News and Announcements from Alums
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Sloane Miller ’93 Presents Worry-Free Dinners at Craftbar
Finally, dining out with food allergies doesn't have to come with a side of miscommunication and an after-dinner trip to the emergency room. Membership in Worry-Free Dinners enables guests to dine without dismay. It is a dining club created for allergy-plagued foodies who find restaurant dining to be a harrowing experience. Worry-Free Dinners offers an intimate and safe environment in which to dine with similarly restricted diners at a pre-screened restaurant.
Sloane Miller, President, Allergic Girl Resources, Inc., created the niche-dining concept based on her love of food and regrets that, as a diner with severe fish and tree-nut allergies, dining out has been challenging at best. After much trial and error, Ms. Miller found restaurants and chefs that were only too happy to create safe meals for food allergic diners. Ms. Miller, who counsels people with allergies and is a health expert at ww.HealthCentral.com, is dedicated to finding ways to make life easier for food-allergic people.
Special menus with a range of choices for each Worry-Free Dinnersâ„¢ event are carefully planned in advance by the chef with valuable input from Ms. Miller. Meals are open to a small group of 8-12 diners whose allergies are manageable and match the planned menu (e.g. wheat allergic diners would sign up for a wheat-free meal). The camaraderie of dining with like-minded patrons is a key factor in the design of WFD. Ms. Miller gives tips on successfully replicating a positive dining experience and provides language to dialogue with chefs and restaurant management so that other restaurant doors open to allergic diners.
For more information about Worry-Free Dinners, please contact Sloane Miller: allergicgirl@gmail.com or at http://worryfreedinners.blogspot.com/
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Elena Karina Byrne’s ’82 New Book of Poems, “Masque” Released
Elena Karina Byrne has released a new book of poems, called "Masque". The book is available to bookstores through Consortium: www.cbsd.com Here are some reviews of the book:
In verse simmering with sensuality, Elena Karina Byrne eloquently reveals, then carefully slices away, layer after layer of the masks we wear until our most secret selves are exposed. With imagery at once exotic and electric,
individual pretense dissolves in the service of revelation, and we find ourselves irresistibly drawn into an internal dialogue that is unabashedly intimate. Find here a voice that is like no other we know. ----- Tupelo PressEach of Byrne’s poems begins with an epigraph, from sources as diverse as Sylvia Plath, Oscar Wilde and the Bible. These help direct readers as Byrne seeks to mine the heavy ore of identity and cart it out on the masks we wear at different times. Perhaps most intriguing is the close relationship of the body to the self; no Cartesian dichotomies for her. For example, “Invisible Blessing Mask: Night,” with its invocation of marriage as a means of addressing the desire to differentiate one’s self from the beloved while at the same time abandoning our identity in union: “It has dissolved on the skin / where you’d rather not / say the words for conjugation, / separate the verb from the tense / nor ever harness what happened to you / when night put the lights out / on the tongue. -- Sacramento News and Review. Read the full review: http://www.newsreview.com/chico/Content?oid=654350
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Sally Jane Kerschen-Sheppard ’00 Announces Next Playwrights Workshop
The next playwrights workshop will be Sunday, May 18th at 6 p.m. If you're a playwright, actor, director, producer, or just a theatre enthusiast, please join the SLC NY Metro Alumnae/i Playwrights Workshop. Please RSVP To slcnymetro@yahoo.com for details and location.
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Joseph Caputo ’07 Wins $10,000 Grant in First Annual Entrepreneurial Media Studies Competition
Joseph Caputo, a 22-year-old Boston University College of Communication (COM) graduate student majoring in Science Journalism, won a $10,000 grant in the first annual Harold G. Buchbinder Entrepreneurial Media Studies Competition with the creation of a new Web site, www.sciencemetropolis.com.
Out of four competing individuals/teams, Caputo’s web site was selected as the winner in March. The site is a blog that supports visitor interaction – both in the digital and physical world. ScienceMetropolis.com aims to be an online community for “science hobbyists” in the Boston and Cambridge area.
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David Lindsay-Abaire ’92 Wins 18th Annual Kleban for “Shrek” Book and Lyrics
New Dramatists has announced that Pulitzer Prize winner David Lindsay-Abaire has received the 18th Annual Kleban Award for most promising musical theater lyricist for his work on SHREK THE MUSICAL, for which he is the book and lyric writer. He will be presented with the award at a private reception on Wednesday, June 4, 2008.SHREK THE MUSICAL will open at the Broadway Theatre on Sunday, December 14, 2008. Preview performances for groups begin on November 10, 2008.
For more information on the production, please visit: visit www.shrekthemusicalgroups.com
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Laura Zeilinger ’95 Named Deputy Director of the Department of Human Services
Department of Human Services Director Clarence H. Carter today named Laura Zeilinger as the Deputy Director for Program Operations of the Department of Human Services (DHS). Zeilinger, an attorney with a longstanding commitment to underserved populations, will act as an advisor to the agency director on all aspects of program operations and be responsible for directing the department’s Income Maintenance Administration and the Family Services Administration.
Laura Zeilinger joins DHS after working as a part of the Health and Human Services cluster in the Office of the City Administrator where she served as liaison between the Mayor and City Administrator and the Department of Human Services and Office of Disability Rights. In that capacity, she was a key facilitator of the District’s policies and achievements in the delivery of homeless services. She developed a strategy for the implementation of the District’s Homeless No More Plan by identifying 2,500 units of permanent supportive housing and coordinating and directing the activities of the Interagency Council on Homelessness.
Prior to that, Zeilinger spent much of her early career working on international economic development, managing a technical assistance project to reform the pension system in the Republic of Kazakhstan.
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Karla DiBenedetto ’02 Premieres New Film, “Trophy”
Karla DiBenedetto announced her new film, "Trophy". The film will have its world premiere at the 10th Annual Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, April 25th - May 4th, 2008. For more information about the Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival and to purchase tickets, please see http://www.mglff.com.
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Kay Chernush ’66 Announces Photographic Exhibit, In the Eyes of a Woman
As part of the series of exhibitions about the plight of victimized women across the globe, the World Bank Art Program is honored to invite you to the opening of the photographic exhibition, In the Eyes of A Woman by American Photographer Kay Chernush.The exhibition explores the drama and complexity of human trafficking and sex labor and offers a rare glimpse into the lives of victimized women and children in Ghana, India, Italy and Thailand. It is the third in a series featuring photographs of women and children by ten women photographers selected from artists who live, work, or were born in one of the World Bank's client countries, and whose work reflects the Art Program's goal of giving a face to the Bank's work in development.
This installment of In the Eyes of a Woman is part of an overarching exhibition Borderless Captivity: Exploitation and Human Trafficking.
The opening date for the exhibition is Wednesday, May 7th, 2008, from 12:30 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Preston Auditorium exhibitions are on view from May 7th - May 30th, 2008 in the Preston, Main Complex Atrium and Main Complex Front Lobby, The World Bank Main Complex, 1818 H. Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.
RSVP for opening is required for external guests by April 30, 2008 via artprogram@worldbank.org or (202)458-0333. For additional information, please call (202)458-0333.
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Columbia Professor Lisa Anderson ’72 Named Provost of the American University of Cairo
The American University in Cairo (AUC) today announced the appointment of Columbia University Professor Lisa Anderson, a specialist on politics in the Middle East and North Africa, as its next provost. Dr. Anderson succeeds Dr. Earl (Tim) Sullivan who has been AUC provost since 1998 and professor of political science at AUC since 1973.
As AUC's chief academic officer, Anderson will be responsible for shaping and implementing AUC’s academic vision and continuing to build the size and quality of its faculty. As the region’s premier liberal arts institution, AUC enrolls more than 5000 students and has a full time faculty of 400. The university will be moving to a new $400 million campus this year.
AUC President David D. Arnold said that the appointment of an academic leader of Anderson's stature is a reflection of AUC's increasing prestige internationally as an institution of higher education. "Professor Anderson has been a leader in higher education in the United States for the past several decades," Arnold said, "AUC is fortunate to have attracted a respected academic and experienced administrator of her caliber as we prepare to embark on a second century of leadership in higher education in Egypt and the Arab Region."
"I am delighted to be joining AUC at a pivotal time for the university and for higher education in Egypt and the Arab world,” Anderson said. “Thanks to its history of distinguished and far-sighted leadership, AUC is uniquely positioned to play a vital role in the development of higher education for the twenty-first century, not only in the region but globally. I am privileged be a part of this venture."
Anderson is currently the James T. Shotwell Professor of International Relations at Columbia University and is the former dean of the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia. Prior to being dean, she was the chair of the political science department at the university. She also served as the director of Columbia’s Middle East Institute. Before joining Columbia, she was assistant professor of government and social studies at Harvard University from 1981 to 1986. Anderson is the author of Pursuing Truth, Exercising Power: Social Science and Public Policy in the Twenty-first Century (Columbia University Press, 2003), The State and Social Transformation in Tunisia and Libya, 1830-1980 (Princeton University Press, 1986), editor of Transitions to Democracy (Columbia University Press, 1999) and coeditor of The Origins of Arab Nationalism (Columbia 1991).
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Porochista Khakpour, ’00, Wins “First Fiction” Prize in the 77th Annual California Book Award
Since 1931, the California Book Awards have honored the exceptional literary merit of California writers and publishers. Each year a select jury considers hundreds of books in search of the very best in literary achievement. Khakpour's Sons and Other Flammable Objects was the sole "First Fiction" winner. Fiction winners were Michael Chabon and Khaled Hosseini. They will all be honored at an awards ceremony in San Francisco in June. Visit www.porochistakhakpour.blogspot.com for more info and updates.
