Last Thursday, I had the pleasure of meeting Smith College alumna Ann Martin ’77, well-known for writing “The Baby-Sitters Club.” I was invited to a dinner with Martin, her editors and members of the Friends of the Smith College Libraries.
The Sophian
UMass: Kathleen A. Brown-Perez will be giving a talk on “Destroy to Replace: What 21st Century Resistance Means to American Indians” on Oct. 16 from…
Patience Kayira | Editor-in-Chief
As a result of the Trump administration’s endless attack on Reproductive Rights, the future of menstrual equity in the United States gets seemingly murkier each day. An article from Groundswell reports that “an individual person can spend approximately $5600 over their lifetime.” Expensive menstrual care products are just part of the larger issue with menstrual equity. Isabel Fields ’21 and Kris Mereigh, Director of Wellness Services & Health Education, share thoughts on how With the Flow, an affiliate program of Wellness Services, seeks to bring about changes to menstrual equity on campus.
Lingchuan Xu ‘21
Last Thursday, the Conway Center held a workshop as part of its “Innovative Strategies” series. “Last year most of the students came up with their own projects [to the Conway Center], but this year we want to give students a jump start and to help them understand what innovation is,” said Monica Dean, the Administrative Director of the Conway Center.
Rosalie Toupin ‘20 | Staff Writer
If you’ve ever taken a class with me, or really if you’ve ever met me, you know that I ask a lot of questions. I am that girl whose hand is raised during lectures, who regularly goes to office hours and has long email chains with her professors — it’s just how I learn. I’m a very social person, and my brain has a tendency to jumble my thoughts together, so I find it very helpful to talk things through with others.
Sylvia Moon | Staff Writer
Capricorn: You work way the F too much. Remember that work can't replace emotional connection/friends/family, so you need to work on accessing your emotional side this week. Emotional vulnerability can lead to great things!
“Dear young people, don’t vote.” I’m sure, as election day approaches, you’ve been hearing this public service announcement (PSA) a lot. Have you ever stopped to watch the whole thing, though? It’s a lot of old, white people sneering at the screen, but I encourage you to because I will be tearing this public service announcement apart.
When I told my friends I would be spending the summer at the end of my sophomore year in the Valley, all of them told me to brace myself.
Smythology episode 4: If Smithies today used Smith slang from 1893
I have a complicated relationship with the word “slam.” Every time I hear the word qualifying some literary event — a poetry reading or a storytelling event — I feel my stomach lurch, as though I caught a whiff of some food that once gave me torrential runs. Not that I only have bad experiences with slams, not at all. But for every poem I’ve heard that revelled in the snap of a word as it rolled off the tongue, for every story I listened to that sparked against the speaker’s animated telling, there were five, ten, fifteen others that made me cringe back into my seat.