(Please
click on images for enlarged versions. Place mouse over images for captions.)
Wells College announces 1997 Alumnae Award
recipients
The Alumnae Association of Wells College
has announced the recipients of its 1997 award: Ithaca, New York resident
Jane Marsh Dieckmann, Wells Class of 1955, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
resident Martha Mavon Friday, Wells Class of 1956.
Ms.
Dieckmann is being recognized for her work as an author and scholar in
diverse areas including literature, history, music, and art. In 1995, her
major academic work in French was published - the introduction to and critical
text of Denis Diderot's Paradoxe sur le comedien, which appeared
in volume xx of the author's
Oeuvres Complètes.
She has written numerous reviews and
feature articles on music and literature as well as five popular cookbooks.
She is also the author of Wells College: A History, the first full-length
narrative of the college, published in 1995 by the Wells College Press.
At Wells, Ms. Dieckmann received her
bachelor of arts degree summa cum laude with distinction in French.
She was the first Wells student to receive a Fulbright grant for graduate
study abroad. After spending a year at the Sorbonne in Paris, she entered
graduate school at Harvard University where she earned her master's degree
and doctorate in Romance languages and literatures.
Martha
Mavon Friday is being honored by Wells this year for her pioneering work
in the area of women's and children's advocacy. She is the executive director
of the Women's Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh, one of the first
organizations in the United States to provide assistance to the victims
of family violence.
She has become a national consultant
and spokesperson on the subject of family abuse, and in that role, has
helped to bring the problem of family abuse into the light of public scrutiny.
She has become an expert witness before state and national committees investigating
domestic violence and services for victims. Based largely on the success
of her work with the shelter, the State of Pennsylvania has been recognized
as a national leader in the area of treatment services for victims of abuse.
At Wells, Ms. Friday majored in English.
She is a member of the Pittsburgh Wells Club and has volunteered in several
fund raising initiatives for the college.
Ms. Dieckmann and Ms. Friday will be
honored at a campus ceremony in May that will be attended by alumnae from
across the nation as part of Reunion 1997.
The Alumnae Award was established in
1968 by the Wells College Alumnae Association in honor of the Centennial
of the college. The award is presented annually and honors those alumnae
who have given outstanding service to their alma mater, either directly
or by service and accomplishment in a field of endeavor that reflects distinction
on Wells College.
February, 1997
Leadership Week at Wells College: Educating
women for life
Wells
College students were on campus from January 20-24, the week before the
official start of spring semester classes, to participate in Leadership
Week. Throughout the week they attended workshops and panel discussions
designed to prepare them for leadership roles in the 21st century.
Leadership Week emphasizes career and
life skills training. Workshops are offered that teach resume writing,
public speaking, how to successfully apply to graduate school, computer
skills (including the Internet), and financial management, among other
topics. This year, the students had an opportunity to prepare for entry
into the professional world by participating in mock job interviews.
Alumnae involvement is part of the
Leadership Week tradition. Wells women working in many different fields
return to campus to participate in panel discussions and meet with students.
Alumnae who majored in English, foreign languages, the sciences, social
sciences, and the arts visited Wells for this year's session.
Leadership
Week is also a community-building activity. All students had a chance to
learn about women's history through a visit to The Women's Rights National
Historical Park, The National Women's Hall of Fame, and The Urban Cultural
Park, located in nearby Seneca Falls, New York. A series of ethnic dinners
were offered to increase multi-cultural understanding.
All Wells students who are not completing
internships or engaged in off-campus study participate in Leadership Week.
February, 1997
Littlefields' $1.2 million challenge gives
a boost to Wells' technology initiative
A pledge of $1.2 million from California
residents Mr. Edmund and Mrs. Jeannik Mequet Littlefield will enable Wells
College to connect all students and faculty to the information superhighway
and improve the quality of foreign language instruction.
"This
gift benefits students who are with us now and who will be arriving in
the years to come. Wells prepares women for the role they will play in
the new century, and hands-on use of technology is an important part of
that education," said President Lisa Marsh Ryerson.
