The Ann Arbor Chronicle » Washtenaw Community College Foundation http://annarborchronicle.com it's like being there Wed, 26 Nov 2014 18:59:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.2 Jean Jennings: “You Can Do Anything” http://annarborchronicle.com/2010/05/12/jean-jennings-you-can-do-anything/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=jean-jennings-you-can-do-anything http://annarborchronicle.com/2010/05/12/jean-jennings-you-can-do-anything/#comments Wed, 12 May 2010 19:45:13 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=43069 Speaking to a packed room at Washtenaw Community College on Tuesday, Letitia Byrd recalled how even her husband eventually saw women as equals, though he grew up in an era when women were expected to stay at home. “Remember that, ladies?” she quipped.

Letitia Byrd, Molly Dobson

Letitia Byrd, left, and Molly Dobson at Tuesday's Washtenaw Community College Foundation Women's Council lunch. Byrd was one of three honorees at the event. Dobson is a previous honoree. (Photos by the writer.)

Murmurs in the room showed that many of them did. About 300 people – mostly women – attended Tuesday’s luncheon of the WCC Foundation Women’s Council, where Byrd, Bettye McDonald and Marianna Staples were honored for their contributions as community leaders. The annual lunch raised about $25,000 for student scholarships and WCC’s Student Resource and Women’s Center.

Defying expectations and breaking stereotypes was a theme throughout the event, highlighted in a speech by Jean Jennings that took the audience through a romp of her unconventional path to becoming the president and editor-in-chief of Automobile Magazine, based in Ann Arbor. The saga included tales of unshaved legs, drill bits, cab driving, crash testing cars and starting a publication “with Rupert Murdoch’s money.” Jennings began by noting that the lunch would be a great place to pick up chicks.

Honoring Women Leaders: Byrd, McDonald, Staples

Before getting to Jennings’ talk, the crowd heard from all three honorees and Anne Duffy, who received this year’s Women’s Council scholarship. Duffy described her 15-year struggle with Lyme disease, saying she was on her deathbed when the disease was finally diagnosed. It took her five years to gain back her strength and start focusing on her career – she’s now pursuing an associate’s degree in journalism, with about a year left until graduation.

Letitia Byrd was the first honoree to be recognized. Peg Talburtt – the event’s emcee and executive director of the James A. & Faith Knight Foundation – noted that Byrd “has dominated the Ann Arbor community for many, many years.” The comment drew laughs because Byrd, a former Ann Arbor schools educator, is known for her ability to recruit people to support local nonprofits. Talburtt also highlighted Byrd’s work with fellow educator Joetta Mial in addressing the achievement gap for African American students in Ann Arbor schools. Their initial data collection set in place efforts that are still underway at the school district, Talburtt said.

In her comments, Byrd began by noting her sadness at the recent death of civil rights leader Dorothy Height, who had hired Byrd decades ago to work at the Delta Sigma Theta headquarters in Washington D.C. – that’s where she met her husband, David R. Byrd.

They later moved to Ann Arbor, and Byrd described the difficulties in getting housing and jobs at that time because of racial discrimination. Her husband was recruited in the mid-1960s to the newly founded Washtenaw Community College, she recalled, where he was asked to head the construction technology program. WCC hadn’t yet been built, she said, and the biggest attraction was the apple orchard located right where they were seated for the luncheon – at WCC’s Morris Lawrence Building. Byrd said she was glad to have been involved in the Women’s Council since its inception, and was pleased to continue supporting its goals.

Bettye McDonald, Molly Dobson, Gloria Thomas

Bettye McDonald, left, talks with Molly Dobson and Gloria Thomas at the May 11 WCC Foundation Women's Council lunch.

Talburtt introduced the next honoree, Betty McDonald, a retired Ann Arbor Public Schools administrator whose volunteer work has included leadership in the Ann Arbor Community Center, the Packard Clinic, Ann Arbor YMCA, Washtenaw Red Cross and many other nonprofits.

Talburtt described McDonald as “a force – just ask her sons and husband!” Her sons are Kevin McDonald of the Ann Arbor city attorney’s office, and Frederick McDonald II, chair of the WCC Foundation board. Bettye McDonald joked that her son’s influence on the board was the reason why she received this recognition. She described Letitia Byrd as her mentor, and said she hoped to continue helping young people get involved in the community through their work with local organizations and boards.

The third honoree, Marianna Staples, told the audience she felt humbled by the work of Byrd and McDonald, adding “I’ve got a couple of years left so maybe I can do some more things too.” She told the story of her father, a German immigrant who arrived in America with no money and no ability to speak English, but whose hard work and determination made him a successful businessman. Her parents never questioned that their children would go to college, so Staples and her brother never questioned it either, she said: “That’s what happens with expectations.”

Marianna Staples

Marianna Staples receives congratulations at the May 11 WCC Foundation Women's Council lunch.

Staples went on to receive a Ph.D. in French, and pursued her love of France by opening La Crêperie de la Chaumière, a former Ann Arbor restaurant, as well as teaching at Adrian College, where she continues to teach part-time.