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Jee Leong Koh MFA ’05 Announces New Poetry Workshop: “Liberating Forms”
Structure gives freedom. In this class we will play with traditional forms: sonnet, triolet, villanelle, and sestina, to free our memory and imagination to discover personal material and poetic resources. We will read the classics and contemporary re-workings of these valuable structures, and through them find our own voice and vision. This class will stimulate writers who are already familiar with these forms and welcome those who do not know an iamb from a trochee.
The workshop meets 5 times on Tuesdays, 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM, May 20 - Jun 24 (except for June 10th). The cost is $175.00 for Members of the Jewish Community Center (JCC), $200 for Non-Members. Workshop will take place at The JCC in Manhattan, 334 Amsterdam Ave. at 76th St. For more information, or to register, please call 646-505-5708. You may also register online on the JCC website at: http://www.jccmanhattan.org/
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Bernardo Ruiz ’95 Announces PBS Documentary Premiere
For more information, please check out http://www.quietpictures.com
From Bernardo Ruiz: We are very pleased to announce the premiere of our first production, Roberto Clemente, for PBS’s award-winning history series, American Experience.
Roberto Clemente was not the first Latino to play in the majors, but he was the first Latino star to have a clear and lasting impact on the game of baseball. As an outspoken and at times controversial player, he helped to shatter stereotypes about Latinos and paved the way for the next generation of Latin American and Caribbean ballplayers.
In an era before players had handlers and press agents, Clemente was a bona fide humanitarian and activist. “If you have the chance to make things better for people coming behind you, and you don’t,” he famously said, “You are wasting your time on earth.”
Please join us for the broadcast premiere on Monday April 21st at 9:00pm ET, after which a Spanish-language version will be available for free viewing online at
http://pbs.org/americanexperience.
Roberto Clemente features interviews with Pulitzer Prize-winning authors David Maraniss (Clemente) and George F. Will (Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball) as well as journalist and author Juan Gonzalez (Harvest of Empire), Vera Clemente, Baseball Hall of Famer Orlando Cepeda, and former teammates. Golden Globe Award-winning actor Jimmy Smits (The West Wing, NYPD Blue) narrates. Written, Directed and Produced by Bernardo Ruiz.
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New Worlds Theatre Project, Ellen Perecman ’75, Executive Producer, Presents “With the Current” by Sholem Asch May 1st - 18th at Center Stage, NY

New Worlds Theatre Project (Ellen Perecman '75, Executive Producing Director) Presents "With the Current" by Sholem Asch. As the ice begins to thaw, an uncontrollable river of passion and desire sweeps everyone up with the current. The production is directed by Marc Geller. It is also a World Premier English translation by Mark Altman & Ellen Perecman's adaptation by Mark Altman, Ellen Perecman & Clay McLeod Chapman ('00). Performers include: Alice Cannon*, Chandler Frantz, Jesse Liebman, David Little*, & Sarah Stockton*. Scenic Design by Aaron P. Mastin. Lighting by Stephen Arnold. Music by Topu Lyo. Performances May 1 - 18, Wednesdays - Saturdays at 8pm; Sundays at 3pm At Center Stage, NY 48 W.21st Street, 4th Fl. (accessible by elevator). (* Member Actors' Equity Association and An Equity Approved Showcase, ** Member Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers)
TICKETS: $18 ($15 seniors and students with valid ID). Purchase tickets at www.newworldsproject.org or call SmartTix at (212) 868-4444. For more information on New Worlds Theatre Project, call 917.513-7620
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Rena Rosenwasser ’71 Reading at Tribute to Barbara Guest
Rena Rosenwasser will be reading at a tribute to Barbara Guest on April 26, 2008 at 1:00 p.m., at the Poetry Project (located at St. Mark's Church, 131 E. 10th St, NY). Barbara Guest (1920-2006) published over twenty volumes of poetry including The Countess of Minneapolis, Fair Realism and The Red Gaze, and earned awards including the Robert Frost Medal for Distinguished Lifetime Achievement from the Poetry Society of America. Join John Ashbery, Charles Bernstein, Susan Bee, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, Peter Gizzi, Kathleen Fraser (pre-recorded), Hadley Guest, Ann Lauterbach, Erica Kaufman, Charles North, Rena Rosenwasser, Richard Tuttle, Africa Wayne and Marjorie Welish in a celebration of Guest's life and work, as well as the forthcoming The Collected Poems of Barbara Guest by Wesleyan University Press. Co-sponsored with The Poetry Society of America.
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Joanna FitzPatrick-Payne ’01 Announces Tribeca Rental, May - Sept
From Joanna FitzPatrick-Payne ’01: We are going to France!
Newly renovated 800 sq ft. Tribeca loft.
Elevator bldg. Warren St. Near City Hall park.
$4500/mo.Photos available. For more information, please contact Joanna at jpayne@funkydrummer.com or James Payne at fitz@westnet.com
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Rachel Stolzman Publishes New Novel, “The Sign for Drowning”
Rachel Stolzman has published new novel, "The Sign for Drowning". This stirring first fiction is a poignant story of loss and healing that explores the frailty of family boinds, the limitations of language, and the ephemeral beauty of life. With intimate precision, Stolzman portrays one woman's fear of loss -- and longing for love -- while exploring the deeper secrets of a family's grief.
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Andrew Boscardin Presents Series of Musical Works, “Brass and Nickel”
Brass and Nickel is a series of new musical works composed by Andrew Boscardin to be premiered on June 20 at 8pm at the Chapel Performance Space, 4649 Sunnyside Ave. N, Seattle. The pieces – combining elements of jazz, rock, new music and improvisation – feature a unique ensemble with an emphasis on the low brass and the electric guitar and their combined range of sonic possibilities. Along with Boscardin on guitar, the band features Chris Stover on trombone, Jim Dejoie on woodwinds, Tom Varner on French horn, Mack Grout on piano, Jon Hamar on bass, and Brad Gibson on drums.
Combining ambient guitar sounds, carefully woven textures and a full harmonic palette, Andrew Boscardin's music draws equally from his love of jazz as it does his work as a composer and orchestrator. In addition to his work on guitar, Boscardin has contributed music for dance, stage and film both as a composer and performer.
Check out http://www.boscology.com for more information.
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Marian Hyun ’77 Announces New York Jazz Choreography Project
Jazz dance, in its glorious variety, is the highlight of the New York Jazz Choreography Project, a semiannual dance concert featuring original works of jazz, to be held at New Dance Group. Dancers ranging in age from 15 to 50+ will perform the works of 14 choreographers, some emerging and some established. Artistic Directors Marian Hyun '77 and Merete Muenter choose choreographers with the goal of showing a wide range of jazz styles -- musical theatre, contemporary, funk, etc. -- that will appeal to all age groups. The strategy seems to be working because the previous shows have sold out. The performances will be on Friday, May 2nd, and Saturday, May 3rd, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, May 4th, at 2 p.m. at New Dance Group, 305 W. 38th Street (at 8th Avenue). Tickets are $15. For information and reservations, please call 212-369-8775.
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Matthew Schwartz ’99 Publishes and Promotes New Book of Poems
Matthew Schwartz '99 is doing an appearance at Barnes and Noble April 8th at 7:30 in Park Slope (267 7th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11215) to promote his new book of poems.
For more information, check out: http://storelocator.barnesandnoble.com/eventdetail.do;jsessionid=F81ADA47AEA4C443F2458620BC7C5D44.worker2?store=2876&event=22706841
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American Photo Best Books of 2007 Selects Linda Peterson ’69 Book
Russell Lee Photographs, the book that Lisa Peterson co-authored with John Szarkowski and J. B. Colson, was chosen as one of American Photo magazine's best books of 2007.
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Thea Goodman ’91 Announces Pushcart Nomination
Thea Goodman's story, "The Safety Bubble," published in Other Voices winter, 2007, was nominated for a Pushcart Prize.
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James Jack ’01 Receives Crown Prince Akihito Fellowship
James Jack has received the Crown Prince Akihito Fellowship to conduct additional language training and research on contemporary artists in Tokyo for two years commencing in Fall 2008.
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Madeline Silber ’83 Exhibits Painting in New York Museum
Madeline Silber's painting, Sway, will be included in the 61st Exhibition of Central New York Artists at the Munson Williams Proctor Institute Museum of Art.Juried by Thomas Piche Jr. and Marion Wilson
Exhibition Dates: April 5th - July 13th, 2008
Public Reception: Saturday, April 5th, 5 - 7p.m.For more information on the exhibit, visit:
http://www.mwpai.org/museum/events/61exhibitionofcentralnewyorkartists/For more information on Madeline Silber, visit: www.madelinesilber.com
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“Elvis & Olive”, first novel of Stephanie Watson ’01, published by Scholastic
Elvis & Olive (Scholastic Press), a middle-grade novel, is the first in a series for 9 to 12-year-olds.
Ten-year-old Natalie Wallis is a shy bookish perfectionist. Annie Beckett (age 9) is a wild tomboy liar. Why do these two very different girls become friends? Because they've got some serious spying to do.
Even the most dull-looking people do all kinds of weird, interesting things when they think no one's watching, Annie says. With this in mind, the girls form a secret spying club and start snooping on their neighbors under the code names Elvis & Olive.
By the end of their summer together, Elvis & Olive have uncovered a number of strange secrets about their neighbors. Eaten far too many freeze pops. And formed a friendship like no other.
