Winter/Spring 2007

February 6 Elliot Engel,
Professor, University of North Carolina, author and NPR contributor

Scarlett Fever: the greatness of Gone with the Wind

February 20 David Morrison,
Former Director Space Science, NASA

Risks and plans to prevent asteroid impact on Earth

March 6 Andrew Mwenda,
Political Editor, Daily Monitor, Kampala, Uganda

Paved with good intentions: why foreign aid and debt relief are bad for Africa

March 20 Juan Williams,
NPR correspondent and author

Enough – the phony leaders, dead-end movements and culture of failure that are undermining Black America and what we can do about it

April 3 Cypress String Quartet,

Timeless masterpieces of string Quartets

April 17 Jack N. Rakove,
Coe Professor of History and American Studies, Stanford University

President and Commander? Thoughts on our post September 11 Constitution

May 1 Abbas Milani,
Senior Fellow, Iran Democracy Project, Hoover Institute

Prospects and problems of democracy in Iran

May 15 Per F. Peterson,
Professor, Department of Nuclear Engineering, University of California, Berkeley

Nuclear energy: what is new and what is changing

June 5 Frank Delaney,
Author of Tipperary and Ireland

Fall 2006

September 19 Daniel C. Sneider,
Associate, Asia-Pacific Research Center

U. S. policy on northeast Asia, a cold war legacy

October 3 Tom Gjelten,
National Security Correspondent, National Public Radio

Stories from the front line: from Central America to Bosina, from Iraq to Cuba

October 17 Karen Kasmauski,
Photographer, National Geographic Society

Impact: from the front line of Global Health

November 7 Paul Rogers,
Natural resources and environment writer, San Jose Mercury News

Energy and the enviroment: how the press decides what to cover, and major California trends

November 21 Leonard Edwards,
Retired Judge, Santa Clara County Superior Court

Children in the court system

December 5 Bonnie Weiss,
Director, Curtain Up!

Song and dance men of the silver screen: Gene Kelly

January 9 Nathaniel Fick,
USMC Captain and author

One Bullet away: the making of a Marine Corps Officer

January 16 Matthew Bogdanos,
Colonel, USMC

Thieves of Baghdad: the journey to recover the world’s greatest stolen treasures

Winter/Spring 2006

February 7 Chris McKay,
Planetary Scientist, Space Service Division of NASA/Ames

The search for life on Mars

February 21 Rick Steves,
Author, TV host, Travel Expert

Europe through the back door

March 7 Nadine Strossen,
Professor of Law New York Law School; President, American Civil Liberties Union

Current challenges to civil liberties

March 21 Spencer Wells,
Geneticist, Explorer-in residence, National Geographic Society

Journey of man, a genetic odyssey

April 4 Bettina Gregory,
Journalist, former ABC news correspondent

The good, the bad, the ugly of network news

April 18 Dr. Andrew Stangel,
Art historian

Processing the past, who owns our treasures?

May 2 Martin Turner,
Knight-Ridder Fellow, BBC Washington Correspondent

End of the news as we know it

May 16 Jeanne Kennedy,
Health Service & Nonprofit Consultant

How to be your own health advocate

June 6 Frans Lanting,
Photographer, National Geographic Society

Ecological hot spots

Fall 2005

September 20 Joseph McNamara,
Research Fellow, Hoover Institute

‘Teddy, the cop’, Theodore Roosevelt as New York City Police Commissioner. A new book by Dr. McNamara.

October 4 Terry Christensen,
Professor and Political Science Department; Head, San Jose State University

Governance by initiative, California elections

October 18 Emma Fuller,
Administrator, Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, Antarctica

Summer on the ice; living and working at the South Pole

November 1 Rita Redberg, MD, MSc,
FACC, Professor of Medicine; Director, Women’s Cardiovascular Services, U.C. San Francisco

The healthy heart, how do we get it, how do we keep it?

November 15 Sean R.Gerrity Director,
American Prairie Foundation

Reinventing America’s Serengetti

December 6 Steve Chiolero,
Systems Engineer, Hartwell Consulting

Living with robots or ‘My toaster is arguing with me’

January 3 Carey Perloff,
Artistic Director, American Conservatory Theater

Challenges of American theater in the 21st century

January 17 Kathleen Ridolfi,
Associate Professor of Law, Santa Clara University; Director, Northern California Innocence Project

Guilty until proven innocent: the case for innocence projects in California

Winter/Spring 2005

February 1 Bonnie Weiss,
Theatre Educator, Writer, Radio and Cabaret Producer

Cole Porter – A Musical Presentation, featuring video clips and recordings of his life and work

February 15 Scott Mize,
President of the Foresight Institute

Nanotechnology and the Millennium Challenges

March 1 Patrick Hatcher,
Historian, Author, and Television Commentator

Codes, Ciphers, Christianity – Did DaVinci Do It?

