Covering the Middle East: Journalism in the Midst of Crisis — An Evening with Trudy Rubin

Philadelphia Area Smithies, come hear an esteemed alumna speak on journalism, current events, and public affairs on October 7th at 7pm. Email PhillySmithClub@Gmail.com for details and to RSVP.

You may click the DONATE button to pay the RSVP fee for yourself and guests.

$15.00 for club members
$20.00 for non-members and guests
$30.00 for non-members who wish to renew their membership

 
Trudy Rubin is the foreign affairs columnist for The Philadelphia Inquirer and travels abroad frequently to South Asia and the Middle East. Her “Worldview” column appears twice weekly in the Inquirer and runs regularly in many other U.S. newspapers. She has special expertise on Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, the Israeli-Palestinian issue, international terrorism, and U.S. foreign policy. She visited Afghanistan and Pakistan twice in 2009, most recently for three weeks in November; between 2003 and 2008 she made ten trips to Iraq and two to Iran and also wrote from Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, Syria, Egypt, Lebanon, Turkey, China and South Korea.Before coming to Inquirer in December 1983, Rubin was Middle East correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor, covering Israel and the Arab world, and lived in Jerusalem and Beirut.Earlier, she was a national correspondent for The Monitor, covering election campaigns and national political and social issues. Prior to that she was a staff writer on American politics for The Economist of London. During the Prague Spring of 1968, she worked in Prague, Czechoslovakia as a radio correspondent.

In 2001, Rubin was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in commentary for her columns on the Middle East. She is also the winner of the 2008 Edward Weintal prize for international reporting.

In 1993, she served as a Jefferson Fellow at the East-West Center in Honolulu. She was invited as an exchange journalist to the Moscow News in Moscow in 1990. She spent 1975-6 as a fellow at the Center for International Affairs at Harvard University as a participant in the program for senior diplomats started by Henry Kissinger. In 1974-5, she was an Alicia Patterson Foundation Fellow in Cairo and Beirut.

Rubin is a graduate of Smith College and the London School of Economics. Follow Rubin on Twitter@trudyrubin.

 

Smithie of the Month–Lisa Carmalt, August 2014

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Smithie of The Month
Name: Lisa Platt Carmalt
Class Year: 1968

How long have you lived in Philadelphia? What’s your favorite restaurant in the city?
I moved to Philadelphia from New Jersey 5 1⁄2 years ago. I like the Vietnam Café on 47th Street.

What are you up to now?
I am retired from a career as a non-profit director, consultant to non-profits, and instructor of English as a Second Language. An organization I founded in Trenton, Interfaith Caregivers of Greater Mercer County (in-home services to seniors and people with disabilities), is now in its 20th year.  I helped start similar programs around the country through the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.  While retired I have volunteered for several organizations which promote literacy.  I’m taking classes through an outreach program of Temple U.  I visit my grandchildren in Seattle whenever possible.

What house did you live in on campus and what was your favorite thing about it?
I lived in Gillett which was convenient to the Hatfield language building where I studied Russian and to JM Green and Hills Chapel where I practiced organ. Of course my friends were the best part.

Why did you choose Smith?
Partly because my mother and others I admired had gone there. Also it was strong in languages and music. And I liked the house system.

Who was your favorite professor?
I especially liked one of my Russian Lit profs, Maria Banerjee, and my piano prof, Lory Wallfisch.

Do you have a favorite/most memorable Smith moment?
The ’68 Chamber Singers European tour was a highlight. I still enjoy choral singing locally and perform with an a cappella quartet in Trenton.

How did your Smith experience shape your life?
Smith prepared me to work for change. The college was in a time of transition and re-definition while I was there. The women’s movement and civil rights were gaining momentum in the world outside. The role of single-sex colleges was being re-examined. I absorbed a desire to make my community a better place, which I have attempted to do since then as a non-profit leader and as a volunteer. Since moving to Philly I have loved working with young alums on revitalizing our local Smith club. It has been exciting to hear from them about the many changes that have made the college what it is today. Here’s to the new Smith of the 21st century!

