

Serving Smith College Alumnae and Friends in the Greater Philadelphia Region


Join the Smith College Club of Philadelphia on Monday Dec 18th between 6:00 and 8:00 at The Rothman Ice Rink at Dilworth Park! Enjoy ice skating, beautiful lights, food trucks, and the Rothman heated cabin for refreshments and snacks! Skaters and non-skaters alike are welcome!
Dilworth Park is great for families and easily accessible from the Mainline and by public transit. Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for children ages 10 and under, and $10 for skate rentals.
We’ll meet at the heated cabin at 6:00 and wear your Smith gear to identify each other (I personally will be wearing my yellow Ivy Day sash!).
Come enjoy this Philly treasure with treasured Smithies!

The holidays are around the corner! But before the current Smithies can enjoy a relaxing winter break, they have a round of finals to complete. Help us send them a little holiday cheer and exam-time encouragement by joining us Tuesday, December 5 from 7 to 9 p.m. to assemble winter care packages. To RSVP and receive the address of our meeting (in Society Hill), please email phillysmithclub@gmail.com.
Your club dues make this support of current Smithies possible. If you are not already a member and would like to become one, join online at https://phillysmithclub.com/membership/.


Did you know the Philadelphia Museum of Art is open late every Wednesday with Pay What You Wish admissions?
Join Susie Kwon (class of 2011) and the Philly Smith Club at 5:30 – 7:30 October 18th for an art-filled gathering and celebrate Octoberfest with a glass of beer!
When you arrive, go to the Great Stair Hall on the first floor and then please look for a table-tent with ‘Smith College Club of Philadelphia’ on it. Drink and food purchase is available – separated from the beer and food pairing that requires tickets.
Details:
Octoberfest at the Philadelphia Museum of Art with Pay What You Wish admissions
Date and Time: Wednesday, October 18, 2017, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.
Location: Great Stair Hall, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19130
Admissions: Free for the Philadelphia Museum of Art members, Pay What You Wish for general public
Web: http://philamuseum.org/wednesdaynights
Host: Susie Kwon, Class of 2011
RSVP TODAY FOR THE FALL FACULTY SPEAKER EVENT!
Monday, October 16th @ 6:30 p.m.

The Smith College Club of Philadelphia is pleased to invite Philadelphia-area alumnae and their guests to our annual faculty speaker event! Nanci Young, Smith College Archivist, will speak on Monday, October 16th at 6:30 p.m. at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (3260 South St., Philadelphia, PA 19104). Nanci will give a presentation on the history of Philadelphia alumnae at Smith College as well as the renovations to the Smith College Neilsen Library.
RSVP today!
Admission includes hors d’oeuvres, wine and non-alcoholic beverages. Tickets are $15 for current club members, $25 for non-members, and $10 for new alums (c/o ’13-17). If you’re not a current member of the Smith College Club of Philadelphia, please support the club and join now to enjoy the discounted admission rate for the talk!
Please RSVP to PhillySmithClub@gmail.com. Submit payment via Paypal or by sending a check to: Elizabeth Savage, SCCOP Treasurer, 2401 Pennsylvania Ave. Apt. 11A12, 19130. Please include: Fall Faculty Speaker in the memo line.
Where to park

Julie Slavet, Class of 1979 (With daughter, Elizabeth Walber, Class of 2016)
How long have you lived in Philadelphia? I’ve lived in Philadelphia since 1995.
What’s your favorite restaurant in the city? My favorite restaurant is Tinto.
What are you up to now? I’ve had some really interesting jobs here since I went back to work after being at home with my children for 7 years. I was the Executive Vice President of the Eastern Montgomery County Chamber of Commerce for 5 years and then District Director for Congresswoman Allyson Schwartz for 6 years. I’m currently Executive Director of the Tookany/Tacony-Frankford Watershed Partnership (TTF), one of our region’s leading community-based clean water organizations.
What house did you live in on campus and what was your favorite thing about it? I lived in Sessions and Park houses. My favorite thing about Session was (of course) the secret staircase — my favorite thing about Park was the view of Paradise Pond.
Why did you choose Smith? I chose Smith because it was the best women’s college to which I applied!
Who was your favorite professor/what was your best class? An Economics class with Bob Buchele made an incredible impression on me because it was a totally different perspective on the world and how the economy impacts people. We spent one fascinating class talking about why it was not a good idea that New York City declare bankruptcy.
What makes a Smithie unique? I think that what makes Smithies unique is our commitment to supporting other women and our belief that women can pursue any goals they choose. I hope that we all share the responsibility that we will use the incredible skills, knowledge, and understanding we have been provided with to make the world a better place for women and other humans!
Do you have a defining Smith moment? I was so proud that Elizabeth, my daughter, decided to go to Smith too! It’s a very different place than it was when I was there and she loved it for lots of the same and different reasons than I did. When she graduated in May, it was a wonderful moment to walk with the Class of 1776 group thru hollering and whooping seniors on each side — and to see my daughter enjoying this so much with her friends. I’ll never forget it. We’re both so proud to be Smithies!

