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September 24-30

October 1-7

October 8-14

Events at Smith

Bike Kitchen!
September 24, 2024
Open Hours: Monday 12-1 pm, Thursday 12-1pm, Sunday 4-6 pm starting Monday 9/23. Have a bike that needs fixing? Want to learn how to fix your own and/or other people's bikes? By gosh then we'll see you there. Bike Kitchen is back in the basement of Talbot (woo!!). You can get to us by going around the house to the left of the front door, our door is at the base of the circle drive. Find out about bike rentals to Smithies (coming over the next few weeks) via Instagram (@smith.bikekitchen).
Talbot House basement

Career Communities Connect & Chat at CEEDS
September 24, 2024
Lazarus Center for Career Development’s Heather Brinn DeLand, PhD, Career Specialist for Government, Law, Policy & International Affairs and Debra J. Immergut, Career Specialist for the Arts, Media & Communications will be available to discuss possible career paths, internship ideas, career resources, and more. Drop by with your questions! Limited lunch provided on a first come, first served basis.
CEEDS
12:15 pm

'Confluence' by Amanda Maciuba
September 5 through October 16, 2024
Amanda Maciuba’s work is an exploration of the visible and invisible marks of human hands on the landscape. Her practice investigates human relationships with the environment over time, forefronting the impacts of human driven climate change. Confluence is a series of prints, artist’s books and installations that are inspired by the confluence of the Kaw and Missouri Rivers in Kansas City, Kansas, that has expanded to consider multiple points how water shapes human life and how our actions impact river environments in return throughout the United States. Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM. On view through October 17.
Oresman Gallery, Hillyer
8:30 am to 4:30 pm

ES&P Lunchbag: The World of Langston Hughes and the Logistics of Counter-Mapping with Aaron Nyerges
September 26, 2024
Dr. Nyerges will discuss the literal and literary map-making practice of the modernist poet, arguing that Hughes's spatial praxis locates national identity by dislocating it, seeking to make cartographic representations personal, provisional, and negotiable rather than fixed and authoritative. This is a selection from the introduction of Dr. Nyerges's forthcoming book, American Modernism and the Cartographic Imagination. This new reading of American modernism examines the cartographic literature of the United States and places it in context of the state's overseas expansion. It stretches the map of US literature across an imperial archipelago of territories, bringing canonical American authors into relation with writers who are comparatively under-represented in modernist studies. The book argues that literary artists from across US dominion responded to space-dominating technologies of empire and retooled them to imagine counter-cartographies, designs that challenged the official geographies of the United States. Aaron Nyerges is a Senior Lecturer of American Studies at the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney. His work engages with literature, geography, and the history of media technologies. From 2021-2024 he was Academic Director of the United States Studies Centre and in 2024 he is the Rolf Lessenich Visiting Fellow at the University of Bonn. His first book, American Modernism and the Cartographic Imagination, will be released by Cambridge University Press in 2025. Lunch provided.
CEEDS, Wright Hall 005
12:15 pm

Exhibit opening: Do Plants Know Math?: Unwinding the Story of Plant Spirals from Leonardo to Now
September 26, 2024
Join us for the opening to enjoy this companion exhibit to the book of the same name by Christophe Gole (Smith College), Stephane Douady, Jacques Dumais, and Nancy Pick. Photographs by Victor Mozqueda. All welcome.
McConnell Hall Foyer
4:30 pm to 6:00 pm

Field Station Friday!
September 27, 2024
Enjoy your Friday afternoon with us for some Monkeying around at MacLeish on the Low Ropes Course! Get outside and have some laughs with Becca, Paul and Stef... Meet up at Sage Hall by 2:45 p.m. to get the van headed to MacLeish. We'll have you back on campus by dinnertime (6 p.m.). Sign up for a spot here!
Sage Hall to MacLeish Field Station and back again
2:45 pm

Writing Personal Statements
September 30, 2024
In this generative workshop, you will learn strategies for writing effective personal statements and statements of purpose for graduate and professional school. We’ll cover what admission committees are looking for, essential elements to include in a statement, and strategies for drafting and revising. Participants will leave with original content for their essays as well as a possible structure. Please bring a laptop or pen and paper. Pizza will be provided, including vegan and gluten-free options. Register on Handshake (link below)
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Campus Center 203
12:15 pm

What We Can't Burn
September 30, 2024
by Eve Driver, co-author of What We Can't Burn, a ‘memoir in two voices’ that she co-wrote with Kenyan climate entrepreneur Tom Osborn who was critical of Harvard's fossil fuel divestment campaign while Eve was part of it. This talk is part of the ENX 100 Environment and Sustainability: Notes from the Field lecture series. All are welcome!
CEEDS
3:05 pm to 4:20 pm