Center City Book Club/Philly Views

Philadelphia-area Smithies, did you know we have two thriving book clubs in the area? One is for Center City residents and the immediate environs of metropolitan Philadelphia and the other is for suburban and regional residents. Below follow some photos from a recent meeting of the Center City book club–

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Photos courtesy of Mary Ellen Wilson ’90 (also an editor at Quirk Books!)

The next meeting of the Center City club is September 18 and they are reading The Light Between the Oceans. Please see our Book Clubs page for more information. 

Tour of the Grand Opera House – Open to all Seven Sisters Alums!

From the Visiting Delaware website: http://www.visitwilmingtonde.com/listings/index.cfm?listingID=583

The Grand Opera House in Wilmington, Delaware welcomes the Smith College Club of Philadelphia and the Seven Sisters Club!

Complimentary tour of The Grand

led by Smith alum Meredith Mitchell McAloon (’10)

4 PM on Saturday, August 16th

Drinks and food to follow at nearby Chelsea Tavern.

chelsea tavernSeven Sisters Grand tour

 RSVP to PhillySmithClub@gmail.com by August 15th.

818 North Market Street

Wilmington, DE 19801

As one of the largest non-profit presenters in Wilmington, The Grand’s mission is to produce live arts in the heart of the city. You can learn more about The Grand’s upcoming season and our extensive arts education programs by visiting: http://www.thegrandwilmington.org.

Important Notice to Grand Patrons:

The Caleb Boggs Federal Building at the corner of Ninth & King Streets behind The Grand is protected by Homeland Security, and the no-parking zone on King Street is strictly enforced. Cars parked there illegally will be ticketed AND towed.

We want your entire evening at The Grand to be an enjoyable experience, so when attending a show, please find other street parking in the area or consider one of the convenient and extremely affordable garages near The Grand (Doubletree Hotel, 8th & King, $3 evenings; HyPark, 10th & Shipley, $4 evenings).

Train transit directions from Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station are available via Google Maps. Click here for Acela directions and here for SEPTA directions.

Sendoff Party for New Smithies

The Smith College Club of Philadelphia invites you to help send off members of the new Smith class of 2018 from the Philadelphia region THIS Saturday, July 26th. Enjoy light refreshments and welcome the newest members of the Smith community at the home of Deborah Davis, class of 1976.

Please let us know if you plan to attend. You can email phillysmithclub@gmail.com up to the day of the event.

On the 18th – July event!

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Our monthly networking event will take place at Zavino on Friday, July 18. Join us for good company and delicious wine. Board members Kate and Susie will be on hand to greet you! Look for a Smith College sign on one of the bar tables and you will have found our group.

The details:

Zavino

112 S 13th St

Philadelphia, PA 19107

215.732.2400

5:30pm

Smithie of the Month: July

Name:  Colby Loew

Class Year: 2013

How long have you lived in Philadelphia? I moved here just a few weeks after commencement, so I have lived in Philadelphia for one year this June.

What’s your favorite restaurant in the city?  The little pizza shop across the street from where I live, Fiesta Pizza, has the best hoagies!

What are you up to now?  I just finished with my first year teaching high school chemistry across the bridge over in Camden, New Jersey.

What house did you live in on campus and what was your favorite thing about it? My first two years I lived in Lawrence House, then I finished up as Reslife in Gardiner during junior and senior year.  Lawrence House was awesome because I met my core group of best friends there, and Gardiner had the best house parties.

Why did you choose Smith?  I first came to look at Smith because I wanted to go to a women’s college that was strong in the sciences.  When I got to campus, it just felt right.  I was so incredibly impressed by all of the students and professors I spoke that I knew it was the perfect fit.

What is your favorite Smith tradition and why?  Now that I’ve been away from Smith, I have a got a serious, new found appreciation for Friday afternoon tea.  It was great to have the chance to catch up with people in the house after long, stressful weeks of studying and assignments.

