1 CURRICULUM VITAE ROCHELLE GOLDBERG RUTHCHILD 137 Coolidge Street Brookline, MA 02446 TEL: 617-738-9524 FAX: 617-738-3381 CELL: 617-943-1533 EMAIL: ruthchil@yahoo.com Visiting Lecturer in Russian and Soviet History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Spring 2015 Visiting Scholar, Women’s Studies Research Center, Brandeis University, 2013present Research Associate, The Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University, 1979-present Coordinator, Gender, Socialism and Post-Socialism Working Group, Davis Center Editor, Aspasia, The International Yearbook of Central, Eastern, and Southeastern European Women’s and Gender History, 2009-present Program Director and Faculty, Harvard Summer School Study Abroad, St. Petersburg, Russia, 2010, 2011 Teaching and lecturing about the history and culture of Russia with an emphasis on St. Petersburg, coordinating student learning activities outside the classroom. Professor of Graduate Studies, Emerita, The Union Institute and University TEACHING/ADMINISTRATIVE RESPONSIBILITIES AT NORWICH UNIVERSITY (1981-2001) AND THE UNION INSTITUTE AND UNIVERSITY (2001-2007) 2003 to 2007: Co-Director, Vermont College M.A. Program 1988 to 2007: Professor of Graduate Studies, Vermont College M.A. Program Core faculty responsibilities included teaching, supervision, and evaluation of students in the regional and online Master of Arts Program, supervision of field faculty, travel to regions, scheduling regular regional meetings, writing, printing and distributing a regular newsletter to regional students, prospective students, field faculty, and alumni, attendance at faculty meetings, participation in the Program democratic governance structure, service on Program and University committees. 1988-94: Director, Norwich University Russian School Directed one of the most prestigious summer intensive Russian programs in the U.S., supervised staff, Deans, and faculty, and served as the primary liaison to the University administration and external agencies. Additional responsibilities included budget preparation, planning for each summer session, supervision and involvement in recruiting of students and faculty, planning for the annual Symposium and the publication of the proceedings (three volumes), public relations, grant writing, curriculum development and implementation, evaluation of staff and faculty, service on University committees. 1 2 1986-88: Director, Graduate Program of Vermont College at Norwich University Served as the democratically elected chair of the Graduate Program faculty, chair of the Coordinating Committee, and the primary faculty representative to the University administration and external agencies. Additional responsibilities included overseeing the formulation, interpretation, and application of Program policies, supervision of Program staff, preparation of the Program budget, supervision, review and oversight of the faculty peer evaluation process, preparation and planning for core faculty meetings, coordination with Admissions personnel, monitoring the work of Program, Division, and University committees, and implementing core faculty decisions. 1982-88: Associate Professor of Alternative Education 1981-82: Assistant Professor of Continuing Education EDUCATION: B.A. 1962. History/Mathematics. Hofstra University. M.A. 1964. History. University of Rochester Ph.D. 1976. History. University of Rochester. Doctoral Dissertation: "The Russian Women's Movement, 1859-1917." FELLOWSHIPS/ACADEMIC GRANTS: Graduate Faculty Research Grant, The Union Institute and University, 2002-2007 Research grants, Summer Slavic Research Laboratory, University of Illinois, 1995, 2000, 2001 Category I Dana Grant, Norwich University, 1997 National Endowment for the Humanities Faculty Seminar, Gender and Identity in Russian Literature, Amherst College, Summer, 1996 International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX), Short-term grant for archival research in Russia, Summer, 1995 Independent Study Leaves, 1994-95 (Norwich), 2002-2003 (Union) Norwich University Research and Publications Grant, 1990 Dana Summer Fellowship, Norwich University, 1989 National Defense Education Act Fellowship (1962-66) Hofstra University and New York State Regents Scholarships (1958-62) FOREIGN STUDY: Participant, US-USSR Exchange Program, Moscow and Leningrad State Universities (1966-67 IUCTG; 1978-79 and 1995 IREX) RELEVANT PAST EMPLOYMENT: 1979-81: Core Faculty, Goddard Graduate Program, Goddard College 2 3 1974-78: Core Faculty and Division Head of Feminist Studies, Goddard-Cambridge Graduate Program in Social Change. 