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Congratulations to Composer and NAS Leader Daniel Asia

Today the Academy of Arts and Letters announced its 2010 music award winners. NAS is pleased to report that Daniel Asia, gifted composer and our Arizona affiliate president, has received the Academy Award in Music, which ” honors outstanding artistic achievement and acknowledges the composer who has arrived at his or her own voice.” Dr. Asia contributes to this blog and the opening notes of his piece, Gateways, currently grace NAS’s homepage.

Categories: Members/Affiliates

Upcoming New York Association of Scholars Event

February 11, 2010 Leave a comment

THE NEW YORK ASSOCIATION OF SCHOLARS

THE CUNY ASSOCIATION OF SCHOLARS

INVITE YOU TO ATTEND OUR FIRST EVENT OF 2010

James Piereson

will discuss

Reflections on the Kennedy Era

James Piereson is  president of the William E. Simon Foundation, a private grant making institution with charitable interests in education, religion, and the problems of youth.  He is also a senior fellow at The Manhattan Institute in New York, where he is director of the Center for the American University.  Prior to joining the Simon Foundation, he was executive director of the John M. Olin Foundation, and has served on the Political Science faculties of several prominent universities, including Iowa State, Indiana University  and the University of Pennsylvania.

Mr. Piereson is the author of Camelot and the Cultural Revolution: How the Assassination of John F. Kennedy Shattered American Liberalism (Encounter Books, 2007), as well as the co-author (with J. Sullivan and G. Marcus) of Political Tolerance and American Democracy (University of Chicago Press, 1982). He has in addition  published articles and reviews in Commentary, The New Criterion, The American Political Science Review, The Public Interest, the Journal of Politics, Philanthropy, The American Spectator, The Wall Street Journal, and The Weekly Standard.

Mr. Piereson also serves on the boards of the Center for Individual Rights, the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, and Donors Trust.

February 28, 2010 3:30 PM

at the home of Nahma Sandrow and Bill Meyers

180 Riverside Drive. apt 3A

Entrance on West 90 Street
New York, NY

RSVP  – David Gordon    (718) 289-5658      dmgordon@mindspring.com

Categories: Members/Affiliates

California Association of Scholars Upcoming Events

January 8, 2010 Leave a comment

Reposted from NAS.org

Dear California members and readers (and anyone happening to visit California this spring),

Don’t miss the following events hosted by the California Association of Scholars at UCLA, UC Berkeley, and UC Santa Cruz:

Thursday, January 21, 7:30 PM
Dinesh D’Souza
What’s So Great About Capitalism?
University of California, Los Angeles, Kerckhoff Grand Salon

Tuesday, March 09, 4:00 PM
Victor Davis Hanson
War in the Postmodern World: A Review of New Laws of Conflict
University of California, Berkeley, Lipman Room, Barrows Hall

Thursday, April 22, 7:30 PM
Dinesh D’Souza
What’s So Great About Capitalism?
University of California Santa Cruz, Room to be determined

Dinesh D’Souza events (January 21 and April 22):

The California Association of Scholars and the Intercollegiate Studies Institute cordially invite you to a free lecture, open to the public.  Dinesh D’Souza will address the moral arguments for and against capitalism in our age of Obama. He will show why the free market system is not only efficient but also moral, and will address topical applications to health care and financial regulations.

Co-sponsorship: American Freedom Alliance
For more information: 310-569-0853 or www.isi.org

Dinesh D’Souza has been called one of the “top young public-policy makers in the country” by Investor’s Business Daily. The New York Times Magazine named him one of America’s most influential conservative thinkers. The World Affairs Council lists him as one of the nation’s 500 leading authorities on international issues. Newsweek cited him as one of the country’s most prominent Asian Americans.

A former policy analyst in the Reagan White House,  D’Souza also served as John M. Olin Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and the Robert and Karen Rishwain Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Dartmouth College in 1983.

Mr. D’Souza’s books have had a major influence on public opinion and public policy. His 1991 book Illiberal Education was the first study to publicize the phenomenon of political correctness. The book was widely acclaimed and became a New York Times bestseller for 15 weeks. It has been listed as one of the most influential books of the 1990′s. (www.dineshdsouza.com)

Victor Davis Hanson event (March 9):

Using ancient Greece and military history as commentary, Professor Hanson will analyze the legal dilemmas faced by democracies when defending themselves against terrorist entities.

For more information: 310-569-0853

Victor Davis Hanson is a Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and Professor Emeritus of Classics at theCaliforniaStateUniversity at Fresno, noted historian of ancient Greece and preeminent military historian. He is author of more than 170 articles, 16 books, and recipient of many awards, including the National Humanities Medal.

New York and CUNY Association of Scholars NYC Event December 13

December 2, 2009 Leave a comment

Via Professor David Gordon, president of NAS’s New York affiliate, an announcement specifically for NAS members:

THE NEW YORK ASSOCIATION OF SCHOLARS

THE CUNY ASSOCIATION OF SCHOLARS

INVITE YOU TO ATTEND OUR SECOND EVENT OF FALL 2009

Emil Draitser

will discuss his recent book

Shush!

