Friday  April 7, 2017

Consulate General of Hungary (227 East 52nd Street, New York City)

2:00-6:30 pm scientific session

Dinner  7:30-09:30 pm

Lecture  ( 8:00 pm) by Tamas Freund, Vice-President

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Our inner world- enriched by arts-stimulates learning, memory, creativity

Program (download)

Economics
1:-1:20 Acs Zoltan, George Mason University: The Digital Entrepreneurial Ecosystem

Mathematical, Physical and Earth Sciences
1:20-1:40 Tardos Eva, Cornell University: Selfish Routing and the Price of Anarchy
1:40-2:00 Bartos Imre, Columbia University*: Black Holes and Gravitational Waves


2:00-2:20 Meszaros Peter, Pennsylvania State University: Black Holes, Cosmic Rays and Neutrinos: Messengers from the Deep Universe
2:20-2:40 Porkolab Miklos, MIT: Demonstrating the Scientific Feasibility of Fusion Energy: a Grand Challenge in Science and Technology
2:40-3:00 Sztipanovits Janos, Vanderbilt University: Cyber-Physical Systems
3:00-3:20Huszar Rudolf, Washington University: Atmospheric Aerosols in the Earth System
Coffee Break
Medical Sciences
3:40-4:00 Mezey Eva, NIH: Therapeutic Use of Human Bone Marrow Cells to Modulate the Immune System
4:00-4:20 Szabo Sandor, UC, Irvine, New Molecular and Cellular Elements in Ulcer Pathogenesis and Healing
4:20-4:40 Tigyi  J. Gabor, University of Tennessee: Prevention of Cancer Metastasis by Targeting the Stroma
4:40-5:00 Nagy-Szakal Dorottya, Columbia University: The Mind-Blowing Microbiome: the Role of Gut Microbes in Colonic Inflammation and Gut-Brain Axis
Coffee Break
Biology, Neurobiology and Neurology
5:20-5:40 Maliga Pal, Rutgers University*: The Promise of Synthetic Biology in Plants
540-6:00 Bodis-Wollner Ivan, State University of NY*: Retineal clues to the pathophysiology of Parkinson’s disease
6:-6:20    Mody Istvan, UCLA: The Other Side of Optogenetics: Fast and Reliable Detection of Neuronal Membrane Potential Changes with Light
6:20-6:40 Zaborszky Laszlo, Rutgers University*: How and What Tells Anatomy about Brain Function?
7:30-9:30 Dinner
FREUND Tamas, Vice President HAS: Our inner world- enriched by arts-stimulates learning, memory, creativity

CELEBRATE THE 5th ANIVERSARY of the NYHSS - October 28, 2016 (more details)

Welcome speech
H.E. Ambassador Ferenc KUMIN, PHD – consul general of Hungary
Past, present and future of NYHSS
Laszlo Zaborszky,  President
Zsofia Trombitas, Founding Secretary
Janos Bergou , Past President
Friends of Hungary: Hungarian scientist all over the world
Professor E. Sylvester Vizi, former president of the Hungarian Academy os Sciences, president of the Society for Dissemination of Scientific Knowledge
What the human eye does not tell the human brain
Professor Ivan Bodis-Wollner, director of Parkinson’s Disease and Related Disorders Clinic Center of Excellence , SUNY

Budapest Scientific: A Guidebook” Oxford University Press, UK, 2015 by István Hargittai and Magdolna Hargittai - October 5, 2015 (more details)

„Edith A. Zang, Ph.D: The Role of Statistics in Pharmaceutical Drug Discovery and Development, - September 15, 2015 (more details)

„Ferenc Molnar: His life and works” by Professor Elizabeth Molnar Rajec PhD, - June 2, 2015 (more details)

„Dawkins’ Dilemmas: Trouble for the World’’s Most Famous Atheist?” by David Seiple M.T. S, Ph.D., - May 26, 2015 (more details)

„50 years of graph theory: the networks by which we are all connected” by László Lovász, - April 21, 2015 (more details)

„Neural mechanisms for discovering casual structure in traumatic environments” by Tamás Madarász, - April 8, 2015 (more details)

„Antibiotic resistant bacteria in New York, origin of a resistance gene and spread of resistant clones of MRSA” by Alexander Tomasz PhD, - March 10, 2015 (more details)

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„Population decline: Problems and countermeasures” by Prof. Paul Demeny, - December 9, 2014 (more details)

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„The Antimatter” by Prof. Dezső Horváth, - October 17, 2014 (more details)

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„Paks and the Hungarian Energy Future” by Béla Lipták, - May 13, 2014 (more details)

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„The Deadliest Lifesavers From the rain forest to the patient’s heart” by Dr. Zoltan Takacs, - April 8, 2014 (more details)

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„Kafka and Asbestos” ' by Professor Elizabeth Molnar Rajec, - March 4, 2014 (more details)

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„In search of the seat of memory in the brain” ' by Prof. Charles R. Legéndy, - February 11, 2014 (more details)

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„Adventures in Biophysics” ' by Prof. Mihály Mezei, - November 25, 2013 (more details)

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„Black Holes, and What We Can Learn from Them without Falling in” ' by Imre Bartos - October 28, 2013 (more details)

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'Magyarságismeret' by Gábor Tarján - 2013 június 20. (more details)

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The unreasonable success of finance by Gabor Laszlo - 2013 május 16. (more details)

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Marina von Neumann Whitman - 2013 április 21 (more details)

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Prof. Verebey Károly - 2013 március 19.

My Lifetime Experience and Love of Medical Research: An Unimaginable Voyage

Prof. Gulyás Balázs Előadása - 2013 Január 29.

Memorial conference on the occasion of 100th birthday of JANOS SZENTAGOTHAI
Program - 2012 November 12.

Szemerédi fest - 2012 November 6.

Papp Klára előadása - 2012 Május 3.

HUNGARIAN SCIENTISTS IN THE US: YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW
A Glimpse at the Achievements of Hungarian Scientists on this Side of the Atlantic
- 2012 Április 25.

Deák István előadása - 2012 Április 5.

Széchenyi Kinga előadása - 2012 Március 1.

Miklós Müller előadása - 2012 Február 2.

Istvan Seri MD, PHD, HOND előadása - 2011 December 2.

Andrew Voros előadása - 2011 November 4.

Boreczky Elemer előadása - 2011 Június 9.

Hargittai István előadása - 2011 március 17.

Vermes Gábor előadása - 2011 február 24.

Prékopa András előadása - 2010 november 3.

 

Vizi E. Szilveszter, E. Sylvester Vizi, MD, PhD, DSc, MHAS, HonFBPhS
Dr. Vizi received his medical decree from (now called) Semmelweis University of Budapest and earned his Ph.D. in 1969, became pharmacology professor in 1976 and Doctor of Sciences (DSc) in 1977. Dr. Vizi was a Riker Fellow at the Department of Pharmacology of the University of Oxford from 1967 to 1969, where he worked alongside Sir William Paton. He was visiting professor at the universities of Mainz and Parma. He also taught at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University (Montefiore Medical Center) as a visiting professor since 1984. He served as deputy chairman of the medical research council department of the Ministry of Health (1977-1981), director at the Institute of Experimental Medicine of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (HAS) and Chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Therapy at the Imre Haynal University of Health (since 2000 part of Semmelweis University). He was named director of the institute in 1989 and held this post until 2002. Dr. Vizi became corresponding member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA) in 1985, full member in 1990. He served as vice president of MTA (1996-2002) and president (2002-2008). He is member of Academia Europaea, member of the board of the Hungarian Football Association, editor-in chief of Neurochemistry International and section editor of the Brain Research Bulletin.