Learn more at www.stephanie-watson.com
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Benjamin Blackburn ’86 Profiled in Sports Collectors Daily
Benjamin Blackburn '86 was recently profiled in Sports Collector Daily for his beautiful baseball sculptures. As the article states, Blackburn's works "are customized with an artist's creativity and a baseball fan's knowledge, intricate sculptures of the game's iconic players and other unique pieces stunning in quality and depth."
You can read the full profile of Benjamin, "Artist Sculpts Wooden Baseball Magic" at: http://www.sportscollectorsdaily.com/latest/artist-sculpts-wooden-baseball-magic.html
Samples of Blackburn's work can be viewed at his web site, Wonderboy Studios
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Jenna Esposito ’00 Nominated for MAC Award and Announces Two Upcoming Performances
The Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs has just announced the nominees for the 2008 MAC awards and Jenna has received a nomination for best female vocalist! Jenna also has two upcoming performances at the Metropolitan Room: Takin' A Chance On Love, on Sunday, March 30th at 7 p.m. and 13 Men... and Me! on Sunday, April 6th at 9:30 p.m. The Metropolitan Room is located at 34 West 22nd Street and each performance has a $20 cover and $15 minimum. For reservations, call 212-206-0440 or visit the Metropolitan room online at metropolitanroom.com
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Erin K. Orr ’96 Will Perform in “Perushka” at Lincoln Center
This April in Lincoln Center, Erin K. Orr will perform in "Petrushka", Basil Twist's puppet staging of the Ballet, with Stravinsky's beautiful music played live by two world class pianists. Erin will operate the arms of the Ballerina puppet in this piece.
This is the first time the show will be performed in New York since its premiere in 2001. The show runs from April 2nd through the 12th at 7:30 (Mondays are dark) and April 5, 6, 12 and 13th at 3:00 at Clark Studio Theater located in the Samuel B. and David Rose Building, 7th Floor West 65th Street and Amsterdam Avenue.
The show will likely sell out. For more information and tickets go to www.lincolncenter.org
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Clay McLeod Chapman's ’00 Premieres New Indie Rock musical, HOSTAGE SONG, on April 4th in New York City's East Village
HOSTAGE SONG is the new indie-rock musical and is a Horse Trade production. Stories and Book by Clay McLeod Chapman '00. Music and Lyrics by Kyle Jarrow. Directed by Oliver Butler.
Bound and blindfolded in a war-torn country, two hostages take refuge in music, memory and each other in this new indie-rock musical. HOSTAGE SONG is the new indie-rock musical developed by a powerhouse combo of downtown favorites: playwright and novelist, Clay McLeod Chapman (creator of the Pumpkin Pie Show), Kyle Jarrow (OBIE winning author of A Very Merry Unauthorized Children's Scientology Pageant, member of the glam rock band The Fabulous Entourage), and Oliver Butler (The Debate Society). Performed by Paul Thureen, Hanna Cheek, Hannah Bos, Abe Goldfarb and Clay McLeod Chapman '00 and backed by a live band headed by Kyle Jarrow and including Drew St. Aubin, Paul Bates, and Jonathan Sherrill.
The show runs from April 3rd through the 26th, Thursday through Saturday at 8pm. It will celebrate its opening night on Friday, April 4th at 8pm.
Tickets are $18.
**SARAH LAWRENCE ALUM DISCOUNT $15, use code SLCALUM. for performances 4/5 - 4/19**To buy tickets, call SmartTix at 212-868-4444 or visit www.hostagesong.com
The show will take place at the Kraine Theater at 85 E. 4th Street, between 2nd and 3rd Aves., NY NY 10003.
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Tovah Feldshuh ’70 Presents Show, “Tovah in a Nutshell”
EXTENDED THROUGH MARCH 22ND! ALUMNAE/I DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE!
TOVAH IN A NUTSHELL!FEINSTEIN’S AT LOEWS REGENCY
PRESENTS
THE DEBUT OF ACCLAIMED ACTRESS/SINGER AND ENTERTAINER
TOVAH FELDSHUH
Her show "Tovah in a Nutshell!" runs through March 22. In this zany musical evening, Ms. Feldshuh sings songs from Gershwin to Judy Collins and inhabits a gallery of hilarious characters, ages 8 to 80, ranging from Grandma Ada in the Bronx to socialite Muffy Brooke Asthma Alsop on Park Avenue. She will be joined by her Musical Director Mathew Eisenstein on piano.FEINSTEIN’S AT LOEWS REGENCY will play the following schedule: Tuesday through Thursday at 8:30 PM. The new weekend schedule will present shows on Friday and Saturday evenings at 8:00 PM and 10:00 PM. The 8:00 PM and 8:30 PM shows have a $60.00 cover with new $75.00 premium seats, both with a $40.00 food and beverage minimum. The 10:00 PM shows have a $40.00 cover with new $60.00 premium seats, both with a $25.00 food and beverage minimum. Jackets are suggested but not required.
Now until March 22, SLC alumnae/i can call (212) 339-4095 and mention the code "Golda" to receive 20% off the following performances: Thursday, 3/20 at 8:30; Friday, 3/21 at 8:00; Saturday, 3/22 at 8:00. For the Saturday, 3/22 performance at 10:00, alumnae/i who mention the code "Golda" can save 50% off the performance price.
FEINSTEIN’S AT THE REGENCY is located at 540 Park Avenue at 61st Street in New York City. For ticket reservations and club information, please call (212) 339-4095 or visit us online at feinsteinsatloewsregency.com and TicketWeb.com.
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Courtney Hunt's ’86 “Frozen River” Named Best Drama at Sundance
"Frozen River," a film about a struggling single mother in upstate New York who teams with a Mohawk woman to smuggle people across the Canadian border, is the first feature from director-writer Courtney Hunt. She adapted it from her own 2004 short of the same name.
The original script was selected as one of six finalists in IFP New York’s emerging Narrative Feature Script Section in 2005. It was also included in the Los Angeles Film Festival’s “Fast Track” Program in 2006. Shot in sub-zero weather in Plattsburgh, New York, in March of 2007, on Lake Champlain and surrounding areas, Frozen River stars Melissa Leo, Misty Upham, Charlie McDermott, Jr., Michael O’Keefe, and Mark Boone, Jr.
For more information, check out http://frozenriverthemovie.com/index.htm
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Sandy Rosenberg ’77 performs in CANDIDE at NYC Opera in Lincoln Center
Sandy Rosenberg ’77 will be performing the role of the Baroness in NYC Opera's production of CANDIDE. It will be performed at the NY State Theatre in Lincoln Center April 8-20.
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Erica Abeel ’58 Announces Publication of New Novel
"Conscience Point," a new novel by Erica Abeel, will be published Fall of 2008 by Unbridled Books. A talented woman becomes entranced with a mega-wealthy family in a story about a mysterious love with two faces.
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Laurie Nadel, Ph.D. ’69 Announces New Weekly Radio Show
Laurie Nadel, Ph.D. is the host of "The Sixth Sense," a weekly radio show based on her bestselling book "Sixth Sense: Unlocking Your Ultimate Mind Power" (ASJA Press, 2006). Each program contains interviews with doctors, scientists, authors, detectives, and others who use their intuitive intelligence professionally. For more information, see www.webtalkradio.net
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Adam Feder ’91 Releases Second CD
Adam Feder's second CD, Shul Band Instrumental, has been released. Its a mixture of klezmer folk grateful dead and traditional judaic melodies. Available from CDBABY or through email. Adam is the musical director of the SHUL OF NY in Manhatten and is about to tour in Berlin and Poland. Hear some music at http://adamfeder.com
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Juliet Gentile MFA ’07 Announces New Workshop, “Pathways of the Heart: The Essence of Sufism”
Upcoming Evening Workshop at NY Open Center:
Pathways of the Heart: The Essence of Sufism
Presented by, Shaykha Fariha al-Jerrahi & Juliet GentileThis evening we will discover, through direct experience, the essential ideas, practices and techniques of the Sufi tradition. Sufism, the mystical essence of Islam, has produced such luminaries as Rumi and Hafez as well as influenced the shape and scope of western mysticism in America today...
April 11th, 2008 7-10pm, 83 Spring Street, New York, NY
Members $35.00/Non-members $40.00
For more information please visit: www.opencenter.org or call (212) 219-2527 (ext. 2)
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Monica Franciscus ’85 Announces Intensive Landscape Painting Workshops in the South of France
Have a memorable and inspiring experience painting in a quiet, mountain village in historic surroundings. Sauve is in the Cevennes, Languedoc wine region and is surrounded by vineyards and mountains. 6 Day sessions starting Mondays, with a welcome dinner the Sunday before are organized from July 13 until August 17. Sessions involve 6 hours instruction per day. All levels welcome.
The objective of the workshop is to build on each painter's individual strengths with a focus on color, space and composition, thereby getting painters to the next level. The classes will deal with specific and different issues each day. Instructor Monica Franciscus has been painting for twenty years and has taught at Cornell University's Johnson Museum.
For more information, please visit www.artbymf.com
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Sarah Sarai ’97 Announces Publication of Her Poetry and Short Story
From Sarah Sarai: poems recently (2007 - 08) in Blackbox, Pank, The Tipton Poetry Journal, Potomac Review, The Minnesota Review, and The Threepenny Review. Poems just published in The Powhatan Review and The Columbia Review. Poems just accepted by Terrain: A Journal of the Built and Natural Environments, The Ester Republic, Numinous, and Juice: A Journal of the Ordinary. My poem "What I Choose To Remind You" has been published in Juice. See http://squeezetheuniverse.com/juice/sarai_remindyou.
