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Free online lectures: Explore a world of ideas

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Wheaton College

Wheaton College is a private liberal arts college that is committed to preparing women and men for leadership roles in a complex and interdependent global society. The college.s 1,500 students come from nearly every state and more than 30 countries. In recent years, its students have earned a number of prestigious academic awards, including a Rhodes, the British Marshall, 14 Fulbrights, five Rotary Ambassadorial scholarships, two Trumans, two James Madison Fellowships and the Udall scholarship.break

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  • Wolf Kahn, an influential modern landscape painter, explains why people become artists, despite the apparent impracticality of art. **Wolf Kahn**'s work infuses the landscape tradition with a new vitality. He has been featured in major solo exhibitions around the country and is represented in numerous major museum collections. He was born in Stuttgart, Germany in 1927. The son of the conductor of the Stuttgart Philharmonic Orchestra, he was sent to live with his grandmother in Frankfurt when he was three years old. Kahn left Germany in 1939, as an eleven-year-old refugee from Nazi Germany, to live in England. In 1940, Kahn joined his father, two brothers, and sister who had settled in the United States and became a student at New York's High School of Music and Art. After serving in the Navy, he used the GI Bill to study with the well-known teacher and abstract expressionist Hans Hofmann. Kahn later joined with a group of other former Hofmann students to establish The Hansa, a cooperative gallery. Though his first two shows were favorably received, sales of his work were slow in the beginning and he was forced to teach part-time. By 1955, Kahn was able to devote himself entirely to painting, although he would still occasionally teach classes at the University of California, Berkeley, Dartmouth, and Cooper Union.
    Partner:
    Wheaton College
  • Sarah Weddington, the attorney, who, at age 26, successfully argued Roe v. Wade before the US Supreme Court, speaks on issues of policy and leadership. While recognizing that women today hold a variety of leadership positions, she argues that "in virtually every field, women are still a thin veneer when one compares the number of women leaders with the number of male leaders in the same or similar fields of work." In this discourse, she cites that although women have often been uncomfortable applying the label "leader" to themselves, "women have always been leaders, but the women leaders of today, younger and older alike, have a unique opportunity to leave thumbprints on modern events."
    Partner:
    Wheaton College
  • Poet Michael Harper reads from and discusses his writing. **Michael Harper** is the author of several collections, including *Images of Kin*, winner of the Melville-Cane Award from the Poetry Society of America and a National Book Award nominee; *History is Your Heartbeat*, winner of the Black Academy of Arts & Letters for Poetry; and *Dear John, Dear Coltrane*, nominated for the National Book Award. Harper grew up in Brooklyn in a family of storytellers where the blues and jazz were played, and much of his poetry, with its variations on a theme and its improvisational feel, reflects these influences.
    Partner:
    Wheaton College
  • Michael Ignatieff discusses his recent work, which combines eyewitness accounts of modern war with an historian's insight into the constancy of human conflict.
    Partner:
    Wheaton College
  • Tina Howe discusses the art and process of playwriting. A writer for the stage for more than thirty years, Howe's best known works include The Art of Dining, Painting Churches, Coastal Disturbances, Approaching Zanzibar, One Shoe Off, and her most recent play, Pride's Crossing. Her plays have premiered at the Los Angeles Actors Theater, the New York Shakespeare Festival, the Kennedy Center, The Old Globe Theater, Lincoln Center Theater and the Second Stage. Howe's work garnered an Obie Award for Distinguished Playwriting, an Outer Critics Circle Award, and an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature. Coastal Disturbances received a Tony nomination for best play. Pride's Crossing was a finalist for the 1997 Pulitzer Prize and won the 1998 New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play.
    Partner:
    Wheaton College
  • Co-author of the USA Patriot Act, Viet Dinh, and Congressman Barney Frank, D-MA, debate the merits of the controversial 2001 law in a public discussion. This event is sponsored by a grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation that is dedicated to supporting relationships between the Wheaton classroom and surrounding communities.
    Partner:
    Wheaton College