Ivan  Bodis-Wollner, M.D., D.Sc
Dr. Bodis-Wollner received his medical degree from the University of  Vienna and trained in neurology at Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York. He did a post doctoral fellowship in neurophysiology at Cambridge University, England. He is Doctor Honoris causa of Szentgyorgyi Albert University. He has served as professor of neurology and ophthalmology at Mt. Sinai Hospital, University of Nebraska and currently at  SUNY Downstate Medical Center, NY.    Dr. Bodis-Wollner is the author of more than 220 peer reviewed papers and seven books. These are primarily related to his lifelong interest and research on basic brain processes involved in making sense of visual information and to visual problems in particular in Parkinson’s disease. He served as member on NIH Advisory Committees and was Co-Chairman for the :National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council Co-Chairman, Working Group on Vision, Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education (l982-5).He is a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, a fellow of the Hanse Institute for Advanced Studies, Germany. He has served as Visiting Professor and Named Lecturer in the United States, Europe, China  and Japan. He was chief Editor of several journals and serves on a number of   editorial boards.

What the eye does not tell the human brain

In a landmark study of the frog’s eye (1957), a group at MIT predicted what the frog CAN see in the world.  Can one predict  the same in humans ? 
When healthy persons take off glasses, their brains tell them what they do not see clearly. Conversely, Parkinson Disease (PD) patients rarely complain of vision. Why?  Are they “blind’ to their visual deficit? Possibly in PD the brain “reports” the visual deficit, not in language , but by imprecise eye movements. We move our eyes quickly many thousand times every day. We use these quick eye movements, called “saccades” (S), to look at something and sometimes to look for something.  Monkey experiments show that “where” to look is decided by the brain before  S  and before any visual target  appears. In PD both the brain  organization for S and  vision are deficient and thus uncalibrated for reality check by the brain. In humans one can’t predict what one sees from retinal activity alone. For being able to make sense of degraded visual input the brain has to generate  pre-motor perceptual plans.

This will be a presentation (in English) of some of the highlights of this new book, which introduces the reader to the visible memorabilia of science and scientists in Budapest. Six of the eight chapters of the book cover the Hungarian Nobel laureates, the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the university, the medical school, agricultural sciences, and technology and engineering. One chapter is about the famous Budapest high schools, and one is devoted to scientist martyrs of the Holocaust.

István Hargittai is Professor Emeritus (active) of the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the Academia Auropaea (London) and foreign member of the Norwegian Academy of Sciences. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Structural Chemistry. His books have appeared in eight languages and include Great Minds, Buried Glory, Judging Edward Teller, Drive and Curiosity, and more.

Magdolna Hargittai is Research Professor at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Academia Europaea (London). Her books have appeared in five languages and include Women Scientists, Symmetry through the Eyes of a Chemist, Visual Symmetry, Great Minds, Candid Science, and others.

The Hargittais are currently working on their new book, New York Scientific (to be published by Oxford University Press, UK).

Abstract: The Role of Statistics in Pharmaceutical Drug Discovery and Development
by Edith A. Zang, Ph.D            

Evidence based medicine is a new paradigm for health care.  It involves emphasizing the use of evidence from well designed and conducted research.  Prehistoric man looked upon illness as a spiritual event or being possessed by demons, and treatment involved cleansing the body or the spirit of these demons by manipulating the various forms of energy that passed through the body.    Following the ancient Greek model of the cause of disease, physicians treated patients with the goal of restoring balances in blood, phlegm, and bile.  Finally, in the 1800s, numerical methods came into favor in drug development.  By the end of the 19th century, the principles of comparative trials had been suggested, and in 1948 the first randomized clinical trial was conducted on the treatment for tuberculosis by a British statistician, Austin Bradford Hill.   By the 1950’s randomized clinical trials became the gold standard for testing new drugs. 

The use of statistics to support drug discovery and development has grown exponentially since the Kefauver-Harris Amendment in 1962, which required drug sponsors to prove a product’s safety and efficacy in controlled clinical trials before it could be marketed.   Consequently, each stage of clinical testing has since been heavily reliant on statistical design and analysis.  The FDA’s Critical Path Initiative (2004), and its Safety and Innovation Act (2012) further emphasize the need for mathematical and statistical models to create more innovative study designs and analysis methods through the implementation of model-based drug development. 

Current trends, including the analysis of pooled data across trials, drugs and even across pharmaceutical companies; the mining of historical trial data; the analysis of DNA microarrays to identify targets for therapeutic intervention; and the increased application of Bayesian versus frequentist statistics in the design and analysis of adaptive clinical trials are expected to revolutionize the process of drug discovery and development. 

About the Speaker

Edith Zang left Hungary in December 1956, arriving in New York in 1958.  She earned a B.A. in biology at Hofstra University in 1972, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in the Ecology and Evolution Program of the Division of Biology at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, in 1979. 

She spent the first part of her career working as a biostatistician and epidemiologist, mostly in cancer research.  First, she concentrated on cancer treatment studies at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, and later on cancer prevention research at the American Health Foundation.  Between 1979-88 she worked in the Laboratory of Epidemiology of the New York Blood Center, first as the biostatistician for the hepatitis B vaccine trial (Heptavax ) which  gained marketing approval in 1980, and later as a co-investigator on several epidemiological studies on AIDS.  From 1980 through 2009 she held an appointment as adjunct clinical assistant/associate professor in the Department of Public Health of the Weill Medical College of Cornell University, teaching a course in biostatistics and epidemiology to medical students. 

In 1997 she made a late-career move from non-profit research to the pharmaceutical industry, working on the design and analysis of Phase I-III clinical trials - first at Novartis and later at Eisai.  At Eisai she participated in gaining simultaneous marketing approval from the FDA, EMEA and the Japanese regulatory agency for the company’s first oncology drug. 

Since retiring from Eisai in 2011, she has worked as a full-time statistical consultant to various pharmaceutical companies including Novartis, Sanofi-Aventis/Genzyme, and Astra Zeneca. 

   


„Ferenc Molnar: His life and works”
 by Professor Elizabeth Molnar Rajec PhD

Ferenc Molnár, born as Ferenc Neumann on January 12, 1878 into a well-to-do Jewish family. In 1896 he changed his name to Molnár in tribute to the profession of a favorite uncle who was a miller. But this onomastic “magyarization” choice was also a gesture of asserted nationalism. Despite the isolation of the Hungarian language, Ferenc Molnár achieved the greatest international fame as a prolific writer. Among many other works he wrote 42 exhilarating stage plays (best known is “Liliom”, 11 novels, most read is “The boys of Pál Street”) and more than 70 films are connected to his name. The rise of Nazism impelled the 62-year-old writer’s 1940 emigration to the United States, where he lived for 12 years at the Plaza Hotel in New York City. He died of stomach cancer at Mount Sinai Hospital in 1952.

About the Speaker

Elizabeth Molnár Rajec was born in Bratislava (Pozsony), was deported as Hungarian minority to Hungary in 1947. During the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 escaped to the West, lives in New York City since 1957. She has degrees from Columbia (BS) and Rutgers Universities (MLS) and received her PhD from the City University of New York in 1974. She was an academic librarian, a professor, a Fulbright and IREX research scholar, retired as Professor Emerita in 1996. She published extensively on Ferenc Molnár, on literary onomastics and on Franz Kafka. As a devoted PEN member she traveled a lot and widely exhibited in Europe and in the United States her kaleidoscopic photomontage creations.    

