April 29, 2014 Speaker: Dr. Peter Davis, UCSD – What Southern Californians Need To Know About Earthquakes

Peter DavisDr. Peter Davis is currently Executive Director of Project IDA at the University of California, San Diego.  Project IDA operates seismographic stations in 41 locations in 26 countries around the globe.  Data from these stations are used for fundamental scientific research, hazard warning, and test ban treaty compliance monitoring.  When the US Geological Survey announces that an earthquake has taken place somewhere in the world, IDA instruments provide key information used by that agency to determine where, when and how large that earthquake was.

Peter-Davis_DSC_1231_bDr Davis joined UCSD in 1993 following work at Teledyne as a consultant to DARPA on nuclear test ban treaty verification issues.  He received a BS from Lehigh University, a Ph.D. from Princeton, and held two postdoctoral fellowships prior to his time at Teledyne:  one from the Carnegie Institution of Washington in Washington, DC, and one from the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung in Erlangen, (West) Germany.  Following his undergraduate studies, he spent one year at the University of Edinburgh on a Rotary Graduate Fellowship.  He is married to Sarah Leach Davis and has two children, Mollie and Matt.

April 22, 2014 Speaker: Richard Lederer, Author/Columnist/Radio Host, Shakespeare’s 450th Birthday & His Influence On Language

Richard LedererRichard Lederer is the author of more than 40 books about language, history, and humor, including his best-selling Anguished English series and his current books, The Gift of Age, A Tribute to Teachers, American Trivia, and Amazing Words. He has been profiled in magazines as diverse as The New Yorker, People, and the National Inquirer and was founding co-host of “A Way With Words” on Public Radio.

Dr. Lederer’s observations on language appear in magazines throughout the United States, and “Lederer on Language” appears each Saturday in the San Diego Union-Tribune. He has been elected International Punster of the Year and Toastmasters International’s Golden Gavel winner. He makes about a hundred appearances a year and, as a speaker, is at home in almost any venue.

Richard Lederer is the proud father of professional poker players Howard Lederer and Annie Duke and poet/memoirist Katy Lederer. Richard and his wife, Simone van Egeren, live in San Diego.

Fifty English Words Made Up by William Shakespeare

            accommodation                                      hurry

            aerial                                                      impartial

            amazement                                             indistinguishable

            apostrophe                                             invulnerable

            assassination                                          lapse

            auspicious                                              laughable

            baseless                                                  lonely

            bedroom                                                 majestic

            bump                                                      misplaced

            castigate                                                 monumental

            clangor                                                   multitudinous

            countless                                                 obscene

            courtship                                                pedant

            critic  (and critical )                                perusal

            dexterously                                             pious

            dishearten                                               premeditated

            dislocate                                                 radiance

            dwindle                                                   reliance

            eventful                                                   road

            exposure                                                 sanctimonious

            fitful                                                        seamy

            frugal                                                      sneak

            generous                                                 sportive

            gloomy                                                   submerge

            gnarled                                                   useless

 

April 15, 2014 Speaker: Scott Peters, State Representative, 52nd District

Scott PetersCongressman Scott Peters serves California’s 52nd Congressional District, which includes the cities of Coronado, Poway and most of northern San Diego. First elected in 2012, he currently serves on the House committees on Armed Services & on Science, Space, & Technology Committee.

Scott Peters is a civic leader who has made improving the quality of life in San Diego his life’s work. After a 15-year career as an environmental lawyer, Scott was elected to the San Diego City Council, where he later became the City’s first City Council President. On the Council, Scott helped lead the $2 billion redevelopment of downtown San Diego, the cleanup of the city’s beaches and bays, and the completion of a number of major infrastructure projects. He also pursued greater accountability and efficiency in government through the creation of a new Council/Mayor form of government with an independent budget review function.

In 2001, the governor appointed Scott to the Commission on Tax Policy in the New Economy, and in 2002, the Speaker of the Assembly appointed Scott to the California Coastal Commission.

Scott also later served as chairman of the San Diego Unified Port District – a major economic engine that supports over 40,000 high-skill, high-wage jobs for San Diegans, with $3.3 billion in direct regional economic impact.

Scott earned his undergraduate degree from Duke University (magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa) and worked as an economist for the United States Environmental Protection Agency before attending New York University School of Law. He and his wife of 27 years reside in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego, California, where they raised their son and daughter.

Scott Peters, listed by National Journal in 2013 as the fourth most independent Democrat in Congress, is a problem solver with a record of bringing people together to get results.

 

April 1, 2014 Speaker: William Lanouette, Author, On Leo Szilard, the “True Father of the Atom Bomb”

William LanouetteHistory has been curiously tight-lipped about the man who first developed the idea of harnessing energy from nuclear chain reactions—the true “father of the atom bomb.” Leo Szilard had long been overshadowed by such luminaries as Albert Einstein, Enrico Fermi, and J. Robert Oppenheimer; and little had been known or said about Szilard until William Lanouette’s Genius in the Shadows: A Biography of Leo Szilard, the Man Behind the Bomb (Skyhorse Publishing, September 2013), which was named a Notable Book of the Year in 1993 by The New York Times Book Review. Skyhorse Publishing is proud to announce its release of a revised, updated edition of Genius in the Shadows, with a new introduction from the author and many new photographs.

Albert Einstein with Leo Szilard_bLeo Szilard changed world science and history through nuclear discoveries that led to weapons and power plants and improved medicine. Born in Hungary in 1898 and educated in Berlin, Szilard fled Hitler’s Germany in 1933, the year he conceived chain reactions. Just before World War II, Szilard enlisted Einstein, his mentor and friend, to write President Franklin D. Roosevelt, urging America to build the A-bomb before Germany could. But after the war, Szilard crusaded for nuclear arms control until his death in 1964.

Shy, witty, and eccentric, Szilard often confounded his colleagues, but also tossed off ideas that led them to win Nobel Prizes in biology, his second field of study. The 1995 Nobel Peace Prize went to the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, founded in the 1950s by Szilard and fellow scientists to control the spread of nuclear weapons. In a whimsical political satire that Szilard wrote, he, Oppenheimer, and President Truman are tried as “war criminals” for creating and using the A-bomb.

Szilard’s vision thrives today in two respected institutions. To bring “the sweet voice of reason” to politics, he founded in Washington, DC, the Council for a Livable World, the first political action committee for arms control. To understand biology and its social consequences, he helped create the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego, California.

This revised and updated edition of a widely acclaimed biography gives a captivating portrait of Szilard’s protean mind, political foresight, humor, and conscience. A scientific provocateur and prophet, he still speaks to our own time.

About the Author

William Lanouette has written about atomic energy and arms control for more than four decades, as a staff member at the National Observer, National Journal, and the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and in the Atlantic, the Economist, Scientific American, and the Washington Post. He holds a BA in English from Fordham University, and an MSc and PhD in political science from the London School of Economics (University of London). He lives in San Diego, California.