| Friday
Registration, Hotel Check-In and Snacks
7:00 Dinner
8:30 Cocktails, Keynote: New Thinking for a New
Era
10:30 Shmoozing Groups: Personal Prerogatives
Hospitality Suite with Food open 24 hours a day
until conference ends
Saturday
10:30 Caucus Session I: Hard Choices
12:00 Pre-Lunch Cocktail Party
1:00 Lunch
2:30 Caucus Session II: Hard Choices
4:30 Free Time
6:00 Cocktail Party
7:00 Dinner
8:30 Workshop I
10:15 Nightclub, Lounge & Free Time
12:00 Piano Bar
Sunday
9:30 Networking Brunch
10:30 Workshop II
1:00 Lunch
2:30 Workshop III — Hands-On
4:00 Farewell Party
Program Detail
Keynote: New Thinking for a New Era
Make Money, Not War — Middle East businessperson;
Harvard Middle East Program Participant
Internet: The Ultimate Sovereign On Earth — CEO:
Internet company
Exhibition Middle East Business and Tourism Opportunities;
Internet Technologies
Shmooze: Personal Prerogatives
Groups of 20 in moderated sessions in which the
object is to let everyone say something and for everyone in the room to
learn everyone else’s name. Breakout sessions after about 40 minutes.
— Next Generation Prejudices: What
do and should we think of the new generation of Germans and Arabs?
— Acceptable Role Models? Homosexual,
Charitable but Convicted, Puritan but Aloof
— Is God Good Government Anywhere?
— Boycotts, Embargoes & Corruption:
Principled Impotence amid Globalized Competition?
— Education: Equality for All or Bye
to the Fittest?
— Zionism: A Jewish State or
a State For Jews?
— A Seder for the 21st Century:
Do We Agree on What is the Jewish Story?
Hard Choices
In this round, participants are assigned specific
scenarios with given facts and choices. They negotiate in groups
of 6-8 to come up with some sort of resolution they can agree upon.
Caucus I Building and Protecting Our Communities
Curriculums
Internet Censorship for the Protection
of Minors
Pride-Building Events
Community Representation
Caucus II Balancing Budgets: Who Gets, Who Gives?
America
Israel
United Nations
Your Community
Exploring New Frontiers -- Possibilities &
Pitfalls
Workshops I and II are 90 minute lecture &
Q/A / comment format; Workshop III is hands-on and geared toward promoting
contact among program participants in a constructive atmosphere.
Track A: Conflict: The Middle East Theater: Assessing
Change
Workshop I Warfare: Current Trends — West Point
Military Attache
Workshop II The Koran’s Content Viewed Against
Contemporary Arab Literature & Behavior — Middle East national / academic
or embassy
Workshop III Arab Culture and Etiquette — Wear
It and Dance It / Same source as II
Track B: New Bites/Bytes for New Likes
Workshop I Diversions: What will be Fun?
New forms or stick with Nick at Nite? / Entertainment industry or Market
Research
Workshop II Raising Children — Will a Generation
Gap Exist with our children? / Social Psychology or Entertainment Industry
Workshop III Music, Clothes & Food — New Sounds,
New Tastes — Eat It Or Wear It! / Food Scientist, Fashion and/or Entertainment
Industry
Track C: New Types of Macro Ethical Dilemmas
Workshop I Taxation — As Countries Compete for
Technically Skilled Workers: Favor the Upwardly and Internationally Mobile
vs. the Situated Middle Class? / Economist correspondent / Consulting Industry
Workshop II Privacy — Do Convenience and Efficiency
in Allocation of Resources Compensate for the Lack of it? / Market Research
firm, Advertising or Attorney
Workshop III Research — Fair Use and the Internet
— From High School Term Papers to Work Academic / Library sciences
/ Internet Search Engine Company
General Comments
Renaissance Weekend — Styled after the annual retreat
attended by the Clintons in South Carolina which attracts an ever-increasing
by-invitation-only crowd of future leaders, many of them Jewish.
Such an event discreetly geared toward Jewish singles would be a totally
new ball-game in singles programming that would produce results in personal
relationships and contact-building and more effectively target future leaders
than current New Leadership programming primarily geared toward targeting
future givers.