Who was your favorite professor/what was your best class?  My favorite professor was Cristina Suarez in the chemistry department, and though I never took a class with her she was my honors thesis advisor.  Professor David Bickar taught my favorite class which was pharmacology and drug design—he told a lot of crazy stories in there.

What makes a Smithie unique?  A Smithie is confident, creative, eloquent, and the ideal candidate for any position.

How did your Smith experience shape your life?  Smith prepared me for a lifetime of learning.  I use skills I developed at Smith in my life every day.  Even more importantly, I will carry the friendships I made at Smith with me throughout my life.  My best friends at Smith have become my family.

June’s “On the 18th” Happy Hour

Philly-area Smithies: Join us for our monthly happy hour this Wednesday, the 18th. This month we will be descending on Local 44, an artisan beer joint, to attend their beer tasting school. Look for a brunette wearing a Smith sweatshirt & holding a Smith College Club of Philadelphia sign. Details below.

Where: 4333 Spruce St, Philadelphia, PA 19104

Time: 5:00-7:00pm.

Date: Wednesday, June 18th, 2014

Come in the Bottle Shop entrance and let them know you’re there for the tasting. Space is limited so be sure to arrive as early as possible.


local44Beer-Tasting

Beer School at the Bottle Shop
+ + Every THIRD Wednesday of the Month 5pm + +

Beer School has long been an opportunity to learn a little something about the beer 
we love to serve at Local 44.

There is now a donation required
to attend Beer School. 

You can “pay what you wish”, but you have to pay something.

100% of your Beer School donation goes directly
to Share Our Strength, an organization that aims to end
childhood hunger in our community and across the country.

As always, samples of each beer we will discuss
are being offered as our treat to you during the class.

Due to space constraints, we limit Beer School
sessions to the first 20 people in the door.

No child should grow up hungry in America, but one in five children struggles with hunger. Share Our Strength’s No Kid Hungry campaign is ending childhood hunger in America by ensuring all children get the healthy food they need, every day.

Can’t attend Beer School but want to make
a donation to Share Our Strength?
HOORAY! We’ve made it easy for you — just click here!

Visit www.nokidhungry.org
for more information and ways to get involved. 

Smithie of the Month: Bernadette Miller ’90

Smithie of The Month

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Name:  Bernadette Miller

Class Year: 1990 AC

How long have you lived in Philadelphia? I moved to Philadelphia in 1994. I rejoined The Hay Group, the company I had worked with in Pittsburgh as an Administrative Manager prior to enrolling at Smith.  Because Hay was headquartered here, I was already familiar with the city prior to moving here for the job. When my job in Marketing and Communications at Hay was eliminated in 1997, I decided to stay in Philly.

Why did you choose Smith?

In 1996, I saw a piece on CBS’s Sunday Morning television show with Charles Kurault about Smith’s Ada Comstock Program, and was swept away with the idea of getting my degree at Smith.  I was impressed with the women’s stories and the Smith environment.  In addition to working full time in a responsible job, I had been attending the University of Pittsburgh part time at night, and was almost halfway through, but I had run out of steam attending school part time while working, and lacked the motivation to keep going.

During this time, I was looking at condos in Shadyside, my Pittsburgh neighborhood. After viewing the Smith piece on television, goodbye condo!  I went to the Atlantic Bookstore on a lunch hour, looked up Smith’s telephone number, called the Ada Comstock Office, and scheduled an appointment for an in-person interview. After visiting the campus for my interview, I was even more convinced that Smith was the right place for me to experience life as a full-time student.

Who was your favorite professor/what was your best class? Two professors and classes come to mind: Joan Garrett-Goodyear’s Writing Autobiography class and Elizabeth Harries’ Romantic Period Comparative Literature seminar.  Joan and Betsey were smart, inclusive, open, empathetic, eloquent, and very aware of gender and class issues– truly the best of what Smith had to offer. Although their backgrounds did not represent mine, they understood and appreciated me. We were different, but as women we had much in common.  And they actually made working hard fun.