She credits her husband, Ken Staples, with awakening in her a spark to contribute to the community. Together, they started an annual fundraiser for the Salvation Army, called The Festive Affair. Over the last 18 years the event has raised more than $2 million to support the Salvation Army and its Staples Family Center, a homeless shelter. She concluded her remarks by making a pitch for people to attend this year’s fundraiser, on Oct. 29 at Weber’s Inn. Helping the homeless find a place to makes it possible to find jobs and improve their lives in other ways. “I do believe that people can change their lives for the better,” she said.

A Serious Case of “Macho Woman Syndrome”

Last year’s guest speaker, Eastern Michigan University president Susan Martin, told rambunctious tales from her life that included slaughtering chickens and kicking down bathroom doors. It’s fair to say that this year, Jean Jennings kicked it up a notch from there.

Jean Jennings

Jean Jennings, president and editor-in-chief of Automobile Magazine: "If being a woman works to your advantage, don't be stupid – take it."

Jennings grew up with five brothers in New Baltimore, Michigan. Her father noticed she was a girl, Jennings joked, and advised her to be a waitress so she’d never starve: “He had high hopes for me.”

As a kid she didn’t tinker with cars like guys do, but she did view them as a way to something bigger, “which was to get the hell out of New Baltimore, Michigan!” She said she dated anyone who let her drive their car, and powered through high school to graduate when she was 15.

She went to the University of Michigan, but said life was crazy in 1971 and she was way too busy with anti-war protests to pay attention to studies. After three non-productive semesters, she quit school and started driving a cab. “My parents were horrified,” she recalled. “I was horrified.”

Wearing bib overhauls or a hippie skirt, smoking cigars, not bothering to shave her legs – “I was so cool!” – Jennings drove the occasional celebrity but mostly took in fares who were drug addicts or drunks. She was once robbed at gunpoint, and another time lugged a bleeding man up to his room where she cleaned out his wound with rubbing alcohol  – he screamed.

But after five years – which included overhauling the taxicab system in Ann Arbor, because that’s what women do, she said – it was time to move on, and Jennings took a job as a test driver at the Chrysler Proving Grounds near Chelsea. “Chrysler hired me because the government made them,” she said, as the crowd broke out in applause. “That’s pretty inspirational.”

The jobs for women weren’t challenging, and there was no opportunity for advancement, so Jennings started angling for a transfer. She lied, telling managers that she could weld so they’d hire her as a mechanic in the firm’s impact lab. It worked – “welding is just like sewing,” she says – and soon she was working with the guys, where “crash days were happy days.” She then told a story worthy of a Saturday Night Live sketch involving her long hair, a drill motor and bonding with male co-workers – The Chronicle can’t begin to do it justice, so we’ll leave it to your imagination.

While at Chrysler, Jennings also wrote newsletters for the UAW, which got the attention of the editor at Car and Driver magazine. [That editor was David E. Davis.] She wore jeans under her dress to the interview, which amused him, she recalled – and he hired her as a writer.

The organization had “severe testosterone poisoning,” Jennings said, and the first two years were difficult. She volunteered for every extreme assignment, from racing in the Baja 1000 to driving in a demolition derby, which she won. Then in 1985, she and Davis left Car and Driver to launch a competing publication, Automobile Magazine, started “with Rupert Murdoch’s money,” she said. It now has about four million readers.

Saying she has a serious case of macho woman syndrome, Jennings said that if you’re only half as good as the average guy, most men will think you’re a genius – “and it doesn’t take much after that to take over.”

She ended her talk with a few words of advice:

  • If you’re having a shitty time, she told the audience, nobody cares, and you’re still having a shitty time – so you might as well have some fun.
  • You can’t accept your rewards or punishments from other people – those need to come from you.
  • If you’re hiring someone, make sure to hire someone better than you. They’ll make you look good.
  • You can do anything, if you learn how to use the tools.
  • If being a woman gets in your way, try to ignore it.

Finally, she said, “if being a woman works to your advantage, don’t be stupid – take it.”

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EMU President: “My Advice Is to Take Risks” http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/05/14/emu-president-my-advice-is-to-take-risks/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=emu-president-my-advice-is-to-take-risks http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/05/14/emu-president-my-advice-is-to-take-risks/#comments Fri, 15 May 2009 02:56:42 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=20516 Susan Martin, president of Eastern Michigan University.

Susan Martin, president of Eastern Michigan University.

It turns out that at least two high-profile women in this area  got their educational start in a one-room schoolhouse – both were at Tuesday’s Washtenaw Community College Foundation Women’s Council Lunch. One we’ve written about before, and one – Susan Martin, president of Eastern Michigan University – gave the luncheon’s keynote speech.

As we summarize below, that speech ranged from slaughtering chickens to kicking down doors.

But before that, three women – Lisa Hesse, Ann Mattson and Ellie Serras – were honored for their leadership roles in the community. Hesse is founder of the nonprofit Girls on the Run of Southeastern Michigan, which works with preteen girls to develop healthy lifestyles through running. Mattson recently retired as 15th District Court Judge, a position she held for 15 years. Serras serves on several nonprofit boards, and was the longtime executive director of the Main Street Area Association.