Short-short just published in The Houston Literary Review. Download at http://thehoustonliteraryreview.com/february2008fictionissue.aspx .
See www.myspace.com/sarahsarai for updates, poems and stories to be published, and more astounding yet curious information.
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Sally Jane Kerschen-Sheppard ’00 Announces Next Playwrights Workshop
The next playwrights workshop will be Sunday, March 16 at 6 pm. If you're a playwright, actor, director, producer, or just a theatre enthusiast, please join the SLC NY Metro Alumnae/i Playwrights Workshop. Please RSVP to slcnymetro@yahoo.com for details and location.
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Kay Chernush ’66 Releases Artist's Book, A Meditation on Breast Cancer
From Kay Chernush: My artist's book, "Self Examination," is a series of self-portraits in words and images about my experience with breast cancer. The book has metal covers and comes in a brushed aluminum box. It was designed by award-winning graphic artist Ethel Kessler, herself a breast cancer survivor and designer of the U.S. Breast Cancer postal stamp. The images and a PDF of the book can be viewed on my website: www.kaychernush.com
It is available for $200, with half the proceeds going to a breast cancer navigator program for underserved women. Limited edition archival prints are also available.
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Laura Pawel ’68 Dance Company at Dance Forum, New York City
Laura Pawel Dance Company will return to Dance Forum, March 7-9, with a program that includes the premiere of "Better Than Being Guillotined," an offbeat group work to electronic music by Phil Stone. Pawel's longtime dance and music collaborators will be on hand for "Brambles," music by Barebones; and "Tangled Yarn," "Phoenix," "Griffins" (premiere), and "Sphinx," all with music by composer/pianist Eleanor Hovda, celebrating her 35th year of collaboration with Laura Pawel Dance Company. This is also the 40th year of Pawel's collaboration with Pamela Dover Finney (1962). Performances are at 8:30 pm, 3/7 and 3/8, and at 5 pm, 3/9. Tickets are $15 at the door. For reservations, call (212) 873-9073. Dance Forum is located at 20 East 17th Street, on the second floor, in New York City.
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J. Keith van Straaten ’93 Presents STORY-TIME IN NEW YORK!
Monday, February 25 - 7:00pm
(Doors at 6:45)Time Out New York Lounge
downstairs at New World Stages
340 West 50th Street (btwn 8th and 9th Avenues)FREE - No Cover, No Minimum, No Reservations, No Nuttin.
Ophira Eisenberg and J. Keith van Straaten bring their new story-reading format on the New York storytelling scene with their innovative StorySwap series. A select group of writers read all-true autobiographical stories directly from the page. The twist? They read each others’ stories… and, they don’t know which story they’ll read until they walk on stage! Why? Find out!
Featuring:
*Frank DeCaro
*Jim Colucci
*Theresa Benaquist
*Eric Pliner
*J. Keith van Straaten
*Ophira Eisenberg
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Sarah Chun MFA ’06 Announces Multicultural Fellowship Recruitment in San Francisco
The San Francisco Foundation's Multicultural Fellowship Program provides professionals of color with challenging work experiences as a member of the Foundation's grant-making program staff. This year, the Fellowship Program is seeking one Fellow in each of the following program areas: Arts and Culture, Education, and Social Justice. The fellowship positions will commence in July 2008.
The deadline to apply is February 29, 2008. Visit www.sff.org for more information.
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Laurel Lipkin ’79 Sponsors High-Profile Hillary Clinton Video
Laurel Lipkin ’72 sponsored the following video, in support of Hillary Clinton. The video is called "Real Solutions for Real Students" and profiles four students talking about the reasons they support her. It was launched on YouTube this weekend. Here's the link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1ofQRam--g
The Clinton campaign loved the video and will be using parts of it in a national effort this Thursday intended to show support by younger voters for Hillary. They expect as many as two million hits.
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Joyce Lindorff ’72 Announces and Performs in the Music of SLC Emeritus Music Faculty member, André Singer
THE MUSIC OF ANDRÉ SINGER (1907-1996)Performances will include saxophone, violin, flute, cello, harpsichord, piano, with special guests
JEAN AND KENNETH WENTWORTH
Admission is free.
Saturday, February 23rd at 3p.m.
Bruno Walter Auditorium
New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center, 111 Amsterdam Ave.Please join our centennial celebration of the music of André Singer, SLC Emeritus Music Faculty member (1946-77). Singer's more than 100 orchestral, operatic, chamber and keyboard compositions are archived in the American Music Collection of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. The afternoon will feature highlights from these works, performed by his friends. The afternoon was organized by SLC alumna Joyce Lindorff (’72), who is Singer's music executor. For information contact the NYPL at
(212) 642-0142, Joyce Lindorff at (215)204-2533
or log on to
http://www.nypl.org/research/calendar/prog/lpa/plistlpa2.cfm
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Jenny Lane MFA ’97 Announces Premiere of Her Play: “Does Anyone Know Sarah Paisner?”
From Jenny Lane: I am so proud to announce the premier of my play, Does Anyone Know Sarah Paisner? which opens on Friday, February 15th and will run through Sunday, March 2nd. I have a wonderful cast and crew working on the production, so I hope you all can make it! Here is all the information on the production:
SHOW DATES & TIMES
Friday, February 15 - 8PM, Saturday, February 16 at 2 pm & 8PM Sunday, February 17 - 7PM, Monday, February 18 at 8 pm, Thursday, February 21 - 8PM, Friday, February 22 - 8PM, Saturday, February 23 - 2PM & 8PM, Sunday, February 24 - 7PM, Wednesday, February 27 at 7 pm, Thursday, February 28 - 8PM, Friday, February 29 - 8PM, Saturday, March 1 at 2 pm & 8pm, and Sunday, March 2 - 7PMTHE GENE FRANKEL THEATRE
www.genefrankel.com
24 Bond Street (and Lafayette)
Take the 6 to Bleeker, N,R,W to Prince
Visit Theatremania.com or call toll free 866-811-4111. Tickets are $18.00.I hope you guys can make it! Visit www.sarahpaisner.com for more information.
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Madeline Silber ’83 Featured on “Behind the Art” online at WSKG.org
This is what they'll announce on the radio:
"Oneonta artist Madeline Silber is our featured artist on 'Behind the Art' this week. Visit Mixed Media, the arts and culture blog to find out more about her work and to explore the arts community in our region. Mixed Media, the arts and culture blog - online at WSKG.ORG."Read the interview at: http://wskg.typepad.com/mixedmedia/
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Sally Jane Kerschen-Sheppard ’00 Announces New Staged Reading on Martha's Vineyard
White Trash Intellectuals Presents:
The Salon: Working Progress
Katharine Cornell Theatre
54 Spring Street, Vineyard Haven, MA
Sunday, February 17, 2008
2 pm and 7 pmMartha's Vineyard's White Trash Intellectuals is proud to present The Salon: Working Progress at the Katherine Cornell Theatre on Sunday, February 17, 2008.
In a one-day-only exhibition, four innovative New York writers will share their works in progress in two staged readings followed by audience Q and A. This event provides the audience with the opportunity to actively participate in their theatre-going experience, as well as shape the development of a work in progress through their honest reactions and constructive comments. The playwright not only gets to hear their work read aloud, they also get the feedback necessary to take that work to the next level.
Love is the Proof, written by Elizabeth Dembrowsky, explores how a single, seemingly bizarre event affects the lives of those who see it in different ways. After a young woman is arrested for spraying graffiti at Ground Zero, three characters, the arresting officer, the defense lawyer, and an unhinged young nun, all try to make sense of why someone would do such a thing and of what the graffiti means to them.
Worth, written by Sally Jane Kerschen-Sheppard, follows the memories of a woman who has just learned of the death of her estranged father. As she remembers their tumultuous relationship, she is forced to ask herself how she can find value in herself when she knows she was not valued by others. How much is a relationship worth?
Thomas Michael Quinn's Killer is a dramatic narrative about a small town man who moves to the Big Apple, learns the rules of survival, and begins a journey of self-discovery that takes him to a place more frightening than the city itself.
Sarah Cavallero's Ruby Films focuses on the struggles of a forty year old woman who is trying to have it all. The pressure is on as she juggles running her own production company with the demands of being a wife and mother. Yet the more she tries, the less she succeeds.
The Salon: Working Progress is an event not to be missed. There is no charge for the reading, though there is a suggested donation of $10. For further information, please contact Elizabeth Dembrowsky at dembrowsky@gmail.com.
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Emilie Miller ’01 Presents Play, Who Will Carry the Word?
The Red Fern Theatre Company Presents WHO WILL CARRY THE WORD?
By Charlotte Delbo
Translation from French by Cynthia Haft
Directed by Melanie Moyer WilliamsFebruary 21 - March 2, 2008
Center Stage, NY (48 West 21st Street)Featuring Lindsey Andersen*, Laura Anderson, Julia Arazi, Jarusha Ariel, Ilana Becker, Kirsten Benjamin, Alexandra Cremer*, Storm Garner, Nicole Grillos, Anaïs Koivisto, Kasey W. Lockwood, Mariya King, Laura Luciano, Sierra Marcks, Paige McDonnell, Emilie Elizabeth Miller, Adair Moran*, Dot Portella*, Kendall Rileigh*, Emily Riordan, Jacquelyn Schultz, Alicia St. Louis, and Christine Wolff
Based upon the true story of Charlotte Delbo, Who Will Carry the Word? depicts the lives of 23 women while they shared a barracks in Auschwitz. Their goal: to keep the strongest of them alive so that someone could share what they had experienced with the world.The production team features direction by Melanie Moyer Williams, lighting design by Jessica Greenberg, set design by Adrienne Kapalko, costume d! esign by Summer Lee Jack, makeup by Amanda Donelan, and Stage Manageme nt by Kimberly J. Weston. Press representation by Lanie Zipoy. Please call 646-284-3517.