March 15 Bob Lacey,
Acting Chief of the Los Altos Police Department

Keeping Los Altos Safe

April 5 Charles Knowles,
Entrepreneur and Conservationist

Wildlife Conservation: Up Close and Personal

April 19 David Davenport,
Professor of Public Policy at Pepperdine University and Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution

A Reform Agenda for the Golden State – Can Even the Terminator Reform California?

May 3 Paul Erdman,
Economist, Author, Contributor to the New York Times, Washington Post, and Bloomberg Magazine

The Economy – The Future Looks Hazy

May 17 Irene Dalis,
Opera Singer and Founder of Opera San Jose

Opera in San Jose – Members of Opera San Jose will perform operatic selections

June 7 Sarah Weddington,
Assistant to President Jimmy Carter; in 1973 successfully argued the winning side of Roe v. Wade case before the U.S. Supreme Court

The Supreme Court and You

Fall 2004

September 21 Henry Miller, MD,
Founding Director of the Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Biotechnology, Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution

Designer Genes for Agriculture and Food Production

October 5 James Bettinger,
Director of the John S. Knight Fellows for Professional Journalists at Stanford University and former Columnist for the San Jose Mercury-News

Philip Davis,
Miami Correspondent, National Public Radio

Julia Powell,
Producer, PBS Frontline

Panel discussion: The News Media and the 2004 Presidential Election

October 19 George Packer,
Staff Writer for The New Yorker, Author of Blood of the Liberals

How Does American Foreign Policy Determine a Democratic World?

November 2 Niall Ferguson,
Noted Author and Senior Research Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford University

The United States: An Empire in Search of an Emperor

November 16 John Scharffenberger,
Entrepreneur, Wine Maker, and Chocolatier

A Cultural Tasting of Chocolate

December 7 Andy Doty,
Retired from Stanford University as Director of Community Relations

Backwards Into Battle: A Tail Gunner’s Journey in World War II

January 4 Victor Hanson,
Professor of Classics at California State University, Fresno, Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Fellow in California Studies at the Claremont Institute

Mexifornia: A frank talk about “Mexifornia”

January 18 Salim Yaqub,
Professor of History at the University of Chicago, Specialist in U.S.-Arab Relations

Containing Arab Nationalism: The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East

Winter/Spring 2004

February 3 Michael McFaul,
Associate Professor of Political Science at Stanford University and Helen and Peter Bing Senior Fellow, Hoover Institute.

Russia’s Drift Back to Dictatorship: Implication for U.S. National Security

February 17 John Arquilla,
Professor, Defense Analysis, U.S. Naval Post Graduate School.

How We Could Lose the War on Terror

March 2 Bill Schustik,
This Renaissance Man has Performed on Broadway, Television and Written Scores for Classical Ballet.

Cross the Wide Missouri

March 16 Dr. Michael Longaker,
Director of Children’s Surgical Research, Dept. Of Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine.

Regenerative Medicine

April 6 Eavan Boland,
Bella Mabury and Eloise Knapp Professor in Humanities at Stanford University. Irish poet.

Eavan Boland: A Poet’s Life

April 20 Brian Watson,
Special Agent Department of the Treasury; Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation.

How to Protect Yourself from Financial Crimes (I.E. Identity Theft, Telemarketing Fraud and Investment Scams)

May 4 John Podesta,
Chief of Staff to President Clinton from 1998-2001.

A View From Washington

May 18 Kit Armstrong,
11 Year Old Pianist and Composer. One of the Youngest Students to be Accepted to the Curtis Institute of Music.

Original Compositions, Beethoven, Mozart and Lizt

June 1 Michael Watts,
Director of the Institute of International Studies and Professor of Geography at U.C. Berkeley.

The Relationship of Oil to Imperialism and the Making of the Modern World

Fall 2003

September 16 Barbara Ehrenreich,
Author of Blood Rites; The Worst Years of Our Lives. A frequent contributor to Time, The New Republic and The New York Times Magazine.

Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America.