The 275 people attending Tuesday’s lunch also heard from Vanessa Ray, a student in WCC’s culinary arts program who received a $1,600 Women’s Council scholarship for the past academic year. She spoke of her struggles as a single mother, working a minimum wage job and fighting the drain of poverty. Her grandmother had been a caterer as well as a role model, Ray said, and when she decided that she needed to return to school to make a better life for her and her son, she followed in her grandmother’s footsteps.

Becoming a student wasn’t easy, she said, and issues of transportation, Internet access and childcare meant that every day could be a struggle. But she kept her focus and relied on the help of her family, the WCC Foundation and Women’s Council, the Women’s Center of Southeastern Michigan and others. With a 3.88 GPA, Ray has landed a job with Simply Scrumptious Catering, a Dexter business owned by Lori Shepard. Ray said she spends her days in a bustling kitchen full of obstinate women, “and loving it.”

Ann Mattson, when accepting her award later in the program, had some encouraging words for Ray. Mattson said that like Ray, she got her start attending community college – in Mattson’s case, she studied at what’s now called Mott Community College in Flint. Two years there helped her get accepted into the University of Michigan-Dearborn, and eventually go on to law school. “I’ve lived that experience and I know there’s a great life ahead of you, Vanessa,” Mattson said.

During her keynote speech, Martin told her own stories about an unlikely background leading to her current role as EMU’s first female president. But she started by acknowledging the challenges as leader at Eastern, saying “Boy, have I got myself into a job!” She said she does have a “nice little house,” referring to the controversial University House, a building that includes the president’s residence. (It was constructed during former president Samuel Kirkpatrick’s tenure, and its cost overruns in part led to his resignation.) “Drop by sometime,” Martin joked. “They change the sheets and everything – it’s great.”

Martin said she grew up on a farm in Croswell, Mich., where her mother was hooking sugar beets in the field when she went into labor. Among the anecdotes she shared: They killed their own chickens for dinner  – “and yes, they do run around with their heads cut off,” she said – and when her father let her drive their new pickup truck, “I rammed that baby right into the porch.”

That was her childhood. “I have no idea why I went to college,” Martin said, adding “I worked one summer packing pickles and that really convinced me.”

She graduated from Central Michigan University, and her first job out of college was as a secretary, while her husband attended school in Texas. When they returned to Michigan, she got a job as a senior secretary (she says she can still type 80-90 words per minute). She enrolled in the MBA program at Michigan State University – after graduating, she said she would have pursued a Ph.D., but they told her she needed business experience.

So through her connections in the Porsche Club – her driving had improved since the porch-bashing days – she landed an interview with the state’s auditor general. ”He said, “OK, it’s about time we hired a woman,” Martin recalled, and with that, she got the job.

Being a woman in a predominantly male field raised some issues. Her boss was reluctant to send her on business trips with male colleagues because of concerns “that sex might occur,” she said. “I assured them that with looks like theirs, there was no chance of that.”

During her first trip she and her colleagues went out to the bar at the end of the day. She managed to get stuck in a bathroom with a jammed lock, and after trying to get her out, the bar workers finally told her she needed to kick the door down. “Let me tell you,” Martin said, “that’s a lot of fun and I did – I knocked that baby off its hinges.”

Martin eventually returned to get her Ph.D. in accounting from MSU – while studying, she got a call asking her to interview for the state Commissioner of Revenue position during Gov. Bill Milliken’s administration. She got the job and held it while continuing to complete her degree. “I’ve kind of been working at that level ever since,” she said.

She spent the bulk of her academic career at Grand Valley State University, working there for 17 years as faculty and in administrative positions. After 18 years at Grand Valley, in 2006 she was named provost and vice chancellor of academic affairs at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, which she described as her dream job.

But then the job at Eastern came along, and she figured since Michigan citizens had paid for her tenure over the years at public universities, she’d take on the challenge – even though, she said, “it seems like a really risky job. They tend to turn over presidents.”

But ultimately, “my advice is to take risks,” Martin told the crowd. “Look at me – I took the presidency of Eastern!”

Lisa Hesse, founder of Girls on the Run in Southeast Michigan

Lisa Hesse, a health and wellness consultant, is founder of Girls on the Run of Southeastern Michigan.

Ann Mattson

Ann Mattson, retired 15th District Court judge, is president elect of the Kiwanis Club of Ann Arbor.

Ellie Serras

Ellie Serras is a community activist and former head of the Main Street Area Association. Her new venture, called Main Street BIZ, is working to create a business improvement zone along a three-block stretch downtown. (The pink button she's wearing says "Downtown Diva.")

Peg Talburtt was emcee for Tuesdays lunch. She will be receiving an award herself on May 16

Peg Talburtt, executive director of the James A. & Faith Knight Foundation, was emcee for Tuesday's lunch. She will be receiving an award from WCC on May 16 – the 2009 Award of Merit, which is the college's highest honor.

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