Events
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Start: 11:30 am
End: 1:30 pm
Asia Society Texas Center Presents
The BP Speaker Series
Prospects for Democracy in China, Afghanistan and
North Korea
Afghanistan: Is Success Possible?
A Lecture by the Honorable Ronald Neumann
President, American Academy of Diplomacy
Ambassador to Afghanistan (ret.)
Thursday, April 8, 2010
11:30 a.m. registration
12:00 luncheon
The Houston Club
811 Rusk Ave.
Houston, TX 77007
Tickets:
$30 ASTC members
$40 nonmembers
$300 table of 10
Click here to register online
no cancellations, exchanges or refunds
President Obama has made the Afghan war his war.
What, realistically, can the United States accomplish there? And what
are the obstacles in our path?
Ronald E. Neumann brings an
informed and incisive perspective to these questions, having served as
U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan from 2005 to 2007, years that saw
coalition forces challenged by a renewed Taliban insurgency. Lessons
learned will form the basis of his April 8 lecture, Afghanistan: Is
Success Possible? the second in the three-part BP Speaker Series:
Prospects for Democracy: China, North Korea, Afghanistan.
Neumann's lecture draws on his new book The Other War: Winning and Losing in Afghanistan,
which journalist Ahmed Rashid praised as "deeply insightful and
thoughtful ... at times amusing and always frank." Former Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage said of the book: "President
Obama's strategy for Afghanistan needs to be informed by this tale.
Clearly a vision of a nation is not sufficient to prevail. As
Ambassador Neumann indicates, execution and accountability are
essential."
Neumann knows Afghanistan intimately. His father,
Robert G. Neumann, served as ambassador there in the late 1960s, and
the son traveled extensively in the country after college. After
serving as a combat infantryman in Vietnam, Neumann joined the State
Department and began a diplomatic career that spanned almost four
decades. Before his Kabul posting he served as ambassador to Algeria
and Bahrain, deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern
Affairs, and political adviser in Iraq. Today he is president of the
American Academy of Diplomacy in Washington, D.C.
He concluded
his article in the September issue of Foreign Policy magazine with this
piece of advice about Afghanistan: "Americans will understand
limitations that are explained in advance along with thoughtfully
conceived near-term actions. But we need to guard against the
temptation to make short-term, 'feel-good' promises now that destroy
credibility later when they cannot be achieved."
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
Photo by Paul Hester
Glenwood Cemetery has long offered a serene and pastoral final resting
place for many of Houston's civic leaders and historic figures. In Houston's Silent Garden,
Suzanne Turner and Joanne Seale Wilson reveal the story of this
beautifully wooded and landscaped preserve's development—a story that
is also very much entwined with the history of Houston.
In 1871,
recovering from Reconstruction, a group of progressive citizens noticed
that Houston needed a new cemetery at the edge of the central city.
Embracing the picturesque aesthetic that had swept through the Eastern
Seaboard, the founders of Glenwood selected land along Buffalo Bayou
and developed Glenwood. Since then, the cemetery's monuments have
memorialized the lives of many of the city's most interesting residents
(Allen, Baker, Brown, Clayton, Cooley, Cullinan, Farish, Hermann,
Hobby, House, Hughes, Jones, Law, Rice, Staub, Sterling, Weiss, and
Wortham, among many others). The monuments also showcase the artistry
and craftsmanship of some of the region's finest sculptors and artisans.
Accompanied
by the breathtaking photography of Paul Hester, this book chronicles
the cemetery's origins from its inception in 1871 to the present day. Through
the story of Glenwood, readers will appreciate some of the natural
features that shaped Houston's evolution and will also begin to
understand the forces of urbanization that positioned Houston to become
the vital community it is today. Houston's Silent Garden is a must-read for those interested in Houston civic and regional history, architecture, and urban planning.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Suzanne Turner is professor emeritus of the School of Landscape
Architecture at Louisiana State University and principal of Suzanne
Turner Associates. She resides in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Joanne Seale Wilson of Houston is the author of several publications in
horticulture and landscaping, including a biography of historic
landscape architect Rose Ishbel Greely. Paul Hester teaches in the
Department of Visual and Dramatic Arts at Rice University. His
photographs have appeared in many books, magazines, and exhibitions.
