Anita Hill Speaking at MCLA Commencement

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Anita Hill
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts welcomes Anita F. Hill as the 2010 commencement speaker.

Ceremonies begin at 11 a.m. on Saturday, May 22, in the Amsler Campus Center Gymnasium.

Hill, a well-known commentator and professor of law at University of Oklahoma College of Law, will be presented with an honorary doctor of law degree. Also being honored at the ceremony will be former trustee Foster Devereux with a doctor of public service; Oscar-winning painter and Williamstown resident Stephen Hannock with a doctor of fine arts; and MCLA alumna and humanitarian Josetta Owen with a doctor of humanities.

Hill's career has taken many turns but she's probably best known for her testimony during the Senate hearings on Justice Clarence Thomas' appointment to the Supreme Cout. A professor of law at the time, she was thrust into the public spotlight in 1991 during those controversial Judiciary Committee appearance. After the hearing, she began speaking to audiences throughout the United States and internationally about social and political problems facing the world.  

She received her juris doctorate from Yale Law School in 1980 and began her career in private practice in Washington, D.C., with a focus on banking law and litigation. She became an adviser to the assistant secretary of the U.S. Education Department and the chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. In 1989, Hill became the first African American to be tenured at the University of Oklahoma College of Law.

Hill has written commentary for Time, Inc., Newsweek, The New York Times, The Boston Globe and Ms. Magazine and appears regularly on national television programs including ABC's "Good Morning America," "Meet the Press," NBC's "The Today Show," "The Tavis Smiley Show" and CNN's "Larry King Live."

She recently received the Ford Hall Forum's First Amendment Award for her promotion of gender and race equality. She is especially proud of receiving the Fletcher Fellowship for her work aimed at ending educational disparities among poor and minority students. That award was created in 2004 on the 50th anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education and is given to institutions and individuals working to fulfill the goals of that landmark decision.

Foster Devereux

Devereux was an officer and director of Allen & Co., a New York-based investment banking firm. He is a graduate of Williams College.


Foster Devereux
As a community leader, and as a trustee of MCLA from 1992 to 2002, Devereux is a longtime champion of public-higher education and is committed to helping create accessibility through the increase of student scholarships. As a trustee, he was a lead advocate for what was then North Adams State College to be recognized as a leading community partner and one of the critical economic engines for North Adams and Berkshire County. He remains involved with building support for the college, most recently as a member of the MCLA Foundation Ad-Hoc Fundraising Committee.

He is a trustee emeritus of the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, and of the Mass MoCA Cultural Development Commission. Through his work with Mass MoCA, Devereux was at the forefront of efforts to establish North Adams as a world-class cultural destination, and to position the arts as an economic development engine.

Devereux is a member of the Alumni Council of the Kent (Conn.) School. He is a former president of the Williams College Alumni Association of Fairfield (Conn.) County and a former member of the Williams College Alumni Association Executive Committee.

Stephen Hannock

Hannock is a luminist painter known for his landscape work; his design of visual effects for the 1998 film "What Dreams May Come" won an Academy Award. His work graces the collections of museums and collectors worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Whitney and the National Gallery of Art in Washington.

Hannock's style is rooted in the tradition of landscape painting in Europe and the United States in the late 1800s, but reflects a creative point of view through his technique and use of color. His work conveys an unmistakable sense of place, as well as an indelible sense of his own presence in and experience of the landscapes he depicts.

While rooted in tradition, his artistic practice continues to evolve. He blends attention to detail with spontaneity to achieve his creative vision. As an innovator, Hannock uses such unconventional tools as a power sander to "machine polish" his canvases, resulting in a luminosity that has become his trademark. Another recent innovation is the addition of text and collage techniques into his landscapes, resulting in paintings rich with ideas to engage the eye and the mind of the viewer.

He lives in Williamstown and maintains a studio in North Adams.

Josetta Owen

Owen graduated in 1965 from the college, where she was inspired by the humanitarian example of Dr. Albert Schweitzer and the call to service of President Kennedy. After graduating, she taught the children of migrant farm workers, and was selected to be a master teacher for education students at nearby San Jose (Calif.) State University.


Josetta Owen
Among her many humanitarian efforts, Owen has volunteered at Mother Theresa's AIDS hospice in Washington. Through the inspiration of her Jesuit church, she led delegations to El Salvador; for 13 years, she and her delegations brought educational and medical supplies to a deeply impoverished community of 35,000, and raised funds on their behalf in the United States.

Owen co-founded The Children of Abraham, a grassroots group dedicated to increased understanding among Christians, Jews and Muslims. She served on the board of Refugee Voices, which sought to publicize the plight of the displaced, and on the board of Nyumbani, a home for abandoned AIDS-afflicted children near Nairobi, Kenya.

Owen lives in California, where she continues her volunteer work as a board member of Samaritan House, an nongovernmental organization serving the poor in San Mateo County, and Shadhika, an organization founded to support the education of children of prostitutes in Calcutta. Through her humanitarian work, she travels extensively throughout the world, most recently to Tanzania, with an April trip to Peru planned to volunteer at a home for severely deformed children.
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North Adams School Panel Recommends $20M Budget That Cuts 26 Jobs

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The School Committee will be presented next week with a $20 million spending plan for fiscal 2025 that includes closing Greylock School and a reduction of 26 full-time positions. 
 
The Finance and Facilities committee is recommending the budget of $20,357,096, up $302,744 or 1.51 percent over this year. This is funded by $16,418,826 in state Chapter 70 education funds, local funding of $3,938,270 (up $100,000 over this year) and a drawdown of school funds of $575,237. 
 
The budget is up overall because of rising contractural costs, inflation and a hike in the cost of out-of-district tuition. 
 
Superintendent Barbara Malkas told the committee on Monday that assignment letters were being sent out the next day to personnel per agreement with the union of a May 1 deadline.
 
Twenty of the reductions represent members teacher's bargaining unit including a dean of students, an art teacher, music teacher, physical education teacher, school adjustment counselor and a librarian at Drury High School (who will move to teaching and be replaced by a library paraprofessional); also affected are two clerical paraprofessionals, two custodians, one maintenance, and a school nurse. The principal is being shifted to Drury's Grades 7 and 8 "on assignment" to complete her contract. 
 
"Losing 26 positions from the budget, we still have to have some funds from our school choice revolving account in order to close the budget for FY 25," said Malkas. 
 
A couple of these positions are already vacant and it is not clear how many, if any, retirements would affect the number of job losses. Malkas said there have been "rumors" of retirements but staff have been reluctant to discuss firm plans with administration.
 
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