„Dawkins’ Dilemmas: Trouble for the World’’s Most Famous Atheist?”
 by David Seiple M.T. S, Ph.D. ”

David Seiple received his BA from The College of Wooster, his Masters in Theological Studies (Theology and New Testament) from Drew University Theological School, and his PhD (Philosophy) from Columbia University.  He has taught courses in philosophy, religion, and critical thinking in colleges in the New York area, including New York University, Drew University, Trinity School, and New York Institute of Technology.  He currently teaches courses in Philosophy and Critical Thinking in the City University of New York.

His publications include articles in The Encyclopedia of Aesthetics, Critical Texts, Union Seminary Quarterly Review, Review of Biblical Literature, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Contemporary Pragmatism and The Dictionary of Literary Biography. He is co-editor (with Casey Haskins) of Dewey Reconfigured (SUNY Press), and co-editor (with Frederick Weidmann) of Enigmas and Powers: Engaging the Work of Walter Wink for the Classroom, Church, and World (Wipf and Stock).  His latest publications are “The Spirit of Arthur Danto” in vol 33 of The Library of Living Philosophers (Open Court, 2013) and “Faith for Faithful Disbelievers: Christopher Morse as Systematic Theologian” (Union Seminary Quarterly Review, 65, 1 & 2).

 

He has served as Chair of the Commission on Ecumenism and Interfaith Relations for the New York Conference of the United Church of Christ, and is a member of Broadway United Church of Christ (NYC).

„„50 years of graph theory: the networks by which we are all connected”
 by Professor László Lovász ”

László Lovász (born March 9, 1948) is a Hungarian mathematician, best known for his work in combinatorics, for which he was awarded the Wolf Prize and the Knuth Prize in 1999, and the Kyoto Prize in 2010. He is the current president of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

 In high school, Lovász won gold medals at the International Mathematical Olympiad (in 1964, 1965, 1966 with two special prizes).

 Lovász received his Candidate of Sciences (C.Sc.) degree in 1970 at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. His advisor was Tibor Gallai.

 Until 1975, Lovász worked at Eötvös Loránd University, between 1975–1982, he led the Department of Geometry at the University of Szeged. In 1982, he returned to the Eötvös University, where he created the Department of Computer Science. The former and current scientists of the department include György Elekes, András Frank, József Beck, Éva Tardos, András Hajnal, Lajos Pósa, Miklós Simonovits, Tamás Szőnyi.

 Lovász was a professor at Yale University during the 1990s and was a collaborative member of the Microsoft Research Center until 2006. He returned to Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, where he was the director of the Mathematical Institute (2006–2011).

 He served as president of the International Mathematical Union between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2010.

 In 2014 he was elected the President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA).

 Lovász wrote 6 papers with Paul Erdős, a highly productive mathematician, which earned Lovász an Erdős number of one.

 

„„Neural mechanisms for discovering casual structure in traumatic environments”
 by Tamás Madarász ”

Cellist Tamás Madarász is a graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge, the Robert-Schumann Academy in Düsseldorf and the École Normale de Musique and Conservatoire Superieur in Paris. As a soloist, recitalist and chamber musician he has played throughout Europe, and besides major musical centers such as London, Paris, Cologne, Budapest or New York, his concerts have taken him to countries as far and wide as Israel, Singapore or New-Zealand.
Born in 1981, in Budapest he began his musical studies at the age of eight. Four years later he won first prize at the Budapest Cello Competition, and was consequently invited to such major venues as the Great Hall of the Liszt Academy or the Óbuda Festival Centre, where his performance was also transmitted live on National Radio. Further competition victories followed in England, where he spent a year as an international scholar at Eton College, and upon his return to Hungary at the National Chamber Music Competition and Festival where he was awarded First Prize and the Audience Prize.  
Winner of a full scholarship from Cambridge University he studied mathematics at Trinity College between 1999 and 2002. After graduating he attended the master classes of ‘cellist and conductor Johannes Goritzki in Germany, where he received his Performance Masters with distinction in the summer of 2006. From 2006 to 2008 he was a participant in the ‘perfectionement’ course for soloists at the École Normale de Musique in Paris, generously sponsored by the French government and the Île-de-France council.
In 2009 he moved to the United States, where he now resides in New York City as a MacCracken fellow at NYU, working on his PhD thesis. Since moving to the city he has performed at venues as diverse as Carnegie Hall, Steinway Hall, the Bell House, Bowery electric, Poisson Rouge, or the floating concert hall the Barge, but also at countless downtown bars and clubs, playing a diverse and ever-changing repertoire from classical solo-and chamber recitals to country rock.
He is a regular guest of prestigious international festivals, such as the Budapest Spring Festival, the Jewish Summer Festival, the Schleswig Holstein Music Festival, the Ticino Musica Festival in Switzerland or the Fête de la Musique in Paris.

Music Program:

J. S. Bach: Preludim in C major, BWV 10009
Cassado: Preludio-Fantasia
Kodály: Adagio, from the Sonata for Cello, op. 8
Ligeti: Sonata for Cello Solo,  I. Dialogo, II. Capriccio

 

 

„Antibiotic resistant bacteria in New York,
 origin of a resistance gene and spread of resistant clones of MRSA”

BIOSKETCH

Alexander Tomasz a native of Hungary arrived to the United States in January 1957 as one of the large group of Hungarians who left the country in that year.  After a short apprenticeship at the Sloan Kettering Institute for Cancer Research, he enrolled in Columbia University where he earned a Ph.D. in biochemistry.  After a postdoctoral fellowship in Rollin Hotchkiss’s laboratory, he rose in rank to Professor at the Rockefeller University where he is currently Head of the Laboratory of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases and was awarded an Endowed Chair in 1998.
Dr. Tomasz was the founder and Chairman of a Gordon Research conference on Bacterial Cell Surfaces; has been Chairman of the Board of Scientific Counsellors, NIAID and the Max Planck Institut fur Molekulare Genetik, Berlin, Germany.  He was recipient of the Hoechst Roussel Award in Chemotherapy and the Selman Waksman Award in Microbiology.  He has been a member of the Task Force on Impacts of Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria, Congress of the United States, and the Advisory Board of WHO on Bacteria resistant to Antimicrobial Agents, Geneva, Switzerland. 
The Tomasz Lab, a group with a strong international flavor, has been making numerous contributions to microbiology, genetics and biochemistry (over 426 publications), particularly in the case of two human pathogens, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus, both of which acquired resistance to multiple antibacterial agents.  
In his presentation entitled “Antibiotic resistant bacteria in New York - origin of a resistance gene and spread of resistant clones of  MRSA,” Dr. Tomasz is planning to provide an update on his studies on antibiotic resistant S. aureus (MRSA) clones in hospitals and community health centers in New York and describe current thoughts concerning the evolutionary origin of an antibiotic resistance gene.

