Thursday, February 24, 2011
Open to WorldChicago Members and International Press Club Members
Event Date: Thursday, March 10
Time: 8:30 am
Place: WorldChicago Office
72 East Randolph
Chicago, IL 60601
Cost: Free
Reservations Required: Due limited seating we must have an RSVP to dsadlicki@worldchicago.org or Donna Sadlicki, Director of Operations, 312-254-1800 x104
Topic: Kyrgyzstan - Investigative Journalism in 2011
This delegation is hosted by WorldChicago (formerly International Visitors Center of Chicago); there are 5 media professionals in Chicago as part of the Open World Leadership Program through the US Congress.
Most individuals working in the media and many observers agree that the level of freedom of the press in Kyrgyzstan has improved since the April 2010. Still, the traditional media in Kyrgyzstan has great challenges in serving as watchdog organizations and performing investigative functions.
Speakers
Mr. Abdumomunov, Sabyraly Abdumomunovich
Editor-in-Chief, News Radio, “Kabarlar” (News) organizes, distribute, and supervises the work of the staff of Radio “Kabarlar” to ensure timely and quality preparation of radio programs and their broadcasts.
Ms. Ageyeva, Yelena Vasilyevna
Political Columnist, “News Media”, LLC, Editorial Board of "The Moskovskiy Komsomolets -
Asia". Her job current duties in her position is to analyzing social, economical and political aspects public life, prediction unfavorable tendencies, writing articles and overviews, and conducting journalistic investigation.
Mr. Ibraimov, Bekpolot Orozbayevich
Correspondent for Osh Region, Bulletin “Pravo dlya Vsekh” (“Law for All”) His job is to collect and disseminate information on legal topic. To interact with local self-government bodies, civil sector, mass media and other organizations
Ms. Ivashchenko, Yekaterina
Correspondent, News Agency “Fergana.Ru” prepares materials (articles, interview, reports, news) to inform public of Kyrgyzstan
Mr. Toktonaliyev, Ryspek
Correspondent, News Agency “AkiPress” Member of Supervisory and Public Council, Ministry of Education and Science in the
His job description is to write and crate overviews for AkiPres.
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Chicago Children's Museum in Navy Pier on Saturday, May 22nd 2010 for “Children's Batik Quilt Exhibition and Workshops”
Dear Friends of Indonesia and Indonesian Community
in the Greater Chicago Area
Please visit Chicago Children's Museum in Navy Pier on Saturday, May 22nd 2010 for
“Children's Batik Quilt Exhibition and Workshops”
from 11.00 am to 2.30 pm,
Organized by the Indonesian Consulate General in Chicago in cooperation with the Chicago Children’s Museum
The Exhibition and Workshop will be officially opened by
the Consul General of the Republic of Indonesia,
Honorable Benny Bahanadewa
on Saturday, May 22nd at 11:00 am
The event will commence with 1 hour of
Children Batik Quilt Workshop
(from 11:00 am – 12:00 am),
1 hour of Indonesian Children’s Gamelan Music Performances
and traditional Dances (from 12:00 - 1:30 pm)
and the 2nd Children Batik Quilt Workshop (from 1:30 pm to 2:30 pm)
in the Greater Chicago Area
Please visit Chicago Children's Museum in Navy Pier on Saturday, May 22nd 2010 for
“Children's Batik Quilt Exhibition and Workshops”
from 11.00 am to 2.30 pm,
Organized by the Indonesian Consulate General in Chicago in cooperation with the Chicago Children’s Museum
The Exhibition and Workshop will be officially opened by
the Consul General of the Republic of Indonesia,
Honorable Benny Bahanadewa
on Saturday, May 22nd at 11:00 am
The event will commence with 1 hour of
Children Batik Quilt Workshop
(from 11:00 am – 12:00 am),
1 hour of Indonesian Children’s Gamelan Music Performances
and traditional Dances (from 12:00 - 1:30 pm)
and the 2nd Children Batik Quilt Workshop (from 1:30 pm to 2:30 pm)
Monday, January 18, 2010
Escape the Winter: Experience Australia
Escape the Winter: Experience Australia www.trumpchicagohotel..com/australia
On Sunday, January 24, the entire 16th Floor of Trump International Hotel & Tower Chicago will turn into a veritable Australian marketplace as the property hosts Escape the Winter: Experience Australia. This spirited "walkabout", taking place from 1 to 5 p.m., will showcase more than 30 wines provided by Wine Australia, beverages and dozens of uniquely Australian foods for sampling, along with aboriginal art, jewelry, live music and more.
