here - Off The Record
Transcription
here - Off The Record
1938 - 2013 May 14, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY CLUB New York City on thE r EcorD With APPreCiAtioN We owe a debt to the 19 women who, in 1938, organized the Foreign policy association’s first for-women-only speakers luncheon. their legacy is very much alive today in the longest running women’s foreign policy lecture series in the United states. rory hAyDen OTR Chairman off-the-record was formed at a time when the international order was in flux and the United states was beginning to play a role that would see it emerge as the world’s superpower. today’s lectures address a rapidly changing world order, defined by both potential and threat. We are honored by our extraordinary roster of distinguished speakers, inspired by the commitment of our members, grateful to noel Lateef and his outstanding Fpa team for unwavering support, and deeply appreciative of the incredible work done by the 14 chairmen who have preceded me. this celebration is for you. For institutions no less than for individuals, milestones present an opportunity to reflect upon both the destination and the journey. as the off-the-record Lecture series observes its 75th anniversary, we at the Foreign policy association are especially grateful to our otr colleagues, who are dedicated to spreading knowledge from which a wise foreign policy must spring. the Foreign policy association takes great pride in otr’s success, since we together serve as catalysts to develop awareness, understanding, and informed opinion on american foreign policy and global issues. such joint events as the Elizabeth French hitchcock Lecture are widely anticipated by our members and demonstrate our shared commitment to fulfilling our vital mission. noel v. lAteef FPA President and CEO 2 • anniversary celebration on thE rEcorD our sPeAKer F EW BroaDcast JoUrnaLists are more experienced, accomplished, or honored than Lesley stahl. after joining cBs news in 1972 as a reporter in its Washington bureau, she covered the Watergate break-in and its aftermath and went on to serve as White house correspondent during three administrations. she was the longtime moderator of Face the Nation before being named 60 Minutes correspondent in 1991. ms. stahl has interviewed key world leaders including margaret thatcher, Boris Yeltsin, Yasser arafat, Yitzhak rabin, Benjamin netanyahu, Jimmy carter, ronald reagan, George h.W. Bush, Bill clinton, and nicolas sarkozy. her incisive middle East reports in 2010, one on the U.s. withdrawal from iraq, and one on the israelipalestinian conflict, won the overseas press club’s Edward r. murrow award for best interpretation of international affairs. her recent interviews, one with a former cia official about “enhanced interrogation techniques” and another with an ex-mossad chief about a possible israeli strike on iran, made international headlines. ms. stahl’s long list of major journalism awards includes numerous Emmys, including one for Lifetime achievement , the alfred i. dupontcolumbia University award, and one for overall excellence in television by the radio and television news Directors association. she received an honorary doctorate from colgate University in 2008. in her book, Reporting Live, about her reporting on Washington, she observes that, “television had become the center of campaigning and governing but also of diplomacy and decision-making.” lesley stAhl CBS News “Television had become the center of campaigning and governing but also of diplomacy and decisionmaking.” anniversary celebration • 3 past otr chairmEn : on the record Donna Dillon Manning Donna Dillon Manning 1987-1991 1987-1991 I first attended OTR in the early 1970s. It met at the Carnegie Endowment International Center, but size forced us to look for a new location for our two sets of eight meetings. I was Speakers Committee Chair part of this time, challenged with finding 16 great speakers each year. We were rarely turned down; however, I learned that you did not invite someone from D.C. in the winter and that reporters could cancel in the blink of an eye, e.g., Dan Rather during the Achille Lauro hostage crisis. We sought the few women speakers who were considered experts in foreign affairs. What a difference a few decades and three female secretaries of state can make. One memorable meeting was moderating a panel with Bella Abzug, Geraldine Ferraro, and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, signaling the role women were going to play in international affairs. Jacqueline M. Garrett Jacqueline M. Garrett 1995-1997 1995-1997 My tenure was filled with major changes. The salmonella poisoning two years earlier made it imperative that we move the organization from St. Vartan Cathedral to a more conducive location. We had long discussed a move, but the effects of this catastrophic incident, resulting in the hospitalization of hundreds and the death of three, made our next step clear. Our search led us to the New York City Bar Association, our present home. Some were conflicted about the move; it was not an easy time. We realized this was an opportunity to reduce our programs from two separate series to one, thus reducing our membership by half. Running two nine-month series had become unwieldy. We offered an optional lunch and changed the name from “Off-the-Record Luncheon Series” to “Off-the-Record Lecture Series.” This geographic move from the far east side to the near west side made OTR even more popular. 