October 7 Bruce Neckers,
Trial attorney, Immediate past President of the State Bar Of Michigan and a Fellow in the American College of Trial Layers and The International Society of Barristers.

Civil Liberties in a Time of National Crisis.

October 21 Dr. Philip Lee,
Senior Scholar at the Institute for Health Policy Studies and Professor Emeritus of Social Medicine, Department of Medicine, U.C.S.F. Assistant Secretary for Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The Future of Health Care: Will physicians change and embrace e-technology or continue in their current pattern?

November 4 Kirk Hansen,
Executive Director of the Mark Kula Center for Applied Ethics at the University of Santa Clara; Senior Lecturer in Business Administration at Stanford.

Reversing the Ethical Crisis in America.

November 18 Robert Kline,
Executive Vice President of 20th Century Fox Television, Co-founder of Lifetime Television and Producer of 22 films. Professor of Film and media at the University of Southern California.

Film, Film, Film.

December 2 Patrick Hatcher,
Retired historian from U.C. Berkley and now with the Center for the Pacific Rim, University of San Francisco. He is a narrator for film and television.

A Russian Birthday: St. Petersburg at 300.

January 6 Mark Bollwinkel,
Senior Pastor of Los Altos Methodist Church and an active professional potter. He has demonstrated and exhibited his art throughout the Bay Area.

Breaking the Mold: Existential Influences in 20th Century Ceramic Art and our Culture.

January 20 Bruce Cain,
Robson Professor of Political Science, U.C. Berkley and Director of the Institute of Governmental Studies.

What does the year 2004 hold for our state and the nation?

Winter/Spring 2003

January 7 Philip A. Taylor, Senior Writer, Sports Illustrated

Sports: Pushing the Limits — Steroids, Drugs, $$ and Celebrity.

January 14 H. Craig Heller,
Lokey/Business Wire Professor, Dept. of Biological Sciences,Stanford University.

Technology in Sports: Pushing the Limits of Human Performance.

January 21 Peter Tarnoff,
President, International Advisory Corporation. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, 1993-1997. Former President of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Topic:International Hot Spots around the World.

February 4 Joanna Berman,
Former SF Ballet principal dancer. Current rehearsal assistant with the Ballet.

A Dancer’s Journey.

February 20 Jon Nakamatsu,
Concert Pianist in US and Abroad. Gold Medallist of the 1997 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition.

Getting to Know Jon Nakamatsu: My Life and My Music.

March 4 Christopher F. Chyba,
Co-Director of the Stanford Center for International Security and Cooperation, and Associate Professor (Research) in the Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences

Biological Terrorism: New Threats for a New Century.

March 18 Kavita Ramdas,
President and CEO, Global Fund for Women. Former program officer at the MacArthur Foundation, Chicago.

Making Change that Lasts: Women’s Movements around the Globe.

April 1 J. Rufus Fears,
Professor of Classics, University of Oklahoma. Holds the G.T. & Libby Blankenship Chair in the History of Liberty.

The History of Freedom.

April 15 Word for Word,
Performing Arts Company, which stages short works of literature in their entirety.

Short Stories by Sandra Cisneros

May 6 Ken Jowitt,
Pres and Maurine Hotchkis Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Robson Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley.

TBD. Either war related or analysis of American foreign policy/types of anti-Western ideologies/challenges to American and Western institutions.

May 20 Laura Strohrn,
International Environmental Policy, Monterey Institute of International Studies.

Trade and Environment: Friends or Enemies?

June 3 Delaine Eastin,

Crisis in California Public Schools.

Fall 2002

September 17 George Zuidema, Vice Provost for Medical affairs and Professor of Surgery Emeritus, The University of Michigan.

The Changing Face of Medicine in Times of War from the Civil War to 9/11.

October 1 David S. Broder, National correspondent, The Washington Post, commentator on CNN and NBC.

The Political Scene: November and Beyond.

October 15 Luis R. Fraga, Associate Professor & Director of Undergraduate Studies, Dept. of Political Science, Stanford University.

Race, Ethnicity, and the Future of California.

November 5 Richard Reeves, author, syndicated columnist, documentary film maker,Visiting Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication, USC.

Richard Nixon and the Politics of Surprise.

November 19 Robin Goodrin Nordli, Professional actress and 10th season with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.

Understanding Shakespeare’s Women or Bard Babes.

December3 Elizabeth Thompson,
Emmy Award-winning Producer/Director

Blink: The Making of a Documentary.