For
immediate release
March 17, 2003
AUTHOR JUDY BLUME TO SPEAK
AT MOUNT HOLYOKE'S 166th COMMENCEMENT
Blume has written twenty-two books, all of
them still in print, including three
best-selling novels for adults. Over seventy million copies of
her books
have been sold worldwide, translated into twenty-six languages.
SOUTH HADLEY, Mass. Judy Blume, whose novels that center
around real issues in her young readers' lives have made her one
of the best-loved authors of this century, will speak at Mount
Holyoke's 166th commencement, Sunday, May 25. Blume will receive
the degree of doctor of arts from the College. She will be joined
by four other honorary degree recipients: Jane Garvey 69,
the former administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration;
Nancy Woodward Hendrie 54, a pediatrician who founded an
organization to assist orphaned and homeless children in Cambodia;
James A. Joseph, the former United States ambassador to South
Africa; and Amartya Sen, the winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in
economics.
"I am delighted that Judy Blume has accepted our invitation
to be our commencement speaker," said President Joanne V.
Creighton. "Her many books have helped introduce countless
young people to literature. On our campus, and on campuses everywhere,
are students who have her to thank for a lifelong love of reading.
Her readers love her for her realism, her willingness to take
seriously their thoughts about the issues of everyday life. I
am certain that our students will find her talk both enjoyable
and inspiring."
Blume's books have made publishing history since the appearance
in 1970 of Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret, one of
the first novels to deal frankly with the issues of early adolescence.
Her books have won more than ninety awards, many of them decided
by children themselves, in the United States and abroad.
Judy Blume has written twenty-two books, all of them still in
print, including three best-selling novels for adults. More than
seventy million copies of her books have been sold worldwide,
translated into twenty-six languages. Blume has written for young
children (Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, Superfudge, Fudge-a-mania),
middle-grade children (Blubber, It's Not the End of the World,
Just as Long as We're Together, etc.) and young adults
(Tiger Eyes, Forever). The Fudge books have been adapted for
TV, and she is currently at work on other TV adaptations of her
novels.
In a 1998 interview with Cybergrrl magazine, Blume said
that she wants her readers "to come away thinking about the
characters and story long after I've reached the last line. I
want them to become emotionally involved. I want them to be reminded,
without being hit over the head, what's really important in life.
And I want them to have a good time while I'm doing it."
Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret was included on
the New York Times list of Outstanding Books of the Year
in 1970, the first of many citations for Blume's books. In 1996
she received the Margaret A. Edwards Award for Lifetime Achievement
from the American Library Association.
Jane F. Garvey 69 (Doctor of Humane Letters)
Jane Garveys distinguished career in government spans more
than a decade. In 1997, after four years working for the Federal
Highway Administration, she was the first Administrator confirmed
by the senate to a five-year term as the 14th administrator of
the Federal Aviation Administration. During her tenure there,
she successfully managed both the Y2K preparedness program and
the aftermath of the September 11th terrorist attacks.
Administrator Garvey initiated Safer Skies, the U.S. aviation
community's safety agenda, which focuses the agency's resources
on taking the actions that safety data and analysis indicate can
make the biggest difference in lowering the accident rate. She
led the successful transition of the FAA's air traffic control
system to January 1, 2000 with no disruptions to service. In addition,
the FAA provided world leadership on Y2K transition. Under Administrator
Garvey's leadership the FAA continued to move forward on its phased
plan to modernize the air traffic control system and had, for
the first time, achieved government and industry consensus on
how to proceed. To bring immediate modernization benefits, she
initiated the Free Flight Phase 1 program under which the FAA
reached consensus with the aviation community to deploy five specific
technologies by the end of 2002.
Prior to being named FAA Administrator, Garvey was Acting Administrator
of the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). She served as Deputy
Administrator of FHWA from April 1993 until February 1997. FHWA,
also an agency of the U. S. Department of Transportation, has
an annual budget of $20 billion and works in partnership with
the states to maintain the safety and efficiency of the Nation's
roads and bridges. A creative leader at FHWA, Garvey chaired FHWA's
Innovative Financing Initiative, which resulted in more than $4
billion in transportation investment in more than 30 statesprojects
that in many cases would have not been otherwise built.
Garvey earned a masters degree in English instruction
at Mount Holyoke College in 1969 and later taught English and
history at South Hadley High School.
Nancy Woodward Hendrie 54 (Doctor of Science)
Dr. Nancy W. Hendrie was a pediatrician in Concord and Carlisle
for more than 26 years, when in 1994 she left private practice
and began work in Asian orphanages. She later started her own
adoption agency, Adopt Cambodia, which has placed Cambodian infants
and children with more than 200 New England families.
In 1998, Hendrie founded The Sharing Foundation (TSF), to assist
orphaned and homeless children in Cambodia. TSF has also built
two schools and rehabilitated another, where it continues to provide
supplies. In 1999, TSF established a large rural farming project
that provides food and income to 34 of the poorest families of
Thom village, including 107 children, and set up an English teaching
program for over 300 children.
In 2002, Hendrie was recognized by the Middlesex Central District
of the Massachusetts Medical Society as a Community Clinician
of the Year, an award which recognizes practitioners who have
made significant contributions to patients and to their respective
communities.
James A. Joseph (Doctor of Humane Letters)
Ambassador James Joseph is Professor of the Practice of Public
Policy Studies and Executive Director of the United States-Southern
Africa Center for Leadership and Public Values at Duke University.
Nominated by President Clinton and confirmed by the United States
Senate in December 1995, he was the first and only American Ambassador
to present his credentials to President Nelson Mandela. In 1999,
President Thabo Mbeki awarded him the Order of Good Hope, the
highest honor the Republic of South Africa bestows on a citizen
of another country.
Ambassador Joseph has had a distinguished career in government,
business, education and philanthropy. He has served four United
States presidents. He was appointed to the number two position
in the Department of the Interior by President Carter and also
served as Chairman of the Commission on the Northern Marianas.
He was a member of the Advisory Committee to the Agency for International
Development under President Reagan, and was appointed an incorporating
director of the Points of Light Foundation and a member of the
Board of Advisors on Historically Black Colleges of President
George H.W. Bush. President Clinton appointed him the first Chairman
of the Board of Directors of the Corporation for National Service.
Amartya Sen (Doctor of Laws)
Amartya Sen is Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, UK, and Lamont
University Professor Emeritus at Harvard University. He has served
as President of the Econometric Society, the Indian Econometric
Association, the American Economic Association and the International
Economic Association. He is also honorary advisor of OXFAM. Before
joining Harvard in 1987, he was the Drummond Professor of Political
Economy at Oxford University and a Fellow of All Souls College.
Prior to that, he was Professor of Economics at Delhi University
and at the London School of Economics.
Sen has received honorary doctorates from major universities
in North America, Europe and Asia. Among the awards he has received
are the Bharat Ratna (the highest honor awarded by
the President of India); the Presidency of the Italian Republic
Medal; the Eisenhower Medal; and the Nobel Prize in Economics.
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