The funds will enable the college to
network academic buildings and residence halls for Internet access and
to install a new high tech, state-of-the-art language laboratory in Cleveland
Hall, the college's foreign language building. Plans are also in place
to computerize the catalogue for the library and purchase additional hardware
and software.
The Littlefields are honorary Wells
trustees. Mrs. Littlefield was born in France and prior to World War II
attended the International School in Geneva, Switzerland, where her father
worked for the League of Nations. She attended the Sorbonne before completing
her education in the United States where she spent her senior year at Wells
and received her degree in 1941.
Mr. Littlefield was general manager
of Utah International and later, for many years, director of General Electric.
He earned his master of business administration degree from Stanford, and
that university's graduate management center is named for him.
The Littlefields' gift will provide
$400,000 per year to Wells for three years, under the condition that the
college raise an equal amount each year. "Improving instruction with technology
is a high priority at Wells. We know our supporters are aware of this,
and we are very confident that the matching funds can be raised," said
Professor of Religion Arthur J. Bellinzoni, who is also director of planned
and leadership giving.
February, 1997
Wells announces board of trustees appointment
Alain Seznec, a scholar of French literature
and administrator from Cornell University, has been named to the Wells
College Board of Trustees, according to Wells President Lisa Marsh Ryerson.
Upon completion of his studies at the
University of Paris, Seznec began his teaching career at Harvard University
in 1953. He joined the Cornell faculty as an assistant professor of French
in 1958, was promoted to associate professor in 1963, and became a full
professor in 1969.
Seznec has published numerous articles
on French literature and two critical editions: La Princesse de Clèves
and
Diderot and Pope's Essay on Man. He has received
a French National Fellowship and The Clark Award for Distinguished Teaching.
In addition to writing and teaching,
Seznec has held many administrative positions at Cornell. His appointments
include director of undergraduate studies in Romance literature (1960-65),
associate dean of the college of arts and sciences (1969-73), chairman
of the department of Romance studies (1976-78), and dean of the college
of arts and sciences (1978-86).
Since 1986, he has served as the Carl
A. Kroch University librarian in Olin Library; and he plans to resume teaching
during the fall 1997 semester.
Seznec has been chairman of Cornell's
Council for the Performing Arts, the University Commission on Residential
Colleges, and the Museum Board. He has also served on the President's Commission
on Undergraduate Studies and the President's Ad Hoc Committee on University
Budget at Cornell.
February, 1997
Women's sports columnist and author is
leader-in-residence
Mariah
Burton Nelson, the first and only nationally syndicated woman columnist
to write about women's sports, will speak about giving young girls the
courage to compete on Thursday, February 13, at 7:00 p.m. in the Chapel
inside Main Building on the Wells campus. A book signing will follow the
presentation. The event is free and the public is invited to attend.
Nelson is the author of The Stronger
Women Get, The More Men Love Football: Sexism and the American Culture
of Sports. Her first book, Are We Winning Yet? How Women are Changing
Sports and Sports are Changing Women, received the Amateur Athletic
Foundation's Book Award.
A former columnist for the Washington
Post, and editor of Women's Sports and Fitness magazine,
Nelson has written for the New York Times, USA Today, Ms.
Magazine, Glamour, Shape, Fitness, and
Cosmopolitan
magazines. Her syndicated women's sports column for Knight Ridder/Tribune,
was distributed to 320 newspapers across the United States.
In 1996, she received the National
Association of Girls and Women in Sports' Guiding Woman in Sport Award
and was inducted into the National Girls and Women in Sports Symposium
Hall of Fame. In 1995, she was presented the National Organization for
Women's award for excellence in sports writing.
Currently, Nelson competes in masters
swimming events, specializing in the 1500 meter free-style; her time is
in the top five nationally for her age group.
