September 17, 2007
President Susan
Scrimshaw is featured in a Sept. 2 Boston Sunday Globe
story about Simmons's rankings in U.S.News & World Report,
Princeton Review's Best Colleges guide, and the Kaplan guidebook,
in which she references the accolades as "Simmons hits a triple." Senior Carolyn Swanhall, a freshman orientation leader, also was interviewed. Other
articles announcing the rankings include electronic coverage in the Statehouse News Service, LATimes.com, bizjournals.com, Boston Business Journal.com, Arizona Republic.com,
AOLMoney news.com, and Forbes.com. Additionally, Scrimshaw
was one of hundreds of American, British, and Israeli college presidents listed in a full-page ad in the
Aug. 8 New York Times, responding against a recent vote by Britain's new University and College Union to
advance a boycott against Israeli academic institutions. The ad was spearheaded by Columbia University and
provided as a public service by the American Jewish Committee.
Simmons School of Management Professor Deborah
Kolb was quoted in an Aug. 28 Wall Street Journal story
on advice for young women on developing a leadership style. Kolb said it's important for young female
managers to get support from their superiors. Jennifer Murtie, a
2007 graduate of the Simmons School of Management, is referenced throughout the piece. Kolb also appeared
in an Aug. 27 North Jersey Herald News article titled "Women Make
Less Because They Don't Ask for More."
Zach Abuza, chair of the department of political science and international
relations, was featured in an Aug. 20 Newsweek story titled
"How to beat terror," which describes new, successful tactics used in Southeast Asia's war on terror. In
Newsweek's international edition on that same day, Abuza was
interviewed in an article about the increase in fundamentalist violence in Thailand. He also was quoted in
the Aug. 19 International Herald Tribune about the threat of Abu
Sayyaf insurgents on the Philippine island of Basilan.
The Aug. 17 issue of Boston Business Journal included a segment
titled "CEO University," a focus on chief executives who received their MBAs from area schools. Simmons School of Management graduate Suzanne Weber, a member of the class of 1982 and CEO of Development Guild/DDI
— a consulting firm for non-profits — was highlighted, and Simmons was ranked #14 in a list of
18 of the "Largest CEO-Producing Universities."
The July 8 edition of The Taipei Times included a feature story on
Alumnae Professor of English Afaa Michael Weaver, who taught at Fu Jen University in Taiwan this summer. The
article quotes Ed Ochester, editor of the University of Pittsburg Press Poetry Series, who called Weaver
"the African American successor to Walt Whitman," and promotes Weaver's 10th book, The Plum Flower Dance. Weaver also was the subject of a feature story in the
August issue of Spare Change News (Cambridge, Mass.), a street
newspaper to benefit the homeless.
Simmons School of Management Visiting Professor of
Entrepreneurship Margaret Heffernan was interviewed in the
September issue of More magazine in a Q&A-formatted section
titled "The Conversation." The article posed questions to Heffernan and Carol Bartz, a software company
executive, to find out which way to the top is better and faster for women.
The historical novel The Inquest, written by Jeffrey Marshall, a
1988 graduate of the Simmons College Graduate School of Library and
Information Science, was reviewed in an Aug. 12 Associated
Press article.
Simmons School of Management Professors Mary
Shapiro, Cynthia
Ingols, and Stacy
Blake-Beard co-published a letter to the editor in the July/August Harvard Business Review, in response to an article about working mothers that
the publication had run earlier in the year. The professors wrote about the importance of negotiating
flexible work arrangements and referenced a 2006 Simmons study on the topic.
Simmons College is mentioned in an Aug. 9 Boston Globe about the
New England Center for Children, a regional education center for children with autism. The article states
that the center offers degrees through Simmons, and quoted the center's director of administration
Judy Cunnif Serio, who graduated from the Simmons School of Management in 1991.
Simmons School of Management Professor Deborah
Kolb was quoted in the Sept. 1 issue of Newsday (N.Y.)
in an article about the new TV series Mad Men, which depicts a
Madison Ave. ad agency in the '60s. Kolb said that the women in the series are represented realistically as
having power only within their peer group.