Performance Schedule
Thursday, February 21 @ 8pm, Friday, February 22 @ 8pm, Saturday, February 23 @ 8pm, Sunday, February 24@ 3pm, Monday, February 25 @ 8pm, Thursday, February 28 @ 8pm, Friday, February 29 @ 8pm, Saturday, March 1 @ 8pm, Sunday, March 2 @ 3pm AND 8pmTickets
Tickets are $18 and can be purchased here, or at www.theatermania.com. Tickets are also available by calling 212-352-3101. Tickets are available at the box office the day of the show for cash only.Philanthropy
Red Fern has chosen to partner with the Remember the Women Institute for this production. They are a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit corporation that conducts and encourages research and cultural activities that contribute to including women in history. Special emphasis is on women in the context of the Holocaust and its aftermath, including post-World War II immigration. Learn more about them at www.rememberwomen.org.
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Alexandra Devin Vicich ’98 Presents The Evolution of the Independent Woman in Society
Why Theatre Company presents four readings.
02/15/08: The Heiress (1850-52)
02/22/08: A Doll's House (1879)
02/29/08: Cactus Flower (1965)
03/07/08: Lilith (1980's - 2007)Doors open at 7PM, come and mingle, readings will start around 7:15. Enjoy wine, hear the reading of a play, and participate in a discussion afterwards! Four Friday evenings at Where Eagles Dare Studios, 347 W 36th St (8th/9th), 13th Fl, Rm Goose
Admission to the series is FREE!
Call 212-604-4397 if you would like more information.
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Martha Mendelsohn ’64 Announces SLC Alumnae/i Prose Writers Group Has Two Openings
From Martha Mendelsohn: The ongoing SLC alumnae/i prose writers group has two openings. We meet one Tuesday a month at participants' homes in Manhattan. Work is emailed beforehand and read aloud at each meeting. Active, committed writers of fiction or non-fiction are welcome. Next meeting is February 26. Please contact Martha Mendelsohn at marthamend@aol.com .
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Madeline Silber ’83 Announces New Solo Painting Exhibition, Entanglements
Madeline Silber presents a solo painting exhibition entitled, "Entanglements". The exhibit will take place at the Fine Arts Gallery at SUNY College at Oneonta, from February 4th until February 29th, 2008.The hours are from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, when classes are in session and by appointment. For more information, call 607-436-3456 or visit www.oneonta.edu/academics/art/gallery.html
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Natalie Neal's New Novel Praised by Amazon.com
Natalie Neal's new novel, Best in the Whole Wide World, has been chosen as a semi-finalist in the Amazon Breakthrough Award. Reviews may be submitted before March 2nd by navigating to http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00126595W
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Tara James ’00 Announces Tenth Annual Women's History Month Conference
Tenth Annual Women' History Month Conference: Black Power, Black Feminism: Black Women's Activism and the Development of Womanist / Feminist Consciousness in the Era Black Power
Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY
Friday–Saturday March 7-8, 2008This Conference is FREE and open to the public.
Traditionally scholarship on the Black Power era has characterized this time of renewed cultural and political nationalism and activism as an almost exclusively male domain. This has begun to change. Not only have scholars uncovered a long tradition of black women's activism before and during the Black Power era, but they have begun reevaluating the entire era as a result. Part and parcel with this period of activism has been the development of a Black feminist consciousness. If scholars have seen the seeds of this consciousness far earlier, the sixties and seventies were notable for organizing that recognized inextricable and complicated ties between categories of race, class, and gender. This conference seeks to sustain and enhance new scholarship that redefines the era, bringing the work and effort of women to the center.
Register and see the full program schedule at: http://www.slc.edu/womens-history/conference/index.php
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Estha Weiner ’72 Presents Workshop, Sculpting a Poem, at the Hudson Valley Writer's Center
The hardest thing to do is write what you intended to write. In this concentrated workshop, you will shape and reshape poems, respond carefully to fellow class members, perhaps respond to an exercise, stretch yourself towards the new and the traditional, in your own work and in the pleasure of reading other poets. Note: this workshop is for more advanced poets
Estha Weiner is co-editor and contributor to Blues For Bill: A Tribute To William Matthews. (Akron Poetry Series, 2005) and author of The Mistress Manuscript (Rivendell Press, forthcoming). Her poems have appeared in numerous anthologies and magazines, including The New Republic and Barrow Street. She is a 2005 winner of a Paterson Poetry Prize, and was a finalist for “Discovery: The Nation” Prize. Estha is founder and director of The NY Writers Nights Series for Sarah Lawrence College, Marymount Writers Nights, and a Speaker on Shakespeare for The New York Council For The Humanities. She is Adj. Assistant Professor of English at City College of NY, and serves on the Poetry/Writing faculties of The Frost Place, Stonecoast Writers Conference, Poets and Writers, Poets House, as well as The Writers Voice. She also serves on the Advisory Board of The Hudson Valley Writers’ Center’s Slapering Hol Press. In her previous life, Estha was an actor and worked for BBC radio in the US.
The workshop will be held at The Hudson Valley Writers' Center, 300 Riverside Drive, Sleepy Hollow, NY. To register, or for more information, call us at 914-332-5953 or e-mail info@writerscenter.org. General information and directions to the Writers' Center can be found on our website, www.writerscenter.org.
SCULPTING A POEM
with Estha Weiner
4 Mondays, 7 - 9 pm
January 28 - March 3 (skips Feb. 18 & 25)
Fee $180The Hudson Valley Writers' Center
300 Riverside Drive
Sleepy Hollow, NY 10591
914-332-5953 / Fax 332-4825
www.writerscenter.org
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Rasheed Bell ’96, Now Rasalus, Releases Brand New 5 Song EP and Will Perform in Brooklyn at BAM Cafe
Rasalus has a brand new 5 song EP out on KAWO Music, exclusively in the Netherlands and Germany. This is the long-awaited follow-up to his late 90's Universal Records release, the critically-acclaimed European smash, "prototype".Rasalus will also be performing Friday, February 1st at 9:30 p.m. at The BAM Cafe in Brooklyn. Admission is free. (BAM Cafe is located at 30 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11217.)
For more information on Rasalus check out his MySpace page at myspace.com/rachidisrasalus, on the web at www.rasalus.com or on youtube.com at rasalus/rachid-pride
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Jenna Esposito ’00 Announces CD Release Celebration at Barnes & Noble in New York City
Jenna celebrates the release of her debut CD "Thirteen Men...and Me!" with a free concert and CD signing at Barnes & Noble at Lincoln Center on February 6th, 2008. Seating begins at 5:30 and the half-hour concert begins at 6 p.m. The CD will be available for purchase through Barnes & Noble. (Barnes and Noble Lincoln Center is located at 1972 Broadway, New York, NY 10023.)
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Jane Freeman ’71 Exhibits "Melville, Miniatures & More" at Art 101 in Brooklyn

It is with great anticipation that ART 101 announces the forthcoming exhibition of works by Jane Freeman.Jane Freeman is a one-woman artists’ cooperative; painter, sculptor, book artist, designer, thinker, historian, writer, teacher and speaker. ”She is an artist in many ways, not least in her way with words” wrote Oliver Sacks.
She brings her myriad talents to ART 101 on January 25, with a series of paintings and essays inspired by reading “Moby Dick.”
The intense small wood panels evoke 19th century maritime New York. Eleven of Ms. Freeman’s famous miniatures, will also be exhibited, reflecting the 19th century theme. Two have been specially created for the exhibition: “The Spouter Inn; The Creaking Sign” and “The Spouter Inn; The Patchwork Quilt.”
Jane Freeman’s miniature stage sets have been shown both here and abroad. She is the recipient of a Pollack Krasner grant. She has exhibited internationally and has lectured and taught art and writing all over the US and in colleges in New York City. She is the author of “The Art of the Miniature” (Watson-Guptill, 02.)
The exhibition will up from January 25th through February 17th. There will be an artist’s reception on Sunday, January 27th, from 4 to 7 pm. An evening of reading Melville is scheduled for February 12, from 7 to 9 pm.
Art 101 is located at 101 Grand Street, Brooklyn, NY 11211. (Take L train to Bedford Avenue, walk south on Bedford to Grand Street, then walk west to 101. Studio is open Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. or by appointment: 718-302-2242.)
For more information, please visit Art 101's web site at: http://www.art101brooklyn.com
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Sharon Langshur MS ’89 Publishes Book, We Carry Each Other
Sharon Langshur MS '89 is the co-founder of CarePages Inc., a Chicago-based healthcare services company that provides a nationwide web service for patients, their families, and healthcare providers (http://www.carepages.com). CarePages.com provided the inspiration for the recently released book, We Carry Each Other (Conari Press, October 2007). These stories of everyday heroes are meant to inspire a social movement in caring for those struggling with illness, loss and life’s challenges.
"'We Carry Each Other is a book for our time,” says Steve Case, Chairman and CEO, Revolution Health and co-founder of AOL. “Eric and Sharon Langshur give us a compassionate, caring and ultimately inspirational look at what we do and say when a loved one or friend is facing serious illness or loss." We Carry Each Other is a guide for anyone who has ever felt paralyzed by the difficulties facing another person and will help them to find the courage to open their hearts and spirits with the right words and actions when a spouse, child, parent, friend, neighbor, or colleague needs them most.
