2017 Annual Report of Donors

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2017 Annual Report of Donors SMITH COLLEGE LIBRARIES ANNUAL REPORT OF DONORS July 1, 2016 – June 30, 2017 During the past year, the Smith College Libraries have benefited from the thoughtfulness and generosity of many donors. We are deeply grateful for the enduring interest and support of all our Friends. Every effort has been made to accurately report this year’s donors. If we have made an error, please let us know. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ FRIENDS OF THE SMITH Kevin McDonough COLLEGE LIBRARIES FUND Kathleen McCartney & Bill Hagen Nina Munk ’88 In Memory of Marcia McDonough ’54 Champions Betsy Pepper ’67 Elizabeth McEvoy ’96 Anonymous Sarah M. Pritchard Frances Pepper ’62 Mary-Lou Boone Ruth Solie ’64 Sandra Rippe ’67 In honor of Martha G.Tolles ’43 Virginia Thiebaud ’72 Rita Saltz ’60 Anne Brown ’62 Amy Youngquist ’74 In memory of Sarah M. Bolster ’50 Edith Dinneen ’40 Cheryl Stadel-Bevans ’90 Christine Erickson ’65 Sustainers Audrey Tanner ’91 Ann Kaplan ’67 Susan Baker ’79 Ruth Turner ’46 M. Jenny Kuntz Frost ’78 Sheila Cleworth ’55 Lynne Withey ’70 Joan Spillsbury Stockard ’53 Rosaleen D'Orsogna In honor of Rebecca D'Orsogna ’02 Contributors Patrons Susan Flint ’78 Nancy Veale Ahern ’58 Deanna Bates Barbara Judge ’46 In memory of Marian Mcmillan ’26 & Gladys Mary F. Beck ’56 B. Veale ’26 Paula Kaufman ’68 Peggy Danziger ’62 Susan Lindenauer ’61 Amy Allen ’90 Stefanie Frame ’98 Ann Mandel ’53 Kathleen Anderson ’57 Marianne Jasmine ’85 In memory of Bertha Watters Tildsley 1894 Elise Barack ’71 Kate Kelly ‘73 Sally Rand ‘47 In memory of Sylvia Goetzl ’71 Brandy King ’01 Katy Rawdon ’95 Linda Beech ’62 Claudia Kirkpatrick ’65 Eleanor Ray Sarah Bellrichard ’94 Jocelyne Kolb ’72 In memory of Eleanor B. Crownfield ’51 James Bennett L & T Respess Books Katherine Rostand ’65 Gail Berney ’75 Valerie Lafleur ’64 Marylynn Salmon In memory of Arthur & Hilda Berney Martha Lawrenz ’62 R. Susan Snively ’67 Nancy Bissell ’61 In honor of Barbara C. Rand ’49 Jane Stahl ’57 Barbara Blumenthal ’75 Lester Little In memory of Frances Porter Moulton Katherin Chase ’64 Christopher Loring Susan Steinway ’78 Cheryl Cipro ’73 Heather Macchi ’93 Alexis Surovov Eleanor Crownfield ’51 Patricia Mariani ’77 Sandra Tullius ’84 Chris Cullens ’80 Carolina Miranda-Silva ’93 Anne Van Wart ’88 Patricia Dube ’49 Jane Moore ’51 Emily Watts ’58 Jane Eisner ’53 In memory of Jennette Hitchcock ’31 Suzanne White ’06 Anne Farr ’66 Nancy Morino ’68 Dawn Wildrick-Cole ’95 In memory of Susan Stanley Eddy ‘66 In memory of Lois Van Hoesen ’68 In honor of Glen K Mahoney Heather Finan ’90 Priscilla Murphy ’69 Martha Wood ’69 Ruth Foxman ’87 Joanne Murphy ’82 Shelley E. Zuraw ’78 Kathleen Golden ’69 Barbara Naeser ’63 Susan Gorsky ’66 Susan Norton ’82 Household Evangelia Antonakos ’97 Margaret Guyer ’90 Susan Novick ’81 Sara Bailey ’55 Anna Hogan ’66 In honor of Peter Bloom Carolyn Baldwin-SoRelle ’09 Susan Hollis ’62 Marcia Osborn ‘53 Kathleen Balun ’72 In memory of Dorothy Tower ’38 Christie Owens ‘69 Gloria Bellis ’51 Elizabeth Huffine ’64 Katherine Polga ‘96 Ada In honor of Maurice Bellis Sarah Bellrichard ’94 Barbara Fitzpatrick