Events Off Campus

Lecture: Converting Science into Policy: A Career Inspired by Rachel Carson
September 26, 2024
Dr. William Sutherland, Professor of Conservation Biology, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, UK, will deliver a Rachel Carson Distinguished Lecture. Dr. Sutherland is a leading ecologist and conservation scientist. Over the last twenty years he has pioneered a range of approaches to policy and practice including novel means of horizon scanning, identifying policy-relevant research agendas, new techniques for collating and assessing evidence, and processes for embedding experiments into practice. With over eleven hundred named collaborators he has created the website www.conservationevidence.com (which reviews the evidence for the effectiveness of 3155 conservation actions), and a set of tools for making evidence-based decisions and embedding evidence into practice. He was President of the British Ecological Society and regularly advises government and conservation organizations. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society and a Commander of the British Empire, a recipient of the ECI Prize, Sir John Burnett Memorial Lecture Medal, Distinguished Service Award from the Society for Conservation Biology, Marsh Award for Ecology from the British Ecological Society, and many others. Register for this talk at the link below:
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Zoom
10:00 am

Lecture: What is a 'Third Place' and Why do They Matter?
September 26, 2024
With Karen Christensen. The term “third place” was coined in 1989 by sociologist Ray Oldenburg (1932-2022) in The Great Good Place, meaning happy gathering places that are neither home nor work. He saw that third places - cafes, taverns, bowling alleys, barbershops, and general stores – could be found around the world, providing fertile ground for human interaction, enhancing individual well-being, and contributing to the common good. Karen Christensen corresponded with Oldenburg for 20 years before meeting him, and he left her the job of writing a sequel to his landmark book. Christensen suggests that third places are the key to solving climate change, loneliness, and political polarization, and brings a cross-cultural perspective to issues including diversity, economics, and public transit. This Zube Lecture is sponsored by the UMass Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning.
UMass Amherst Design Building Lecture Hall (DB 170)
4:00 pm to 5:00 pm

Events at Smith

Exhibition: Here, Now
August 30, 2024 through July 13, 2025
From August 30, 2024 until July 13, 2024, The Smith College Museum of Art (SCMA) will host a solo exhibition of art by Younes Rahmoun—one of Morocco’s most important artists—in partnership with the Botanic Garden of Smith College and Arts Afield at CEEDS. The exhibition will explore how Rahmoun’s place-based sculptures and installations have, for the last 25 years, created space for viewers to be in community, together in the here and now. Foremost among the exhibition's themes are nature, place, and landscape; spirituality; migration as a consequence of de/colonization; and the relationship between the macrocosm and the microcosm. The public can visit various elements of he exhibition- on Smith Campus at the SCMA and the Botanic Garden- and at Smith's Ada and Archibald MacLeish Field Station.
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Smith College Museum of Art and the MacLeish Field Station

'Confluence' by Amanda Maciuba
September 5 through October 16, 2024
Amanda Maciuba’s work is an exploration of the visible and invisible marks of human hands on the landscape. Her practice investigates human relationships with the environment over time, forefronting the impacts of human driven climate change. Confluence is a series of prints, artist’s books and installations that are inspired by the confluence of the Kaw and Missouri Rivers in Kansas City, Kansas, that has expanded to consider multiple points how water shapes human life and how our actions impact river environments in return throughout the United States. Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM. On view through October 17.
Oresman Gallery, Hillyer
8:30 am to 4:30 pm

Presentation of the Concentrations
October 4, 2024
Get more information about the concentrations at Smith (including the Environmental Concentration).
Carroll Room, Campus Center 208
12:15 pm to 1:10 pm

Environmental Study Abroad Info Session
October 7, 2024
Students interested in studying abroad with a program that has an environmental focus should plan to attend this lunchtime information session to learn about all of the different types of programs available. Lewis Global Studies Center staff will be there to answer questions and students who studied abroad last year will be there to share their stories. Lunch provided.
CEEDS, Wright Hall 005
12:15 pm

Making Meaning of ‘Women for the World' to Advance Climate Action
October 7, 2024
by Blythe Coleman-Mumford ‘17, Climate Programs Manager: HBCU/MSI Engagement and BIPOC Affinity Programming at Second Nature. This talk is part of the ENX 100 Environment and Sustainability: Notes from the Field lecture series. All are welcome!
CEEDS
3:05 pm to 4:20 pm

Botanic Garden Summer Internships - Info. Session
October 7, 2024
What: Learn about opportunities to get involved with the botanic garden! We have conservation and summer internships, and opportunities for conducting plant research over the summer in London through a Kew internship.
Lyman, 111
4:30 pm to 5:30 pm

Events Off Campus

Captured Sunshine: An Energetic View of Terrestrial Ecosystems
October 4, 2024
Harvard Forest Bullard Lecture, with Dr. Yadvinder Malhi, Professor of Ecosystem Science at the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, Programme Leader of the Ecosystems Group at the Environmental Change Institute, and the Director of the Oxford Centre for Tropical Forests, University of Oxford.
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Zoom and in person - more details at link
11:00 am