We Carry Each Other was written by Eric and Sharon Langshur with Mary Beth Sammons. Available wherever books are sold or through the publisher at (800) 423-7087, orders@redwheelweiser.com, or online at www.conari.com.
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Gwendolen Gross MFA ’98 Leads Role Mommy Panel at White Plains Public Library
On Wednesday, January 23 from 7-9 pm, Role Mommy Events will present a panel discussion with women writers including Gwendolen Gross SLC MFA 1998, and author of The Other Mother, http://www.The-Other-Mother.com. The Other Mother is one of Role Mommy's list of must-read books for 2007 - "This compelling read paints a realistic portrait of the intense divide between a working and stay at home mom."
The other panelists are Jane Green, bestselling author of Second Chance, and Pamela Dorman, Editorial Director for Every Woman's Voice Press. The event will be held at the White Plains Public Library, located at 100 Martine Avenue, White Plains, NY. Register with beth@rolemommy.com
For more information, please check out the following web site: http://rolemommyevents.blogspot.com/2007/12/our-next-event-january-23-at-white.html
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Adrienne Dawes ’04 Announces World Premiere of You Are Pretty

St Idiot Collective announces the world premiere of You Are Pretty, a dark comedy about a modern-day brothel written by Adrienne Dawes '04. Directed Jenny Larson, You Are Pretty stars Lee Eddy (Austin Chronicle's Best Actress 2003-2007), Cyndi Williams (Independent Spirit Award Nominee for Best Actress-Room), David Yeakle, Carra Martinez, Michael Joplin, Alan Metoskie and Travis Hale.You Are Pretty will be performed as a site-specific production in a house beginning February 7th, 2008 and closing February 23rd, 2008.
Inspired by HBO's documentary Cathouse and the book Brothel by Alexa Albert, You Are Pretty invites audiences into the intimate lives of the women and men working in the Hippie Ho House, a legal brothel located in the rural town of Moundhouse, NV. Their struggle to find love within the harsh environs of the brothel is met with a biting sense of humor and feminist perspective of the legal sex industry.
You Are Pretty was first developed by Downstage, the Sarah Lawrence College student-run theater company in April 2004 and has contiunued development with a grant from Austin Scriptworks' Seed Support program and received readings/workshops by St Idiot Collective and Live!
Girls! Theatre (Seattle, WA). In 2004 the play was awarded the Lipkin Prize for Playwriting awarded by Sarah Lawrence College.
In the October issue of American Theater magazine local theatre artist Amparo Garcia Crow raves, "If I could be a young artist again, I would join (or offer my house to) Austin's busiest actor troupe St Idiot Collective. Their site-specific valentine this February is You Are Pretty by Adrienne Dawes, an earnest tale about the legal sex industry from a feminist perspective that has turned - how shall we say? - romantic."
Tickets will go onsale beginning January 28th, 2008 available online at http://youarepretty.eventbrite.com Admission to the opening night performance on February 7th will include goody bags filled with safe-sex products and gifts from project sponsors Early to Bed, Babeland, Bitch Magazine and Forbidden Fruit. Tito's Vodka sponsors the opening weekend party February 8th, 2008.
A limited number of press comps are offered for preview performances February 4th-6th, 2008 by special request.
DATES: February 7th - 23rd, 2008
TIME: 8pm
VENUE: Hippie Ho House brothel (see website for directions)
TICKETS: $14 regular admission; opening night $17 (admission includes goody bag) TICKET URL: http://youarepretty.eventbrite.com
For more information visit the company's URL at: www.myspace.com/stidiotcollective or contact st.idiot@gmail.com
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Gwynne Middleton ’01 Receives U.S. Student Fulbright Award
Gwynne Middleton '01 and now of University of Nevada, Reno has been awarded a Fulbright U.S. Student scholarship to Malaysia in Teaching English As A Foreign Language, the United States Department of State and the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board announced recently.
Middleton is one of over 1,300 U.S. citizens who will travel abroad for the 2007-2008 academic year through the Fulbright U.S. Student Program.
The Fulbright Program, America’s flagship international educational exchange program, is sponsored by the United States Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. Since its establishment in 1946 under legislation introduced by the late Senator J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, the Fulbright Program has provided approximately 279,500 people – 105,400 Americans who have studied, taught or researched abroad and 174,100 students, scholars and teachers from other countries who have engaged in similar activities in the United States – with the opportunity to observe each others' political, economic, educational and cultural institutions, to exchange ideas and to embark on joint ventures of importance to the general welfare of the world's inhabitants. The Program operates in over 150 countries worldwide.
Recipients of Fulbright awards are selected on the basis of academic or professional achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership potential in their fields. For further information about the Fulbright Program or the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, please visit our website at http://exchanges.state.gov
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The World Congress on Psychology and Spirituality invites Hilda Brown ’57 to present The Umbrella Project, a non-profit she founded in 1990
The World Congress on Psychology and Spirituality has invited Hilda Brown, founder and President of The Umbrella Project to present her project at the Congress in New Delhi, India on January 5, 2008. The Umbrella Project, a global 501 ( c)3 non-profit teaches children that they can make a difference through creativity. See www.umbrellaproject.org for more information on this 18 year old venture.
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Mir Productions Presents Fetish: An Original Play by Joyce Wu
Mir Productions presents Fetish
A New Play by Joyce Wu
Directed by Julianne Just '05
Featuring LeVon Fickling, Michael Lutton, Jacob Troy '05 and Joyce WuThursday, January 10th through Sunday, January 13th at 8:00 pm,
Wednesday, January 16 through Saturday, January 19th at 8:00 pm
Sunday, January 20th at 2:00 pmThe Players Loft
115 MacDougal Street, New York, NY
Tickets are $15.00, visit www.smarttix.com for reservations, or call 212-868-4444.A recent posting in the dating section of the craigslist.com claimed that "Asian women are the other white meat". The implication was that a white man and an Asian woman make the most common and socially acceptable interracial pairing. Fetish, a new play, depicts Matt and Sophie, a couple about to get married, who must contend with how much race and ethnicity still matter to them in an era after political correctness.
Sophie, perpetually feeling like an outsider, fears that his Wasp family will never fully accept her. Frustrated by her constant insecurity, Matt begins to lose sympathy. When Matt helps his best friend Dion, who is black, secure a job at the private equity firm where he works, his co-worker James assumes it is because Dion has benefitted from Affirmative Action-type quotas. When he discovers that Matt has arranged it, James decides to poison the friends against each other and to sabotage Matt's relationship with Sophie.
Exploiting stereotypes that Matt, like anyone, secretly harbors but would never admit having, James begins to suggest that Sophie is cheating on him with Dion. A contemporary twist on Othello, the play explores the ways in which people of color are exoticized and eroticized even by those who are closest to them. While the tragedy of Othello lies in the title character's capitulation to the violent, barbarous caricature, Fetish portrays the tragedy that arises from subscribing to those very stereotypes.
Dubbed a "promising young playwright" by Backstage, Joyce Wu (playwright) studied with acclaimed playwright OyamO and graduated with honors with a B.A. in English Literature from the University of Michigan. Her one act, Other People, was lauded by nytheatre.com as a "hellacious amount of thought-provoking fun."
For more information, please visit Mir Productions' web site.
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Susan Yankowitz ’63 Presents Staged Reading of New Documentary Theatre Production, "SEVEN"
Seven award-winning playwrights -- Paula Cizmar, Catherine Filloux, Gail Kriegel, Carol K. Mack, Ruth Margraff, Anna Deavere Smith and Susan Yankowitz -- have created a collaborative work for the theatre based upon personal interviews and oral histories of seven extraordinary women whose work benefits the citizens of their diverse cultures: Russia, Pakistan, Nigeria, Northern Ireland, Afghanistan, Guatemala, and Cambodia. The play is a testament to their extraordinary acts and common humanity in the face of injustice and violence.
It is about to have its premiere presentation in a staged reading at the 92nd St. 'Y' on January 21, 2008, directed by Evan Yionoulis, and with the support of Vital Voices Global Partnership:
" Vital Voices is proud to be collaborating with such distinguished playwrights on this groundbreaking work of documentary theatre. SEVEN has truly captured the important work and remarkable lives of a diverse and courageous group of women leaders. We hope the SEVEN stories will inspire audiences to commit themselves to changing our world for the better as well."
Date & Time: Mon, Jan 21, 2008, 8:00pm
Location: Lexington Avenue at 92nd Street
Venue: Kaufmann Concert Hall
Code: T-TP5MS17-01
Price: $18.00 / $10.00 Age 35 and UnderTickets can be ordered online at www.92Y.org -- you can check the 92nd Street Y website and look for SEVEN -- or by phone (212.415.5500), fax (212.415.5788), or in-person at the box office.
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Hilda Brown's ’57 The Umbrella Project Invited to Present at the World Congress on Psychology and Spirituality in New Delhi India
From Hilda Brown, class of 1957: The Umbrella Project, a global children's art project, has been invited to present at the World Congress on Psychology and Spirituality in New Delhi, India. After 18 years of teaching children that they can make a difference through creativity, we are excited to be recognized by the International community.