In addition to hourly wine seminars, Executive Chef Frank Brunacci and celebrity chef Simon Bryant of the Hilton Adelaide www.abc.net.au/tv/cookandchef/about/presenters.htm will also interact with guests, talking about their homeland and its cuisine. Up-and-coming Australian musicians, Anthony Snape www.anthonysnape.com and Claire Wyndham www.clairewyndham.com , will perform live throughout the afternoon.
Escape the Winter: Experience Australia is $35 per person, with ticket proceeds benefiting Chicago's Mercy Home for Boys and Girls. There will also be raffle tickets on sale for a chance to win impressive prizes including a trip for two to Australia, provided by V Australia and a six-month membership at The Spa at Trump.
Date:
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Time:
1:00pm to 5:00pm
Venue:
Trump International Hotel and Tower
401 North Wabash Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611
Cost:
$35 per person (in advance)
RSVP:
Please register via the attached link: www.trumpchicagohotel..com/australia
Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=268445745154&ref=mf
On Sunday, January 24, the entire 16th Floor of Trump International Hotel & Tower Chicago will turn into a veritable Australian marketplace as the property hosts Escape the Winter: Experience Australia. This spirited "walkabout", taking place from 1 to 5 p.m., will showcase more than 30 wines provided by Wine Australia, beverages and dozens of uniquely Australian foods for sampling, along with aboriginal art, jewelry, live music and more.
In addition to hourly wine seminars, Executive Chef Frank Brunacci and celebrity chef Simon Bryant of the Hilton Adelaide www.abc.net.au/tv/cookandchef/about/presenters.htm will also interact with guests, talking about their homeland and its cuisine. Up-and-coming Australian musicians, Anthony Snape www.anthonysnape.com and Claire Wyndham www.clairewyndham.com , will perform live throughout the afternoon.
Escape the Winter: Experience Australia is $35 per person, with ticket proceeds benefiting Chicago's Mercy Home for Boys and Girls. There will also be raffle tickets on sale for a chance to win impressive prizes including a trip for two to Australia, provided by V Australia and a six-month membership at The Spa at Trump.
Date:
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Time:
1:00pm to 5:00pm
Venue:
Trump International Hotel and Tower
401 North Wabash Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611
Cost:
$35 per person (in advance)
RSVP:
Please register via the attached link: www.trumpchicagohotel..com/australia
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=268445745154&ref=mf
Monday, November 30, 2009
THE TRUE VALUE ADDED NATURE OF THE INTERNATIONAL PRESS CLUB OF CHICAGO
Organizational membership, including membership in a press club, can mean many different things to its members or those desiring membership depending on one’s personal, professional, and social needs or perspective on life.
That said, once you go beyond the basic By Laws of a club, any club, you quickly encounter the organization’s collective personality, design, and structure, which is often just a mirror image of the membership which comprises its ranks.
Under normal circumstances, this could almost lead to a paradoxical situation in which altruistic desires of the organization give way to the reality spawned by the biases of its lifeblood, the membership. On one hand, an organizational purity of purpose is prized, however, the realities of the world make its lofty attainment virtually impossible to achieve.
During this time of institutional metamorphosis, political correctness flourishes, member posturing ensues, and a skewed set of personal agendas thrive. Unfortunately, before too long, that once sacrosanct sense of shared camaraderie, intertwined with trust between members and guests, becomes the first casualty, and if left unchecked, will ultimately spell operational disaster for the organization.
It would be shortsighted to believe that a new visitor wouldn’t be able to tell what to expect from a club they may be considering for membership, the very first meeting they chose to attend. After all, first impressions gleaned from initial meetings are often long lasting and go unchanged. Whether good or bad, that impression is firmly set, as if in stone, often cemented in place by the tone and candor of the discussions going on around the room between the members interfacing with each other, the guests, and especially the official speaker(s) de jour.