Growing Up Jewish Under Stalin

Many years after making his way to America from Odessa in Soviet Ukraine, Emil Draitser made a startling discovery: every time he uttered the word “Jewish” — even in casual conversation — he lowered his voice. This behavior was a natural product, he realized, of growing up in the anti-Semitic, post-Holocaust Soviet Union, when “Shush!” was the most frequent word he heard: “Don’t use your Jewish name in public. Don’t speak a word of Yiddish. And don’t cry over your murdered relatives.”  This compelling memoir conveys the reader back to Draitser’s childhood and provides a unique account of mid twentieth-century life in Russia as he struggled to reconcile the harsh values of Soviet society with the values of his working-class Jewish family.

Draitser, today a professor of Russian at Hunter College, in addition examines Odessa’s social fabric as exemplified in film, literature, humor, headlines, holidays and vernacular to offer valuable, poignant snapshots of this turbulent, terrifying time in a work that one reviewer called “whimsical, heartfelt and candid,”  and another found “a wonderfully evocative memoir of childhood and adolescence during one of the most tragic epochs in Russian history. As grim as the historical background of the memoir is, the mood is redeemed by Draitser’s perfectly Odessan Jewish humor, sad yet optimistic, compared with that of another great Odessan, Isaak Babel.”

December 13, 2009 3:00 PM

at the home of Nahma Sandrow and Bill Meyers

180 Riverside Drive. apt 3A

Entrance on West 90 Street
New York, NY

RSVP  – David Gordon    (718) 289-5658      dmgordon@mindspring.com

Categories: Books, Members/Affiliates

The “Diversity Religion” at Virginia Tech

October 28, 2009 Leave a comment

In this week’s Pope Center Clarion Call, Carey Stronach, president of the Virginia Association of Scholars, explains why the crusade for “diversity” by the administration at Virginia Tech is unacceptable to scholars.

Academic promotion should no more depend on “diversity accomplishments” than on “religious accomplishments” or “chess accomplishments” or “gardening accomplishments.” If the administrators can’t see that by “privileging” (to use a favorite leftist term) the diversity mindset over everything else they’re undermining real academic work, they should be summarily dismissed.

Arizona Scholars Host Ward Connerly; “Alianza” Prepares Protest

October 28, 2009 Leave a comment

So,  for the first event of the Arizona Association of Scholars, Ward Connerly will be our guest.  Being a strong believer in open dialogue I forwarded a press release to many student organizations on campus. Here is one response:

To: Daniel, Arturo, Andrea, Lorenzo, Socorro, and David

I didn’t want to explain all of this to the greater email list, but I’m just sending this to a few leaders on campus:

Ward Connerly (for those who may not be familiar) was a key opponent of Affirmative Action when the University of Michigan defended its admissions process to the Supreme Court in the late 1990s.  As chair of Alianza (Latino student organization) at the University of Michigan during the Affirmative  Action cases, I can attest that, frankly, his advocacy can do more potential damage for student of color resources on campus than the cultural center restructuring plans.  So, I urge you to research Connerly’s track record, attend the talk, and let your voices be heard.

If you think it would help, I’d be glad to address your organizations, just let me know.

Thanks,
Maurice

Jeepers, so much for free inquiry and open dialogue, which now seems to be a dangerous commodity.

Ward Connerly at the University of Arizona

October 14, 2009 Leave a comment

The Arizona Affirmative Action Initiative will be on the ballot in a few weeks.  In conjunction with this, the newly re-constituted  (think orange juice) AZ Association of Scholars has invited Ward Connerly, the initiator of these state wide referendums, to the campus of the University of Arizona.  His presentation will take place October 28, Wednesday, 4-5:30 in Holsclaw Hall, which is in the Music Bldg.  Come one, come all!!  You can even fly in for the event, as Tucson is gorgeous this time of year.

Categories: Members/Affiliates

New Book on the Soviet Bomb-Maker Who Became a Moral Anchor

October 2, 2009 Leave a comment

Jay Bergman, president of the NAS Connecticut affiliate and professor of history at Central Connecticut State University, has published a new book, Meeting the Demands of Reason: The Life and Thought of Andrei Sakharov. The 411-page, 22 ounce book about the nuclear physicist who helped create the Soviet hydrogen bomb but then became the “moral anchor of a dissident movement” represents the culmination of eleven years of careful research and writing.

Click here to read reviews of this “superb intellectual history.” Click here to purchase Meeting the Demands of Reason.

Categories: Books, Members/Affiliates

California Association of Scholars Talks of War

September 24, 2009 Leave a comment

Next month the California Association of Scholars, along with the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, will sponsor a free lecture by Victor Davis Hanson on “War in the postmodern world: a review of new laws of conflict and why they are often surreal when seen in a classical context.” Here is the description of the event:
 Using ancient Greece and military history as commentary, Professor Hanson will analyze the legal dilemmas faced by democracies when defending themselves against terrorist entities.
 
Victor Davis Hanson is a Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and Professor Emeritus of Classics at the California State University at Fresno, noted historian of ancient Greece and preeminent military historian. He is author of more than 170 articles, 16 books, and recipient of many awards, including the National Humanities Medal. 
Victor Davis Hanson is also the recipient of NAS’s Peter Shaw Award and was the keynote speaker at our 2009 national conference. We hope our local members and readers will seize this opportunity to hear from an excellent scholar of Western civilization and to meet like-minded Californians.
 
The lecture will take place on Monday, October 12, 2009, at 7:30pm at the UCLA faculty center (MAP). Please call (310) 569-0853 if you have any questions.
 
To learn more about the California Association of Scholars, click here to visit its website.
To see the flyer for the evening, click here.
Categories: Members/Affiliates
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