Katie Marousis ’90 Edith Bingham ‘55 Ada Suzanne Foster Elizabeth Maruska ’69 Caren Borland ‘68 Elvin Fowell Sally McPherson ’67 In memory of Frances N. Glover ‘68 In memory of Dorothy L. Fowell ’24 In honor of Betsy R. Pepper ’67 Nancy Bradbury ‘74 & Eunice Lilly Maureen O'Brien ‘54 Molly Fowler Evelyn Brown ‘72 In memory of Nancy H. Harrington ’42 Kathryn Gabriel Elizabeth Outler ’92 Linda Bruemmer ‘73 Carol Gotwals ’50 Alison Overseth ’80 Mary Callaway ‘62 Elizabeth Guthman ’60 Amanda Peiffer Emily Carlson ‘96 Rachel Harrington ’85 In memory of Elizabeth B. Brophy ‘51 Judith Carroll ‘74 Jean Hiersteiner ’43 Elisabeth Pendleton ’62 Eunice Chambers ‘77 Clay Hiles Ronald Perera Bootie Charon ‘59 Ann Hilliard ‘59 Eugene Povirk In memory of Dorothy Miller Lewis ’59, Edward Charon, Gertrude Charon In memory of Helen F. Wellmeier ’31 Susan Proctor ’68 & Gordon Reid Allison Hindman-Harvey ’06 E. Upshur Puckette ’57 Carol Christ Jennifer Hughes ’84 Abigail Quandt ’77 Deborah Cushman ‘77 Catherine Jenkins ’96 In honor of Martin Antonetti Mary Dangremond ‘76 M. Patricia Jensen ’52 Catherine Saines ’89 Gail de los Santos Anderson ‘79 Carolyn Judson ’49 Cathy Schoen ’70 Marie-Jose Delage In memory of Elizabeth G. von Klemperer ‘44 Marcia Schofield ’65 Lauren Dillard ‘73 Paula Kaufman ’68 In memory of Mary Dunn Ellen Doon ‘92 Helen LaFave ’85 Virginia Sharpe ’81 Anne Dorny ‘55 John Lancaster ’53 William Sheehan Berkley Duck In memory of Ruth Mortimer Lancaster ’53 Barbara Simanek ’73 Emily Egan 2004 Marian Leibold ’77 Amy Southwick ’64 Paula Einaudi ‘65 In honor of Lisa W.Callahan ’77 Sarah Stewart ’54 In honor of Judith B. Milestone ‘66 Jennifer Levy ’76 Diane Tohn ’56 Barbara Townsend ’74 Winifred Black ’97 Christina Fitzpatrick ’03 In memory of Lyn J. Corbett ’74 Amanda Bowen Maureen Flannery Sarah Trabucchi 2000 Margaret Browar ’66 Stephanie Frost ’77 Anne Van Wart ‘88 Esta Busi ’59 C. Lissa Ganter ’63 Lydia Vandenbergh Caroline Carbaugh ’66 Katherine Ginnetty ’81 In memory of Ellen-Fairbanks D. Bodman ’45 Elizabeth Carpenter ’93 Claire Goldman ’57 Mary Vos ’52 Kathleen Carr ’59 Ann Gordon ’66 Mary Walker ’58 Mary Carter ’64 Theanne Griffith ’08 Kalle Weeks ’67 In memory of Constance Wiesman ’67 Margaret Guyer ’90 C. Ann Welsh ’76 Sarah Carter ’03 Kristin Halloran ’02 Margaret Wise ’51 Clara-Mae Chittum ’66 Elizabeth Hansen ’64 Andrea Wolfman ’75 Laura Clary ’97 Catherine Harley ’87 Nancy Wood ’73 Cynthia Clayton ’64 Lily Hart ’05 Kathryn Wood ’86 Wynne Delmhorst ’62 Mary Harvey ’75 Constance Zack ’66 Wynne Delmhorst ’62 Joan Hershey ’81 Karen Zens ’71 Patricia DeMallie ’75 Mary Hinds ’76 Jane Dietzel-Cairns ’85 Mary Hinkel ’73 Individual In honor of Barbara Kellum & Betsy Hitchcock ’77 Jessica Nicoll ’83 Ann Alpers ’84 Sandra Doucett Barbara Holden ’69 Shani Armbruster ’03 Diane Hummelbrunner ’88 James Dowd ’74 Adele Baydin ’51 Eve Hunter ’12 In memory of Yolanda King ’76 In honor of Sadie Dingfelder ’01 Melissa Draper ’77 Mary Irwin Sarah Bellrichard ’94 Kathryn Dunn ’75 In honor of Jenny Kuntz Frost ’78 McKey Berkman ’77 Roberta Klein ’74 Judith Everitt ’71 Jean Berry ’58 In memory of Elizabeth Gallaher von In memory of Michele B. Zuckerman ’71 In memory of Susan von Salis ’79 Klemperer ’44, Nora