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November 7-13

November 14-20

November 21-27

Featured Event

Climate 101: Smith’s Role in the New England Food System
November 11, 2019
Andrew Cox, Director, Dining Services presents information about how his office is helping address the challenges of climate change through thoughtful purchasing decisions and meal planning for a healthy, sustainable future. Part of the ENX 100: Environment and Sustainability Lecture Series. All welcome.
McConnell 103
2:40 pm to 4:00 pm

Events at Smith

Landscape Master Plan: Interactive & Hands on Engagement and Discussion about Inclusive Landscape
November 7, 2019
The Landscape Master Planning Committee invites you to participate in an important project to help re-envision our campus' exterior landscape. We understand that the only way to meaningfully adapt to the ongoing evolution of student priorities, pedagogy, technology, climate and landscape management practices is through a purposeful collaboration with students, faculty, and staff. We need your input about your lived experience and your ideas- visit our website to find out more about what we hope to achieve (see link below). Please join us during our series of community engagement events that will include hands on art projects, sticker boards, discussions and interactions focused on three themes: inclusivity, adaptation, and education. Food will be provided on a first come, first served basis.
Campus Center ground-level
12:00 pm to 1:00 pm

Landscape Master Plan: Conversations about Inclusive Landscapes
November 7, 2019
The Landscape Master Planning Committee invites you to participate in an important project to help re-envision our campus' exterior landscape. We need your input about your lived experience and your ideas- visit our website to find out more about what we hope to achieve (see link below).
More...
Campus Center ground-level
1:00 pm to 3:00 pm

Landscape Master Plan: Open House and Interactive Engagements
November 7, 2019
The Landscape Master Planning Committee invites you to participate in an important project to help re-envision our campus' exterior landscape. We understand that the only way to meaningfully adapt to the ongoing evolution of student priorities, pedagogy, technology, climate and landscape management practices is through a purposeful collaboration with students, faculty, and staff. We need your input about your lived experience and your ideas- visit our website to find out more about what we hope to achieve (see link below). Please join us during our series of community engagement events that will include hands on art projects, sticker boards, discussions and interactions focused on three themes: inclusivity, adaptation, and education. Food will be provided on a first come, first served basis.
More...
Campus Center ground-level
4:30 pm to 5:30 pm

Landscape Master Plan: Interactive & Hands on Engagement and Discussion about Educational Landscape
November 8, 2019
The Landscape Master Planning Committee invites you to participate in an important project to help re-envision our campus' exterior landscape. Please join us during our series of community engagement events that will include hands on art projects, sticker boards, discussions and interactions focused on three themes: inclusivity, adaptation, and education. Food will be provided on a first come, first served basis.
More...
Campus Center ground-level
12:00 pm to 1:00 pm

Health & STEM Professions Lunch Bag: Applying to Grad Schools in STEM Fields
November 8, 2019
Find out: 1) When to attend/apply; 2) Selecting programs/schools; 3) How to prepare and take the admission test; 4) What is needed for a successful application. Pizza provided (first come - first served).
McConnell 103
12:10 pm to 1:00 pm

Workshop: Designing Your Life
November 9, 2019
Space is limited to 20 students- Registration will open in October. Lazarus Center Career Advisor Patty Woods will facilitate this workshop, based on the book by Stanford University Design Educators Bill Burnett and Dave Evans. This program is designed to give you the chance to participate in a transformative process, one in which you are empowered to begin to solve the "problem" of what your future will be. Understanding how you want to outline your personal "what’s next?" will also help you start to think about the requirements of job applications, graduate school proposals, and fellowship personal statements. The workshop will be a fun and engaging way to stimulate your planning imagination and design a future that reflects what you love and want to accomplish. There will be required pre-work for this workshop. Check in with the Lazarus Center for more information.
Campus Center 103/14
10:00 am to 2:30 pm

NOAA summer internship presentations
November 13, 2019
Join us to hear from three Smithies who spent their summer interning at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) this summer! Today's presentations include June Cho, '20: Understanding Sea Level Rise Impacts to Wetlands at the South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve; Frances Duncan, '20: Science Sparks: Communicating Science to Diverse Audiences; and Madison Williams, '21: Data Analysis Intern. Lunch provided.
CEEDS, Wright Hall lower-level
12:15 pm