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Nancy Boulicault ’82 Launches Second Book in the Innovative Bilingual Series, One Plot - Two Languages
Radio Franglais, Nancy Boulicault's second book in the innovative bilingual series, One Plot – Two Languages, was launched at the Festival de Jeunesse at the French Institute in London on December 5th, where she was a featured author alongside such luminaries as Michael Rosen, Quentin Blake and Daniel Pennac. Nancy will be touring North America (US and Canada) with her books and workshops in 2008. Middlesex University Press is pleased to offer a discount of 20% on books and workshops booked by referral from the SLC community. For more information contact Nancy at nancybou@dsl.pipex.com or info@radiofranglais.com .
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Tamara Studniski ’95 Announces Production of Aladdin: A pantomime in the British tradition performed by the Qingdao International Drama Group
The Qingdao International Drama Group is staging their second pantomime directed and co-produced by Tamara Studniski. This year's cast has over 30 members from over 10 different countries. Half of our profits go to charity: Last year, we raised enough to send 15 local, underprivileged children to school.
The performance takes place on January 25th, at Qingdao Number 2 Middle School in the Shandong Province of China.
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Judith Strand Chirgwin ’53 Offers An Opportunity for the Residents of the City of Naples, FL, to Have a Naples Town Meeting
The City of Naples has a population of approximately 20,000 people with about 16,000 voters. For over 75 years the City has attracted the most sophisticated and unpretentious of new residents. When developers built gated communities which now have about 400,000 residents outside the City of Naples in Collier County, the post office allowed the owners to use "Naples" as part of their US Postal address.
Those living within the City limits are now eager to preserve the small town character which brought them here. So beginning in January we will meet to share our interests at the Central Avenue Library at 5:30 pm on the 4th Thursday of each month. Anyone living in Naples who would like to strengthen our network is welcome and encouraged to join.
Everyone's participation will enrich our community. Please see what you can contribute to www.naplestownmeeting.com
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Modern Adaptations of Yiddish Plays Never Before Available in English Just Published by Ellen Perecman ’75
Ellen Perecman '75 has just published a collection of Yiddish plays that have never before been translated into English. The volume, Selected Yiddish Plays Vol. I: Works by Sholem Aleichem, Sholem Asch, I.D. Berkowitz and Peretz Hirshbein, is now available at www.newworldsproject.org and Amazon.com for $16.95. All proceeds from the book go to New Worlds Theatre Project, Inc.
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Eugenia Lovett West ’44 Receives Advance Praise for Her New Mystery, Without Warning
Praise for "Without Warning", the new mystery from Eugenia Lovett West '44:"Engaging start to a new series... West spins a plausible tale, and flawed, grieving Emma makes an appealing heroine." - Publisher's Weekly
"Simply engaging from start to finish. Clearly a series on its way." - Lyme Times
"West... has a nice way with the material accoutrements of the priveleged on both sides of the Atlantic." - Kirkus Reviews
"A delight!" - Rebecca Pepper Sinkler, former editor, The New York Times Book ReviewA woman’s search for her husband’s killer plunges her into the high-stakes world of illegal weapons and global threats
Emma Streat had it all: a dream house, two beautiful sons, and a marriage to the successful—if workaholic—CEO of an important defense company. But when her CEO husband dies in a hit-and-run accident, she leaves her comfortable life along the Connecticut River behind to find his killer. The search plunges the dynamic ex-opera singer into an international high tech world where a new laser invention may become a global threat.
Using her talent for making unlikely connections, Emma becomes involved with an intriguing British peer who works undercover smoking out spies. Two physicists are murdered and a key notebook is stolen. Emma must keep her head, while mourning her husband’s death and bearing threats on her life. Her search spirals into a terrifying development—and surprising end.
Eugenia Lovett West delivers a thrilling mystery and a strong, appealing heroine.
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Carl Atkins ’75 Publishes "Shakespeare's Sonnets With Three Hundred Years of Commentary"
Carl Atkins announces the release of his new book, "Shakespeare's Sonnets: With Three Hundred Years of Commentary". This is a fully annotated critical edition of the sonnets written without literary jargon and intended for serious students and general readers alike. It is only the fourth variorum edition of the sonnets ever published, and the first since 1944. It should appeal equally to those coming to Shakesepeare's sonnets for the first time and those seeking a fresh look at an old friend. The book is published by Fairleigh Dickinson University Press and is available on Amazon.com.
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Rasheed Bell, Now Rasalus, Plays Joe's Pub on December 17th
Rasalus will be playing Joe's Pub (425 Lafayette Street between East 4th and Astor Place in New York City's East Village) on December 17th at 7 p.m. This event will promote Rasalus's brand new 5 song EP entitled, "my name is Rasalus" on KAWO Records out of Germany. He will also perform songs from his critically acclaimed debut, "prototype". Rasalus will rock you! Check out myspace.com/rachidisrasalus to keep up with Rasalus's whereabouts and goings-on!
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Jane Trigere ’70 Presents Show at Yeshiva University Museum

Local artist, Jane Trigere, has a showing of her art in a New York City museum. Her collective-collage, called "Encompassing Sukkot: Collected Memories", is on view until January 31st at Yeshiva University Museum in the Center for Jewish History (15 West 16th Street).See www.yumuseum.org for more details.
Trigere's collection of anecdotal Sukkot** memories come from all over the world. She searched for and made objects to represent these memoris -- sometimes literally, but also evocatively.
Bound together, these visualized memories form another sort of story.
The viewer is an active participant. Can these varied memories encompassed within one frame bring visions of Sukkot to mind? Does it matter or detract from the experience if a few images are unusual or unfamiliar? And what of the viewers who have no memories of the holiday of Sukkot? Can they make something of this collage of images that is all their own?
Each memory has a distinct space of its own, but is also inscribed, and the author acknowledged, in a booklet attached to the panel. This 3-D collage-in-a-box is homage to the artist Joseph Cornell who single-handedly created this quirky art form in the 1930's through 1950's.
Why "Encompassing Sukkot" as a title?
On Sukkot, Jews shake the lulav and etrog (in tall right-hand box) in six directions -- a symbol of God's presence everywhere, and Jews always need to know where east is in order to direct their prayers toward Jerusalem. Therefore, a working compass is placed in the center. All sailors are taught to "box the compass", which means they must be able to name and locate 32 points on the compass.
Jane Trigere has lived in Western Massachusetts since 1991. She has worked with her husband Ken Schoen in his book business (Schoen Books) and was the founding director of Hatikvah Holocaust Education & Research Center in 1997. She has been active in the arts as a book binder, a graphic artist, a set and costume designer, a calligrapher, a cobbler, an eyeglass frame designer, an embroiderer, a painter, and a textile artist. She is currently collecting stories about ironing for another collective-collage. Contact her at jane@trigere.com. See www.trigere.com for more.
** Sukkot is the Jewish fall holiday that historians agree Thanksgiving was probably modeled on. Both holidays revolve around showing gratitude for a bountiful harvest.
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Presents His Play, Scattered Blossoms
Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin shared a studio and living space in the south of France during a six week period in 1888, pursuing their separate dreams of paradise. During those same six weeks, just a few hundred miles away, Jack the Ripper went on his killing spree. What did one event have to do with the other? Was it just metaphysical coincidence or are their times when the culture goes crazy? This play explores van Gogh’s “Japanese Dream” in search of answers.
STEPHEN FIFE’s productions in NYC: Primary Stages, Jewish Rep, Playhouse 91, Circle Rep Lab, Samuel Beckett, Hypothetical Theatre, La Mama, Alice’s Fourth Floor, Theatre for the New City. His adaptation of the Yiddish play God of Vengeance was recently produced in Tel Aviv after having been done several times in the US. This Is Not What I Ordered, an evening of comedies, is published by Samuel French. His theatre memoir Best Revenge was published in 2004. Break of Day, his play about van Gogh’s family, was produced in Hollywood in 1999. He is currently reworking that play while also writing the third play of his “van Gogh Cycle.” He lives in the Los Angeles area, where he is a member of the Actors Studio West playwrights/directors lab. For more information, please check out www.stephenfife.com
Play takes place on November 19th, at 7:30p.m. at 38th Street Studios (Primary Stages Studios, 307 West 38th Street Suite 1510, New York, NY, 10018)
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Eisa Ulen Richardson's ’90 debut novel, Crystelle Mourning, Now Available in Paperback
Eisa Ulen Richardson's '90 debut novel, Crystelle Mourning, is now available in paperback. This profound and intense debut novel is the story of a young African American woman from West Philadelphia who finds her path to a bright future in gentrified Brooklyn, New York, blocked when she can't let go of the love she lost. With its deeply resonant depictions of urban African American life and the cultural forces that challenge and sustain their communities, Crystelle Mourning is a triumphant, lyrical beginning to a bright new talent in fiction.
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Porochista Khakpour ’00, Acclaimed Author, Reads with SLC Alums and Faculty in Two Events in NYC
Porochista Khakpour, acclaimed author of Sons and Other Flammable Objects (a New York Times Editor's Choice, and selection for Chicago Tribune Fall's Best), will be reading at two events in New York City.
Debut novelist Porochista Khakpour '00 will be reading with SLC faculty members and writers Melvin Bukiet and Victoria Redel on Saturday, November 17 at 4pm as a part of the Enclave Reading Series. See http://www.enclavianmatter.blogspot.com for more info.
On Monday November 19 at 7pm, Khakpour will also read with MFA '02 alum Dalia Sofer and writers Nahid Rachlin and Marsha Mehran for the Half King's "An Evening With Four Female Iranian-Amerian Authors." See http://www.thehalfking.com/calendar/2007/iran.htm for more info.
