

Tucker earned her Smith degree in biological sciences and was a Coral EdVentures program student/teacher in Belize. She will complete her fellowship year in the Arctic Research Program in NOAA's Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing Program. The prestigious fellowship appointment will support Tucker’s work in Washington, D.C. Sarah Tucker ’13 has been selected as a 2023 Knauss Fellow by the University of Hawaiʻi Sea Grant College Program.

An Ada Comstock Scholar, Bongfeldt earned her undergraduate degree at Smith in English language and literature and a master of arts degree in theatre. Marty Bongfeldt MFA ’21 is the new donor services associate for the Community Foundation of Western Massachusetts. La Princesse de Clèves by Lafayette: A New Translation and Bilingual Pedagogical Edition for the Digital Ag e, published by Lever Press, is a finalist in the Best eProducts awards category. The paper explores potential threats to live coral reefs.Ī scholarly work co-edited by Hélène Visentin, associate dean of the faculty and dean for academic development and professor of French studies, is a finalist for the Association of American Publishers’ 2023 PROSE Awards. Refugium under threat in a warming world,” in PLOS ONE, an open access scientific research platform. Professor Emeritus of Geology, published “Coral Gardens Reef, Belize: An Acropora spp. Giovanna Bellesia, professor emerita of Italian studies, and Victoria Poletto, senior lecturer emerita in Italian language and literature, are translators of My Language is a Jealous Lover, a new book by Adrián Bravi about his experiences and his writing as an Argentinian-Italian.

Smith’s new Neilson Library won an honorable mention in The Architect’s Newspaper’s 2022 Best of Design Awards. Brownstein is working in Associate Professor Niveen Ismail’s lab, and Heishima is doing research in Associate Professor Nathan Derr’s lab.

Lucy Brownstein ’24 and Hana Hieshima ’23 have been named 2023 Beckman Scholars by the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation, which supports undergraduate researchers in chemistry and the life sciences by supporting the development of student relationships with faculty mentors. Judges were Susannah Howe, director of Smith’s Design Clinic Denise Wingate Materre ’74, vice president for alumnae relations Deb Wijnhoven, director of employer engagement. Big Pitches ($300 each): Eugenia Rogers ’25 for Empowerment Workshop for Teen Girls Glory Divine Yougang Tahon ’26 for Glorious Farms. Winners of this year’s Elevator Pitch Contest sponsored by the Jill Ker Conway Innovation and Entrepreneurship Center were: Top Pitches ($500 each): Shastia Azulay ’23 for Food Recovery Network Fhrynee Lambert ’24 for Haitian Women’s Reproductive Autonomy. Photographs by Bea Oyster ’23 have been published recently in The New York Times. The exhibition, which explores the world of Alice-in-Wonderland-themed motifs in children’s books and other illustrations, features an entire room dedicated to Moser’s prints. 26 at the Tomi Ungerer Museum–International Illustration Centre in Strasbourg, France. Wood engravings by Barry Moser, Irwin and Pauline Alper Glass Professor of Art, are featured in an exhibition, Surré Alice.Illustr’ Alice, on view through Feb.