4 • Anniversary Celebration on the record Anne Sitrick Anne Sitrick 1997-2003 1997-2003 In my six-year term, there were many memorable events. Two stand out. First, I sought quality speakers, especially for our first lecture. In July, I contacted Tom Brokaw, who happily consented to be our opening speaker. Ten days before, Tom called to say that he had a conflict. I had one week to find a stellar substitute. I called my friend Les Gelb, then president of the Council on Foreign Relations. He suggested I call a young man new at the Council's renowned magazine Foreign Affairs and to tell him Les said he needed "some exposure" and should accept my invitation. I called the relatively unknown Fareed Zakaria, who agreed to be our opening speaker in what was one of his first public appearances. I am proud that in an April 2001 article the Financial Times called OTR “the women of New York's best kept secret.” Ann J. Charters Ann J. Charters 2003-2008 2003-2008 Off-the-Record isn't prescient but it certainly looked that way. Former National Security adviser Robert McFarland spoke on Russia days after Yukos oligarch Khodorkovsky was arrested, shattering Putin's rule of law. OTR arranged for former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to be interviewed by Anne-Marie Slaughter, later the first woman director of State's policy planning. Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers opined that the U.S. economic recovery was in the seventh inning, months before returning to D.C. Our successful lectures were a result of vigorous debates at speakers committee meetings. We hashed out what foreign policy issues would be paramount six months out. Booking speakers six months ahead, rather than two, meant we all looked younger longer. I relished members who wouldn't miss a lecture even when speakers opposed their views, because OTR chose carefully. One challenge remains: having speakers call on women first, not men, for questions. Anniversary Celebration • 5 on the record Jacqueline Adams Jacqueline Adams 2008-2010 2008-2010 I am particularly proud that OTR was flexible enough to meld my interests in both the visual arts and foreign policy. We held a Patrons’ event about U.S.-Cuban relations in an art gallery, featuring Cuban artists; we explored Iraq after the U.S. invasion by looking at Richard Mosse’s photographs and hearing his firsthand observations; we hosted three Elizabeth French Hitchcock Lectures at MoMA, with then-Harvard University President Lawrence Summers, CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour and Mexican Ambassador Arturo Sarukhan. Most memorable were the 65th and 70th anniversaries. In 2003, I led the discussion with Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., whose wit, insights and perfect recall of events during the Kennedy Administration were thrilling. In 2008, I introduced celebrated historian and author Doris Kearns Goodwin, whose analysis of President Lincoln’s Team of Rivals was the perfect prelude to an historic presidential election. Wendy E. Dietze Wendy E. Dietze 2010-2012 2010-2012 Two speaker themes stand out. The first was our response to our members’ interest in cybersecurity and the Internet’s role in foreign affairs. We had a terrific lecture by Jared Cohen (now with Google), who was the reigning State Department expert for both Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton. We also had a thought-provoking presentation on new media and the Internet by Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington. Her talk coincided with our board’s significant upgrading of our OTR website. The second major theme we pursued was providing greater insight and analysis on the Middle East, an increasingly vital and volatile region. We hosted Ahmed Rashid, Ali Soufan, Karen Elliott House, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, Hooman Majd, as well as Ambassador Ryan Crocker. They gave us their memorable firsthand accounts of a critical and unpredictable part of the world. 6 • Anniversary Celebration Past OTR Chairmen Elinor Miner Lamont 1946–1948* Mary L. Belknap 1979–1983 Anne Sitrick 1997–2003 Mary Hand Darrell 1948–1961 race “Gay” Sloane G Vance 1983–1987 Ann J. Charters 2003–2008 Mildred Adams Kenyon 1961–1970 lizabeth French E Hitchcock 1970–1976 oris C. Halaby D 1976–1979 onna Dillon D Manning 1987–1991 Judith L. Biggs 1991–1995 Jacqueline M. Garrett 1995–1997 Jacqueline Adams 2008–2010 endy E. Dietze W 2010–2012 *Before 1946, OTR did not have elected chairmen. Anniversary Celebration • 7 otr past chairman 75 YeArs of leCtures 1918 From the League of Free nations association, organized to support international peace after World War i, the Foreign policy association forms and begins monthly lectures at the astor hotel in the 1920s. Female members find themselves at a disadvantage in the large setting. 1938 a group of 19 prominent women, led by Eleanor robson Belmont, start a series of lectures for women only, to be conducted in smaller groups and off the record, so that speakers are not quoted in the press. the first speaker is Leland stowe, a pulitzer prize-winning journalist, at the hotel pierre on october 19. 1940 the Fpa and the Women’s Group set up office and meeting space at midston house on madison avenue. 1946 the Women’s Group organizes more formally and elects Elinor miner Lamont as chairman. 1950 the group is officially named the off-the-record Luncheon series and adjusts its program to attract a larger foreign policy audience. 1954 otr moves its lectures to the carnegie Endowment international center on East 46th street, across from the United nations headquarters. 1958 otr splits its lectures into two groups, series a and B, as membership approaches 300. 1960s otr formally affiliates with Fpa and gains board representation through its chairman, mildred adams Kenyon. 1975 otr hosts margaret thatcher four years before her rise to British prime minister. membership reaches 1,000. 1978 the Elizabeth French hitchcock memorial Lecture is endowed by family members of the former otr chairman, to serve otr and Fpa members. the first speaker is Bridget mccall oppenheimer, founder of the south african organization, Women for peace. 