1971-1974: Faculty in Feminist Studies, Goddard-Cambridge Graduate Program 1969-1972: Instructor in History, Cardinal Cushing College, Brookline, Massachusetts PUBLICATIONS: "'Going to the ballot box is a moral duty for every woman’: The Great War and Women’s Rights in Russia,” Russia Great War Project. Slavica (forthcoming). “Bulat Okudzhava at Norwich (Bulat Okudzhava v Norviche),” in The Voice of Hope: New Material about Bulat (Golos nadezhdyi: Novoe o Bulate). Moscow: BULAT, 2013, 37-48. “From West to East: International Women’s Day, the First Decade,” Aspasia, vol. 6 (2012): 1-24. “Esther Frumkin: Bringing the Revolution to the Jewish Street,” in Judith S apor, Andrea Pető, Maura Hametz, and Marina Calloni, eds.,Jewish Intellectual Women in Central Europe 1860-2000: Twelve Biographical Essays. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2012, 173-204. Entries for Mariia Pokrovskaia (357-61), Mariia Chekhova (393-97), Alexandra Kollontai (407-10), Anna Kal’manovich (411-14), and Anna Filosofova (414-18), in Tiffany K. Wayne, ed., Feminist Writings from Ancient Times to the Modern World: A Global Sourcebook and History, vol. 2. Santa Barbara: Greenwood Press, 2011. Equality and Revolution: Women’s Rights in the Russian Empire, 1905-1917 (University of Pittsburgh Press, June 2010). Honorable Mention for the Reginald Zelnik Prize of the American Association for Slavic, East European and Eurasian History (ASEEES), for an outstanding monograph published on Russia, Eastern Europe or Eurasia in the field of history, and Honorable Mention for the Heldt Prize of the Association for Women in Slavic Studies (AWSS), for the best book in Slavic/Eastern European/Eurasian women's studies. “Women’s Suffrage and Revolution in the Russian Empire, 1905-1917,” in Karen Offen, ed., Globalizing Feminisms, 1789-1945. New York: Routledge, 2010, 257-274. A Very Short Course on Russian Women’s History Contextualizing Russian Feminism: Twenty Years Forward. Editor, with Beth Holmgren, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009. "Reframing Public and Private Space in Mid-Nineteenth Century Russia: The Triumvirate of Anna Filosofova, Nadezhda Stasova, and Mariia Trubnikova" in Christine Worobec, ed., The Human Tradition in Imperial Russia. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, 2009, 69-83. “The 1908 Women’s Congress: Then and Now (S”ezd 1908 goda: ego znachenie togda i tseper’,” in Natalia Pushkareva, Marianna Muravyeva, and Natalia Novikova, eds. Gender Equality in Russia. Materials from an International Academic Conference Dedicated to the Hundredth Anniversity of the 1908 First All Russian Women’s 3 4 Congress, from March 21-23, 2008 (Gendernoe ravnopravie v Rossii. Materialy mezhdunarodnoi nauchnoi konferentsii posviashchennoi 100-letiiu Pervogo Vserossiiskogo zhenskogo S"ezda 1908 goda. 21-23 marta 2008 goda). St. Petersburg: Aleteia, 2008, 230-35. Six entries (Chekhova, Maria, Filosofova, Anna, Mamonova, Tatiana, Pokrovskaia, Maria, Stasova, Nadezhda, Trubnikova, Maria) in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008. “Women’s Suffrage and Revolution in the Russian Empire, 1905-1917,” Aspasia, vol. 1 (2007): 1-35. “Feminist publications and publishers in St. Petersburg, 1899-1917,” The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review, vol. 33, no. 1 (2006): 27-48. Seven entries in Francisca DeHaan, Krassimira Dasskalova, and Anna Loutfi, eds. Biographical Dictionary of Women’s