Save the date for: AAUW Funds Brunch By Donna Holmes
Please join us for the annual Capitol Counties Interbranch Funds Meeting
Saturday, January 29, 2022 – 10:00 AM to Noon
FREE Via Zoom, which opens at 9:45 AM. More information to come.


Book Group 2:
The Invisible Bridge, by Julie Orringel, on Oct. 5; coordinator is Carol Hayes
Book Group 3:
Reading a book selection and meeting on Oct. 27; coordinator is Carolyn Meeker
Book Group 4:
Notes of a Native Son, by James Baldwin, on Oct. 13; coordinator is Nancy Lawrence
Book Group 6:
The Hidden Life of Trees, by Peter Wohlleben, on Oct. 11; coordinator is Angela Scarlett
Book Group 8:
The Language of Butterflies, by Wendy Williams, on Oct. 25; coordinator is Diana Squire
Book Group 10:
How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, by Bill Gates, on Oct. 21; coordinator is Sandi Schoenman
Book Group 12:
The Warmth of Other Suns, by Isabel Wilkerson, on Oct. 7; coordinator is Linda Cook
Book Group 33:
The Other Mrs., by Mary Kubica, on Oct. 7; coordinators are Jane Pivetti, Nancy Lawrence
A nucleus of members have created a new group and welcome other women to join. If you would enjoy walking the regional trails and park pathways in the Sacramento area in the company of others, please contact Kathleen Deaver. Kathleen’s contact information can be found in the Membership Directory.
US women athletes brought home more medals than men! You can read more in USA Today (which attributes this success to Title IX) at https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/olympics/us-women-are-dominating-medal-count-at-tokyo-olympics-in-ways-they-ve-never-done-before/ar-AAN0W6E
Click here for Printable Newsletter Articles
By the time you receive this newsletter you should have received your new directory. If you
have not or want to purchase an additional copy for $5 please contact Donna Holmes at (916) 402-4714.
The following new members are listed in your new directory so feel free to reach out to them:
Please welcome new member Linda Howard, previously a member of the Roseville Branch. Linda is a retired teacher and has also worked as a real estate broker. She is interested in evening book groups and singles dining out. Linda is located in Carmichael.
Our second new member is Stephenie Moczydlowski and she lives in Fair Oaks. Stephenie is a retired nurse case manager and is interested in Public Policy as well as most of our interest groups! She has been an active participant at two of the Great Decisions I.
We will be updating the Membership website as soon as possible. Additionally, with Karen Burley’s help, the directory will also be posted in the members-only section of the website.
See you on Zoom for September’s Showcase or in PERSON at the Ice Cream Social in October and remember to bring prospective members who may join for the reduced rate of $69.50 for joining at an event.

Welcome to a new branch year, and your membership team is full of new leaders:
on doing it for a long time. The advantage for her is most everything is done from home, where she can keep her husband company, and she loves this kind of data-heavy work.Membership History from the 19th Century to the 21st and Beyond
We will be exploring our membership history each month to illuminate how changes have worked over the last 140 years. First: In the beginning, members were hand picked by existing members and had to have attended particular universities. The San Francisco Branch of AAUW is the second oldest branch in the United States, organized in 1886 as the Pacific Organization of Collegiate Alumnae. The members were from UC Berkeley, Mills College and Stanford University. We could still have Angela Scarlett, and Donna’s great-grandmother who attended California Collegiate starting in 1863, merging with Mills in 1864 — unfortunately she died in 1886. Donna’s grandmother, Rebecca Suhr, was the first woman to graduate from the Stanford School of Law in 1903 and became a member.
We will move further into the 20th century in a future article. Stay tuned!
Sharon Anderson, membership treasurer, and Liz Jordan, finance director, want to thank the
members who have so eagerly renewed their membership and made significant donations to our branch outreach programs, and to our Dues Assistance Fund and General Branch Operations Fund.
As of the date of this writing, May 15, 2021:
The deadline to renew is June 1. Because our newsletter comes out very close to this deadline, we urge every member:
The renewal process requires many hours of volunteer time:
Sharon Anderson and Liz Jordan want to thank all members for their timely renewal and for the generosity of their donations to local and national needs. Thank you!
A WELCOME AND A FAREWELL
As we end our membership year, we are very pleased to welcome our newest member,
Carmen L. Hobbs, to AAUW Sacramento. Carmen has a BS in nursing from San Jose State University and an MS from Sonoma State University in nursing leadership and management. She is retired from the position of nurse consultant with the State of California. She has a particular interest in working with our Public Policy and Scholarship Committees. She also is interested in joining Great Decisions, Cultural History, Readers’ Theatre and the Singles Dining Out groups. Carmen made a point of attending our final program meeting of this year on Zoom, and we are all eager to meet her in person as COVID restrictions are lifted.
Sadly, this will be the last column of our two-year term as co-membership directors and what a tumultuous two-year period it has been! The joy of our 100- year anniversary and the challenge of the COVID pandemic were only two of the events that shaped and influenced our term. We wish Donna Holmes and Marty McKnew the best outcome as they navigate membership during their two-year term.
ON MY (FINAL) RADAR (From Jan):
One of the last recommendations I would like to make as I end our stint in office: Instead of eliminating a degree requirement for members, why not add an “or” qualification that would extend membership to any interested women and men without formal degrees who have contributed to the advancement of equity for women by working with us locally, statewide, nationally or internationally as a volunteer, financially or otherwise, on projects related to our goals. This qualification would certainly broaden the net we are able to cast to recruit new members while still focusing recognition on one of our primary goals, education and equity for all women. We might also be able to award posthumous membership to those awesome women and men who fought for equity and are no longer with us. I hope National will explore this as an alternative path to more inclusivity in our organization.
You can find out about the Interest Groups offered by the branch by looking at the banner on the home webpage (just under the branch photo) and clicking on “Activities”. Click on “Interest Groups” and you will find a list of all Interest Groups, when they meet, and the group leader to contact for more information (email addresses and phone numbers can be found in the Branch Membership Directory and Handbook).
Some Interest Groups are taking a break during the pandemic, but a number are still meeting – virtually! According to the Interest Group Coordinator, Vicki Nicholson, here are the groups that are currently meeting:
Feel free to contact a group leader to learn more about the Interest Group. They would love to have you join in!
AAUW CA Public Policy Update: A reminder that you can get the latest information on California state public policies that concern the AAUW mission at aauw-ca.org.
The branch renewal letters went out in the mail on Monday, April 19. The day before that, I sent out, to all our members, a mass email that includes National’s invoice form. If you will use National’s emailed invoice form to renew this year, to that we say: Yippee! It saves us a lot of time and trouble, getting all the dues in the right slot very quickly.
The invoice was mailed out from my computer, but it doesn’t look like it because I have to use
National’s program. The email will be from memberinfo@AAUW.org.
National’s email invoice is easy, as you no doubt learned last year, but here’s a refresher, just in case: 1) open the email with your credit/debit card in hand; 2) click on the blue (aqua?) highlighted option 1: “Click here to use debit or credit card”; 3) fill in the blanks; 4) click “next”; 5) click the “submit” button at the end. Besides dues, you can also donate to any of National’s Funds on this invoice.
For any donations that you wish to make to any of Sacramento’s programs with your renewal, please include a check mailed with your renewal form, because National will not process our branch donations.
If you have any problems, please call me. Please be sure to postal mail back your paper application to me, as we do need it for our bookkeeping purposes. If the emailed invoice gets lost in your inbox, just let me know and I’ll send you another one.
If you haven’t renewed as you read this, renew now! Thank you!
Sharon Anderson, Membership Treasurer
916-396-9790