Events at Smith

Alum Visit: Science Journalist Sadie Dingfelder '01 Talks About Her Neurodiverse Career
October 8, 2024
Smith alum Sadie Dingfelder '01 will give an overview of career opportunities in science writing and science communication, and share what she's I've learned about neurodiversity and the neurodiversity movement through her work as a neurodiverse science writer for National Geographic, the Washington Post, and the American Psychological Association. Sponsored by the Lazarus Center, the Accessibility Resource Center, ES&P and JNX.
CC 103/104
4:15 pm to 5:30 pm

Science Careers for the Greater Good
October 9, 2024
The Science Careers for the Greater Good series introduces Smithies to a range of science-focused careers that have a social impact. This semester, we'll be joined by Beth Capiro '16. Beth is Manager of Climate Data Science at the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), the public agency responsible for public transportation in New York City. Beth joined the MTA in 2018 when she completed a Master of Urban Planning degree at CUNY Hunter College. Her work at the MTA involves collecting, managing, and interpreting a variety of data to support the development and implementation of the MTA's Capital Improvement Program. In particular, she's worked on a variety of initiatives to better prepare New York City's public transit system for climate change. Snacks provided. Sponsored by The Lazarus Center and CEEDS.
CEEDS, Wright Hall 005
4:30 pm

'Confluence' by Amanda Maciuba
September 5 through October 16, 2024
Amanda Maciuba’s work is an exploration of the visible and invisible marks of human hands on the landscape. Her practice investigates human relationships with the environment over time, forefronting the impacts of human driven climate change. Confluence is a series of prints, artist’s books and installations that are inspired by the confluence of the Kaw and Missouri Rivers in Kansas City, Kansas, that has expanded to consider multiple points how water shapes human life and how our actions impact river environments in return throughout the United States. Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM. On view through October 17.
Oresman Gallery, Hillyer
8:30 am to 4:30 pm

Field Station Friday: Planting Perennials and Bouquet-Making
October 11, 2024
Kick off your fall break with a Friday afternoon planting perennials and making bouquets at MacLeish Field Station! Sign up at the link below.
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MacLeish Field Station - Meet at Sage Hall Circle
1:30 pm

Events Off Campus

Information Session: The Bard Graduate Programs in Sustainability
October 8, 2024
The Bard Graduate Programs in Sustainability are pleased to invite interested prospective students to our Online Information Session to learn more about graduate school options in our MBA in Sustainability and Center for Environmental Policy programs from Director Eban Goodstein and the admissions team. Attendees receive a $65 application fee waiver for attending. We'll also review our scholarships (below)! Use the link below to register:
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Virtual
7:00 pm

2024 Virtual Forum on Bi-Partisan Environmental Policy
October 9, 2024
The Hubbard Brook Research Foundation, the League of Conservation Voters, the Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society at Dartmouth, and Sustainable Futures Consulting will be hosting a multi-part panel discussion featuring bi-partisan environmental decision-makers of the past, present, and future. The first panel is on Reflections and Insights from Champions of the Clean Air Act Amendment and the second panel is on Youth Environmental Action.
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Webinar - register at link above
1:00 pm to 2:30 pm

Community Disaster Resilience: To What? For Whom?
October 10, 2024
Professor Susan Cutter at the University of South Carolina will deliver a Rachel Carson Distinguished Lecture via Zoom. Dr. Cutter is a Carolina Distinguished Professor of Geography at the University of South Carolina and co-director of the Hazards Vulnerability & Resilience Institute (HVRI). She has conducted pioneering research on vulnerability and resilience with specific reference to methods, models, and metrics. Her innovative work has significantly influenced hazard mitigation and disaster recovery policy and practice at local, state, national, and international levels. Her outstanding accomplishments have been recognized by numerous prestigious awards and honors. She was the recipient of her discipline’s highest awards: American Association of Geographers (AAG) Lifetime Achievement, Presidential Achievement, and the Wilbanks Award for Transformation Research. She received an honorary doctorate from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. She is also an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, and an elected foreign member of the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters.
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Webinar - register at link above
10:00 am

Lecture: Appealing for Local Control and Spatial Inequality: Reforming Governance and
October 10, 2024
Development Rationalities in Southern California presented by Alejandra Reyes. Several limitations have thwarted the implementation of California housing law for over fifty years. This research sheds light on the evolution of municipal-state relations at a period of reform by analyzing the contentious implementation of state housing law in Orange County, California, a region of concentrated affluence. Systemic privilege has historically allowed some jurisdictions to influence decision-making at higher levels, skewing housing policy and planning outcomes. Nonetheless, and despite contention between different government levels and localities, the leverage of reactionary local politics is weakening. State reforms, along increasingly diverse and mobilized constituents, are prompting slow but important policy change. This Zube Lecture is sponsored by the UMass Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning.
UMass Amherst Design Building Lecture Hall (DB 170)
4:00 pm to 5:00 pm