Movements and Feminisms in Central, Eastern, and Southeastern Europe, 19th and 20th Centuries. Budapest: Central European University Press, 2006. “E.G. Etkind at Norwich (E.G. Etkind v Norviche),” in E.G. Etkind: Here and There (E.G.Etkind: zdes’ i tam). St. Petersburg: Akademicheskii proekt, 2004, 463-466. “Vozvrashchenie zhenskoi istorii: pol, klass i feminism v dorevoliutsionnoi Rossii (Recovering Women’s History: Sex, Class and Feminism in Pre-Revolutionary Russia)”, in Elena Gapova, Almira Ustanova, Andrea Peto, eds. Gendernye istorii vostochnoi Evropy (The Gender History of Eastern Europe). Minsk: European Humanities University Press, 2002, 67-79. “Feminism in Russia, 1905-1917: A Forgotten Legacy,” in Grigorii A. Tishkin, ed., Zhenshchina v grazhdanskom obshchestve: Istoriia, filosofiia, sotsiologiia (Woman in Civil Society: History, philosophy, sociology). St. Petersburg: St. Petersburg Philosophical Society and Konrad Adenauer Fund, 2002, 101. Eighteen entries in Norma Corigliano Noonan and Carol Nechemias, eds. The Encyclopedia of Russian Women's Movements. Westport, CT and London: Greenwood Press, 2001. "Writing For Their Rights. Four Feminist Journalists: Mariia Chekhova, Liubov' Gurevich, Mariia Pokrovskaia, and Ariadna Tyrkova," in Jehane Gheith and Barbara Norton, eds. An Improper Profession: Women and Journalism in late Imperial Russia. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2001, 167-195. “Arise, Ye Prisoners of Privatization,” Sojourner vol. 27, no. 4 (December 2001): 14-15. "Interview with Elena Gapova," Sojourner vol. 26, no. 1 (September 2000): 9, "Conference Report: Writing Women's History and the History of Gender in Countries in Transition," Sojourner vol. 25, no. 3 (November 1999): 19, 40. "Russia's Post-Party Depression," in Radical America vol. 26, no. 4 (June 1999): 4-22. 4 5 "Women's History-Eastern European," in D.R. Woolf, ed., A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing. New York and London: Garland Publishing, 1998, 953-955. Esther Frumkin: From Bundist to Bolshevik," in Proceedings of the Di Froyen: Women and Yiddish Conference. New York: National Council of Jewish Women, 1997, 58-63. “Women in Russia: Progress or Regress?" Thirteenth Annual Ellsworth Lecture, Johnson State College, March 8, 1996, transcript of lecture. Women in Russia and the Soviet Union: An Annotated Bibliography. New York: G.K. Hall, 1994. Named one of the ten best bibliographies in history for 1993-95 by the American Library Association. 'Mirovich, N.', in Marina Ledkovsky, Charlotte Rosenthal, and Mary Zirin. Dictionary of Russian Women Writers. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1994, 431-432. "Engendering History: Women in Russia and the Soviet Union," European History Quarterly, vol.24 (1994): 555-62. "Soviet Journeys," in Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz and Irena Klepfisz, eds., The Tribe of Dina: A Jewish Women's Anthology. Boston: Beacon Press, 1989, 123-28. Technical Consultant/Editor for Tatyana Mamonova, Editor, Women and Russia: Feminist Writing from the Soviet Union, Boston: Beacon Press, 1984 (pseud. Sarah Matilsky) "Sisterhood and Socialism: The Soviet Feminist Movement," Frontiers, vol. VII, no. 2 (1983): 4-12. "The League of Equal Rights for Women," in the Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History. Gulf Breeze, Florida: Academic International Press, 1981, vol. 19, 88-92. BLOGS/INTERVIEWS: Interview about film “Left on Pearl,” Jewish Perspectives, WHDH Boston, March 16, 2014. “Interview with Rochelle Ruthchild,” Indiana University Summer Workshop Alumni Newsletter, Spring 2014, 3-7. “The History of Russian Sex.” (January 23, 2014) http://www.wcwonline.org/Women-=Books-Blog/russiansex “Free Pussy Riot!” (December 4, 2013) http://www.wcwonline.org/Women-=-BooksBlog/pussy SELECTED REVIEWS: “War, Memory, and Punishment in Russia: Two Heldt Prize Winners.” Review Essay of Judith Pallot and Laura Piacentini, with the assistance of Dominique Moran, Gender, Geography, and Punishment: The Experience of Women in Carceral Russia, and Karen Petrone, The Great War in Russian Memory. Aspasia, Vol. 9, 2015, 157–161. 