The IPCC is an organization somewhat off kilter from these aforementioned, oft expected, regularly anticipated detractors, in that the membership happens to respect and appreciate each other and the guests who choose to frequent our meetings. Thus, the usual institutional negativity found at other organizations is simply not tolerated or condoned.
We have found that the attendees at our meetings and functions are there, specifically to enjoy the company; learn from the presenters (especially at the regular Monthly Visiting Speaker program); or to debate each other, quite often to the point of tongue in cheek exchanges on any subject which happens to pop up at the time, in a true, sleeves rolled up, Chicagoese oratory style. The more outgoing members in the crowd can also be counted upon to share their views on everything from the lunacies of local politics to the events unfolding on the world stage- sometimes one and the same- while simultaneously encouraging those more reserved in attendance to partake as well. Most importantly, everyone’s there to have fun, and enjoy the moment without pretense, reservation, or regard to personal position or status.
The IPCC is an organization based on a relatively simple, yet permanent set of precepts, which call for the preservation of a Neutral, Non-Attributable, Off-The- Record, Pretense Free, environment where our presenters can feel as comfortable with their audience as they are with the subject matter contained within their presentations. We provide a secure venue for our Monthly Visiting Speakers program guest presenters, whether diplomats, industrialists, or commercial planners, where they can freely discuss their own ideas or concepts as they see fit. They have also been known to try out a Work-In-Progress presentation on those in attendance, often soliciting honest, no holds barred input or observations from the room at the same time to help them fine tune the content or their delivery-more often than not, over a lunchtime meal or a slice of pie!
Our membership-professionals one and all in their own rights-is comprised of Educators, Economists, members of the Working or Retired Domestic and Foreign Press, Public Affairs Officers, Photographers, Technical Writers, Editors, Publishers, Diplomats, Domestic and Foreign Trade Representatives, Broadcast Pioneers, Medical Personnel, Linguists, along with the occasional Student. It’s this inherent vocational diversity, further enhanced by the secondary skill sets and backgrounds of the individual members of this organization that brings the true Value Added nature of the IPCC to the forefront. It also places the beneficial worth of the IPCC squarely into proper perspective as a safe haven organization able to maintain a non-negotiable level of objectivity during an era of biased reporting, uncertain alliances, and diminishing levels of substantive reporting from the ranks of the working press.
As the organization’s Membership Chairman, I hope to see you at our next Monthly Visiting Speaker Program. As a member, I look forward to the views and ideas you will bring with you!
Wayne Toberman, International Press Club of Chicago 2009 Membership Chairman.
That said, once you go beyond the basic By Laws of a club, any club, you quickly encounter the organization’s collective personality, design, and structure, which is often just a mirror image of the membership which comprises its ranks.
Under normal circumstances, this could almost lead to a paradoxical situation in which altruistic desires of the organization give way to the reality spawned by the biases of its lifeblood, the membership. On one hand, an organizational purity of purpose is prized, however, the realities of the world make its lofty attainment virtually impossible to achieve.
During this time of institutional metamorphosis, political correctness flourishes, member posturing ensues, and a skewed set of personal agendas thrive. Unfortunately, before too long, that once sacrosanct sense of shared camaraderie, intertwined with trust between members and guests, becomes the first casualty, and if left unchecked, will ultimately spell operational disaster for the organization.
It would be shortsighted to believe that a new visitor wouldn’t be able to tell what to expect from a club they may be considering for membership, the very first meeting they chose to attend. After all, first impressions gleaned from initial meetings are often long lasting and go unchanged. Whether good or bad, that impression is firmly set, as if in stone, often cemented in place by the tone and candor of the discussions going on around the room between the members interfacing with each other, the guests, and especially the official speaker(s) de jour.
The IPCC is an organization somewhat off kilter from these aforementioned, oft expected, regularly anticipated detractors, in that the membership happens to respect and appreciate each other and the guests who choose to frequent our meetings. Thus, the usual institutional negativity found at other organizations is simply not tolerated or condoned.