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Porochista Khakpour's ’00 Novel, Sons and Other Flammable Objects, Acclaimed in The New Yorker
The New Yorker this week gave Porochista Khakpur a very positive review:
"Khakpour explores ethnicity, nationalism, and post-9/11 fear—well-worn themes that are far less compelling than the exuberant originality of her style. The characters burst from the page in fiery exchanges, while their chaotic inner lives are conveyed with witty precision; a simple parting comment is accompanied by "a definite wink, a wink or maybe a squint, but a smile, possibly a grimace, more than a smile." Khakpour's comic sense of familial tensions—particularly father-son enmity—is infectious. . ."
For more, please check newsstands for the November issue.
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Monique Lukens MFA ’97 Is Grand Prize Contender for "Institute for Independent Music"
Placing "1st" in the "IFI Electronica Genre Contest," Monique Marissa Lukens '97 & Jake Benson's "Wo Sind Sie" (Jake Heartache trance mix) is NOW vying for the "GRAND HONOR" of the IFIMusic.org/CONTESTS. Please email your vote to Contest@IFIMusic.org. Type the # of your song choice in the email. (You may vote as many times as you like as long as you use a "different" email address each time.) Thank you for your support!!
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Denise J. Hart MFA ’99 Is Semi-Finalist in Eugene O'Neill National Playwrights Conference
Denise J. Hart, Graduate Theatre MFA '99 is the 2007 semi-finalist in the Eugene O'Neill National Playwrights Conference and The Lark Play Festival for her moving drama, This Joy.
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Emily Franklin ’94 Reads from Her Latest Book, How to Spell Chanukah: 18 Writers Celebrate 8 Nights of Lights
Join Emily Franklin '94 for a reading from her latest book, How to Spell Chanukah: 18 Writers Celebrate 8 Nights of Lights. Other authors including Steve Almond, Jill Kargman, Jonathan Tropper, and Adam Langer will read and sign copies at the Upper West Side Jewish Community Center at 7pm on December 10th.
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Jeannine Jones ’98 Presents Plays, No Entrance and Blind luv
Dora Mae Productions presents a production of one-act plays written by Alec Miller and Evan Farber, directed by Jeannine Jones '98 and Rachael Evans.Performances run from November 13th through the 18th at 8pm, November 17th also at 2pm.
Featuring: Matt Stapleton '05, Christopher Cole, Lexi-Cullen-Baker, Sherita Delgado, Helene Galek, TR Hayes, Ellen Haynes, Brandon Hillard, Samantha Jones, Montserrat Mendez, Theresa Rose, Benjamin Weaver, and Brad Zizmor.
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Eugenia L. West ’44 Publishes Mystery Novel, "Without Warning"
From Eugenia Lovett West: "Exciting things happen, even when you're not the youngest kid on the block. My mystery, Without Warning, the first in a series, is being published in December 2007 by Thomas Dunne/St. Martin's Press, using the name Eugenia Lovett West."
A woman. A murder. A mission. In Eugenia L. West's new mystery Without Warning, they come together to tell the riveting tale of Emma Streat, a dynamic ex-opera singer who has spent the past twenty years in Connecticut as wife and mother of two sons. But when Emma's mega-successful CEO husband dies in an unlikely hit and run accident, she starts her own hunt for his killer. She is plunged into the high stakes world of illegal weapons, global threats-and murders. She meets an intriguing British peer who works undercover to smoke out spies. But tracking down criminals is hazardous work and Emma pays a heartbreaking price.
Dominick Dunne, author of People Like Us, had this to say of the book: "...a fast-paced page turner...strong characters...interesting backgrounds with international flair. An engaging read."
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Tiffany Dugan ’92 Displays Book Art on Center for Book Arts Web Site
Samples of Tiffany Dugan's book art are now posted on the Center for Book Arts artist website. To view her work, please view the link at http://www.centerforbookarts.org/artistmember/bio.asp?artistID=1478
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Kay Chernush ’66 Announces Human Trafficking Photography Exhibition
Kay Chernush's powerful images of sex and labor exploitation commissioned by the US State Department are featured with the photography of Howard G. Buffett, President of the Howard G. Buffett Foundation, and Academy Award nominated director Robert Bilheimer, in an exhibition that puts a face on modern-day slavery and the worldwide problem of human trafficking. "These pictures are a dramatic representation of a crime that shames us all. Art is a powerful advocacy tool to motivate people to take action especially in the defense of women and children," said Mr. Antonia Maria Costa at the October 29th opening. The exhibit takes place at the UN Visitors Gallery, 1st Avenue at 46th Street, New York, NY 10017, from October 29th through November 18th, 2007.
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Chiara Merino ’95 Announces Publication of Leer Para ti (Reading to You)
The book was presented at the Instituto Cervantes in NYC by SLC Professor Eduardo Lago in April 2007 with Siri Hustvedt, Chiara Merino and Julia Piera.
Chiara Merino announced the publication of Leer para ti (Reading to You) by Siri Hustvedt (Bilingual Edition, English-Spanish). The book was co-translated by Chiara Merino '95 and poet Julia Piera. The book was edited by Bartleby Editores, Madrid, Spain (May 2007) and the prologue was written by Eduardo Lago, SLC faculty.
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Jee Leong Koh MFA ’05 Announces Publication of Poetry Chapbook, Payday Loans
Jee Leong Koh MFA ’05 published a poetry chapbook, called Payday Loans. The sonnet sequence is about work, love, sex, and migration. The chapbook was published by Poets Wear Prada, 2007. For more information, please visit http://jeeleong.blogspot.com
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Linda Peterson ’69 Publishes Russell Lee Photographs: Images from the Russell Lee Photograph Collection
Linda Peterson served as editor, project manager and author (many hats!) for a recent University of Texas Press 2007 book, Russell Lee Photographs: Images from the Russell Lee Photograph Collection. URL for more information is: http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/books/leerus.html .
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"SCREWBALLS" in Los Angeles Features Three SLC Alums
"Screwballs", a brand new stage comedy written and directed by Jonathan Edelman ('76), produced by Alexander Edelman ('06) and starring Martha Gehman ('78) is now playing at the Odyssey Theatre in West LA, at 2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
The play, which takes off from the screwball movies of the 1930's, involves role reversal, gender swapping and identity confusion in a story about a divorced couple and a cast of lunatic supporting characters who get mixed up in their lives.
The play runs every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday night at 8:00p.m. and every Sunday at 7:00p.m now through December 15th.
General admission is $20.
To purchase tickets or for more information, please call (310) 477-2055 or visit the theatre online at http://www.odysseytheatre.com. Please visit the show's web site at http://www.screwballstheplay.com
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Peter Ajemian ’89 Announces Soja Martial Arts Grand Opening
Friday, November 2nd
5:00pm - 10:00pm
Cost: FREE!You are invited to drop by and see free, flowing martial arts demos every hour on the hour. Participate in brief seminars to see how our safe martial arts workouts feel with your body.
Traditional Martial Arts Demos on the hour every hour. Brief seminars for beginners, get a feel for some of our workouts. Professional holistic body workers discuss their work and offer free demos. Bring a friend and have a fun Friday evening after work.
Live music performances
DJ Music by Tom Thump and BlipsynchLocation: 2406 Webster, Oakland, CA, 94612
between 24th & 25th Streets
* 2 blocks from the newly opened Whole Foods Market in Oakland
* 1 block northeast of Lake Merritt
* 1/2 block from Broadway AutorowFor more information, please visit www.sojamartialarts.com or call 510.832.7652.
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Kate Feiffer ’87 Publishes New Children's Book
Henry the Dog with No Tail, an illustrated children's book written by Kate Feiffer ’87, and illustrated by her father Jules, has just been published (Simon & Schuster). It is a funny tale about a dog that goes in search of a tail. His first stop, of course, is the tailor. Children who enjoy the book might also like www.henrydog.net
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Gwendolen Gross MFA ’98, Acclaimed Author, Offers Free Writing Workshop
Gwendolen Gross - an award-winning writing instructor and author of The Other Mother: A Novel - is offering a free writing workshop. The workshop will be held at Bookends Bookstore in Ridgewood, Jersey from 7:30pm-9:00pm on November 2, 2007.The workshop will begin with a review of the fundamentals of writing practice. There will be writing topics, discussion of craft and writing process, and a chance (no requirement) to read fresh work aloud. The workshop is for writers at all levels. Please bring a notebook and writing implements.
The workshop is free but advance registration is required. Register as soon as possible to guarantee your space by calling Bookends at 201-445-0726 or in person at the store. Purchase of The Other Mother is requested but not required.
Gwendolen Gross (www.The-Other-Mother.com) is the author of the novels Field Guide, Getting Out, and most recently, The Other Mother. She graduated from Oberlin College, was selected for the PEN West Emerging Writers Fellowship, and received an MFA in fiction and poetry from Sarah Lawrence College. Ms. Gross has worked as a snake and kinkajou demonstrator, naturalist, opera singer, editor, and mom. She lives in northern New Jersey with her family.
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New Novel For Moms, Book Signing Event with , Author of The Other Mother
Meet Gwendolen Gross, author of The Other Mother, for a book signing and Q&A. The book signing is on October 27 from 1-3pm at Bookends Bookstore in Ridgewood, New Jersey. BookList calls The Other Mother, "an electrifyingly complex and explosively gripping portrait of contemporary, have-it-all motherhood." Event Details:
Date and Time: October 27, 2007, 1:00pm-3:00pm
Location: Bookends Bookstore - http://www.Book-Ends.com
Address: 232 East Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey (201-445-0726)
Directions:
