Tag Archives: Washington College

Lisa Jones Wins Sophie Kerr Prize

An Anthropology major who wrote about a life-changing trip to Tanzania and the simple pleasures of life in a one-intersection town in the Maryland countryside has won the largest student literary prize in the nation, the Sophie Kerr Prize. Lisa Beth Jones, who grew up in tiny Fork, northeast of Baltimore, was named the winner on May 17 at a special reception at Poets House in New York. She will cap her four years of study at Washington College by walking off the commencement stage with a check for $61,062; a prize believed to be the largest awarded to any senior anywhere this graduation season.

For 43 years, the Sophie Kerr Prize has gone to the graduating senior at Washington College who demonstrates the greatest literary ability and promise. Jones earned it with a portfolio of nonfiction work that includes travel writing, recollections of family life on a farm, and excerpts from her senior thesis on African immigrants in America. In writing about the month she spent on a College-sponsored trip to Tanzania the spring of her junior year, she delivered sensory postcards of the land and the people based on entries from her weathered travel journal.

The committee of 13 English professors, who selected Jones from among 30 portfolios, was impressed with the way she shaped a sense of place with her language and with the maturity she brought to her observations and her craft. While at Washington College, Jones earned a place on the Dean’s List every semester and was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa. She also made time to work in the Colleges Geographic Information Systems Lab and to help other students in the campus writing center. She finished her required coursework in December and has since worked as the Grants & Contracts Coordinator at the International Youth Foundation in Baltimore and as a travel writer for Examiner.com.

This year, for the first time, the Sophie Kerr Committee also selected four finalists for the prize. They are: Maggie Farrell, 22, from Hatfield, PA; Dan McCloskey, 21, of Ellicott City, MD; Insley Smullen, 22, of Frederick, MD; and, Joe Yates, 22, a Tampa, FL native.

The Sophie Kerr Prize is the namesake of an Eastern Shore woman who forged a successful career in the New York publishing world. Born in 1880 in Denton, Md., some 30 miles from Washington College, she graduated from Hood College and launched her career briefly in Pittsburgh as the women’s page editor at two newspapers. After moving to New York, she became managing editor of the Woman’s Home Companion. A prolific writer, Kerr published 23 novels and published hundreds of short stories in the popular magazines of the day, including The Saturday Evening Post, Colliers, and McCalls.

When she died in 1965, she left more than $500,000 to Washington College with the stipulation that half the income from the bequest would be awarded annually to the senior showing “the most ability and promise for future fulfillment in the field of literary endeavor.” Over the years, the endowment from Kerr’s gift has provided more than $1.4-million in prize money to promising young writers, in amounts ranging from $9,000 in 1968 to a high of nearly $69,000 in 2009. The winners have gone on to establish careers as writers, editors, teachers, and marketing professionals. Many have published their work as novels or collections of short stories or poetry.

The other half of Kerr’s bequest funds scholarships and library acquisitions, and brings a parade of world-class literary figures from across all genres to campus for public readings and workshops. Such literary luminaries as Edward Albee, Jonathan Franzen, Allen Ginsberg, Toni Morrison and William Styron have visited Washington College under the auspices of the Sophie Kerr Lecture Series.

Sophie Kerr Prize to be Announced in NYC

Beginning in 1968, when the first Sophie Kerr Prize was awarded, each graduation at Washington College built to a moment of tension as to which one of more than 20 aspiring writers would receive the nation’s most lucrative undergraduate literary prize. This year, the college’s best-known tradition will not be carried out at graduation or in Chestertown. The winner of the $61,062 prize will learn of his or her triumph in Manhattan. For the first time since the prize was created in the 1960s, the Sophie Kerr committee will narrow candidates to a field of five or six finalists and will announce the winner on May 17 at a ceremony at Poets House in Battery Park City.

“This is a magnificent prize, going to incredibly talented students, and they weren’t quite getting the recognition they deserved,” says the college’s first-year president, Mitchell Reiss, in explaining the rationale. “That was going to continue to be the case if we awarded it at graduation in Chestertown.”

The change has drawn mixed reactions from former winners, current students and community members. Last year’s winner, Hailey Reissman, says the prize casts too large a shadow over graduation. She is a fan of the new plan. Laura Walter, the 2003 winner, says she is happy that the college will name finalists so more students get recognition for their talents. She also agrees that the tension associated with the prize can overwhelm graduation.

Officials cite two main reasons, one practical and one emotional, for awarding the prize in New York. On the practical side, the setting will allow the winner and finalists to meet with publishing executives and writers who might help them launch careers. On the emotional side, the change will remove from graduation day the feelings of intense disappointment experienced by those who do not win.

Kerr, a magazine editor and writer of women’s fiction who grew up on the Eastern Shore and spent her working life in New York, bequeathed the prize (half of the annual income from her donation to the college) to the senior with the “ability and promise for future fulfillment in the field of literary endeavor.” The sum was $9,000 when the prize was first awarded in 1968 and has fluctuated to as much as $68,814 in 2009.

Washington College Closer to Deal for Board of Education Property

The old Board of Education building has been sold to the only bidder. The commissioners accepted Washington College’s offer for 215 Washington Avenue. In a unanimous decision the commissioners chose Option I. According to the bid package, the college would pay $1,850,000 for the property with $850,000 of that in cash over a four year period; $250,000 in year one and $200,000 each year for the next three years. The college would also set aside $1 million in Commissioners Scholarships. Each $12,500 scholarship would be awarded to graduates of Kent County High School attending Washington College over the next ten years.

The field behind the building would be left as open space and used as an additional sports field. As long as the college is not using the field it would be open to the public, similar to the arrangement used for the Lelia Hynson Pavilion in Wilmer Park.

While the bid has been accepted the transaction is not final. The sale of the property is dependent upon certain conditions that can only be met by the town. The college would like the property to be rezoned Institutional, and the Chestertown Historic District Commission, the planning commission, and the appeals board would grant a demolition permit for the existing building, with the exception of the front facade of the original structure.

The college plans to use the property for additional classroom and administrative office space. The sale of 215 Washington Ave. will help cover some of the cost of the Kent County Public School consolidation and relocation.

Washington College Bids on Board of Education Property

For some time, Washington College has been looking to expand. One of the buildings the board has been very interested in buying is the Kent County Board of Education building at 215 Washington Avenue. Washington College is not the only interested party, but has now submitted a formal bid to buy the property. There are two prices on the table; both including scholarships to qualifying students from Kent County High School. Also in the bid is a stipulation that would allow the school to tear down the old building and start over.

CBMM Hosts Washington College’s Chesapeake Semester Students

Five students from Washington College recently slept overnight in the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum’s (CBMM) Hooper Straight Lighthouse as part of the College’s Center for Environment & Society’s Chesapeake Semester. Using Washington College and CBMM as base camps, students journey in, on, and around the 64,000 square mile Chesapeake watershed for an entire semester. Students explore the ecosystem in depth, develop solutions to environmental problems, and influence decision-making at local and national levels.

While in St. Michaels, students cruised on the skipjack, Rebecca T Ruark and participated in several docent-led tours of CBMM’s ten exhibit buildings, working boat yard, and 18-acre waterfront campus.

CBMM offers lighthouse overnight tours every fall and spring for groups of up to 15 participants as well as a wide variety of educational programs for K-12 through college level students and adults. For more information about CBMM’s education programs, visit www.cbmm.org or contact Kate Livie at klivie@cbmm.org.

Washington College Named Top School

The Princeton Review has named Washington College one of its top colleges for 2010. A total of 373 schools were included, about 15-percent of all the US colleges and universities. The Princeton Review uses both institutional data and student input to create its profiles of the selected colleges and universities. Washington College students describe “a great, small-school environment where everyone is always friendly and active,” and where professors “are always available and willing to help or even just chat about daily life.” They give high marks to WCs “exceptional pre-med program” and “strong environmental studies program” and note it is “a very good writing school.”

Reissman Wins Sophie Kerr AWard

Washington College senior Hailey Reissman is the winner of this year’s Sophie Kerr literary prize; one of the highlights of Washington College’s yearly commencement. Reissman will get $64,500 for winning the competition, the largest single literary prize in the US. Hailey says she will use at least part of the money to pay off some student loans.

Washington College Prepares for Commencement

John Harwood, Chief Washington Correspondent for CNBC and political writer for The New York Times, will address graduates at Washington College’s 227th Commencement ceremonies on May 16. Harwood will receive the honorary degree Doctor of Letters. Also being honored is Dr. Richard A. Meserve, president of the Carnegie Institution and former chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Meserve will be awarded the honorary degree Doctor of Science. The highly anticipated announcement of the winner of the Sophie Kerr Prize, the largest undergraduate literary prize in the nation, will be made during the ceremonies. This year the winning senior will receive a check worth $64,243.

Sophie Kerr Weekend Daniel Handler, a.k.a. Lemony Snicket

Daniel Handler is the author of the literary novels The Basic Eight, Watch Your Mouth, and, most recently, Adverbs. Under the name Lemony Snicket he has also written a sequence of books for children, known collectively as A Series of Unfortunate Events, which have sold more than 53 million copies and were the basis of a film starring Jim Carrey. His intricate and witty writing style has won him numerous fans for his critically acclaimed literary work and his wildly successful children’s books. Handler has worked intermittently in film and music, most recently in collaboration with composer Nathaniel Stookey on a piece commissioned and recorded by the San Francisco Symphony, entitled “The Composer Is Dead,” which has been performed all over the world and is now a book with CD.

An adjunct accordionist for the music group The Magnetic Fields, he is also the author of Lemony Snicket: The Unauthorized Biography, The Beatrice Letters, Horseradish: Bitter Truths You Can’t Avoid, and two books for Christmas: The Lump of Coal and The Latke Who Couldn’t Stop Screaming: a Christmas story. He is the screenwriter of the film Rick, a revamp of the Verdi opera Rigoletto, and the film adaptation of Joel Rose’s novel Kill the Poor, and has written for The New York Times, Newsday, San Francisco Chronicle, The Believer, Chickfactor, and various anthologies, and was the chair of the Judging Panel for the National Book Awards in Young People’s Literature, 2008. His current projects include a fourth novel for adults, a picture book in collaboration with Maira Kalman and the script for the long-awaited second Snicket movie.

Friday, March 26, 2010
Decker Theatre, Gibson Center for the Arts
Washington College, Chestertown
4 p.m.

410-778-2800
http://lithouse.washcoll.edu/schedule.php

Washington College Gets Grant

Washington College is getting a nearly $350,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. The money will pay for what is called an “inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer.” It is a device that does analysis for research in chemistry and physics. Washington College says few liberal arts schools have this kind of device. School officials say they were fortunate to get the grant and be able to perhaps keep some students who might otherwise transfer out to a more scientific school to finish their degree.