Crow, Paul Pickrel Jean Kalt Field ’43 & Vernon Harward Emily Knox ’98 Ellen Pskowski ’75 Robin Smith Barbara Kwasnik In memory of Joan Garret-Goodyear In honor of Emily Smith ’17 In honor of Amy F.Hogan ’99 Maja Razlog ’97 Smith College Club of Belmont Allison La Pointe ‘97 Judith Reynolds ’69 Cynthia Sommer ’75 Marjorie Lamberti ‘59 Julie Richter ’83 Nancy Steger ’59 Shannon Last ’01 Anne Rittershofer-Neumann ’58 Nan Stifel ’77 In honor of Douglas Patey In memory of C.R. Rittershofer In memory of Ann Smith & William Oram & Mary Rittershofer Marcia Stuart ’63 Beverly Leach ’67 Katharine Robinson Jaime Taylor ’06 Cheryl Lewy ’71 Liisa Rogers ’82 Marianne Thomas ’77 In honor of Kate Kelly ’73 In memory of Virginia T. Rogers ’20 Mara Toone ’96 Frances Licht ’56 Marta Rudolph 2014 Ada Gregor Trinkaus-Randall Teri Lilly ’89 Antoinette Russin ’61 In honor of Jennifer Trinkaus-Randall ’06 Sara Mallari ’87 In memory of Mary B. Smith ’08 & In memory of Galina Gorokhoff ’43 In honor of Olivia Mallari ’16 M. Beverly Ryburn ’43 Jennifer Vacca ’89 & Sophia Mallari ’17 In honor of Martha H.Villechaise ’43 Alice Wareham ’44 Leslie Mark ’83 Joan Schuman ’62 In memory of Elizabeth F. Lewis ’44 Marilyn Martin ’57 Susan Seamans ’70 Barbara Weeks ’53 Lydia Mitchell ’80 Kathryn Service Natalie White ’85 Turalu Murdock ’66 In honor of Barbara B. Blumenthal ’75 Jaqueline Wren ’59 Jane Murray ’59 Carole Settle ’64 Alicia Wyman ’82 Katherine Naughton ’70 Sondra Shair ’56 Victoria Yablonsky ’73 Christine Nolan ’81 H. Gay Siccardi ’58 Helen Ogden ’63 In memory of Mary Ann Javelera ’58 Student/Recent Alumnae Mary Placke ’58 Diana Simplair ’87 Kathryn Bonomi ‘78 Beth Pryor ’84 Nancy Smith ’50 In memory of Sandra Streepey ’58 In honor of Mary Irwin Caren Borland ‘68 Nancy Lerner ’63 Korri Krajicek ’07 In memory of Kimberly Morris In memory of Lois Van Hoesen ’68 Julia MacKenzie ’79 & Frances Norton Glover ’68 & Leah Zwerver ’07 David Magidson ’58 Sarah Caspar ’57 Wendy Reeve ’92 In memory of Hinda P. Magidson ’58 Katharine Chandler ’97 Sarah Schroer ’77 Laura Marks ’96 Susanna Coit ’08 Laura Shannon ’87 Elisa Maselli ’74 Carla Cooke ’01 Stephanie Miller ’57 Matching Gifts Margaret Ford ’80 Lisa Moline ’84 In memory of Ruth Mortimer Lancaster ’53 Boeing Company Jane Palmer ’62 Margaret Gibbs ’52 Bank of America Charitable Foundation Joyce Palmer ’90 Margaret Hartshorn ’73 Jackson National Life Insurance Company Anne-Marie Papandrea ’86 In honor of Joan W. Howard ’73 Thomas Reuters Corporation Anne Pidano ’73 Dorothy Helly ’52 Wells Fargo Foundation Janet Rosenberg ’54 In memory of Helen L. Callaway ’50 ________________ Lauren Siket ’07 Jane Holt ’69 Jocelyn Thomas ’08 CURRENT LIBRARY FUNDS In memory of Catherine Campbell Rhorer ’69 & Elizabeth Gallaher von Klemperer ’44 Gifts Under $20 Lois Homma ’72 Miriam Cady ’04 College Archives In memory of Frances Dalton ’72 & Paulina Do ’10 Nima Eshghi ’87 Nancy Ashton ’72 Kyle Faget ’97 Nanette Holben In memory of Mary Maples Dunn Sarah Honenberger ’74 In memory of Danielle Drumke ’95 Athena Kimball ’51 In honor of Barbara M. Collins ’48 Paula Frazier ’72 In memory of Mary Maples Dunn Nancy Husbands ’62 Anne Galli ’02 Jane Knowles Amanda Izzo ’99 Martha Gray ’83 In Memory of Herbert J.
