Capital Letter
As we start the
new Branch year, please join us on September 11 for good food, good company,
and good information. Then at the meeting or later, tell a Board member what
you would like continued in our program and what you would like changed (and
how). Lets get off to a good start!
News Items from the President
Branch
News
The next AAUW National Convention will be held at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in our beloved city June 24-27 2005. If you can commit even 2-4 hours to help our sister AAUW members have an enjoyable experience, please call Anne Martin at 202.484.2981. The convention will need 350 volunteers to make the week run smoothly. Branch member Gale Dugan is a Convention Committee member. Please join her and Anne in welcoming members from across the country. You have a wide range of committees available: Credentials, Elections, Floor Procedures, Floor Voting, Hospitality, Information & Airport Reception, On-Site and Advanced Registration, Sales, Signs, Special Needs and the Volunteer Administration.
There are several issues in which we are very interested as a Branch. I’ll be writing more about the proposal to change the membership requirements in the coming months and Mary Ann Banta will update us on any proposed resolutions for MAMM.

Due to several IRS requirements, each Branch was requested to complete an
“Affiliates Agreement, Branch Survey and
Branch Checklist”. This has been completed and mailed to National. As it is a
lengthy document, we do not plan to publish it in the Capitol Letter; however, it will be available at our next meeting for your review.
Dr. Marion Carter spoke and signed books at
the 30 Anniversary International Congress on Science, Culture and Arts in the 21st Century in Dublin Ireland in July. She spoke on “Education and Culture” We’re very proud of Dr. Carter.
News from
National
There are several board and officer positions open. These were announced in the winter/spring issue of AAUW in Action. Job Descriptions are available on the AAUW web site. The due date for submitting candidate forms is October 1. The Association has 18 elected positions (including 10 Regional Directors) and the Foundation has 7 elected positions.
The National Board has had to take a number of significant actions to accommodate economic realities. Due to a combination of both branch and member-at-large membership decline, AAUW faced a significant budget shortfall last year. Difficult decisions were made, e.g., staff and program cuts, the Leader on Loan program was put on hold, the National Board will fund 50% of their travel expenses themselves, and the AAUW will no longer be a member of the International Federation of University Women ($200.000 fee scheduled to rise to $300,000 in coming fiscal years). Other actions are also being considered to meet the $100,00 shortfall anticipated for the coming fiscal year.
To help meet the continuing expenses of the organization, AAUW has launched the “One in a Million” Campaign which is a year long effort (through June 30, 2005) to raise $1 million in unrestricted support. National will ask honorary and paid life members to participate in the campaign by contributing a gift of $120. Each donor will receive the 1881 Fund pin that recognizes the donor’s commitment to the mission and programs of AAUW. Other donations are welcomed to secure the future of the Association. We’ll be talking more about this in our coming Branch meetings.
The Rising Middle class in India Globalization
is having a major impact on India, Come hear about the major changes
occurring. Saturday, October 9 Gather at noon; Lunch at 12:30 p.m. Cost: $15 Place: Alfio's
LaTrattoria 4515
Willard Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. (Friendship Metro, North exit or valet
parking. The Friendship Heights Shuttle leaves the Metro at 12:10 and stops
nearby.) Speaker: Firoze Rao was born in Bombay,
India. He is a graduate of the University of Bombay and the University of
Westminster. He is a member of the Institute of Professional Financial
Managers, UK. Firoze
Rao is a native of India who became a naturalized US citizen in December
2003. He has worked at Lockheed Martin since 1997 and currently is the
Finance Manager for the EPA eRulemaking Initiative. He
also is the treasurer of the United Nations Association National Capital
Area and a member of the DC League of Women Voters. RSVP to nancy.roman6@verizon.net or
301-656-6092
Policy items from National
Support
Child Care for Low-income College Students June
10, 2004
Difficulty
obtaining affordable, high quality childcare continues to prevent many
low-income women from attending college.
In 1998, Congress made significant progress toward addressing their
needs by authorizing the Child Care Access Means Parents in Schools (CCAMPIS)
program. The CCAMPIS program funds
on-campus daycare and after-school programs for low-income students. Unfortunately, though CCAMPIS is authorized
to receive up to $45 million in funding, President Bush’s budget for fiscal
year 2005 requested only $16.1 million.
CCAMPIS
funding must be increased because
· In 1999-2000, 27 percent of college
students had dependants, and 13 percent of these students were single
parents. Quality childcare can be very
expensive—more than tuition at many colleges.
CCAMPIS centers help parenting students earn their degrees.
· Available services only meet a small
fraction of the need. Currently less
than 10% of over 4,000 eligible colleges receive CCAMPIS funding. If only funded at $16.1 million in 2005,
some CCAMPIS programs may be closed, and no new programs will be added. If funded at $75 million, as proposed in the
Part-Time Students Assistance Act (H.R. 3968), CCAMPIS could provide funding to
one quarter of all eligible colleges.