Cultivating Wisdom, Intimacy, and Response in a Warming World:
November 13, 2019
A Meditation Series in Eco-Buddhism Wednesday evenings throughout the semester with Karin Meyers, Visiting Assistant Professor of Buddhist Studies. Meyers was associate professor at Kathmandu University’s Centre for Buddhist Studies from 2011–18, where she also served as director of the master’s program in Buddhist studies. Her work focuses on Buddhist psychology, ethics and contemplative systems; Buddhism and free will; and topics in Buddhist studies that occupy the borderlands of religion and philosophy.
Helen Hills Hills Chapel
8:30 pm to 10:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Ecological Art: Print media installations across campus at Mount Holyoke College
November 8-18
Ecological art expresses engagement with the natural world or environmental issues. Site-specific work responds directly to the location it is installed in. The Expanded Print Media class will have public outdoor installations at accessible sites across campus that respond to the history, environment and culture of Mount Holyoke College and Western Massachusetts. Projects range from explorations of local ecological concerns inspired by environmental data collected as part of the Campus Living Lab to broader explorations of the human footprint on the landscape.
Installations can be found in the Botanic Garden, on the exterior of the Art Building, near the Upper Lake Dam, and at Project Stream.

Events at Smith

Udall Scholarship Information Session
November 14, 2019
The Udall Foundation awards scholarships to college sophomores and juniors for leadership, public service, and commitment to issues related to Native American nations or to the environment. Find out how you can apply and join the ranks of Smithies who have been previous Udall Scholars.
More...
Lazarus Center Workshop Room
12:00 pm to 1:00 pm

NOAA summer internship presentations
November 14, 2019
Join us to Hear from Smithies who spent their summer interning at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) this summer. Today's presentations include Frances Kretschmer, '20: Recolonization of the Cedar River by Pacific salmon; Morgan Jones, '21: Hudson River NERR Environmental Research Intern; and Esme Mendoza, '21: Little Port Walter Chinook Salmon research intern. Lunch provided.
CEEDS, Wright Hall lower-level
12:15 pm

Udall Scholarship Information Session
November 15, 2019
The Udall Scholarship honors the contributions of two Arizona politicians whose national reputations rest on their actions to protect the environment and to support Native American peoples. Open only to sophomores and juniors. Excellent students, who are US citizens or permanent residents, may apply in one of three streams: the environment, tribal policy, and native health care. The last two categories of the scholarship are open to Native Americans and Alaska Natives. Current Udall Scholar and ES&P major, Larissa Holland, '20, will join us and talk about the Udall application process, the August networking conference in Tucson AZ, and what she has gained from both.
Lazarus Center workshop room
12:15 pm

Gallery walk/talk with artist Kate Whittaker (AC'90)
November 15, 2019
One of our accomplished geosciences alums, Kate Whittaker (AC '90), will walk us through her exhibition of paintings in the Alumnae House gallery. Since graduating from Smith, Kate's paleoclimate work has taken her on global journeys to intriguing places and landscapes that have inspired her art. In her own words: "Journeys is a series of paintings created in response to experiences, emotions, and memories formed during my travels to East Africa, Central Asia, Europe and the US. While these travels are usually for paleoclimate research conducted on the world's large lakes, I am always equally focused on the unique landscapes, antiquity, and cultures I encounter. Arriving home I feel compelled to make images of what lodged in my heart." We'll have light refreshments in the gallery as Kate talks with us about her experiences, her work, and her art. Everyone is welcome.
Alumnae House Gallery, 33 Elm St.
3:00 pm

Climate Inherits Us All
November 15, 2019
A Panel Discussion with: Heather Davis, Assistant Professor of Culture and Media, Eugene Lang College, The New School; Vic Barrett, Activist, Fellow, The Alliance for Climate Education; Kadambari Baxi, Architect and Professor of Professional Practice, Barnard College. What inherits us, what we leave to others, how we accept (or refuse) that which is bequeathed are themes that anchor this panel and project. Part of the short-term Kahn Liberal Arts Institute project of the same name. All welcome
Graham Hall, Hillyer
4:30 pm

Careers in Climate Change & Sustainability: Alumnae Virtual Panel Discussion
November 18, 2019
Hear from alumnae who have incorporated climate change and sustainability into their professions. This event is part of the Year on Climate Change.
Lazarus Center Workshop Room
5:00 pm to 6:00 pm

“GeoArt” – Selected Examples of Communicating Geosciences Through Art
November 19, 2019
Professor Bosiljka Glumac will explore the relationships between art and geosciences and present about work done in collaboration with many students and colleagues. Lunch will be served in McConnell Foyer at noon (while supplies last).
McConnell Auditorium, room 103
12:00 pm

Eco-Rep Repair Fair
November 20, 2019
Have items in need of repair? Does your favorite clothing item have a tear in it or a missing button? Do your shoes or boots need waterproofing? Does your bike need a check up? The Eco-Reps are hosting a Repair Fair to help you with that! Members of the Bike Kitchen, electricians, the Design Thinking Initiative, and others from the Smith community will be on hand to teach repair skills and help us keep useful items out of landfills. Smith students, faculty, and staff are all welcome.
Campus Center Carroll Room
11:00 am to 2:00 pm