Recommended publications
  • 2019 20 Catalog
    20 ◆ 2019 Catalog S MITH C OLLEGE 2 019–20 C ATALOG Smith College Northampton, Massachusetts 01063 S MITH C OLLEGE C ATALOG 2 0 1 9 -2 0 Smith College Northampton, Massachusetts 01063 413-584-2700 2 Contents Inquiries and Visits 4 Advanced Placement 36 How to Get to Smith 4 International Baccalaureate 36 Academic Calendar 5 Interview 37 The Mission of Smith College 6 Deferred Entrance 37 History of Smith College 6 Deferred Entrance for Medical Reasons 37 Accreditation 8 Transfer Admission 37 The William Allan Neilson Chair of Research 9 International Students 37 The Ruth and Clarence Kennedy Professorship in Renaissance Studies 10 Visiting Year Programs 37 The Academic Program 11 Readmission 37 Smith: A Liberal Arts College 11 Ada Comstock Scholars Program 37 The Curriculum 11 Academic Rules and Procedures 38 The Major 12 Requirements for the Degree 38 Departmental Honors 12 Academic Credit 40 The Minor 12 Academic Standing 41 Concentrations 12 Privacy and the Age of Majority 42 Student-Designed Interdepartmental Majors and Minors 13 Leaves, Withdrawal and Readmission 42 Five College Certificate Programs 13 Graduate and Special Programs 44 Advising 13 Admission 44 Academic Honor System 14 Residence Requirements 44 Special Programs 14 Leaves of Absence 44 Accelerated Course Program 14 Degree Programs 44 The Ada Comstock Scholars Program 14 Nondegree Studies 46 Community Auditing: Nonmatriculated Students 14 Housing and Health Services 46 Five College Interchange 14 Finances 47 Smith Scholars Program 14 Financial Assistance 47 Study Abroad Programs 14 Changes in Course Registration 47 Smith Programs Abroad 15 Policy Regarding Completion of Required Course Work 47 Smith Consortial and Approved Study Abroad 16 Directory 48 Off-Campus Study Programs in the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Weekend Program May 16-19, 2019 HOURS a Cell Phone
    REUNION Weekend Program May 16-19, 2019 HOURS a cell phone. Anyone who is injured or becomes ill while on campus should seek Alumnae House medical attention at the Cooley Dickinson Thursday, 8:30 a.m.–9 p.m. Hospital, 30 Locust Street, 413-582-2000. elcome to Smith! We’re excited you’re here to celebrate Reunion Friday and Saturday, 8 a.m.–10 p.m. and the Smith friendships that have sustained you since graduation. Sunday, 8 a.m.–1 p.m. W LOST AND FOUND Inquiries about articles lost on campus Registration/Check-In Hours Alumnae always tell us that one of the greatest gifts of their Smith may be made Thursday through Sunday Alumnae House Tent at the Campus Center information desk, experience is the deep connection they share with other Smithies. No Thursday, 4–9 p.m. 413-585-4801. On Monday, all unclaimed matter how much time passes, the bonds among Smith alumnae endure Friday, 8 a.m.–10 p.m. articles will be taken to the Alumnae and only grow stronger. Saturday, 8 a.m.–7 p.m. House. Smith College is not responsible for lost or stolen articles. SHUTTLE SERVICE This weekend is all about connection—a chance for all of us to come together for Smith. From the alumnae parade to Illumination Night to Shuttle service is provided for on-campus SPECIAL PROGRAM faculty presentations, we want you to once again experience the power transportation only. For shuttle service, Class of ’69 Exhibit call 413-585-2400. Representative Works of 13 Class of Smith, its place in the world, and its remarkable legacy of creating the of ’69 Visual Artists leaders and visionaries the world needs.