Oppose Federal Nominee that
Threatens Title IX June 29,2004
|
On May 10th,
President Bush nominated Thomas Griffith to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals,
considered the second most powerful court in the country. Last year, Griffith was a member of the
commission created by the Department of Education to evaluate the enforcement
of Title IX in athletics. His proposals included what would have been one of
the most damaging changes: eliminating the proportionality prong of the
three-part test, which is used by colleges and universities to prove compliance
with Title IX. This three-part test is critical to the effectiveness of Title
IX in the athletics arena, and Griffith himself noted that his “radical”
proposal “went down in flames.”
Oppose Thomas Griffith’s nomination to the D.C. Circuit
Court because
Support equal pay for equal work! August 12, 2004
Forty years after the Equal Pay Act was signed into law, the wage gap continues to cost American families $200 billion a year. At every stage in her adult life, a working woman is deeply impacted by the wage gap. For example, a woman right out of college with a bachelor’s degree will earn, on average, $32,238; a man with the same education will earn $42,292. If current wage inequities are not remedied, the average 25-year-old woman who works full time year-round for 40 years will earn $523,000 less than the average 25-year-old man.
Terrell Scholarship Recipients for 2004-2005
By Maria E. Baylor, Committee
Chair
|
Again this year, the Mary Church Terrell Scholarship (MCTS) Committee of this branch selected as MCTS recipients two outstanding and deserving seniors graduating from District of Columbia public high schools. They are Tamela P. Odom and Keyona R. Hall
.
Tamela Odom was the valedictorian of the June 2004 graduating class of 185 graduates from Eastern Senior High School. She maintained a 3.90 cumulative grade point average and had SAT scores of 1010. In fall 2004, she will enter George Mason University where she will major in Elementary Education. Her career goal is to become an elementary school teacher or a guidance counselor.
Kenya Hall also was the valedictorian of her June 2004 graduating class from Anacostia Senior High School. Keyona had a 3.63 cumulative grade point average and SAT scores of 900. In fall 2004, she will enter Trinity College where her intended major will be in Journalism. Her career goal is to be a family lawyer
.
We wish both of them much success.
Other MCTS committee members: Phyllis Curry, Erma Wilson and Joan Stanley
Celebration
of the International Day of Peace
Time: Tuesday, September 21 from 6:00 to 8:00pm
Place: Kenney Auditorium, Johns Hopkins School
of Advanced International Studies (1740 Massachusetts Avenue NW).
Speaker: Professor Abdul Aziz Said
Mr. Said is
the Chair of Islamic Peace at American University and director of the Center
for Global Peace at American University.
In September
2001, the United Nations General Assembly established the International Day of
Peace to strengthen the ideals of peace and to alleviate tensions and causes of
conflict. The UNA-NCA Task Force on Peace and Security organizes an event each
year to commemorate this occasion with the aim of promoting reflection on the
current state of world peace and on its future prospects. The event is open to
the public.
RSVP to: rsvp@unanca.org with
"International Day of Peace" in the subject line.
Calendar
9 Deadline for reservations for the Pot Luck lunch RSVP To Mary Ann Banta: 301-986-0362 or MAsPiper@aol.com
14 Book
Group. Book: Reading Lolita
in Tehran by Azar Nafisi. Tues., 6:15 p.m. Place: Zorba’s Café, 1612 20th
St., NW (1/2 block north of the Q St. Exit of Dupont Circle Metro. Contact:
Sandy Seppala, 703-739-2522 (h), 703-597-7925 (cell), sandra.seppala@verizon.net.
7
Deadline for Reservations for October 9 meeting. RSVP:To
301-656-6092 or
9 Branch meeting, Alfio's LaTrattoria 4515 Willard Ave., Chevy Chase, Md.
19 Book
Group. Book: Middlesex by
Jeffrey Euginides. Tues., 6:15 p.m. Place: Zorba’s Café, 1612 20th St., NW (1/2
block north of the Q St. Exit of Dupont Circle Metro. Contact: Sandy Seppala,
703-739-2522 (h), 703-597-7925 (cell), sandra.seppala@verizon.net.
November
9 Book
Group. Book: Lenin’s Tomb
by David Remmick. Tues., 6:15 p.m. Place: Zorba’s Café, 1612 20th St., NW (1/2
block north of the Q St. Exit of Dupont Circle Metro. Contact: Sandy Seppala,
703-739-2522 (h), 703-597-7925 (cell), sandra.seppala@verizon.net.
7 Book
Group. Book: TBD. Tues., 6:15 p.m. Place: Zorba’s Café, 1612 20th
St., NW (1/2 block north of the Q St. Exit of Dupont Circle Metro. Contact:
Sandy Seppala, 703-739-2522 (h), 703-597-7925 (cell), sandra.seppala@verizon.net.
American Association of
University Women, Washington, D.C., Branch Capital Letter is the official
publication of this branch. Editors: Mary
Ann Banta and Nancy Grace Roman
Capital Letter—September 2004