She is a graduate of Stanford University,
where she averaged 19 points per game on the basketball team and was captain
and leading scorer and rebounder her last three years. One of her rebounding
records is still unbroken. She played for pro teams in France and the United
States and later received her master's degree in public health from San
Jose State University.
Nelson's family has strong ties to
Wells. Her mother Sarah Burton Nelson graduated from Wells in 1946; and
her grandmother, Mary Pew Burton, graduated from the college in 1922.
Mariah Burton Nelson is visiting Wells
as a leader-in residence. Sponsored by the college's Leadership Connection
group, the leader-in-residence program brings outstanding women who are
recognized leaders in their fields to campus each semester to teach, meet
with students informally, and present public lectures.
February, 1997
Martinez will expand conference services
and leadership programs
Terry Martinez, associate dean of students at Wells, has been promoted
to the position of director of conferences and leadership programs, effective
March 1.
Martinez will expand conference services
at the college, building on the success of summer leadership camps and
conferences for girls offered in the last two years.
The Wells Conference Center offers
its programs and facilities to diverse groups in addition to providing
leadership training for young women. "I will be responsible for getting
businesses and organizations to use our facilities, and I will develop
programs for groups. I hope to do some teaching myself," she says.
Conferences at Wells, which have been
viewed primarily as a summer enterprise, will now become a year-round part
of college services, she says.
President Lisa Marsh Ryerson says,
"Terry's experience developing leadership programs, her ability to work
closely with students, and her managerial skills make her the ideal candidate
for this important position."
Martinez joined the Wells student affairs
staff in 1991 as director of residence life. In 1995, she was promoted
to associate dean of students. In addition to counseling students and overseeing
residence life, she was responsible for supervision of the transportation
office, security office, and the community service office.
At Wells, she also coordinated the
21st & Wells Program, a regional minority recruitment workshop and
program for high school girls; and she developed the Rainbow Connection,
a multicultural education series.
Before coming to Wells, she worked
as interim director of counseling and career services at St. Joseph's College
and residence hall director at the SUNY College at Old Westbury.
She earned her bachelor's degree in
social work from the SUNY College at Buffalo and her master's degree in
counseling and applied psychology from New York University.
February, 1997
Chanting workshop featured at Wells Women's
History Month symposium
A chanting workshop led by Norma Gentile,
an early music specialist whose study of esoteric healing influences her
singing and teaching styles, will be offered at Wells College as part of
a symposium entitled Women: Education/Space/Expression, on Saturday,
March 1. Registration will begin at 12:30 p.m. in the college's Macmillan
Hall. The event is open to the public.
Included on the program are presentations on women in literature, history,
and the social sciences as well as workshops on expression and a screening
of the documentary Hillary's Class. Gentile's chant workshop, "Singing
the Songs of Hildegard von Bingen," will be held from 2:45 to 4:00 pm in
Alice Barler Recital Hall. To close the day Gentile, Alex Raykof, and the
early music group Elizabethan Conversation will perform "Hildegard's Spirit,
A Medieval Concert."
Norma Gentile earned her master's degree
in voice performance from the University of Michigan. As a soloist, she
has sung with Cuadro Musical in Europe and Oriana in the United States,
making appearances at the Stravinsky Festival (Spain) and the Boston Early
Music Festival.
Also at ease with the operatic repertoire
of the Baroque and Classical eras, Gentile has sung roles such as Poppea
from Monteverdi's "Coronation of Poppea," and the Sorceress from Purcell's
"Dido and Aeneas." She has recorded for Radio Espana, and her American
concerts have been broadcast regularly by National Public Radio stations
since 1983.
Gentile's focus since 1990 has been
on the music of Hildegard von Bingen. Hildegard was founder and abbess
of two monasteries for women in 12th century Europe. She composed chants,
wrote poetry, and authored nine books on theology and medicine.
Gentile has given numerous workshops
and concerts from California to Colorado to Michigan featuring the chants
written by Hildegard. Her first solo CD, Meditation Chants, is a
live recording of a Candlelight Meditation Concert using Hildegard's music.
