• Shakespeare: Othello

    Shakespeare's Othello deals with themes of race and jealousy. Here's a side-by-side version of the original version (Shakespearean English) and a modern translation: Othello Translation | Shakescleare, by LitCharts Here's a recording of the play, with Paul Robeson as Othello: Othello, Act I, Scene 1: Venice. A Street "Tush! never tell me" (2024 Remastered Version) Here's … Continue reading Shakespeare: Othello

  • Leadership Development Workshop (online): Learn About WordPress

    This will be a reprise of our Leadership Development Workshop from September.  Join us by Zoom to learn about how to use a free online graphics design program and how to add pages, posts, and events to our chapter's WordPress website. You can prepare for the workshop by watching the videos here.  

  • Mary Wollstonecraft: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

    Mary Wollstonecraft was an English writer and philosopher.  In 1792, she wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman: with Strictures on Political and Moral Subjects. In this essay, Wollstonecraft argues that women are neither mere ornaments nor property to be traded in marriage. Rather, women are human beings deserving of the same fundamental rights … Continue reading Mary Wollstonecraft: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

  • Bertrand Russell on Israel and Palestine (1917-1970)

    Philosopher Bertrand Russell was a supporter of Israel but took an interest in Palestinian issues and worked with Israeli leftists, leading to his final statement of February 1970. This Zoom conference will be presented by John Lenz (a classicist from Drew University) and Thom Weidlich (an independent scholar), both of whom are active members in … Continue reading Bertrand Russell on Israel and Palestine (1917-1970)

  • Admissions Testing

    Please arrive 10 minutes early to allow for registration. Please bring a printed copy of your voucher and your picture ID to the session. If you are under the age of 18, but at least 14, you need to bring a parent or guardian and complete additional forms. You must contact Richard A. Schaefer via … Continue reading Admissions Testing

  • Shakespeare: The Taming of the Shrew

    Back in Elizabethan times, it was considered funny to tell stories about how badly a man beat his disagreeable wife. However, Shakespeare turned this trope on its head. For years, people have been arguing about whether the play is feminist or antifeminist. (Kate is eventually "tamed.") However, the moral of the story is clear: the … Continue reading Shakespeare: The Taming of the Shrew

  • Theodore Talk: Dudley Clark, the Genius of Deception (the Illusionist Who Fooled Hitler)

    Can one man change the course of a world war? From 1941, working from rooms over a Cairo brothel, British officer Dudley Clarke conceived a new way of fighting the Nazis: using the tools of the mind. Deception in war isn't a new idea, but this eccentric colonel realized that global conflict offered the chance … Continue reading Theodore Talk: Dudley Clark, the Genius of Deception (the Illusionist Who Fooled Hitler)

  • George Eliot: Middlemarch

    Middlemarch is a novel that is set in a provincial town in England in the years leading up to the Reform Act of 1832, which broadly increased voting rights in Britain (but women still could not vote). Middlemarch deals with many themes, including "the woman question" and the nature of marriage, as well as religion … Continue reading George Eliot: Middlemarch

  • Mensa Mind Games

    Doubletree by Hilton Washington Dulles Airport 13869 Park Center Rd., Herndon, VA, United States

    Want to play a game? How about a bunch of games? American Mensa’s Mind Games is a four-day board-game-judging marathon, during which the year’s seven best new-to-market games are chosen and awarded the coveted Mensa Select® seal. Mensa members and their guests evaluate a pre-selected lot of games based upon certain judging criteria and submit honest, constructive … Continue reading Mensa Mind Games