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm
Poet, Playwright, and Civil Rights Activist
Amiri Baraka was born Everett LeRoi Jones in 1934 in Newark,
NJ. After leaving Howard University and the Air Force, he moved to the
Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1957 and co-edited the avant-garde
literary magazine Yugen and founded Totem Press, which first
published works by Allen Ginsberg,
Jack Kerouac, and others.
He published his first volume of poetry, Preface to a
Twenty-Volume Suicide Note, in 1961. Blues People: Negro Music in
White
America,
still regarded as the seminal work on Afro-American music and culture. He
also edited The Moderns: An Anthology of New Writing in
America
were published in 1963. His reputation as a playwright was established with
the production of Dutchman at the Cherry Lane Theatre
in New York on March 24, 1964. The controversial play subsequently won an
Obie Award (for "best off-Broadway play") and was made into a film. (The
play was revived by the Cherry Lane Theatre in January 2007 and has been
reproduced around the world).
In 1965, Jones moved to Harlem,
where he founded the Black Arts Repertory Theatre/School. The BARTS lasted
only one year but had a lasting influence on the direction of Afro American
Arts. Sending five trucks a day into the Harlem community, art show on one,
poetry reading from the other, music, another, drama the other, where
performances would be given in a changed location each day. Vacant lots,
play grounds, housing projects pushing Art that would be Black as Bessie
Smith, mass-based and taken to the people and Revolutionary, reflecting the
intensity of the entire Black Liberation Movement
In 1966, when the BARTS was dissolved, Baraka returned to Newark,
his hometown and set up with his new bride, Amina Baraka, (who was a founder
of Newark’s “Loft” a local venue of contemporary art), Spirit House and the
Spirit House Movers, which brought drama, music and poetry from across the
country.
During this period, the Barakas founded the Committee for Unified
Newark and the Congress of Afrikan People which led the election of Ken
Gibson as the first Black Mayor of a major northeastern city spearheaded by
the 1972 Gary (IN) Convention. In 1968, he co-edited Black Fire: An
Anthology of Afro-American Writing with Larry Neal.
He and his wife, Amina Baraka, edited The Music (Meditations
of Jazz & Blues (Morrow) Confirmation: An Anthology of African-American
Women, which won an American Book Award from the Before Columbus
Foundation. The Autobiography of LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka was
published in 1984. His recent publications are Y’s/Why’s/Wise (3rd
World 1992) Funk Lore (Littoral 1993), Eulogies, (Marsilio,
94,) Transbluesency, (Marsilio 1996), Somebody Blew Up America &
Other Poems (Nehesi 2002).
Amiri Baraka's numerous literary honors include fellowships from
the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, the
PEN/Faulkner Award, the Rockefeller Foundation Award for Drama, the Langston
Hughes Award from The City College of New York, and a lifetime achievement
award from the Before Columbus Foundation. He was inducted into the American
Academy of Arts and Letters in 1995. In 1994, he retired as Professor of
Africana Studies at the State University of New York in Stony Brook, and in
2002 was named Poet Laureate of New Jersey and Newark Public Schools. In
January 2007, his award-winning, one-act play, Dutchman, was revived
at the new Cherry Lane Theatre in New York and received critical acclaim and
international attention. His recent book of short stories, Tales of the
Out & The Gone (Akashic Books) was published in late 2007. Home,
his book of social essays, will be re-released by Akashic Books in early
2009. Digging: The Afro American Soul of Music (Univ.
of California) is also due out this year.
Learn more about the Rothko Chapel.
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