    [Show full text]
  • Honolulu Advertiser & Star-Bulletin Obituaries
    Honolulu Advertiser & Star-Bulletin Obituaries January 1 - December 31, 2001 L LEVI LOPAKA ESPERAS LAA, 27, of Wai'anae, died April 18, 2001. Born in Honolulu. A Mason. Survived by wife, Bernadette; daughter, Kassie; sons, Kanaan, L.J. and Braidon; parents, Corinne and Joe; brothers, Joshua and Caleb; sisters, Darla and Sarah. Memorial service 5 p.m. Monday at Ma'ili Beach Park, Tumble Land. Aloha attire. Arrangements by Ultimate Cremation Services of Hawai'i. [Adv 29/4/2001] Mabel Mersberg Laau, 92, of Kamuela, Hawaii, who was formerly employed with T. Doi & Sons, died Wednesday April 18, 2001 at home. She was born in Puako, Hawaii. She is survived by sons Jack and Edward Jr., daughters Annie Martinson and Naomi Kahili, sister Rachael Benjamin, eight grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and a great-great-grandchild. Services: 11 a.m. Tuesday at Dodo Mortuary. Call after 10 a.m. Burial: Homelani Memorial Park. Casual attire. [SB 20/4/2001] PATRICIA ALFREDA LABAYA, 60, of Wai‘anae, died Jan. 1, 2001. Born in Hilo, Hawai‘i. Survived by husband, Richard; daughters, Renee Wynn, Lucy Evans, Marietta Rillera, Vanessa Lewi, Beverly, and Nadine Viray; son, Richard Jr.; mother, Beatrice Alvarico; sisters, Randolyn Marino, Diane Whipple, Pauline Noyes, Paulette Alvarico, Laureen Leach, Iris Agan and Rusielyn Alvarico; brothers, Arnold, Francis and Fredrick Alvarico; 17 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren. Visitation 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at Nu‘uanu Mortuary, service 7 p.m. Visitation also 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the mortuary; burial to follow at Hawai‘i State Veterans Cemetery.
    [Show full text]
  • President Drew Gilpin Faust by John S
    A Scholar in the House President Drew Gilpin Faust by john s. rosenberg radition and the twenty-first century were tas crest backed up the bust. Carved into the heraldic paneling tangled together in Barker Center’s Thompson Room on either side of the fireplace were great Harvard names: T on the afternoon of February 11, when Drew Gilpin Bulfinch and Channing, Lowell and Longfellow, Agassiz and Faust conducted her first news conference as Har- Adams, Holmes and Allston. Huge portraits of iconic Harvar- vard’s president-elect. dians hung on the walls: astronomer Percival Lowell, for science; Daniel Chester French’s bronze bust of John Harvard, perched Le Baron Russell Briggs, professor of English and of rhetoric and on the mantelpiece of the enormous fireplace behind the lectern, oratory, a humanist and University citizen who served as dean of peered down on Faust and the other speakers—and a stone veri- Harvard College and—nearly simultaneously—dean of the Fac- 24 July - August 2007 April 2007: Drew Gilpin Faust at her then-o∞ce as dean of the Radcli≠e Institute for Advanced Study, photographed by Jim Harrison ulty of Arts and Sciences and (she is an accomplished historian), to an extent not matched president of Radcli≠e Col- since chemist James Bryant Conant became president in 1933. lege; and, from the world of Second, because Faust has been dean of the Radcli≠e Institute public service, Theodore for Advanced Study since 2001, Harvard has turned to one of its Roosevelt, A.B. 1880, LL.D. own—the first truly internal candidate since Derek Bok, then 1902, an Overseer from 1895 dean of Harvard Law School, became president in 1971.