Population decline: Problems and countermeasures

 

Presentation on 9 December 2014 by Paul Demeny (Demeny Pal Gyorgy)

Distinguished Scholar of the Populat Council,

External Member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Abstract

In the post-World War II decades the central international demographic issue was the extraordinarily rapid rate of population growth in the so-called third world. In the past seventy years the wide differential between rich and less developed countries in terms of changing population size resulting from markedly different patterns of the transition from relatively high fertility and high mortality to low fertility and low mortality had far-reaching economic, social, and geopolitical consequences. Rapid population growth in the LDCs imposed added economic burdens on the latter group’s development and generated national and international programs seeking to moderate the resulting imbalance between resources and population size. Nevertheless, the population growth differential has dramatically reshaped the world’s demographic map, greatly diminishing the population share of the rich countries within the global total. In the most recent decades another, but still not adequately appreciated and dealt with population issue has emerged: that of very low levels of fertility in the advanced countries, and sporadically also outside that group: fertility levels that imply current or impending population decline in the affected countries. Today every single country in Europe experience sub-replacement-level reproduction, signaled by an average total fertility rate short of, in many countries often by a wide margin, the roughly 2.1 children per woman necessary for the long-run maintenance of population size. An ominous implication of this unprecedented demographic pattern is not only, and not primarily, a diminished population size but the rapid aging of the population structure, resulting in a growing imbalance between the size of the potential labor force-age population and that of those past retirement age. The presentation outlines the broad quantitative aspects of the contemporary global demographic situation and its determinants, considers what this implies for future population change and for shifts in the relative sizes of countries and groups of countries, and deals with the deficiencies of public policy responses low fertility countries thus far have deployed, using the familiar tools of modern welfare states, in trying  to remedy or at least attenuate the resulting problems as seen from a national point of view. Application of these measures have proven remarkably ineffective. Issues to be examined seek answers to a number of key questions. Might heavier application of the “Swedish-style” pro-fertility policy work? What are the impediments for applying heavier doses of the recipe? Is there a compelling case for a search for approaches beyond the conventional repertory?  The answer is affirmative, but individual freedom of choice (including the choice of childlessness or of a single child) must be preserved; exhortative political pressures on individuals and attempts at state-managed cultural engineering must be avoided; material incentives must be ethically and socially justified; and measures should remain rational and viable even if the need for them qua population policy tools would be vitiated by emerging favorable trends in fertility. I outline two radically innovative policy changes that both satisfy these criteria and promise a new level of effectiveness in raising fertility.

Biographical note

from Professor Paul George Demeny (Demeny Pal Gyorgy)

I was born in Nyiregyhaza, Hungary, in 1932. My middle schools were the Piarist gymnasium in Debrecen and, after the school’s demise by nationalization, the Debrecen Collegium of the Reformed Church, where I obtained my baccalaureate in 1951. I received a diploma from the University of Economics in Budapest in 1955, following which I worked in the Central Statistical Office under the tutelage of the eminent Hungarian demographer, Louis Thirring. In 1957 I entered the Institut Universitaire des Hautes Etudes Internationales in Geneva, Switzerland, and then, having received a US fellowship, continued my graduate studies in economics at Princeton University. I received there my Ph. D. in economics in 1961 and also became an American citizen. My first American work place was Princeton University as assistant professor of economics and associate at the Office of Population Research. My work career continued at the University of Michigan where, after a semester as visiting professor of demography at the University of California, Berkeley, I achieved the rank of full professor of economics in 1969. This was followed by my accepting an invitation from the University of Hawaii to continue there as professor of economics and where I also could establish a sizeable new research unit, the East-West Population Institute, of which I was director, specializing in population research focused on the Asia-Pacific region. In 1973, on the invitation of the Population Council, a private institution founded by John D. Rockefeller the 3rd, I moved to New York as the Council`s vice president.  Until my retirement in 2013 as Distinguished Scholar I worked at the Population Council where I also founded the quarterly Population and Development Review. This journal, which I edited for 38 years, soon became the leading organ of its scientific field. My academic work, in books and specialized studies focused on analyses of population dynamics and on issues of population policy: on these themes I also gave lectures and presentations in over 30 countries worldwide. In 1986 I was elected as the third non-American born president of the Population Association of America. In 2001 I became External Member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. In 2003 I was honored by the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population as its Laureate and also received the Olivia Nordberg Schieffelin Award for Excellence in Writing and Editing in the Population Sciences. Since my retirement some of my professional activities have continued. I gave lectures at Oxford University, and earlier this year an invited special lecture at the conference of the European Association for Population Studies held in Budapest, and in October 2014 at the session of the European Environment and Sustainable Development Councils (EEAC), held in the Hungarian Parliament, as a keynote speaker.

Prof. Dezső Horváth

MTA Wigner Research Centre for Physics, Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Budapest, Hungary

Dezso Horvath received his MSc in Physics at the Eotvos Lorand University of Budapest in 1970. He started his studies in experimental particle ohysics at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (Dubna, Russia) and later worked at particle accelerators of the Leningrad Institute of Nuclear Research, of TRIUMF (Vancover, Canada), Brookhaven National Laboratory (USA), of the Paul Scherrer Institute (Switzerland) and at various machines od CERN. He organised common Budapest-Debrecen research teams for CERN experiments: to study the matter-antimatter symmetry with low energy antiprotons, and search for new phenomena, Higgs-bosons and supersymmetric particles at the Larga Electron-Positron (LEP) collider and at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). He has more than 700 publications registered in the InSpire data base of particle phyisics with above 37000 citations; his Hirsch index is 81. He was until 2012 the head of the High Energy Physics Department of the Wigner Research in Debrecen, at present he is a Professor Emeritus. He coordinates the work of Hungarian CMS group at LHC and teaches particle physics at the Univesity of Debrecen. He gives invited plenary talks at international conferences and also popular education lectures for general audiences. For his scientific accompishments he received in 2012 the Szechenyi Prize of Hungary. At present he is the charman of the Particle Pgysics Committee of teh Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

BIG BANG AND MICROCOSM: WHERE DID THE ANTIMATTER GO?

The symmetry of particles and antiparticles is one of the most fundamental laws of particle physics and it is very well established both theoretocally and experimentally. However, we do not see antimatter galaxies in the cosmos although after Big Bang, at the birth of the Universe matter and antimatter should have been created in exactly equal quantities. Thus it remains one of the great mysteries of the microworld, what caused that tiny little prevalence of matter against antimatter which resulted in our visible Universe.

There are many attempts to clarify question and I shall show a few of them: experiments at the antimatter factory of CERN and AMS2 experiments in space. At the end of my talk I shall overview the real, possible and impossible partial applications of antimatter from medical diagnosis through dream to fantasy.

Béla Lipták

Béla Lipták was born in 1936 in Hungary. As a Technical University student, participated in the revolution against the Soviet occupation, escaped and entered the United States as a refugee in 1956. In 1959 he received an engineering degree from Stevens Institute of Technology, in 1962 a masters degree from CCNY and later did graduate work at Pratt Institute. In 1960, he became the Chief Instrument Engineer of Crawford and Russell, where he led the automation of dozens of industrial plants for over more than a decade. In 1969 he published the multi-volume Instrument and ‘Automation Engineers’ Handbook, which today is in its 5th edition. In 1975 he received his professional engineering license and founded his consulting firm, Béla Lipták Associates PC, which provides design and consulting services in the fields of automation and industrial safety. Over the years he lectured on automation at many universities around the world, including Yale University, where he thought automation as an adjunct professor in 1987. His over 50+ years of professional experience included the automation of several dozen industrial plants, the publication of over 300 technical articles (www.controlglobal.com/voices/liptak.html) and of over 20 books, all dealing with the various aspects of automation, safety and energy technology. (http://a9.com/bela%20liptak?c=1&src=amz). In 1973 he was elected an ISA (International Society of Automation) fellow, in 1995 received the Technical Achievement Award from ISA and in 2001 “Control Hall of Fame” award. He was the keynote speaker at the 2002 and the 2011 ISA conventions and in 2012 received the “Lifetime Achievement Award” from the International Society of Automation.