5 6 Masha Gessen, Words Will Break Cement: The Passion of Pussy Riot, in Women’s Review of Books, vol. 51, no. 6 (November/December 2014): 13-14. Victor Leontovitsch. The History of Liberalism in Russia. Trans. by Parmen Leontovitsch. Slavic and East European Journal, 58.3 (Fall 2014): 557-558. Marjorie L. Hilton, Selling to the Masses: Retailing in Russia, 1880–1930, in Business History Review, vol. 87, no. (Autumn 2013): 609-611. Marianne Hirsch, The Generation of Post Memory: Writing and Visual Culture after the Holocaust and Julija ykys, Epistophilia: Writing the Life of Ona imaitẻ, in Women’s Review of Books, vol. 50, no. 4 (July/August 2013): 28-29. Barbara Alpern Engel, Breaking the Ties That Bound: The Politics of Marital Strife in Late Imperial Russia in The American Historical Review vol. 117 (2012): 1328-1329 Sonja M. Hedgepeth and Rochelle G. Saidel, eds., Sexual Violence Against Jewish Women During the Holocaust, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. 28, no. 3 (September/October 2011): 10-11. Anita Diamant, Day After Night, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. 27, no. 6 (November/December 2010): 22-23. Helena Goscilo and Andrea Lanoux, eds. Gender and National Identity in TwentiethCentury Russian Culture. Journal of Cold War Studies, vol. 12, no. 1 (Winter 2010): 206-208 Irene Nemirovsky, Suite Française, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. XXIII, no. 6 (November/December 2006): 23-25. Eva Hoffman, After Such Knowledge: Memory, History, and the Legacy of the Holocaust, and Rochelle G. Saidel, The Jewish Women of Ravensbrück Concentration Camp, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. XXI, no. 12 (September 2004): 24-25. Nehama Tec, Resilience and Courage: Women, Men, and the Holocaust, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. XXI, no. 1 (October 2003):9-10. Fiona Montgomery and Christine Collette, eds. The European Women’s History Reader, in the Journal of Contemporary European Studies, vol. 11, no. 2 (July 2003): 302-303. David Ransel, Village Mothers: Three Generations of Change in Russia and Tataria, in the Slavic and East European Journal, vol. 47, no. 1 (Spring 2003): 143-144. Lena Jedwab Rozenberg, Girl With Two Landscapes: The Wartime Diary of Lena Jedwab, translated by Solon Beinfeld, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. XX, no. 5 (February 2003):7-8. Anna Hillyar and Jane McDermid, Revolutionary Women in Russia, 1870-1917: A Study in Collective Biography, in Revolutionary Russia, vol. 14, no. 2 (December 2001):147149. Anne Nivat, Chienne de Guerre: A Woman Reporter Behind the Lines in Chechnya, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. XVIII, no. 9 (June 2001):5-6. Till My Tale is Told: Women’s Memoirs of the Gulag, ed. by Simon Vilensky, in The Women’s Review of Books, vol. XVII, no. 6 (March 2000):7-8. 6 7 Barbara Evans Clements, Bolshevik Women, and Mary Buckley, ed. Post-Soviet Women: From the Baltic to Central Asia, in American Journal of Sociology (1999):1873-1876. Other Book Reviews in the Russian Review, Russian History, Europe Asia Studies, European History Quarterly, Jahrbücher fur Geschichte Osteuropas, Journal of Lesbian Studies, Sojourner, Studies in Contemporary Jewry, In These Times, Science and Society SELECTED LECTURES/TALKS: “Belarus Family Travels,” Boston Jewish Genealogical Society, Temple Emanuel, June 8, 2014. “Left on Pearl,” Creativity and Collaboration Panel, Leonard Bernstein Festival of the Arts, Brandeis University, April 24, 2014 (with Susie Rivo). “Making a Feminist Documentary Film,” Women’s Studies Research Center, Brandeis University, April 10, 2014 (with Susie Rivo). “Homophobia and the Anti-Gay Campaign in Russia: Political and Social Dimensions“ Sakharov Seminar on Human Rights. Survey of the history of laws and attitudes towards gays and lesbians in Russia and the Soviet Union. Davis Center, November 