1. Choose a resort that is within 90 minute drive
of Manhattan with sufficient facilities for conferencing and outdoor enjoyment
2. Religion and Eating: The Program should
be non-sectarian and avoid being seen as affiliated with one religious
sect or another. Participants should be in an egalitarian atmosphere and
vegeterian food is one possible way to finesse issues. Prayer services
will not be part of the official program. Microphones will not be
used at sabbath events.
3. Sponsorships: Likely corporate sponsors
might include Bnai Brith (Building Our Community), World Zionist Organization
(Israel topics), Microsoft (Internet), the Forward (New Generation Thinking),
professional associations such as Arab-American Chamber of Commerce (Middle
East business), the Economist, and entities in the fashion, market
research and consulting industries. They can sponsor cocktail parties;
bring freebies to hand out at workshops; and generally give goods and services
to use; they might also give scholarship aid to those who can’t afford
the full price of the conference. They can get a link to the conference
web site and we can prepare home pages for them if they don’t have one.
4. Delegate Preparation: Informational material
would be available via Internet so that schedules, caucus scenarios and
speaker data could be accessed in advance and participants arrive prepared.
This avoids having to print and disseminate lots of reading material at
the conference (which people by then will be too busy to read) or in advance
(which people will forget to bring) at our expense. Several computer
terminals with Internet access will be set up at site so that people can
access whatever they didn’t bring.
5. Financial: A conference fee of $200 per delegate
will be charged separate from the hotel reservation fee. If 100 people
attend, that creates a $20,000 budget for speakers and administrative expenses.
The hotel will be expected to throw in either a commission on rooms booked
(about 10%) adding an extra $25 per person or to allocate an events budget
for on-site expenses such as decoration, entertainment, extra food, hospitality
suite, comps for staff and speakers, etc. Corporate sponsors eager
to get their name in front of this desirable demographic might well kick
in goods and services such as computer rental, speaker transportation,
exhibition materials and delegates.
6. Attendance: Rather than being open to all who
apply, attendance should be limited to 120-150 people aged 24-35 and unmarried
who may attend upon acceptance of an application used to select a diverse
and qualified group of individuals that will ensure that these efforts
are well received by people likely to fill leadership roles in the future,
of a disposition likely to contribute to the well-being of such a conference
and of likely compatibility to those that attend. Those unlikely
to enjoy this conference are highly ideological and close-minded, lacking
a graduate level degree, uninterested in highly structured programming
and generally uncurious about people and new ideas.
7. Speakers / Faculty: All speakers and faculty
should similarly be within the ages of 25-40, and preferably be entrepreneurs
and good speakers. Facilitators will be needed for dining room seating
and shmoozing sessions. Honorariums of between $300 and $500 a speaker
are anticipated plus room and food comps. Speakers will be expected
to prepare written curriculum to disseminate in advance to delegates over
Internet and to bring hand-out material to conference.
8. Homework on the Organization End: Seating
Assignments for dinner, pre-registration for the various caucuses and workshops;
preparing hand-out materials such as badges, maps, room signs, tickets
to events, souvenir shirts, etc.
9. Things to determine from the Hotel: Room
rates, commissions, availability of dining rooms, gratuity policy, selection
of night club entertainment, late checkout (ie: 5 pm), availability of
food outside of meal times and in hospitality suite, modem and PC terminal
access, photographer, full range of transportation options to and from
the hotel.
10. Publicity: web site, voicemail response,
press releases to jewish media, federation, wzo, universities, synagogue
bulletins.
11. Services we will need: web site creation and
maintenance including some art, credit card merchant account (so we can
take visa).
12. The Web Site contains: the program, speaker
bios, purpose of program, application to register, travel instructions
by car, bus, plane and taxi; links to sponsors; hotel and conference reservation
information; contact information if there are any unanswered questions.
So That We Can Do Our Homework and make this conference
more effective and tailored to the tastes of the Participants: The
application for registration asks one’s: name, address, telephone, e-mail,
credit card, age, sex, ever married, children, kohen/levi, b.a. or higher
degrees and from where, any study abroad, foreign languages, special talents
or skills, current reading and newsgathering habits, outgoing or introverted,
specific things you like/dislike about people, hobbies, extent of internet
usage, general political/zionist orientation, t-shirt size, can we list
your name/e-mail and city in a take-home directory. choose which
caucuses, shmoozes and workshops the registrant wishes to attend and list
second and third choices. Refunds available for cancellation outside
of 14 days only.
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