„Paks and the Hungarian Energy Future”

The lecture will focus on two issues: 1) How to make Paks safe? and 2) How to make Hungary less dependent on Russian fuels? Today Russia supplies 86% of the imported oil and gas and 100% of the uranium.The approximately 60 minute lecture will be based on the research findings of the following two books:

The lecture will start with a general description of the state-of-the art of the nuclear power industry and will describe those causes of the 3-Milse Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima accidents. Next, it will describe the existing and planned new units at Paks, in terms of their improvements relative to the Chernobyl design and their uncorrected safety problems, followed by a discussion of the economics of the expansion.

Dr. Zoltan Takacs

Dr. Zoltan Takacs is a pharmacologist specializing in drug discovery from animal venoms. He is the founder and president of the World Toxin Bank. He is a co-inventor of the designer toxin technology, a toxin-genomics drug discovery platform developed at the University of Chicago, and holds patent rights to scorpion toxin-derived drug leads for autoimmune diseases. Passionate about snakes and exploration since childhood, Zoltan has traveled to 140 countries, is an aircraft pilot, scuba diver, and wildlife photographer. He holds a Ph.D. from Columbia University, was a researcher at Rockefeller University and Yale University before joining as a faculty at the University of Chicago. He served as an Earth Institute Fellow at Columbia University and he is a National Geographic Society Emerging Explorer. Zoltan's work has been featured in the National Geographic Magazine, on the National Geographic Channel, BBC, ABC, PBS/NOVA, Rai3, and RTL.

„The Deadliest Lifesavers
From the rain forest to the patient’s heart”

Venoms of the Earth's deadliest animals, from the Sahara to the Pacific, from the Amazon to the Himalayas are the source of medicine's top life saving medications. They treat heart attack, heart failure, diabetes and other diseases. Join scientist and explorer Dr. Zoltan Takacs on real-life adventures into the most remote frontiers of the world in search of venoms, then watch how those venoms are turned into future leads for medicine with cutting-edge genomics. Be ready to ride camels, sleep in hammocks, and team up with exotic tribes. We'll tackle pirates and malaria, face elephants and crocodiles ― the only way of getting hold of nature's million-years-old blueprints for medicine.

Prof. Elizabeth Molnar Rajec, PhD

Elizabeth Molnar Rajec was born in Bratislava (Pozsony), was deported as Hungarian minority to Hungary in 1947. During the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 escaped to the West, lives in New York City since 1957. She has degrees from Columbia (BS) and Rutgers Universities (MLS) and received her PHD from the City University of New York in 1974 with a dissertation on Franz Kafka. She was an academic librarian, a professor, a Fulbright scholar, retired as Professor Emerita in 1996. At present she is the elected President of the Kafka Society of America. She published extensively on Franz Kafka, on Ferenc Molnar and on literary onomastics. As a devoted PEN member she traveled a lot and widely exhibited her kaleidoscopic photomontage creations. 

„Kafka and Asbestos”

Franz Kafka was born in Prague in 1883, contracted tuberculosis and died of cancer of the larynx at age 41 in a sanatorium in Kierling-Klosterneuburg near Vienna in 1924. His exposure to asbestos dust is traceable from 1911 to 1917 to his participation in the family owned factory registered as "Die Ersten Prager Asbestwerke." In 1917 Kafka experienced two pulmonary hemorrhages, apical tuberculosis later advanced infiltration of lungs was diagnosed. His health seriously deteriorated. In a sanatorium in the High Tatra Mountans he met the Hungarian Robert Klopstock, who died as a noted thoracic surgeon in New York City in 1972.To examine Kafka's life, his writings and the consequences of his exposure to asbestos dust is indispensable.    

Prof. Charles R. Legéndy, PhD

DR. CHARLES LEGENDY began his university education at the Budapesti Muszaki Egyetem in 1955 then went to Princeton University (BSE, electrical engineering, 1959) and Cornell University (PhD, physics, 1964).  He published his first papers in solid state physics, where he is known as the co-discoverer of the magneto-plasma phenomenon known as “helicon waves,” which is now universally used when efficient plasma generation is required, as is, importantly, in the manufacture of computer chips.  Subsequently Dr. Legéndy turned his attention to the theory of data processing in the brain, the subject of this lecture.  Over the years, Dr. Legéndy was involved in a number of projects in experimental brain research (electrophysiology), aerospace engineering, and computers.  His book, Circuits in the Brain, was published by Springer (2009). 

 

Prof Mihály Mezei,

Curriculum vitae

Dr. Mezei received his University Diploma and PhD in chemistry from the Eotvos Lorand University.

He did postdoctoral work at NYU and at Hunter College of the CUNY and also taught at Hunter College, Borough of Manhattan Community College and at Seton Hall University.

He is currently a member of the faculty of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in the Department of Structural and Chemical Biology. His major research interest is the development of novel computer simulation methodologies and the analysis of simulation results. In addition, He is involved in a number of collaborative projects, supported by NIH, for the modeling of interactions of small molecules with proteins aiming at the development of drug leads. These works led to more than 150 publications.

He served on the scientific advisory boards of biotechnology startups. He also developed software for use in various aspects of molecular simulations that are distributed from the website of his laboratory: http://inka.mssm.edu/~mezei.

„Adventures in Biophysics”

The talk will discuss some of the experimental and theoretical approaches used to determine and understand the structure and function of biological molecules. The ideas behind the mayor experimental methods for the determination of molecular structure will be discussed, followed by the presentation of theoretical and computational techniques used to understand molecular structure and function. Particular attention will be paid to the so-called Monte Carlo methods.  

 

Imre Bartos, PhD is an astrophysicist at Columbia University. After graduating from Eӧtvӧs University in Budapest, Hungary, he received his doctorate from Columbia University, where he subsequently was awarded a fellowship to continue his work as faculty His primary research interest is black holes and neutron stars, and their role in cataclysmic cosmic events in which the flow of matter creates ripples in the very fabric of space-time. He also works on the biological applications of optics, ranging from genetics to fighting malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. He has been recognized as one of the top 30 under 30 Rising Stars of Science by Forbes Magazine in 2012. Bartos’ work in astrophysics mainly focuses on gravitational radiation in the context of multimessenger astrophysics. He studies the gravitational collapse of massive stars that form black holes after spectacular explosions forming supernovae and gamma-ray bursts, as well as the coalescence of black hole and neutron stars. He is a member of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, which aspires to directly detect gravitational waves for the first time in human history, and to make the first direct observation of black holes. Bartos is also interested in using his scientific expertise for humanitarian causes. He is working on developing a light barrier that could provide protection to humans by repelling mosquitoes, potentially contributing to the mitigation of malaria, yellow fever and other diseases that kill millions every year. The Columbia research team he is a member of was the recipient of Grand Challenges Explorations grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to fight malaria by creating invisible light barriers that keep the insects away from humans. In addition, Bartos is involved in developing methods to study animal locomotion to enable the large-scale analysis of the behavioral effects of genetic traits. His research in the Columbia BioOptics group is conducted in collaboration with Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics at Columbia. This research could advance research and treatment of human diseases of genetic origin, such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s disease. Bartos was the recipient of the Allan M. Sachs Teaching Award, and was a finalist in Columbia’s Presidential Teaching Award. He and his research were featured in major American, Hungarian and other journals and magazines. He is member of the Columbia Experimental Gravity (GECo) group and the Columbia BioOptics group. He is an author or co-author of more than 60 peer-reviewed articles.