Coral Reef Ed-Ventures Info Panel
November 20, 2019
Smith students who have previously participated in the Coral Reef Ed-Ventures program will talk about their experiences and answer questions. (Lunch provided.)
CEEDS, Wright Hall 005
12:15 pm

Sustainable DIY Eyeshadow Study Break!
November 20, 2019
Take a break from studying and join your Eco-Reps in making sustainable DIY eyeshadow! All supplies will be provided, just bring your creative energy. You will be provided a small tin to mix the all-natural, mineral eyeshadow ingredients.
Campus Center 103/14
4:00 pm

Film screening: Planet Earth
November 20, 2019
The Green Team hosts a screening of the environmental documentary series of the same name. All welcome!
CEEDS, Wright Hall 005
7:00 pm

Cultivating Wisdom, Intimacy, and Response in a Warming World:
November 20, 2019
A Meditation Series in Eco-Buddhism Wednesday evenings throughout the semester with Karin Meyers, Visiting Assistant Professor of Buddhist Studies. Meyers was associate professor at Kathmandu University’s Centre for Buddhist Studies from 2011–18, where she also served as director of the master’s program in Buddhist studies. Her work focuses on Buddhist psychology, ethics and contemplative systems; Buddhism and free will; and topics in Buddhist studies that occupy the borderlands of religion and philosophy.
Helen Hills Hills Chapel
8:30 pm to 10:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Housing & Environmental Justice Organizing in the Era of the Green New Deal
November 15, 2019
The purpose of this panel is to bring on-the-ground organizers, policy makers, and the public to discuss how housing and environmental justice movements can interact with emerging climate justice movements, decarbonization initiatives, and especially policies that might fall under the umbrella of the Green New Deal. Co-sponsored by the Center for Community Engagement and the Department of Environmental Studies. The three panelists are: Tatiana Cheeks - Arise for Social Justice, Springfield; Professor Sigrid Schmalzer - Professor of History at UMass Amherst & Science for the People; Senator Jo Comerford - State Senator representing Franklin, Hampshire, and Worcester counties.
More...
Amherst College, Beneski Earth Sciences Building, Paino, Room 107
5:00 pm

Five College Climate Planning Meeting
November 17, 2019
Extinction Rebellion Western Massachusetts will be hosting a gathering at UMass for a conversation about creating a Five College body to lead climate action. Their agenda for this first gathering is to bring together the many groups invested in urgently addressing the climate crisis, to build relationships, and to imagine how they might all collaborate more effectively. This invitation extends to environmental groups, affinity and cultural groups with vested interests in a livable climate, and individuals working toward climate justice in their research or activism. Groups are invited to send 2-3 representatives who can speak to what future collaboration might look like and what role you'd like to play. Please RSVP with link.
More...
UMass Amherst
3:00 pm to 5:00 pm

Events at Smith

Liyang Network Teach-In
November 21, 2019
Learn about Lumad womxn's organizing in the Philippines from two community organizers from the Liyang Network who have been working closely with them and supporting their campaigns. Event hosted by two Smith College groups, Pan Asians in Action (PAIA) and the Pasifika Student Association.
Mwangi Cultural Center, Northampton
7:00 pm to 8:30 pm

Cultivating Wisdom, Intimacy, and Response in a Warming World:
November 27, 2019
A Meditation Series in Eco-Buddhism Wednesday evenings throughout the semester with Karin Meyers, Visiting Assistant Professor of Buddhist Studies. Meyers was associate professor at Kathmandu University’s Centre for Buddhist Studies from 2011–18, where she also served as director of the master’s program in Buddhist studies. Her work focuses on Buddhist psychology, ethics and contemplative systems; Buddhism and free will; and topics in Buddhist studies that occupy the borderlands of religion and philosophy.
Helen Hills Hills Chapel
8:30 pm to 10:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Field Notes
November 24, 2019
CISA's storytelling event is back by popular demand -- get your tickets now! (see link below) Farmers, chefs, and neighbors from throughout the Valley will take to the stage to share their stories. Expect everything from the tragic to the hilarious as we journey through the fields and kitchens of the Pioneer Valley. Welcoming storytellers: Cathie Cappa, Auntie Cathie's Kitchen; Danny Botkin, Laughing Dog Farm; Elodie Chicoine, Chicoine Family Farm; Jessica O'Neil, Just Roots; Jo Goodman, homesteader; Marie Rohan, South Hadley Community Garden; Matt Stinchfield, community member; Nancy Hanson, Hampshire College Farm Program; Pete Solis, Mockingbird Farm; and Supicha Hillenbrand, Thai Chili Food Truck
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Academy of Music Theatre, Northampton
2:00 pm