What’s your favorite restaurant in the city?  

My favorite restaurants include: McNally’s Tavern in Chestnut Hill (Meg McNally is a Smith graduate), Paris Grill in Chestnut Hill, and The London Grill.

What are you up to now?  Although I retired when my job was eliminated, I plan to return to work part time this summer. In a sense, I started my career over after graduating from Smith. I’ve held several interesting jobs, one at Hay as noted above, another at Lincoln Financial Services in HR, and a few clunkers in between that I did to pay the bills.

What house did you live in on campus and what was your favorite thing about it? I didn’t live in a campus house, but in a small apartment in Old School Commons at 35 South Street, close to campus.  I chose not to live in a house because I had a cat and, frankly, because I valued my privacy. However, I lived close enough to campus to immerse myself fully in campus activities, including Rally Day, the school Senate, and meeting with other students at Davis Hall and the Ada Center.

What makes a Smithie unique?

Smith women celebrate the life of the mind!  Smith women participate. Smith women are life-long learners, e.g., the woman I met at a Club meeting from Betty Friedan’s class who was still traveling.   Smith women understand that we don’t have to sit back and defer to men, that we don’t have to let others define who and what we are.  That we can change who we are at mid-life, as I did.  I have met many exceptional Smith women—young and old, professors, teachers, nurses, graduate students–through the Smith Club and Smith Club of Philadelphia Book Group.  Although our backgrounds, opinions, and professions may differ, we are open to a free exchange of ideas.

How did your Smith experience shape your life?  For me, Art in all of its forms—music (Beethoven to Bob Dylan), painting, dance—truly makes life worth living. Through my liberal arts education, I gained the “language skills” that I needed to help me express myself and, importantly, to help me navigate my life in the wider world as a single woman from a working-class background.  In the process, I learned something about myself too. My English degree and liberal arts education reinforced the idea that everything is connected—from the Bible, to Shakespeare, to Mary Shelley, and beyond.

Do you have a defining/favorite/most memorable/transformative Smith moment? Not so much one moment but appreciating the experience of–referencing Sylvia Plath–being in the company of women.  All the women who had been at Smith before me, and all the women who would be students after I graduated. We mattered!

SCCOP 2014 Annual Meeting

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Annual Meeting Announcement

Don’t forget to get in your RSVP for the Annual Smith College Club of Philadelphia Meeting ASAP.

Where?
New Century Trust

1307 Locust Street,

Philadelphia, PA 19107

When? May 29th at 6:00pm

Cost:

$20 for members.
$25 for non-members.

Send your registration along with your annual dues and get the members’ rate! Payment can be made by check made out to “Smith College Club of Philadelphia” and mailed to “SCCOP Treasurer, 822 S. 9th St., 3rd Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19147” or through Paypal:

 

The annual meeting is an opportunity for club members to socialize as well as conduct club business, including the election of new board members. Are you interested in joining the board? Do you know someone who is? Nominations for board members can be sent to the club in advance or made at the meeting.

This year’s event takes place at the New Century Trust in Center City Philadelphia, an organization with roots going back to the Women’s Pavilion at the centennial exhibition in 1876. The Trust was active in Pennsylvania’s women’s suffrage movement and in providing both vocational training and social events for women. Today, the Trust continues to run programs to support it’s mission of improving the status of women and girls, preserving their landmark building, and educating the public about the Trust’s role in women’s history.

We’ll enjoy a tour of the Trust’s building, a National Historic Landmark, and learn more about this trailblazing organization. Register today! Email us at phillysmithclub@gmail.com to RSVP and let us know how you submitted payment.

Call for Board Members

Our annual meeting is coming up, and we will be voting on new board members! All skill-sets and interests are welcome, but we are particularly looking for people interested in the following areas:

  • Communications
  • Treasurer
  • Current student outreach
  • Event Planning