Abstract

„Black Holes, and What We Can Learn from Them without Falling in"

Breakthroughs in our understanding of the physical world often come from the exploration of Nature at its extremes. In many cases these explorations lead us far away from Earth, into the cosmos. From the earliest times and greatest distances, to the strongest forces and highest energies, astronomical observations helped us reach depths unachievable on Earth. Black holes are one of the most mysterious creatures of the cosmos. They are barely observable from afar, but show peculiar behavior once something or someone is nearby. We have surprisingly little information about them (none has been directly observed so far!), and we seem to have no mechanism at our disposal, even in principle, to peek into their inner workings. Beyond being distant, enigmatic objects, black holes are also one of the best tools to examine extreme phenomena and expand our horizon of fundamental physics and astronomy. I will present black holes from this, somewhat unusual, perspective: their role in helping us better understand Nature.

Tarján Gábor néprajztudós, kultúrantropológus „Magyarságismeret” címmel megjelent könyvét bemutató előadására

Népünk és kultúrájának ismerete alapvető fontosságú minden nemzedék tudásának megalapozásában. Az elmúlt időszakok oktatáspolitikája mégsem foglalkozott a kérdéssel jelentőségéhez mérten. Sokszor ezért azt tapasztalhatjuk, hogy a pedagógusképző intézményekben végzettek jelentős része egyáltalán nem kapott semmilyen szakmai felkészítést a népi hagyományokról, a magyarságtudat kialakításának módjairól. Ez különösen a közoktatás alsóbb szintjein – az óvó- és tanítóképző intézetekben tartható komolyabb hiányosságnak. Szükség van tehát egy olyan összefoglaló munkára, amely a Népismeret, Hagyományismeret és a Néprajz általános kérdéseivel foglalkozik és segítséget nyújt a pedagógiai munkához is. Ezt a missziót vállalja Tarján Gábor új könyve, amely egyúttal a szerző közel négy évtizedes néprajzi kutatómunkájának és felsőoktatásban szerzett tapasztalatait hordozza. A Magyarságismeret oktatása nem jelent „néprajztanárképzést”, hanem egy új diszciplínát, amely magában hordoz néprajzi ismereteket is. A Magyarságismeret népismereti, önismereti, identitáserősítő társadalmi-kulturális ismerettár, amely aktivitást keltő módszerekkel érzelmileg is megerősítheti az egészséges hazafiságot, a magyarsághoz tartozást. A Magyarságismeret a határon belüli és kívüli magyarság szociológiai, antropológiai és néprajzi jellegzetességeit ismerteti, segítségével teljesebb és reálisabb képet nyerhetünk népünk etnikai és kulturális sajátosságairól. Talán nem túlzás azt remélni, hogy egy ilyen könyvre a pedagógus társadalmon kívül sok magyarul érző és gondolkodó embernek szüksége lehet.

 

 

The unreasonable success of finance

Talk at the New York Hungarian Scholar Association by Gabor Laszlo

Gabor Laszlo is currently a director at Citigroup, head of Global Model Analytics in Finance.  Prior to this appointment he held various positions in the financial sector in New York, Middle East, and the Netherlands.  Before his financial career that started in 1996, he worked in geophysical and nuclear research in Canada, UK, Saudi Arabia, and Austria.  Gabor is a graduate of the Technical University of Budapest (Electrical Engineering), and the University of Calgary (Mathematics).  He is also a part time lecturer in the Master of Quantitative Finance program of Rutgers Business School. 

Synopsis

Finance, both as an economic pursuit and an economic enterprise, is a huge and rich area of the human experience.  Most likely only religion surpasses it as the most significant determinant of human behavior, although for many finance is the new religion for all practical purposes.  Finance is a reflection on the perception of reality of mankind, its technological advancement and its flickery aspirations.  The practice of finance is today a collective agreement of the economic elite, who have to hire a highly specialized class of experts who can run the financial markets and maintain their integrity.  Only advanced societies can participate in finance because it presupposes the legal and technological basis that must exist before financial markets can take off and flourish.  Critics of religion, Christianity in particular, often describe religion as the opiate of the masses, a means of social control, and a set of truth claims that are poorly supported by factual data.  Finance comfortably fits these pronouncements. 

With the democratization of vice finance has become more and more corrupt.  Money amplifies and facilitates the tendencies of exploiting the week members of societies by the powerful ones.  Money completely changes the perception of virtue and vice: virtue will seem to be vice, and vice virtue.  In money economy in a materialistic society everything will eventually be measured by money.  Money pits against the poor and the rich, and introduces new forms of alienation in society such as the debtor and the creditor.  Financial crises have a venerable history, a true history of follies.  These are clear manifestations of collective madness. 

Finance, as practice, is old, as an academic field is very young.  Every age defines, and re-defines finance, therefore a survey of finance is necessarily an audit of how we live today.  (The allusion to Trollope’s  novel The way we live now (1875) is intentional.)  While we can agree that finance is the bane of our epoch, we shouldn’t overlook the truly genuine advances of finance that have the potential of managing the ruinous effects of economic misfortune and establishing a more equitable society.  Finance is a fascinating endeavor, and an intellectually satisfying study that need not be oversold.  Finance is here to stay, better get a grasp of it.

The presentation attempts to explore the current landscape of finance, its false promises, realistic roles and aims, and the principles and foundation of modern quantitative finance. 

 

 

The Martin's Daughter - A Memoir - Marina von Neumann Whitman

Sunday, April 21, 2013
4:00 pm to 8.00 pm

Marina von Neumann Whitman (born March 6, 1935) is an American economist. She is a Professor of Business Administration and Public Policy at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business as well as The Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy. She is also a member of the board of directors at the Professor Whitman was educated at Radcliffe CollegeColumbia University. During 1973/74, she served on Richard Nixon's Council of Economic Advisers. She was a director at the Council on Foreign Relations between 1977 and 1987