    [Show full text]
  • PRESS RELEASE the Historical Society of Pennsylvania 1300 Locust Street Philadelphia, PA 19107 (215) 732-6200
    PRESS RELEASE The Historical Society of Pennsylvania 1300 Locust Street Philadelphia, PA 19107 (215) 732-6200 www.hsp.org For Immediate Release Media Contact: Mary Ann Coyle 215-732-6200, ext. 220 [email protected] The Historical Society of Pennsylvania presents Founder’s Award to Local Teacher and Three Nationally Recognized Educators Philadelphia-- The Historical Society of Pennsylvania will present its prestigious Founder’s Award at its annual Founder’s Awards dinner on Saturday, April 17, at the Society. This year’s awards honor four individuals for their Contributions to Historical Education: Donald G. Brownlow, Mary Maples Dunn, Sheldon Hackney, and Gary B. Nash. Donald G. Brownlow, of The Haverford School, was nominated for the Founder’s Award as a particularly distinguished and effective Philadelphia area teacher. He is renowned for his ability to stimulate students’ interest and enthusiasm in history, his creativity in addressing historical issues, and his legacy of nurturing student historians. Mary Maples Dunn, co-executive of the American Philosophical Society, has shaped history’s education and future as a professor at Bryn Mawr College, as President of Smith College, as director of Radcliffe College’s Schlesinger Library, and as Acting Dean of the Radcliffe Institute. She is known as a superbly engaging teacher with lasting influence on students. Sheldon Hackney has served as chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities under President Clinton, president of the University of Pennsylvania, provost of Princeton University, and president of Tulane University. Now teaching at the University of Pennsylvania, Professor Hackney is a distinguished historian of the American South, the Civil Rights Movement, and America of the 1960s.
    [Show full text]
  • Second Berkshire Conference on the History of Women
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Women's Studies Quarterly Archives and Special Collections 1975 Second Berkshire Conference on the History of Women Mary Dunn How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/wsq/223 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] SECOND BERKSHIRE CONFERENCE and the professions; women and social institutions, such as church, ON THE HISTORY OF WOMEN trade unions or schools. This program also highlighted the new methodological developments which are essential to women's The Berkshire Conference of Women Historians decided in 1972 history, such as demography, oral history, psychohistory. Many to lend support to research in the history of women. The field scholars reported finding greater interest in their research than was regarded with some suspicion by many historians who did not they had expected and more historians engaged in active research see it as legitimate, and insisted that it was a "fad" whose time than they knew existed. Therefore an important contribution of would soon pass. Moreover, too many people doing research in the conference was the opening of communication among the field were working in isolation; rarely does one history aepart­ scholars in new fields, which will help avoid duplication of re­ ment employ more than one person working in the history of search, foster cooperation, further exchanges of information, and women. Professors Lois Banner and Mary Hartman made the first offer opportunities to test hypotheses and interpretations.
    [Show full text]
  • Cabinet of Culinary Curiosities:Books
    Six recipes for puff pastry from 1669 to 1970. Eating ice cream in France in the late 19th century. Dining with gladiatorial entertainment.These are just three of the offerings included in Cabinet of Culinary Curiosities: Books & Manuscripts from the Mortimer Rare Book Room. Other items feature: a tribute to Julia Child and her fellow Smith College classmate, cooking teacher, and writer, Charlotte Turgeon;Jack Sprat and the space race; cooking and dining for kings, queens, and mice; and French opinions about Chinese food and table manners.This array of more than fifty culinary curiosities from books and manuscripts fea- tures images and descriptions of food and eating from the 16th through the 21st centuries. My inspiration for creating Cabinet of Culinary Curiosities was Table for Ten:The Art, History and Science of Food,a series of exhibitions and events organized for the fall of 2010 by Museums10, a group of museum and historical sites in the Pioneer Valley of Massachusetts.Although there are some cookbooks and housekeeping manuals here, I tried to find unusual, and often amusing, images and text within the culinary theme.Thus, I included a late-19th cen- tury etiquette manual which includes rules for proper decorum at the dinner table, the first Betty Crocker pic- ture cookbook, another cookbook with an aluminum cover, and an English diagram of plates of food laid out for a royal banquet in 1710. I also chose to show a 16th-cen- tury description of honey bees written in Latin, an account of an Amsterdam merchant cooking tulip bulbs as if they were onions, and a modern artist book with printing plates made from cooked spaghetti.
