For
immediate release
April 13, 2005
Nina Totenberg, NPR Legal Affairs Correspondent,
to Speak at Mount Holyoke’s 168th Commencement
SOUTH HADLEY, Mass. – Nina Totenberg, National Public Radio’s
award-winning legal affairs correspondent, will be the speaker
at Mount Holyoke College’s 168th commencement on Sunday,
May 22. Totenberg will be joined by honorary degree recipients
Beverly Daniel Tatum, president of Spelman College and former dean
of Mount Holyoke; Barbara Wilson, program manager for the Center
for Space Microelectronics Technology at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory and a 1968 graduate of Mount Holyoke; and Krisana Kraisintu
of the German Medical Aid Organization, who successfully fought
for universal access to AIDS drugs in southeast Asia and is now
doing the same in Africa.
Totenberg is widely regarded as one of the nation’s leading
law reporters. Her reports on the Supreme Court and legal affairs
are heard regularly on NPR’s newsmagazines All Things
Considered, Morning Edition, and Weekend Edition. She is also a regular panelist
on Inside Washington, a weekly syndicated public affairs program.
A frequent contributor to major newspapers and periodicals, she
has published articles in the New York Times Magazine, the Harvard
Law Review, the Christian Science Monitor, Parade Magazine,
New York Magazine, and others.
"Ms. Totenberg will be a wonderful commencement speaker, who,
like the other honorary degree recipients, exemplifies a commitment
to leadership and purposeful engagement with the world that speaks
to the heart of Mount Holyoke's mission," said Mount Holyoke
President Joanne V. Creighton. "The Class of 2005 is looking
forward to hearing her thoughts on the Supreme Court, her career
as a journalist, and what women need to know to change the world."
Her ground-breaking 1991 report on Anita Hill’s allegations
of sexual harassment by Judge Clarence Thomas led the Senate Judiciary
Committee to re-open Thomas’s Supreme Court confirmation
hearings to consider Hill's charges. NPR received the prestigious
George Foster Peabody Award for its gavel-to-gavel coverage --
anchored by Totenberg -- of both the original hearings and the
inquiry into Hill's allegations, and for Totenberg's reports and
exclusive interview with Hill.
Totenberg was named Broadcaster of the Year and honored with the
1998 Sol Taishoff Award for Excellence in Broadcasting from the
National Press Foundation. She is the first radio journalist to
receive the award.
Before joining NPR in 1975, Totenberg served as Washington editor
of New Times Magazine, and before that she was the legal affairs
correspondent for the National Observer.
Beverly Daniel Tatum
Scholar, teacher, author, administrator and race relations expert,
Tatum is the ninth president of Spelman College. Prior to her appointment
to the Spelman presidency in 2002, she spent 13 years at Mount
Holyoke College, serving in various roles during her tenure there
as professor of psychology, department chair, dean of the College
and acting president.
Tatum is a clinical psychologist whose areas of research interest
include black families in white communities, racial identity in
teens, and the role of race in the classroom. For more than 20
years, she has taught a course on the psychology of racism. She
has also toured extensively, leading workshops on racial identity
development and its impact in the classroom.
In her critically acclaimed 1997 book, "Why Are All the Black
Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?" and Other Conversations
about Race, she applies her expertise on race to argue that straight
talk about racial identity is essential to the nation. She is also
the author of 1987’s Assimilation Blues: Black Families
in a White Community, and has published numerous articles, including
her classic 1992 Harvard Educational Review article, “Talking
about Race, Learning about Racism: An Application of Racial Identity
Development Theory in the Classroom.”
Prior to joining the Mount Holyoke faculty in 1989, Tatum was an
associate professor and assistant professor of psychology at Westfield
State College in Westfield, Mass., and a lecturer in black studies
at the University of California at Santa Barbara.
Barbara Wilson, class of 1968
Wilson is program manager for the Center for Space Microelectronics
Technology at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.,
and also serves as JPL's chief technologist.
A physicist with a doctorate from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
and a bachelor's degree from Mount Holyoke, Wilson joined JPL in
1988 as technical group supervisor of the Microdevices Section.
Shortly thereafter she was named manager of the Microdevices Laboratory,
a facility operating under the umbrella of the Center for Space
Microelectronics Technology.
She most recently served as program manager for JPL's Earth Science
Program Office and technologist for NASA's New Millennium Program,
which sponsors spacecraft missions designed to test new technologies
so that they may be confidently used on science missions of the
future. She is the recipient of the NASA Special Achievement Medal
for her contributions to the New Millennium Program.
Before joining JPL, she served as supervisor of the Optoelectronic
Materials Research Group at AT&T Bell Labs, where she was awarded
the company's exceptional contribution award for her work in semiconductor
devices.
Krisana Kraisintu
Kraisintu, a noted Thai pharmacist, is working with the German
Medical Aid Organization to develop locally produced, affordable
generic drugs for impoverished AIDS patients in the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Eritrea, and Tanzania.
Kraisintu’s work to broaden the availability of AIDS drugs
in southeast Asia earned her the title “AIDS Warrior” from
her peers. Through her work, 70,000 AIDS/HIV patients in Thailand
and an additional 30,000 patients in Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam
were able to gain access to affordable treatment. Kraisintu and
her research team have worked on formulation development and bioequivalence
studies of HIV/AIDS -related drugs since 1992. Thailand became
the first developing country to make these affordable drugs relatively
widely available.
Kraisintu received a bachelor’s degree in pharmacy from Chiengmai
University, Thailand in 1975, a master’s in pharmaceutical
analysis from Strathclyde University, U.K. in 1978, and a doctorate
in pharmaceutical chemistry from Bath University, U.K. in 1981.
For the past 22 years, she has worked in the pharmaceutical industry
in various roles of quality assurance, manufacturing, research
and development and business development for the discovery, development,
and commercialization of chemical and natural pharmaceutical products.
Kraisintu received a Gold Medal at Eureka 50th World Exhibition
of Innovation, Research and New Technology in Brussels in 2001,
and a Global Scientific Award in 2004 from the Letten Foundation
as recognition of her outstanding scientific contribution in the
field of HIV/AIDS.
Commencement ceremonies begin at 10:30 AM in
Gettell Amphitheater. In the event of rain, the event will be
held in the Kendall Field
House.