An Attunement Practitioner for many
years, Gentile explores healing as a process of aligning emotional, mental,
physical, and spiritual aspects of ourselves. She studied Attunement extensively
through the International Emissary program, and supplements it with studies
in Alexander Technique, the MerKaBa, overtone chant, and psychic perception.
Advance registration is recommended.
The cost of the symposium is $10 for students, and $15 for all others,
and includes dinner. There is an additional $10 charge for non-student
participation in the chants workshop. Send checks payable to Wells College
to Career Services, Wells College, Aurora, New York 13026. For more information,
contact 315/364-3225, or e-mail careers@wells.edu.
February, 1997
U.S. Retirement Communities vice president
named to Wells College Board of Trustees
John R. Woolford III, vice president and
chief operating officer of U.S. Retirement Communities, L.P. in Media,
Pennsylvania, has been named to the Wells College Board of Trustees, according
to Wells President Lisa Marsh Ryerson.
Woolford is a registered architect
who has more than 16 years of experience with Continuing Care Retirement
Communities. He was previously a senior project manager and senior living
specialist with Ewing Cole Cherry Brott Architects in Philadelphia.
He has been responsible for the design
and construction oversight of senior living projects nationally and has
worked closely with both development and marketing groups. He has extensive
experience in land planning and zoning, as well as the management and design
of large complex projects.
Woolford attended Middlebury College
and received his bachelor's degree in architecture from Cornell University.
He also studied in Staufen, Germany and the Technische Hogeschool in Delft,
Holland. He is NCARB-certified and a member of the AIA/Aging Network.
U.S. Retirement Communities, Inc. is
a full-service retirement housing management and consulting firm providing
a spectrum of support services for sponsors and owners of housing and services
for the elderly, including: adult communities, continuing care retirement
communities, assisted living residences, long-term care facilities, and
subacute facilities.
U.S. Retirement Communities, Inc. projects
include The Arizona Senior Academy in Tucson, Arizona; Peconic Landing
in Southold, New York; and Laurelwood in Galloway Township, New Jersey.
February, 1997
Professors form AAUP Chapter
A group of Wells College faculty members
met in December and voted to form a local chapter of the American Association
of University Professors (AAUP).
The chapter, to be known as the Wells
College AAUP Chapter, has been officially recognized by the association's
national office in Washington, D.C. The Wells Chapter will be formally
inaugurated at a public ceremony to be held at the college during February
and currently has 14 members, according to campus AAUP officers. The college
has 45 full-time faculty members.
Scott Heinekamp, associate professor
of physics, has been elected the Wells AAUP Chapter's President. He says,
"AAUP is our national professional organization, one that fearlessly supports
the spirit and meaning of academic freedom in the United States. We hope
that this new professional connection will enhance the prestige and public
image of Wells College. We sincerely believe that a stable and well-informed
faculty is any administration's best hope for institutional growth and
constructive change. The Wells College AAUP Chapter looks forward to working
with the faculty, the administration, and the Board in ways that will benefit
the college and the entire community."
Wells' Vice President for Academic
Affairs Ellen W. Hall says, "For more than 80 years, the AAUP has been
involved with colleges and universities to help faculty and administrators
establish sound academic practices in their institutions. AAUP policy statements
and documents often serve as procedural guides for the academic community
nationwide."
In a congratulatory letter, Mary A.
Burgan, AAUP General Secretary, wrote to the Chapter: "Faculty have advanced
the standards and practices of the academic profession through the AAUP
for more than 75 years.... The 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic
Freedom and Tenure prevails as the vital and enduring expression of the
values and practices of the profession. Today, the statement is endorsed
by more than 150 disciplinary associations and educational organizations
and the number continues to grow."
The American Association of University
Professors was founded in 1915 in order to promote academic freedom for
faculty members, a new idea at the time. The AAUP remains the leading organization
primarily dedicated to protecting the academic freedom of professors.
February, 1997
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
|