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Victor Hammer Fellowship announced
The Wells
College Book Arts Center has established the Victor Hammer Fellowship
in the Book Arts with the aid of a grant from the Gladys
Krieble Delmas Foundation, according to Bruce Bennett, the center's
director and professor of English at Wells.
Jocelyn Webb has been named the first
Victor Hammer Fellow for a one-year term beginning in the fall 1998 semester.
She will teach a class on printing and publishing, as a counterpart to
the already existing course in fine binding. "The course will cover how
to set type, typography, and ways art can complement text," she said. "During
the spring semester I will teach a class on the history of the book."
Her other responsibilities include
executing printing assignments for the college, working on printing projects
with visiting writers, and arranging for two book arts workshops per year.
She will also be affiliated with the Press and Letterfoundry of Michael
and Winifred Bixler located in nearby Skaneateles, New York, where she
will serve as an apprentice.
Ms. Webb earned a graduate certificate
in the book arts from the University of Iowa this year where she worked
in the university's Center for the Book. "I worked closely with writers
in the writing workshop compiling manuscripts for possible publication.
Jorie Graham and James Galvin were very supportive and helped me connect
the Iowa writing program to the Center for the Book," said Ms. Webb.
Ms. Webb collaborated with fiction
writer Peter Orner to publish
Seep , a collection of his stories
and her artwork which she submitted as her final thesis project at the
University of Iowa. This book was published under the imprint of Sierras
Press - a publishing enterprise Ms. Webb created and plans to expand.
Before she began her studies at Iowa,
she was an apprentice with the Yolla Bolly Press in Ovelo, California,
where she set type by hand for publication of El Pan de los Dias: The
Bread of Days, a folio-sized book of Mexican poetry edited by Octovio
Paz and Samuel Beckett with etchings by Enrique Chigoya. She was also an
apprentice with Turkey Press in Santa Barbara.
She earned her B.A. in English literature
from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. She has
published poems in
100 Words: A Literary Magazine for the International
Writing Program at the University of Iowa.
August, 1998
Xerox Corporation VP named Wells College
Board Chair
Margie Filter Hostetter, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer of the
Xerox Corporation in Stamford, Connecticut,
has been named to a one-year term as Chair of the Wells College Board of
Trustees, according to Lisa Marsh Ryerson, President of Wells College.
A resident of Westport, Connecticut,
Ms. Hostetter began her career in 1966 with Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. in
New York City as a security analyst in the Trust and Investment Division.
In 1970 she joined G.A. Saxton & Co., also in New York, as a Senior
Technology Analyst.
In 1973 she became a member of the
Corporate Control Staff of Xerox Corporation, beginning her distinguished
career in that organization. From 1979-84 she served as Director of Investor
Relations for Xerox. In 1984 she was promoted to Vice President and Secretary.
She assumed her current position as Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer
in 1990.
Ms. Hostetter is a member of the Board
of Counselors of the Board of Trustees of Peoples Bank in Bridgeport, Connecticut,
and is also a member of the Investor Relations Association of New York,
the National Investor Relations Institute, and the Financial Women's Association
of New York.
Her study, "Accounting Practices of
Major Computer Companies," published in the Financial Analysts Journal
won a Graham and Dodd Scroll Award, presented by the Financial Analysts
Federation for Excellence in Financial Writing.
She attended Wells for three years
and received her B.A. in economics from the City College of New York. In
1990, she was named a Wells College Trustee and has served continuously
in that capacity for the last eight years.
August, 1998
Wells receives grant for Visiting Writers
Series
Wells has been awarded a $2,850 grant
from the New York
State Council on the Arts (NYSCA) to fund the college's Visiting Writers
Series, according to Professor of English Bruce Bennett who coordinates
the series.
The Visiting Writers Series has been
bringing distinguished literary figures to Wells and the Finger Lakes Region
for the last 23 years. The writers have included Nobel and Pulitzer Prize
winners. Galway Kinnell, Lucille Clifton, and W. S. Merwin are among the
guests who have visited campus.
"On average, eight writers visit campus
each year," said Professor Bennett. "In addition to readings, they visit
classes and meet individually with students. The writers are very much
a part of the liberal arts curriculum."