One of the five Hungarian scientific geniuses dubbed "the Martians" by their colleagues; John von Neumann is often hailed as the greatest mathematician of the twentieth century and even as the greatest scientist after Einstein. He was a key figure in the Manhattan Project; the inventor of game theory; the pioneer developer of the modern stored-program electronic computer; and an adviser to the top echelons of the American military establishment. In The Martian's Daughter , Marina von Neumann Whitman reveals intimate details about the famed scientist and explores how the cosmopolitan environment in which she was immersed, the demanding expectations of her parents, and her own struggles to emerge from the shadow of a larger-than-life parent shaped her life and work.
Unfortunately, von Neumann did not live to see his daughter rise to become the first or highest-ranking woman in a variety of arenas. Whitman became a noted academic during the 1960s and '70s, casting her teaching and writing in the framework of globalization before the word had been invented; became the first woman ever to serve on the President's Council of Economic Advisers and participated actively in U.S. efforts to reshape the international monetary and financial system during the early 1970s; pioneered the role of women on the boards of leading multinational corporations; and became the highest-ranking female executive in the American auto industry in the 1980s. In her memoir, Whitman quotes from personal letters from her father and describes her interactions with such figures as Roger Smith of GM and President Nixon. She also details the difficulties she encountered as an early entrant into a world dominated by men and how she overcame the obstacles to, in her words, "have it all."
"Marina Whitman may be the daughter of a Martian but she is an exemplar of the best of America. In the academic world, in public service, in high corporate positions, she pushed the frontiers of female participation and did so by unambiguously demonstrating both competence and character. The book is a fascinating saga of an exceptionally talented family, initially focused on a mathematic genius but ultimately growing in diversity and influence."
—Paul Volcker, formerly Chairman of the Federal Reserve (1979-1987)
"How did a young Hungarian immigrant and his daughter both become leading advisors to Presidents of the United States? This richly detailed memoir not only illuminates Marina von Neumann Whitman's ground-breaking life, but sheds long-awaited new light on her father, bringing us as close as we may ever get to the autobiography that John von Neumann never had the chance to write."
—George Dyson, author of Darwin Among the Machines, Project Orion, and Turing's Cathedral
"A fast-paced, readable, and deeply educational account of how the daughter of a genius made her own brilliant way as a heavily involved top economist and an equally involved wife and mother."
—George P. Shultz, The Hoover Institution, formerly U.S. Secretary of State (1982-1989)
"Marina Whitman draws you into her life with lively anecdotes. She engagingly describes coping with a famous father, the challenges of a young mother with a high level job in the Nixon White House, and combining executive responsibilities at General Motors with a strong marriage and a successful academic career. A fast-paced enjoyable read!"
—Alice M. Rivlin, The Brookings Institution


"Marina Whitman had extraordinary parents who loved her, but also wanted her to choose certain paths. But Marina was extraordinary too and chose her own way. This book charts the progress for a woman who has done it all---with grace and ability. But under all the famous names, fascinating events and newsworthy achievements emerges the story of a real human being who makes those tough choices and has intelligence and integrity as her watchwords. What a read!"
—Lynn Martin, formerly U.S. Secretary of Labor (1991-1993)

My Lifetime Experience and Love of Medical Research: An Unimaginable Voyage - by Prof. Karl Verebey

Tuesday, March 19, 2013 6:30 pm to 8.30 pm

About Karl Verebey

Professor Karl Verebey graduate of Cornell University Medical Collage, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, SUNY, Downstate Medical School, Appointed to Chief Toxicologist for the City of New York by the Health Commissioner. Dr. Verebey spent researching drugs of abbuse for 15 years at NY State Subszance Abbuse Testing and Research Laboratory publishing over 100 scientific reports. Leter became director of Psychiatric Diagnostic Laboratories of America, followed by President and Director of Leadtech Corporation. He is currently Director of Ammon Analytical Laboratory. Documents of his election into the Hunter Collage Hall of Fame, state, "Dr. Vereby has made notable contributions to the wolrd of science by his work on opiates, endorphins, narcotic antagonists, and the psychopharmacology of cocain". He is "recognized as one of the world's principal scientists in research into drug abuse".
In his Dr. Vereby playd 1st division waterpolo in Hungary and was champion of the USA in 1959 and 1961 paying for the New York Athletic Club

Translational molecular neuron-imaging by Prof. Balázs Gulyás

Program
Translational molecular neuroimaging Balázs Gulyás Psychiatry Section, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden The human genome contains approximately 23.000 genes determining structural and/or functional proteins. According to recent estimates, ~4.000 of them can be targeted at ~12.000 various target sites for therapeutic or diagnostic purposes. Using advanced molecular imaging techniques and molecular imaging biomarkers, molecular targets, including disease biomarkers and/or disease modifiers, can be visualized in vivo. Complemented with “humanized” animal disease models, the molecular imaging approach has significant benefits in therapeutic drug and diagnostic biomarker development. The increasing social burden of various neurodegenerative diseases, including MCI (mild cognitive impairment), Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and Huntington’s disease, puts a special emphasis on the use of molecular imaging in basic and clinical neuroscience research. The development of novel diagnostic imaging biomarkers for neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration is now-a-days in the forefront of translational molecular neuroimaging research. Although the presence and progression of both neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory processes can be visualized and quantitatively assessed by various ways, the early diagnosis of neurodegenerative diseases is hampered by the lack dedicated diagnostic markers that can label alterations in the ailing brain’s biochemical processes in a way that by using molecular imaging techniques the disease can be recognised distinctively in its early phase with high sensitivity and specificity. The lecture will give an outline of the recent status of translational molecular neuroimaging, with special regard to the development of molecular imaging biomarkers for neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration, including Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and some mental disorders.

About Balázs Gulyás
Balázs Gulyás MD, BA, MA, PhD was born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1956. In 1981 he graduated in Medicine from the Semmelweis Medical University, Budapest. Parallel with his medical studies, he pursued studies in physics at the Roland Eötvös University, Budapest. He continued his university education at the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium, where he obtained a BA (1981) and an MA (1983) degree in Philosophy and PhD degree (1984) in Neurobiology. He received his post-doctoral training at the Department of Clinical Neurophysiology of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, and at the Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, United Kingdom. At present he is a professor of clinical neuroscience at the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. He is also affiliated, as visiting professor, with the NTU-Imperial College Lee Kong Chian Medical School in Singapore. Dr Gulyás’ recent research activity focuses on the use of translational molecular neuroimaging, with special regard to the development, testing and validation of novel molecular imaging biomarkers for neurological and psychiatric diseases, the development of novel therapeutic drugs as well as testing and profiling various “humanised” animal disease models of CNS diseases. Dr Gulyás has published 9 books, over 30 book chapters and more than 150 scientific papers in peer reviewed journals. He is a member of Academia Europaea, the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Royal Belgian Academy of Medicine.

 

Memorial conference on the occasion of 100th birthday of
JANOS SZENTAGOTHAI - 2012 November 12. 4:00-8:00 PM

Program
Opening remarks: Karoly Dan, Ambassador, Consul General of Hungary Welcoming remarks: Sylvester E. Vizi, Past-President, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (HAS) Welcoming remarks: Laszlo Zaborszky Pedro and Tauba Pasik (NY): Reminiscing about John Szentagothai Peter Petrusz (Chapel Hill, NC): Szentagothai, Chair of the Anatomy in Pecs (1946-1963) Miklos Rethelyi (Former Minister in the Second Cabinet of Viktor Orbán): The Budapest Years (1963-1994): Chairman of the Anatomy, President of HAS, Member of the Parliament Coffee break Andras Pellionisz (Sunyvale, CA): The Cerebellum as a Neuronal Machine Peter Erdi (Kalamazoo, MI): Reconciling the irreconcilable: Self-organization vs Downward causation Ivan Bodis-Wollner (NY): Szentagothai, Reflexology and Pre-emptive Perception Sarolta Viola (Wien): The man in the blue dungarees- Memories of the grandfather Janos Rethelyi (San Diego): An imaginary journey with my grandfather across continents Sylvester E. Vizi (Budapest): Closing remarks

About JANOS SZENTAGOTHAI
Professor and Chair, Department of Anatomy, Semmelweis University Medical School, Budapest (1963-1977); President, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1977-1985); President, European Neuroscience Association (1976-1978); Member American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Finnish Academy, Leopoldina, Pontifical Academy, National Academy of Sciences, USA, Royal Belgian Academy of Medicine, Royal Norwegian Academy, Royal Society (London), Royal Swedish Academy

 

Program of the Szemerédi Fest
- 2012 November 6.


