• In one way or another, polls have misfired in the three most recent U.S. presidential elections, a record that may signal what lies ahead in 2024. Will the polls fail yet again? What accounts for their uneven at best performance record? And why are polls still such dominant, narrative-setting forces in American politics? Those questions and more will be...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Tue, February 27 to February 27 | 09:30 AM-10:45 AM Central Time
    W. Joseph Campbell, Ph.D., Professor, School of Communication, American University
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  • The loyalists were the losers of the American Revolution. The Americans who rejected independence and who fought to keep the colonies safely within the bosom of the British Empire lost almost everything when the patriots declared victory at the Battle of Yorktown in 1781. History quickly lost sight of them in the years afterwards and looking back now,...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Tue, March 5 to March 5 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    Richard Bell, Professor of History, University of Maryland
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  • After nearly 20 years of lecturing on classic musical theater and American popular song, Julie Kurzava will finally join the 21st century, sharing thoughts and observations on contemporary musical theater, including themes such as identity, mental health, and coming of age. She’ll also discuss musical and vocal styles, and compare current artistic trends...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Thu, March 7 to March 7 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    Julie Kurzava, Faculty, Loyola University
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  • Buy some lingonberry hard candy at a 19thc candy shop, visit the homes and museums of playwright and novelist Arthur Strindberg and sculptor Carl Milles whose thoughtful, whimsical pieces dot the city; check out the Nobel Museum (Bob Dylan won for literature in 2016); reminisce at a toy museum in a WWII bunker; appreciate the beautiful textiles at a silk...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Thu, March 7 to March 7 | 12:00 PM-02:30 PM Central Time
    Barbara Paulson, Travel Specialist
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  • The House Republican Caucus' difficulties in electing a Speaker in the fall of 2023 pointed out how the Grand Old Party has broken down into two factions uneasily coexisting under the same party label: one faction representing the traditional, business-oriented conservatism of Ronald Reagan, the other the anti-government populism of Donald Trump. Can these...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Thu, March 14 to March 14 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    Geoffrey Kabaservice, Director of Policy Studies, Niskanen Center, D.C.
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  • The chronicle of World War II is filled with many amazing stories. Probably none of these tales of heroism had such historic and strategic significance as the abrupt and surprising crossing of the Rhine River at the German town of Remagen on March 7, 1945, by a small party of GIs. The class will look at both the strategic setting for the Rhine crossing as...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Tue, March 19 to March 19 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    David B Lindauer, Lt. Colonel (Ret.), US Army Signal Corps
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  • For more than 125 years, filmmakers have been drawn to the dynamic vitality of New York City. Its dramatic architecture, its diverse neighborhoods and populations, its universally recognized landmarks, its 24/7 lifestyle, and its 8 million stories have helped make the city a featured player in more than 17,000 movies—including such memorable films as King...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Wed, March 20 to March 20 | 12:00 PM-01:15 PM Central Time
    Brian Rose, Professor (ret.), Department of Communication and Media Studies, Fordham University
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  • Hundreds of French churches and cathedrals were destroyed or converted to warehouses or horse barns during the French Revolution. It wasn't until the mid-19th century that the French government committed to recover and restore that church heritage, inspired in part by the public success of Victor Hugo’s novel Notre-Dame de Paris (The Hunchback of...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Thu, March 21 to March 21 | 12:00 PM-01:30 PM Central Time
    Judy Scott Feldman, Ph.D., Art Historian/National Mall Coalition
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  • Hamas’ slaughter of Oct. 7 not only shook Israel to its core, creating doubts among Israelis about the nation’s ability to protect them, but it also set off a regional chain reaction that put U.S. forces in direct battle with Iran-backed militias and other radical groups.  Meanwhile, Israel’s response triggered a wave of deep anti-Israeli sentiment...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Wed, March 27 to March 27 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    Lawrence Haas, Senior Fellow, American Foreign Policy Council
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  • By now, it seems everyone has an opinion about The 1619 Project. Published in 2019, The 1619 Project was a special edition of The New York Times Magazine that tried to focus readers’ attention upon the centrality of race slavery in American history. We’ll push past the headlines and the posturing and test four of The 1619 Project’s central claims...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Tue, April 2 to April 2 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    Richard Bell, Professor of History, University of Maryland
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  • Explore spring’s bounty on over 1000 acres of gardens once owned by the Dupont family; visit an art museum, home, and studios of three generations of America’s finest painters (the Wyeths); watch potato chips being made at a major snack food factory (samples and an outlet store, too); and ride in a 1916 electric car (take that Elon Musk!). Travel expert...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Wed, April 3 to April 3 | 12:00 PM-02:30 PM Central Time
    Barbara Paulson, Travel Specialist
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  • Baron’s new book, Collision of Power: Trump, Bezos and the Washington Post, chronicles politics and journalism during the tumultuous era of candidate and President Donald Trump. Some reviews of the book suggest that readers begin with the book’s epilogue, which lays out Baron’s view of “objectivity" in journalism and why news organizations need...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Thu, April 4 to April 4 | 12:00 PM-01:00 PM Central Time
    Martin Baron, Former Executive Editor, Washington Post
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  • The tension between science and religion may be a significant fact concerning contemporary politics, but the rift goes back centuries. Galileo tried to argue that the two ought to be seen as distinct magisteria. The Dalai Lama, on the other hand, argued that science and religion can clash, and if they do then religion must change. What is the relation...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Thu, April 11 to April 11 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    Steven Gimbel, Professor of Philosophy, Gettysburg College
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  • Although best known as classic musical film "The Wizard of Oz," the world of Oz began with the 1900 book by Frank L. Baum that quickly became a stage musical. This class will tell the tale of Baum's book and detail how it was made (with great difficulty) into the beloved movie musical of 1939, and later further adapted into "The Wiz" and "Wicked." Come and...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Thu, April 11 to April 11 | 12:00 PM-1:30 PM Central Time
    Dan Sherman, PhD
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  • In this presentation, we will discuss an event which history somehow overlooked: the attempt by a brave band of soldiers and civilians to overthrow Nazi rule in Munich, Germany, with the intention of handing the city over to the approaching Allied armies. This account is based largely on first-hand information provided by German Captain Rupprecht Gerngross,...
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    Tue, April 16 to April 16 | 09:30 AM-11:00 AM Central Time
    David B Lindauer, Lt. Colonel (Ret.), US Army Signal Corps
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  • Moving from place to place and job to job until he found his true calling as a painter, Vincent van Gogh had a short artistic career. Dying at 37, he was a painter for only ten years. He reached his “high, yellow note” as a painter during months he spent at Arles, in the South of France. Vincent spent only 444 days in Arles—the most prolific period in...
    Zoom - Washington Metro Oasis
    Tue, April 16 to April 16 | 12:00 PM-01:30 PM Central Time
    Bonita Billman, Art History Lecturer
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