18, 2013 “Jews in Belarus: An Historical Survey,” 33rd International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies International Conference on Jewish Genealogy, Boston, August 5, 2013 “World War One and Women’s Rights in Russia,” Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies Convention, Los Angeles, California, November 21, 2010. “Bridging the Divide: Feminists in Soviet Russia,” American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies Convention, Boston, Massachusetts, November 14, 2009. “Accommodation and Resistance: The 1908 First All-Russian Women’s Congress,” American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies Convention, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 16, 2008. “The Tsar, Suffrage, and Revolution in Early 20th-Century Russia,” Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, Minneapolis, Minnesota, June 14, 2008. “The Tsar, Women’s Suffrage, and Revolutions in Early Twentieth-Century Russia,” Historians Seminar, Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University, May 2, 2008. “The 1908 Women’s Congress: Then and Now.” Plenary Talk (in Russian), Conference on The Legal Situation of Women in Russia: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow, St. Petersburg, Russia, March 22, 2008. “Russian Feminists: From Global Sisterhood to Silence.” Seventh European Social Science History Conference, Lisbon, Portugal, February 26, 2008 7 8 “War, Revolution, and Women’s Suffrage in the Russian Empire,” Conference on International Feminisms in Historical Comparative Perspective, 19th-20th centuries, Institute of Social Sciences of the University of Lisbon, February 25, 2008. “The Tsar, Suffrage, and Revolution in early 20th century Russia.” Conference on Suffrage, Gender and Citizenship. International Perspectives on Parliamentary Reforms, October 17, 2006, Tampere, Finland "’A Patriot for Women’: Anna Kal'manovich and the Issues of Gender and National Identity for Jewish Women in Pre-Revolutionary Russia.” VIII Conference of the European Association of Jewish Studies, Moscow, Russia, July 26, 2006 “’Bourgeois Feminism’: Gender, Class, and the Women’s Equal Rights Union in Russia, 1905-1908.” European Social Science History Conference, March 22, 2006 “Esther Frumkin: Bringing the Revolution to the Jewish Street,” Conference on “Jewish intellectual women in Europe: gendering history, politics and culture.” March 17-18, 2006, Central European University, Budapest “Comparative history: Russia and the United States in the early twentieth century,” Wellesley College History Seminar, October 14, 2005 “Well-Behaved and Ill-Behaved Women Rarely Make History: February and March, 1917,” Davis Center Historians Seminar, April 16, 2004 “International Women’s Day in Russia and the U.S.,” University of MassachusettsBoston, March 8, 2004 “Feminism in Russia, 1905-1917: A Forgotten Legacy,” (in Russian), Women in Civil Society Conference, St. Petersburg State University, June 6, 2002 “Reframing Public and Private Space in Mid-Nineteenth Century Russia,” Summer Research Laboratory in Slavic Studies, University of Illinois, June 26, 2001 "Reclaiming Herstory in Russia," Conference on Writing Women's History and the History of Gender in Countries in Transition, October 2, 1999, Minsk, Belarus “From Comrade to Babe: Women in Post-Soviet Russia,” Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, University of Rochester, June 4-6, 1999 EDUCATIONAL/MEDIA RESOURCE CONSULTANT: Davis Center Curricular Project: Women and Revolution: Women’s Political Activism in Russia from 1905-1917 (2013) http://daviscenter.fas.harvard.edu/sites/daviscenter.fas.harvard.edu/files/Women%20and %20Revolution%20Resource%20Document_FINAL.pdf PAPERS PRESENTED AT: Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES, formerly AAASS) and New England Slavic Association annual meetings, Berkshire Conference, Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, European Social Science History Conference, Fifth World Slavic Congress, National