    [Show full text]
  • The College News 1988-2-17 Vol. 9 No. 8 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1988)
    Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Bryn Mawr College News Collections, Digitized Books 1988 The olC lege News 1988-2-17 Vol. 9 No. 8 Students of Bryn Mawr College Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews Custom Citation Students of Bryn Mawr College, The College News 1988-2-17 Vol. 9 No. 8 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1988). This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews/1381 For more information, please contact [email protected]. EGE NEWS BRYN MAWR COLLEGE February 17,1988 Smith minority prof, resigns; what about Bryn Mawr? BY L0RR1E KIM ber issue of The Sophian, Smith's student-run put on a back burner." Mance describes the Nowrojee expresses concern for Bryn newspaper, Butler acknowledged the "good current campus mood as watchful and rather Mawr, as one of the Smith "counterparts" Jtor the past few months, Smith College intentions that do exist at Smith," but pointed cautious, following last semester's "almost referred to by Burger: "I guess that the inci- has been the focus of nationwide media atten- out that playing down the significance of catastrophic" tumult: "It was a very emo- dent at Smith reinforced my questions about tion. The much-publicized resignation of racism is a naive approach that leaves "racial tional time for students, stressful and how seriously minority concerns are taken. I Johnella E.
    [Show full text]
  • Abolition: Seeanti-Slavery Academy of Music, Phila., 99 Act of Supremacy
    INDEX Abolition: See Anti-slavery American Peace Society, 241 Academy of Music, Phila., 99 American Philosophical Society, 248, 308 Act of Supremacy, 383 American Psychiatric Association, 187 Act of Toleration, 434, 436-437, 439 American Railroad Journal, 168 Act of Uniformity, 284 American Revolution: American Patriots and Adams, Henry, 118 the Ritual of Revolution, by Peter Shaw, Adams, John, 219, 345, 353, 491; Pennsyl- rev., 345-348; The "Centinel": Warnings vania Federal District Court, 311; and of a Revolution, Elizabeth I. Nybakken, Timothy Pickering, 225-226 ed., rev., 217-218; "Controlling the Op- Adams, John, schoolteacher, 67 position in Pennsylvania During the Adams, John Quincy, 119 American Revolution," by Anne M. Ous- Adams, Samuel, The Old Revolutionaries: Po- terhout, 2—34: John Adams and the Diplo- litical hives in the Age of Samuel Adams, by macy of the American Revolution, by James Pauline Maier, rev., 348-350 H. Hutson, rev., 111-114; Letters of Del- Adams, Willi Paul, 351 egates to the Congress, 1774-1789, Paul Addams, Jane, 241, 363 H.Smith, et al., eds., rev., 105-106: Light- Ader, Clement, 324 Horse Harry Lees and the Legacy of the Ahlstrom, Sidney E., 453 American Revolution, by Charles Royster, Aitken, Robert, 355 rev., 495: The Old Revolutionaries: Polit- Alden Park Corporation, Phila., 247 ical Lives in the Age of Samuel Adams, by Alexander, John K., Render Them Submissive: Pauline Maier, rev., 348-350; The Press Responses to Poverty in Philadelphia, and the American Revolution, Bernard Bar- 1760-1800, rev. 109-110 lyn and John B. Hench, eds., rev., Aliens, registration of, 1717, 251-253 350-351; Revolution, Reform and the Pol- Alison, Francis, 218 itics of American Taxation, by Robert A.
