided tours of a portion of the 80-acre tree farm. Designer Heather Wells ’87 used Smith colors and memorabilia to freshen up the Smith Room at the College Club of Boston. Vintage Smith Alumna designer adds just the right touch to College Club room makeover when the college Club of Boston set out to redesign the eleven guestrooms in its historic Victorian brownstone, it gave a small group of designers two weeks and a small budget to come up with a new look that would incorporate the club’s antique furnishings and also show off the college for which the room was named. Designer and architect HEATHER WELLS ’87 accepted the challenge to freshen up the Smith Room, whose pink walls and sheer curtains did little to evoke the image of Smith College. Wells, principal of Heather G. Wells, Ltd. Architectural Interiors, and her design team recast the room in shades of blue and yellow, the colors used by Smith athletic teams. Pale yellow walls in the bedroom with Delft-blue upholstery on the chairs give the room a nostalgic feel that blends with the antique furnishings. “As a firm, we tend to work with a slightly more contemporary decor, but here we wanted to be contextual while still being fresh,” Wells said. To give it a true Smith feel, the design team hung 1940s-era Smith commemorative plates on the walls and a 1920 Smith College Alumnae Fund poster in the bath. “The design is fresh, welcoming, warm, and classic,” Wells said, “like the members of the club and Smith alums.” To see more photos of the Smith Room, or to find out more about the College Club of Boston, which operates as an event venue and bed-and-breakfast in Boston’s Back Bay neighborhood, go to thecollegeclubofboston.com, or call 617536-9510. —EG Remembering a dedicated volunteer VIRGINIA (GINNY) CLEGG GAMAGE ’37 died September 23 in Marblehead, Massachusetts. A former president of the Alumnae Association of Smith College, Ginny was known throughout the Smith community as a dedicated supporter of the college and committed volunteer. Born in Philadelphia, Ginny lived for the past fifty-six years in Marblehead, and was extremely active in the community, where she was well-known for her work in historic preservation. In 1979, she headed Marblehead’s 350th anniversary Virginia (Ginny) Clegg committee. She wrote Gamage ’37 seven editions of a Marblehead walking tour titled The Lure of Marblehead and coauthored the definitive history of the town, Marblehead: The Spirit of ’76, published by Chilton Book Co., in 1972. Gov. Francis W. Sargent appointed her to the Massachusetts bicentennial commission, and she planned statewide activities for the 1976 celebrations. In 2004, Ginny was named Marblehead’s first historian emerita. In addition, Ginny was president of the Marblehead Historical Society, the Marblehead Neck Association, and the Old Marblehead Improvement Association. She was a trustee of Salem Five Cent Savings Bank. Professionally, Ginny had worked for the Remington-Rand Corp. and CBS. She was an account executive for the McCann-Erickson Advertising Agency in Los Angeles, and was associate editor at Nautica magazine. A fiercely loyal Smith alumna, Ginny held numerous volunteer positions with the college, including trustee of the college (1965–1968), president of the class of 1937 (1957–1962), and class Fund agent (1952–1957). She leaves three daughters, a son, and two grandchildren. Winter 2007-08 Smith Alumnae Quarterly 83 smith seen | photographs by asia kepka Knitting the night away A cold, windy November night was the perfect time to cozy up with a skein of wool and settle in for a long evening of knitting and conversation. That was the scene November 16 when eighteen students, along with Dean of Students Julianne Ohotnicky, gathered in the Campus Center’s Goldstein Lounge for what was billed as a five-hour knitathon. The event was one of a series of alternative Friday night SmithTo-Do activities that have been coordinated this year by Kelly Johnson ’08 [see p. 16]. In addition to knitting and purling, the group was raising money, about $650 that would go to the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts. Students brought their own knitting projects with them to occupy their hands. For those whose projects didn’t require their full concentration, a little on-screen entertainment, at left, helped pass the time. And, thanks to a group from Park House, there were homemade cupcakes. 84 Smith Alumnae Quarterly Winter 2007-08 N_`Z_JZ`\ek`jk8i\Pfl6 Summer Science and Engineering Program for High School Girls June 29–July 26, 2008 K_\Jd`k_Jldd\iJZ`\eZ\Xe[<e^`e\\i`e^Gif^iXd `jX]fli$n\\bi\j`[\ek`Xcgif^iXd]fi\oZ\gk`feXcpfle^nfd\en`k_jkife^`ek\i\jkj `ejZ`\eZ\#\e^`e\\i`e^Xe[d\[`Z`e\% <XZ_jldd\i#j\c\Zk_`^_jZ_ffcjkl[\ekj]ifdXZifjjk_\ZflekipXe[XYifX[Zfd\kfJd`k_ :fcc\^\kf[f_Xe[j$fei\j\XiZ_n`k_Jd`k_]XZlckp`ek_\c`]\Xe[g_pj`ZXcjZ`\eZ\jXe[`e\e^`e\\i`e^% >`icjn_fn`ccY\`e_`^_jZ_ffc ^iX[\j0 Æ() `e]Xcc)''/Xi\\c`^`Yc\kfXggcp]fik_\jldd\i)''/gif^iXd%=fiXYifZ_li\#Xggc`ZXk`feXe[ÔeXeZ`XcX`[`e]fidXk`fe# ZfekXZk1Jd`k_Jldd\iJZ`\eZ\Xe[<e^`e\\i`e^Gif^iXd#:cXib?Xcc#Jd`k_:fcc\^\#Efik_Xdgkfe#D8'('-* K\c\g_fe\1+(* ,/,$*'-' =Xo1+(* ,/,$*'-/ <$dX`c1\[flki\XZ_7jd`k_%\[l N\Y1nnn%jd`k_%\[l&jldd\igif^iXdj&jj\g WOMEN HELPING WOMEN—ALUMNA TO ALUMNA. IT’S WHAT THE SMITH NETWORK IS ALL ABOUT TAP INTO THE POWER OF THE SMITH NETWORK BE A MENTOR: Use your talent, skill, and experience to guide a fellow Smith alumna to her professional best. FIND A MENTOR: Whether you’re just starting out or looking to change careers, you can find a Smith alumna to help you achieve your goals. Smith Alumnae Quarterly Alumnae House Smith College Northampton, MA 01063 Change Service Requested With the Alumnae Association’s mentoring program, it’s easier than ever to make the Smith network work for you. Sign up online to be a mentor to a Smith alumna or search to find an alumna mentor. To get started, take a couple of minutes to go through a brief tutorial at http://alumnae.smith.edu/mentor. Your Alumnae Association. Your community. CONTACT US Web: http://alumnae.smith.edu Phone: 800-526-2023 E-mail: alumnae@smith.edu Nonprofit Organization U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 230 Burlington, VT 05401