This year Professor Bennett has scheduled
a group of well-known writers including Katherine McAlpine and Gail White,
editors of
The Muse Strikes Back: A Poetic Response by Women to Men;
Laure-Anne Bosselaar, author of the poetry collection The Hour Between
Dog and Wolf; Edward Hower whose most recent novel is The Queen
of the Silver Dollar; and a return visit by Lucille Clifton, one of
America's most celebrated writers.
"It's wonderful that NYSCA has once
again generously supported literature and the arts in this area through
its grant to Wells," said Bennett. "The grant makes it possible for the
college to continue to be a vital cultural center."
Professor Bennett is also director
of the Wells College Book Arts Center
which consists of the Wells College Press and the Class of 1932 Bindery.
The center offers classes, exhibitions, lectures, demonstrations, workshops,
and symposia in the fine arts, the literary arts, bookbinding, printing,
publishing, and related fields. It is a classroom, laboratory, and a library
for information and inspiration and serves as a magnet for all who wish
to study the art of the book. Visiting writers frequently participate in
Book Arts Center activities.
August, 1998
Wells president named to board of the
Women's College Coalition
President Lisa Marsh Ryerson has been
named to the board of the Women's College Coalition in Washington, D.C.,
according to Jadwiga Sebrechts, the coalition's director.
"I am delighted that President Ryerson
has agreed to join our board," said Sebrechts. "The Women's College Coalition
will benefit from her vision and energy. She is an exemplary college president,
and we are looking forward to her involvement."
President Ryerson will attend her first
board meeting at the end of September. She will serve a three-year term,
joining 11 other board members who are also presidents of women's colleges.
The Women's College Coalition is an
association that advocates in many arenas on behalf of both two-year and
four-year women's colleges in the United States. With headquarters at Trinity
College in Washington, D.C., it also serves as a clearinghouse for research
on women-centered education.
Coalition public policy initiatives
include attaining gender equity in education for girls and women, advancing
leadership by women in a wide variety of settings, and increasing the number
of women who enter professions related to the study of math and science,
according to Sebrechts.
The Women's College Coalition and the
Ad Council are leading a national, public service campaign for gender equity
in schools entitled Expect The Best
From A Girl: That's What You'll Get. "The campaign encourages us to
let our daughters and female students know we expect more from them. In
turn, we must offer the support and encouragement they need to reach the
highest levels of achievement," said President Ryerson.
August, 1998
Director of corporate and foundation support
appointed
Christine Franquemont, a resident of Ithaca,
New York, has been appointed Director of Corporate and Foundation Support
at Wells, according to Dr. Jan Kennedy Olsen, Wells' Vice President for
External Relations.
In this position, she will work with
members of the Wells faculty and administration to match corporate and
foundation resources with college priorities - including an aggressive
plan to enrich academic programs which accompanies the college's policy
to lower tuition costs by 30% beginning in the fall semester of 1999.
Dr. Franquemont comes to Wells with
a strong record of success in fundraising both for higher education and
her own research projects. She has served as Associate Director of Foundation
Relations at Cornell University, and she is the recipient of two Fulbright
awards as well as grants from the National Science Foundation and the Social
Science Research Council.
She earned her B.A. from Radcliffe
College in anthropology and her Ph.D. from Cornell University. She has
taught at Cornell University, Ithaca College, the Museum of Fine Arts in
Boston, the School for Field Studies, and was a visiting scientist in Japan.
Her publications include monographs and articles on the ethnobotany of
the Andes.
"As a graduate of a women's college,
I am very pleased to join the Wells community at this moment when the college
is strengthening academic programs and institutional planning. I am delighted
to be able to put my skills and energies to work for the cause of women's
education," said Dr. Franquemont.
August, 1998
Other Articles
in Wells College News:
| September,
2002 |
September,
2000. - May.,2001 |
May,1998 |
May - June,1997 |
| August, 2002 |
September,
1999 - August, 2000 |
April,1998 |
March - April,1997 |
| September,
2001. - May.,2002 |
August,1999 |
March,1998 |
February,1997 |
|
May,1999 |
February,1998 |
November - December,1996 |
|
April,1999 |
January,1998 |
October,1996 |
|
February -March,
1999 |
December,1997 |
September,1996 |
|
January,1999 |
November,1997 |
June - Aug.,1996 |
|
Fall,1998 |
October,1997 |
May,1996 |
|
August,1998 |
September,1997 |
April,1996 |
|
June -July,
1998 |
July - August,
1997 |
February - March,
1996 |
Last updated 01/22/2003
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