    [Show full text]
  • Richard Slator Dunn
    Richard Slator Dunn Education Harvard College, BA Magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, 1950 Princeton University, MA in History, 1952; PhD in History, 1955 Employment 1954-55 Instructor in History, Princeton University 1955-57 Instructor in History, University of Michigan 1957-63 Assistant Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania 1963-68 Associate Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania 1968-84 Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania 1969-70 Visiting Professor of History, University of Michigan 1970 Acting Chairman, Department of History, University of Pennsylvania 1972-77 Chairman, Department of History, University of Pennsylvania 1978-87 Co-editor, with Mary Maples Dunn, The Papersof William Penn, Historical Society of Pennsylvania 1978- Director, Philadelphia Center for Early American Studies, University of Pennsylvania 1984-96 Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professor of American History, University of Pennsylvania 1987-88 Harold Vyvyan Harmsworth Professor of American History, Oxford University 1992- Editor, Early American Studies series, University of Pennsylvania Press 1996- Nichols Professor Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania Publications Books 1. Puritansand Yankees: The Winthrop Dynasty of New England, 1630-1717 (Princeton University Press, 1962), xii, 379pp.; paperback edition by W W Norton, 1971. 2. The Age of Religious Wars, 1559-1689 (W W Norton, 1970), xii, 244pp. Hardback and paperback. Expanded 2d ed., 1559-1715 (Norton, 1979), xii, 303 pp. Hardback and paperback. 3. Sugar and Slaves: The Rise of the PlanterClass in the English West Indies, 1624-1713 (University of North Carolina Press, 1972), xx, 359pp. British edition by Jonathan Cape, London, 1973. Paperback edition by W W Norton, 1973. Richard S. Dunn: Achievements 347 4.
    [Show full text]
  • Viewing Our Exhibitions, Or at One of Our Many Engaging and Enlightening Public Programs
    The Library Company of Philadelphia The Annual Report of the Library Company of Philadelphia for the Years 2016 & 2017 Years for the of Philadelphia Company of the Library Report Annual The 2 0 1 6 Philadelphia of Company Library The THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE LIBRARY COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA FOR THE YEAR 2016 PHILADELPHIA: Te Library Company of Philadelphia 1314 Locust Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107 2019 AR2016.indd 1 10/8/2019 2:42:18 PM President Howell K. Rosenberg Vice President Maude de Schauensee Secretary John F. Meigs Treasurer Charles B. Landreth Trustees Rebecca W. Bushnell Randall M. Miller Harry S. Cherken, Jr. Stephen P. Mullin Nicholas D. Constan, Jr. Daniel K. Richter Maude de Schauensee Howell K. Rosenberg Charles P. Keates, Esq. Richard Wood Snowden Charles B. Landreth Michael F. Suarez, S.J. Michael B. Mann John C. Tuten John F. Meigs Edward M. Waddington Louise Marshall Kelly Clarence Wolf Trustees Emeriti Peter A. Benoliel David W. Maxey Lois G. Brodsky Elizabeth P. McLean Robert J. Christian Martha Hamilton Morris B. Robert DeMento Charles E. Rosenberg Davida T. Deutsch Carol E. Soltis Beatrice W. B. Garvan Seymour I. Toll William H. Helfand Helen S. Weary Roger S. Hillas Michael Zinman Director Richard S. Newman Director Emeritus John C. Van Horne Cover: Marines hold Liberty Sing in front of Liberty Statue in Phila during World War. Books Wanted for our Men (1914-1919). AR2016.indd 2 10/8/2019 2:42:18 PM TABLE OF CONTENTS REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT 4 REPORT OF THE TREASURER 8 REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR 10 EXHIBITIONS
    [Show full text]
  • 2015 16 Catalog
    16 ◆ Catalog 2015 S MITH C OLLEGE 2 0 1 5 – 1 6 C ATALOG Smith College Northampton, Massachusetts 01063 Notice of Nondiscrimination 2015–16 Class Schedule Smith College is committed to maintaining a diverse community in an atmosphere of mutual respect and appreciation of differences. A student may not elect more than one course Although you must know how to read the Smith College does not discriminate in its in a single time block except in rare cases that course schedule, do not let it shape your pro- educational and employment policies on the bases involve no actual time conflict. gram initially. In September, you should first of race, color, creed, religion, national/ethnic Normally, each course is scheduled to fit choose a range of courses, and then see how origin, sex, sexual orientation, age, or with regard into one set of lettered blocks in this time grid. they can fit together. Student and faculty advis- to the bases outlined in the Veterans Readjustment Most meet two or three times a week on alter- ers will help you. Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act. nate days. Smith’s admission policies and practices are guided by the same principle, concerning women applying to the undergraduate program and all applicants to the graduate programs. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday For more information, please contact the adviser for equity complaints, College Hall 103, A 8–8:50 a.m. A 8–8:50 a.m. A 8–8:50 a.m. B 8–8:50 a.m. A 8–8:50 a.m.
    [Show full text]