Women's Studies Association, Summer Research Laboratory in Slavic Studies at the University of Illinois, Conference 8 9 on the History of Women in the Russian Empire, Women in Russia Conference. MANUSCRIPT REVIEWER: For book manuscripts from Beacon Press, Cambridge University Press, D.C.Heath, Hebrew Union Press, Indiana University Press, Rowman and Littlefield, University of Alabama Press, University of Pittsburgh Press, articles for the Russian Review, The Journal of Women's History, Slavic Review. TRANSLATOR: Introduction and Translation, “Olga Zakuta, Kak v revoliutsionnoe vremia Vserossiiskaia Liga Ravnopraviia Zhenshchin dobilas’ izbiratel’nykh prav dlia russkikh zhenshchin (How in the revolutionary time the All-Russian League for Women’s Equal Rights won suffrage for Russian women),” Aspasia, vol. 6 (2012): 117-124. “In Memoriam Igor Semenovich Kon (1928-2011),” Aspasia, vol. 6 (2012): 233-237. AED-SUNY Plattsburgh Training Project for Russian local government officials and Chamber of Commerce representatives (October, 1994). For articles in The Women's Review of Books and World Paper, for interviews published in the New York Times, Boston Globe, Sojourner, Guardian of London, USA Today PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: Association for Women in Slavic Studies/AWSS. Co-Founder and President (1988-90), Clerk, Board of Directors, (1990-present). Program Committee, Association for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies, Boston, 2009, 2013. Chair, AWSS Travel Grants Committee, 2006-present. Member, AWSS 2004 Conference Committee. Member, Heldt Prize Committee, 1989-94. Chair, Zirin Prize Committee, 1998-2005. Committee on the Status of Women, American Association for Advancement of Slavic Studies, 1987-90. Board of Directors, AAUP, UI&U chapter, (2004-2006). COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES: 888 Women’s History Project, Documentary Film (“Left on Pearl”) in progress on the origins of the Cambridge, MA Women’s Center, 2001-present Clerk, The Friends of Jewish Dokshitsy, 2007-present Chair, 2005 Women’s Kallah, 150th Anniversary Committee, Temple Israel, 2005 Board of Directors, Eastern European Jewish Humanitarian Project, 2000-present Women’s Educational Center Thirtieth Anniversary Documentary Project, 2000-2001 Women Whose Lives Span the Century Oral History Project, Temple Israel, 1997-2000 9 10 UNIVERSITY COMMITTEES/SERVICE: 2010-present: Co-Coordinator, Gender, Socialism and Post-Socialism Working Group, Davis Center 2013-2014: Program Committee, “A Revolutionary Moment” Conference, March 27-29, Boston University. Spoke at conference, coordinated film program and videoing of sessions. 2013: Feminist Issues Discussion Group, Women’s Studies Research Center, Brandeis University 1997-2006: Co-Chair, Master of Arts Program, Norwich University, The Union Institute 2001-2002: Center for Women Advisory Committee, The Union Institute & University 2001-2002: Chair, Graduate Human Subjects Research Committee 1992-1994; 1999-2001: Divisional Promotion and Tenure Committee 1998-2001: Graduate Program Licensure Coordinator 1997: Graduate Program Operations Committee 1996: Graduate Program Self-Study Report 1991-93: Norwich University Governance Task Force 1989: New Library Grant Writing Committee 1983-2001: Russian School Advisory Committee 1988-94: Graduate Committee on Academic Standing and Degrees 1982-87: Teacher Certification Coordinator for the Graduate Program GRANTS: Principal Grantwriter and fundraiser, 888 Women’s History Project, Funds raised to date$190,000. Massachusetts Humanities, to the 888 Women’s History Project for the documentary film project “Left on Pearl,” 2006, $9993, 2007, $10000, 2010/2011, $10,000. Social Science Research Council Grants to the Russian School, 1989-94, totaling over $100,000. Proposal Writer/Consultant, Women's Educational Equity Act grants to GoddardCambridge Graduate Program in Social Change, 1977-79, $115,000. REFERENCES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST 10