
Scarsdale Alumni Association Eve Ensler'71 earned a spot as one of America's Best Leaders according to US News and World Report. Congrats Eve!
Source: www.usnews.com
Through her words and deeds, she earned a spot as one of America's Best Leaders.

Scarsdale Alumni Association
Andrew's ('95) new upcoming book "Too Big to Fail" (Oct 20th release). Cant wait to get a hold of it.
- Ricardo.
Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
New York Times scribe Andrew Ross Sorkin's much-anticipated book Too Big To Fail may be the closest we'll ever get to being a fly on the wall during last year's financial crisis.

Scarsdale Alumni Association
Meet the 2009 Scarsdale Distinguished Alumni! - SHS & the Scarsdale Alumni Association present the 2009 Distinguished Alumni Award Ceremony http://scarsdalealumni.org/s/1067/commun ity.aspx?sid=1067&gid=1&pgid=252&cid=104 5&ecid=1045&crid=0&calpgid=61&calcid=753
Source: scarsdalealumni.org
The twelve honorees are: Charlie Alterman’93Orchestrator, music director and conductorDanielle Dreifus Butin ’81Global health advocate, occupational therapist, founder of AfyaNicole Eisenman ...

Scarsdale Alumni Association
Michael Ascher '98
I want to invite you all to the launch party of a non-profit organization I am starting called The Young Professionals Society for the Arts to be held on Saturday September 12 at 8p.m at the Engleman Recital Hall. We will be having a world famous Israeli pianist perform and cocktails sponsored by Chopin Vodka. Proceeds will benefit an amazing charity- The National Liberty Museum.
Source: www.nycsociety.org
We are excited to announce that our New York City launch party will take place on Saturday evening, September 12th at 8 p.m at The Engelman Recital Hall (located on East 25th Street between Lexington Avenue and 3rd Avenue). ...

Scarsdale Alumni Association After a year in the making, Shankar Desai'98 just launched his great new venture that changes the way we can rent and find apartments in NYC. Great work Shankar!
Source: www.nakedapartments.com
We match renters and brokers in New York City to make renting an apartment easier for everyone.

Scarsdale Alumni Association Andrew C. Weber '78, was recently appointed assistant secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical and biological programs.
Source: www.defenselink.mil
WASHINGTON, June 22, 2009 Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates today welcomed four high-ranking new arrivals to the Pentagon, hailing them as “welcome additions” to the Defense Department.The new officials ...

Scarsdale Alumni Association Ambassador Richard Holbrooke '58
Source: news.bbc.co.uk
The Hague tribunal has rejected the argument by former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic that he should not be prosecuted because of an immunity deal.

Scarsdale Alumni Association
Mara Liasson'73 (AUDIO)
NPR: National Political Correspondent
Source: www.npr.org
The Treasury Department has rolled out details of the Legacy Securities Program. It's a federal plan to dispose of toxic financial assets. The government is trying to get away from the word toxic. After all, who would want to buy toxic assets? Legacy assets sound more investor-friendly.

Scarsdale Alumni Association Aaron Sorkin'79
Source: news.yahoo.com
Columbia Pictures is sending Aaron Sorkin to the plate to take a swing at the baseball drama "Moneyball," which is based on Michael Lewis' best-seller about the Oakland A's and their unorthodox approach to evaluating talent.

Scarsdale Alumni Association Provocative and controversial, Rushkoff '79, in "LIFE INC: How the World Became a Corporation and How to Take it Back" argues that our economy’s implosion is an opportunity for us to become reconnected to our towns, to our values, and to each other

Scarsdale Alumni Association WATCHING WALTER CRONKITE: Reflections on Growing Up in the 1950s and 1960s is being distributed by the University of Nebraska Press. Forward note by Eric Rorthschild.
Source: scarsdalealumni.org
Watching Walter Cronkite had its beginning when Dr. Kutscher realized his teenage daughter was part of a generation, born after 1980, oblivious to issues that have been the foundation of their parents' ideals. ...

Scarsdale Alumni Association Amy Blumstein '90 publishes her first children's book: Jamie and Tallulah

Scarsdale Alumni Association Nancy Roth '54 Award winning book
Source: scarsdalealumni.org
Nancy Roth's book : Grounded in Love: Ecology, Faith, and Action, is the winner of a Silver Medal from the Nautilus Book Awards. She is now eligible to win the Gold! The awards are for books that ...

Scarsdale Alumni Association
Visits a classroom sharing his experience about being on the pathology panel of the House Select Committee on Assassinations to investigate the deaths of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King.
At the Academic Awards evening at Scarsdale High School in May, 1942, Ira Newlin, Chairman of the Science Department, announc...ed that Joseph Davis was the winner of the Bausch & Lomb Science Award as the finest science student at SHS.
After graduation from SHS, Davis served in the U.S. Army for four years and in 1949 graduated from the Long Island College of Medicine. A surgical internship in San Francisco followed and then he joined the U.S. Public Health Service where he was assigned to four different Indian areas. Distressed by the minimum support services available to Indians, he secured reassignment to Pathology.
This new assignment awakened [Davis’s] “never ceasing curiosity” and he joined the new Medical Examiner’s Office in Miami, Florida. A year later, the Director of the examiner’s office died and Davis was appointed Acting Director and a year after that, Director. He held that position for forty years.
Davis’s stature and accomplishments in Miami led to his serving as a case consultant throughout Florida, as an aircraft crash consultant for the U.S. Air Force, and even as an assistant to the police in as far away places as the Cayman Islands. In 1968, he was appointed to the pathology panel of the House Select Committee on Assassinations to investigate the deaths of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King.
In time, his good work in Miami led to his becoming the President of the Dade County Medical Association, President of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and the President of the National Association of Medical Examiners.
Additional honors followed. Three new buildings on the Medical Examiner complex were named the Dr. Joseph H. Davis Center for Forensic Pathology. At the dedication a letter from John G. Farrow, his 10th grade biology teacher, was read. In February, 2005 the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, with over 6000 member, awarded Dr. Davis the Gradwohl Medallion for his distinguished service to forensic science. The Gradwohl award, the highest honor bestowed by the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, has only been awarded eleven times in the previous thirty years. Read More
At the Academic Awards evening at Scarsdale High School in May, 1942, Ira Newlin, Chairman of the Science Department, announc...ed that Joseph Davis was the winner of the Bausch & Lomb Science Award as the finest science student at SHS.
After graduation from SHS, Davis served in the U.S. Army for four years and in 1949 graduated from the Long Island College of Medicine. A surgical internship in San Francisco followed and then he joined the U.S. Public Health Service where he was assigned to four different Indian areas. Distressed by the minimum support services available to Indians, he secured reassignment to Pathology.
This new assignment awakened [Davis’s] “never ceasing curiosity” and he joined the new Medical Examiner’s Office in Miami, Florida. A year later, the Director of the examiner’s office died and Davis was appointed Acting Director and a year after that, Director. He held that position for forty years.
Davis’s stature and accomplishments in Miami led to his serving as a case consultant throughout Florida, as an aircraft crash consultant for the U.S. Air Force, and even as an assistant to the police in as far away places as the Cayman Islands. In 1968, he was appointed to the pathology panel of the House Select Committee on Assassinations to investigate the deaths of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King.
In time, his good work in Miami led to his becoming the President of the Dade County Medical Association, President of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and the President of the National Association of Medical Examiners.
Additional honors followed. Three new buildings on the Medical Examiner complex were named the Dr. Joseph H. Davis Center for Forensic Pathology. At the dedication a letter from John G. Farrow, his 10th grade biology teacher, was read. In February, 2005 the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, with over 6000 member, awarded Dr. Davis the Gradwohl Medallion for his distinguished service to forensic science. The Gradwohl award, the highest honor bestowed by the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, has only been awarded eleven times in the previous thirty years. Read More