Amanda Mott, Class of 1985
How long have you lived in Philadelphia? Since 1991.
What’s your favorite restaurant in the city? Do I have to pick one? Love the choices we have a great restaurant scene – love oysters at Pennsylvania 6, Tria and Mr. Martino’s Trattoria to name a few.
What are you up to now? I work at the University of Pennsylvania as the Associate Director for News. I have just started working on a master’s part time and I enjoy reading and spending time gardening in Waverly Community Garden.
What house did you live in on campus and what was your favorite thing about it? Morris House – the friends I made there are life long. It was great being on Green Street and close to Paradise Pond. The fact that it was a medium in size meant we had a nice mix of students from all years.
Why did you choose Smith? A family friend Nancy Leslie recommended it she taught at Spellman College in Georgia where I lived and her daughter was a freshman at Mount Holyoke. My parents were British and had not gone through the U.S. college search process. I loved the idea of college in New England.
What is your favorite Smith tradition and why? Loved Friday teas and Art History 100. That routine of taking time to gather in that slightly formal, informal way and sit and talk was kind of funny but also wonderful. A year of art history and looking at art and architecture from all over the world was like a grand tour. On those occasions when I am fortunate to see the works we studied in person – brings those lessons to life.
Who was your favorite professor/what was your best class? I took Letterpress with Elliot Offner in my junior year – love of it has stayed with me. The satisfaction of working to set moveable type, watch as the words take shape on the page and feel the impression the type has made on the paper is amazing.
Do you have a defining/favorite/most memorable/transformative Smith moment? I think it was when I finally realized there were no requirements and signed up for Dance History. It was freeing. My first semester I basically created requirements for myself English 101, History 101, Calculus . . .what was I thinking? When I began to explore what I wanted, it opened up a new world of possibilities.
What makes a Smithie unique? She is empowered to be outspoken and a good listener.
How did your Smith experience shape your life? Hard to sum up. I could not have gone to Smith without the financial aid I received and I’m forever grateful for the experiences, discoveries and doors opened as a result. I reconnected with Smith in a meaningful way six years ago when I joined the Smith Alumnae Chorus. Since then I have traveled with them in concert to Sicily and to the Baltic. It has been a true gift to be able to connect to generations of Smith singers, make new friends and to experience the astonishing
talent of Jonathan Hirsh, senior lecturer and director of choral and orchestral activities at Smith.
Carol Dedov, Class of 1962.
How long have you lived in Philadelphia? I am, if you can believe it, a life-long Philadelphian, and, except for Smith, 2 years in New York for nursing school at Columbia U., and six months working in Basingstoke, England, have spent my life here. I know that isn’t much national and international experience compared to some, but I know many lifelong Philadelphians who have never been much further away than trips to the Jersey shore, so I am grateful that I have been able to broaden my horizons. That is the first thing Smith did for me – got me out of the Philly mindset, and smoothed some of the rough edges from my accent, although by now the accent has slowly crept back.
What house did you live in on campus and what was your favorite thing about it? I lived in Gillette House on campus and, aside from the wonderful “girls” I lived with, it was good being so close to the main campus. Being across the street from the John M Green auditorium (or John M as we called it) came in handy when we had early a.m. compulsory assemblies. We Gilletters keep in touch to this day.
What is your favorite restaurant in the city? I am hard-pressed to name a favorite Philly restaurant – there are a lot of good ones. I have friends in the suburbs, and I have recently enjoyed the White Elephant, in Huntingdon Valley. I know it is a little out of the way, but if you are in the area it’s worth a try. The owner tells us it isn’t authentic Thai, but is adapted to American tastes.
What are you up to now? When I graduated from Smith I found that my sociology major hadn’t prepared me for much in the way of earning power. While volunteering at a local hospital I decided I wanted to be a registered nurse, so I enrolled in Columbia University’s Department of Nursing’s 2 year program for college graduates. I have had a career in nursing and have always been able to find jobs. I am still working as a per diem visiting nurse. Someone I know overheard my employer tell somebody that “we have a nurse in her mid-seventies making visits”. We think she must have been talking about me.
Why did you choose Smith? I chose Smith because I had a high school friend whose sister was a student at Bryn Mawr, so I became very aware of the Seven Sisters and wanted to be part of that tradition. At Smith I was surrounded by my intellectual peers, which hadn’t been the case at my public high school.
I do regret that I did not take more advantage of the academic opportunities available and spent much too much time and energy worrying about weekends away and Saturday night dates. I hope young women of the twenty-first century are smarter in this regard than I was.
Get your tickets now! Kory Stamper ’96 will read from her book “Word by Word: The Secret Life of Dictionaries” at our club’s annual meeting on the evening of Monday, May 8 at 6:30. The meeting will take place in Old City at Christ Church Neighborhood House, an arts-incubator space in Old City.
Don’t miss this opportunity to hear from the Merriam-Webster lexicographer called a “wry and charming correspondent” by The Atlantic and lauded as “very much part of the vanguard of word-nerd celebrities” by the New York Times.
Check out an op-ed she wrote in 2013 titled, “How to Edit a Dictionary.”
Please RSVP to phillysmithclub@gmail.com.
Ticket info:
Member ticket: $12
Member ticket with a copy of Word by Word: $32
Non-member ticket: $20
Non-member ticket with a copy of Word by Word: $40
All tickets include hors d’oeuvres, wine, and non-alcoholic beverages.
Submit payment via the PayPal button below to purchase tickets and copies of Word by Word:
OR mail your check to the club treasurer at: SCCOP Treasurer, 2401 Pennsylvania Ave. Apt. 11A12, Philadelphia, PA 19130.
If you are purchasing a ticket including a copy of the book, kindly RSVP by May 1.
If you’re not a current member of the Smith College Club of Philadelphia, please support the club and join now to enjoy the discounted admission rate for the talk. New alums pay just $5 in dues. Regular annual membership for all other class years is $20.
Questions? We’d love to hear from you! Contact the club at phillysmithclub@gmail.com.