We have found that the attendees at our meetings and functions are there, specifically to enjoy the company; learn from the presenters (especially at the regular Monthly Visiting Speaker program); or to debate each other, quite often to the point of tongue in cheek exchanges on any subject which happens to pop up at the time, in a true, sleeves rolled up, Chicagoese oratory style. The more outgoing members in the crowd can also be counted upon to share their views on everything from the lunacies of local politics to the events unfolding on the world stage- sometimes one and the same- while simultaneously encouraging those more reserved in attendance to partake as well. Most importantly, everyone’s there to have fun, and enjoy the moment without pretense, reservation, or regard to personal position or status.
The IPCC is an organization based on a relatively simple, yet permanent set of precepts, which call for the preservation of a Neutral, Non-Attributable, Off-The- Record, Pretense Free, environment where our presenters can feel as comfortable with their audience as they are with the subject matter contained within their presentations. We provide a secure venue for our Monthly Visiting Speakers program guest presenters, whether diplomats, industrialists, or commercial planners, where they can freely discuss their own ideas or concepts as they see fit. They have also been known to try out a Work-In-Progress presentation on those in attendance, often soliciting honest, no holds barred input or observations from the room at the same time to help them fine tune the content or their delivery-more often than not, over a lunchtime meal or a slice of pie!
Our membership-professionals one and all in their own rights-is comprised of Educators, Economists, members of the Working or Retired Domestic and Foreign Press, Public Affairs Officers, Photographers, Technical Writers, Editors, Publishers, Diplomats, Domestic and Foreign Trade Representatives, Broadcast Pioneers, Medical Personnel, Linguists, along with the occasional Student. It’s this inherent vocational diversity, further enhanced by the secondary skill sets and backgrounds of the individual members of this organization that brings the true Value Added nature of the IPCC to the forefront. It also places the beneficial worth of the IPCC squarely into proper perspective as a safe haven organization able to maintain a non-negotiable level of objectivity during an era of biased reporting, uncertain alliances, and diminishing levels of substantive reporting from the ranks of the working press.
As the organization’s Membership Chairman, I hope to see you at our next Monthly Visiting Speaker Program. As a member, I look forward to the views and ideas you will bring with you!
Wayne Toberman, International Press Club of Chicago 2009 Membership Chairman.
Monday, June 15, 2009
YOU ARE INVITED…..
A presentation focusing on “Modern Turkey”, followed
by a round table discussion will highlight the “Third
Wednesday” luncheon session of the International Press Club
Of Chicago, at noon on Wednesday, , June 17, at
Houlihan’s Restaurant, 111 East Wacker Drive, Chicago.
The presenter will be Hon. Suleyman Sozeri, trade commissioner,
Consulate General of Turkey in Chicago. Other specialists also are
expected to attend.
The IPCC meets every Wednesday at Houlihan’s. The third
Wednesday of each month is highlighted by a guest presenter.
The events are informal. Attendees are able to order from the regular
menu and pay their separate checks.
Dennis Hodges, an activist in efforts to promote high speed rail
systems ,will serve as the presenter for the July 15 luncheon session.
Guests are always welcome and encouraged.
For information:
Phone: 708-246-5556
E –mail: lepinske@sbcglobal.net
by a round table discussion will highlight the “Third
Wednesday” luncheon session of the International Press Club
Of Chicago, at noon on Wednesday, , June 17, at
Houlihan’s Restaurant, 111 East Wacker Drive, Chicago.
The presenter will be Hon. Suleyman Sozeri, trade commissioner,
Consulate General of Turkey in Chicago. Other specialists also are
expected to attend.
The IPCC meets every Wednesday at Houlihan’s. The third
Wednesday of each month is highlighted by a guest presenter.
The events are informal. Attendees are able to order from the regular
menu and pay their separate checks.
Dennis Hodges, an activist in efforts to promote high speed rail
systems ,will serve as the presenter for the July 15 luncheon session.
Guests are always welcome and encouraged.
For information:
Phone: 708-246-5556
E –mail: lepinske@sbcglobal.net
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