8 • anniversary celebration 1979 otr moves to a larger facility, the auditorium of st. Vartan cathedral at 630 second avenue, to accommodate a membership of 1,300. 1990s otr eliminates the second series and reduces its membership. Lunch purchase becomes optional after a catered meal causes a tragic food poisoning, in october 1992. the series adopts a new name, the off-the-record Lecture series. 1996 otr moves its lectures to the association of the Bar of the city of new York on West 44th street. 1998 otr celebrates its 60th anniversary with Un high commissioner for refugees sadako ogata. 2001 otr creates a new category of membership, patron, to provide additional evening events and lunches with speakers. Fareed Zakaria speaks on “terrorism in the age of Globalization,” one month after the terrorist attacks of september 11. 2003 otr celebrates its 65th anniversary with historian arthur m. schlesinger, Jr. 2005 the otr logo is redesigned and modernized. otr’s website, www.off-the-record.org, goes live. 2008 otr celebrates its 70th anniversary with historian Doris Kearns Goodwin. 2009 one month after receiving the nobel prize in Economics, paul Krugman speaks on the world financial crisis. 2013 otr celebrates its 75th anniversary. anniversary celebration • 9 For thE rEcorD : MeMBers’ CoMMeNts Memorable Speakers “My favorite was always tom Brokaw.” “Gay Vance brought in the most interesting speakers…lecturers like Marshall schulman.” “david Brooks, doris Kearns Goodwin, ryan Crocker, Jane fonda.” “one of my first lectures: Gary hart.” “i remember the Chinese ambassador who so stuck to the official party line that people were astonished.” “tom friedman, great wit and knowledge.” “Mona el-Ghobashy’s lecture on egypt.” “Vali Nasr and trita Parsi: each time i see either one on television, i say, thanks to the otr lectures.” “Mark lyall Grant, richard haass, richard holbrooke, frank Wisner.” “senator tim Wirth’s “Cybersecurity was discussion of global exceptional. tino Cuellar gave population growth.” us entrée into another world.” 10• anniversary celebration Insight and Understanding “thanks to the otr lectures, i have a deeper understanding of ‘why they hate us.’ ” “i find the audience reaction intriguing.” “Just to be able to hear experienced speakers live and to be able to engage in Q & A.” “the series has expanded my knowledge of global issues.” “in this interconnected world, it is much more important to have a heightened view of the impact of our government’s place.” “i find that the lectures widened my perspective and made me aware of media bias…” “the lectures provide such in-depth coverage of major issues in a time when the media is more and more superficial.” “Keeping up-to-date is much more complicated these days... so the chance to hear the ‘newest’ issues and the players is even more valuable than 20 years ago.” anniversary celebration •11 otr’s FoUnDinG YEar MilestoNes of 1938 • president Franklin D. roosevelt appoints Joseph p. Kennedy as america’s ambassador to Great Britain. • German laws restrict Jews from practicing medicine, law, and accounting and prohibit their attendance at cultural events. • Japanese troops engage in widespread violence and atrocities, killing hundreds of thousands in china’s capital, in an event that becomes known as the rape of nanking. • With war clouds gathering, British prime minister neville chamberlain meets with hitler in munich and returns to London, where he states that there will be “peace for our time.” • the spanish civil War continues as Britain and France recognize the Franco government. • major oil deposits are discovered in saudi arabia, but significant production does not begin until after the war. • Japan enacts the national mobilization Law, putting its economy on a wartime footing. • congress passes the naval Expansion act, authorizing a 20 percent increase in the size of the U.s. fleet. • Bowing to adolf hitler’s ultimatum, austria agrees to annexation by Germany. nazi troops soon occupy the country. • Winston churchill condemns the munich agreement and urges the U.s. to prepare for the war he sees as inevitable. • Under threat of invasion, czechoslovakia agrees to cede its sudetenland region to Germany. • on the evening of november 9, mobs vandalize, loot, and burn thousands of Jewish synagogues, homes, hospitals, schools, and businesses in widespread nazi pogroms that become known as Kristallnacht, or the night of Broken Glass. • noting that hitler had the most influence on the world in 1938, “for better or worse,” TIME magazine names him man of the Year. anniversary celebration •13 off-the -record lect u r e se r i e s Board of Governors Chairman Rory Hayden Speakers Committee Committee Paula Keltner Elizabeth Maher Vice-Chairman Nella Habsburg Membership Committee Secretary Mary Wadsworth Darby Patricia P. McGrath Treasury Nominating Sheila Lyall Grant Kimberly S. Engelbert Catherine S. Michaelson Nadia S. Malik Christine L. Thomas House Committee Roberta Dougherty Ann Goodbody Allison MacEachron Karen Zukerman Wendy E. Dietze Bridget Foley Anne Louvel Lise Stone Suzanne Thompson Irmeli Viinanen Monica Voldstad 75 th Anniversary Planning Committee Chairman Roberta Dougherty Wendy E. Dietze • Ann Goodbody • Nella Habsburg • Paula Keltner Patricia P. McGrath • Catherine S. Michaelson • Kate O’Neill • Lise Stone Monica Voldstad • Karen Zukerman ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Mildred Kenyon | The OTR of the FPA, 1973 Janice Miller & Monica Alverca | Program Design Kate O’Neill | Program Research Sanford Teller | Milestones of 1938 Anniversary Celebration •15 Off-The-Record Lecture Series Foreign Policy Association 470 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10016-6819 www.off-the-record.org