Laudations 7:00 Professor Van Vu (Yale University): Endre Szemerédi and Additive Combinatorics Van Vu is the Percy Smith professor of Mathematics at Yale University. He received his bachelor at Eötvös Lóránd University (Budapest, 1994) and his PhD at Yale (1998) under the direction of László Lovász. He was Endre's colleague at Rutgers for several years before moving to Yale in 2011. Professor Vu is the recipient of the Sloan fellowship (2002) by the Sloan Foundation, the Pólya Prize (2008) by the Society of Industrial and Applied Mathematics, and the Fulkerson Prize (2012) by the American Mathematics Society and Mathematical Optimization Society. 7:15 Professor Mario Szegedy (Rutgers University): The Impact of Endre Szemerédi 's Works on the Theory of Computing Mario Szegedy is a theoretical computer scientist at Rutgers University. After studying at Eötvös Lóránd University, he earned his PhD from the University of Chicago. His works on probabilistically checkable proofs won him the Gödel price in 2001. He was awarded another Gödel prize in 2005 for his investigations of space complexity for streamed data. More recently he was a Miller Fellow at UC Berkeley, where he conducted research in the area of quantum computing. 7:30 Keynote Lecture Professor Endre Szemerédi: Personal reminiscences or the Road to my encounter with the King of Norway, with a video presentation of the Award Ceremony 7:45 - 8:00 Q&A 8:00 – 9:00 Reception

 

"How Everything is Connected to Everything Else & the Science of Social Network Analysis"
Papp Klára előadása előadása - 2012 Május 3.

Abstract
Each one of us is part of a social network, from which no one is left out. Though we do not know everyone on the globe or even in our community, each person is connected to every other person through links with people.   Similarly, there is a path linking any two neurons in the brain, any two companies in the world.  Likewise, one might study the spread of infections or the dispersal of ideas on the internet through their linkages.  The interconnections between any numbers of phenomena may be studied through social network analysis, a discipline that started in the 1930s in sociology. The field of social network analysis was greatly advanced by the work of Hungarian mathematicians, most notably Paul Erdős and Alfréd Rényi who applied graph theory to the study of social networks.  This enabled the visual illustration of networks and accelerated its growth from the domain of sociology to information technology, medicine, marketing, and other diverse disciplines.  Hungarian mathematicians have made significant contributions to the science not just to its visualization, but also the popularization of the method, most notably Albert-László Barabási among others.  The roles of Hungarian mathematicians and scientists in developing this field will be highlighted during this talk.  

About the speaker
Klara Papp, PhD, is Associate Dean and Director of Student Assessment at SUNY Downstate College of Medicine.  She earned her PhD in educational psychology from State University of New York at Buffalo.  She provides expertise to medical faculty in educational testing and measurement. She recently moved to NYC from Cleveland, Ohio where she directed the Center for the Advancement of Medical Learning (CAML) at Case Western Reserve University.  On a national level, Klara served as chair of the research committee for Clerkship Directors in Internal Medicine and received its Charles H. Griffith III Educational Research Award. She has served as an accreditation reviewer for California schools and colleges, and has been a member of the NIH study section for grants in health and science education.  She applied social network analysis in illustrating relationships among scientists at Case Western Reserve University and became fascinated with its potential for identifying areas of growth and development.

 

 

"Freedom Fighters or Terrorists: the Dilemmas of Military Occupation, Collaboration, Resistance, and Retribution."
Deák István előadása - 2012 Április 5.

Abstract
István Deák attempts, in his talk, to illuminate the terrible challenges universally faced by military occupiers and the occupied. He presents three examples drawn from World War II Europe: the massacre at Oradour in France; the Via Rasella explosion followed by the Ardeatine Caves executions in Italy, and the Ujvidék/Novi Sad massacre, which was followed by a violent Titoist revenge in Hungary/Yugoslavia. Before his lecture, Istvan Deak will launch the recently published book, Risky Region. Memoirs of a Hungarian Righteous Gentile, for which he wrote the introduction. This work is the English-language translation of Jenő Thassy's highly successful World War II memoirs, originally entitled "Veszélyes vidék"(1996). A career officer in the Hungarian Royal Army during World War II, Jenő or Eugene Thassy, as well as his fellow-officer Guido Görgey, engaged in both anti-Nazi resistance activity and the saving of persecuted Jews.

About the speaker
István Deák, who is Seth Low Professor Emeritus at Columbia University, was born in Hungary; since 1956 he has been residing in New York City. He obtained his PhD degree at Columbia University in 1964. He was the Director of the University’s Institute on East Central Europe between 1968 and 1979. His publications include, Weimar Germany’s Left-wing Intellectuals: A Political History of the “Weltbühne” and Its Circle (1968); The Lawful Revolution: Louis Kossuth and the Hungarians, 1848-1849 (1979); Beyond Nationalism: A Social and Political History of the Habsburg Officer Corps, 1848-1918 (1990); Essays on Hitler’s Europe (2001), and Marina Cattaruzza and István Deák, Il processo di Norimberga tra storia e giustizia (2006). He edited and partly wrote, together with Jan T. Gross and Tony Judt, The Politics of Retribution in Europe: World War II and Its Aftermath (2000). He is a frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books and The New Republic; his current research deals with collaboration, resistance, and retribution in World War II Europe.

 

 

"DEPORTATIONS IN HUNGARY DURING THE RÁKOSI DICTATORSHIP"
Széchenyi Kinga előadása - 2012 Március 1.

Abstract
After the Soviet occupation of Hungary in 1945, in 1948 the communist takeover was complete in Hungary and the Rákosi dictatorship (1948-1956) followed. Stalin demanded faster sovietization of the satellite countries. Deportation was a form of persecution of ”class enemies” and their families. Mass deportations to forced labor camps in Hortobágy and 137 villages in Eastern Hungary took place between 1949-1953. Different forms of deportations were used with the same objective: to ruin and liquidate class enemies from the elderly to young children. After Stalin’s death in 1953 Prime Minister Imre Nagy released the deportees with certain restrictions. Surveillance and discrimination continued.

About the speaker
Kinga Széchenyi, educator, writer, and sculptor graduated from Loránd Eötvös University, Budapest in 1970. Then taught at Toldy Ferenc Secondary Grammer School, and later became a teacher trainer for Loránd Eötvös University. Translates English and American literary works and psychology publications. Researched the deportations of the Rákosi dictatorship and published a book on the topic: Stigmatized (Megbélyegzettek, Kráter Kiadó, Pomáz, 2008.) She studied sculpturing at Dési-Huber Art School, Budapest, makes plaquettes and statuettes. Her János Bolyai and Gyula Farkas plaquettes are awards for mathematicians at international conferences. Her large János Bolyai plaquette is on a memorial tablet in Marosvásárhely, Transylvania. She received the Silver Order of Merit of the Hungarian Republic for her achievements in education in 1998.

 

 

"Ervin (Erwin) Bauer, a Hungarian founder of theoretical biology, his life and tragic end in the USSR"
Miklós Müller előadása - 2012 Február 2.

Abstract
Bauer was born in Lőcse (Levoca) (then in Hungary), his brother was Béla Balázs, his first wife was Margit Kaffka, and his second wife was Stefania Szilard. He received his medical training in Budapest and Göttingen and graduated in 1914. He left Hungary in 1919 and worked in Göttingen, Prague and Berlin before moving to the USSR in 1925. In Russia he had a spectacular career. He worked in the Obukh Institute of Professional Diseases (1926-1931), was professor of Biology at the 2nd Medical College of Moscow (1930-1932), department head at the Timiryazev Biological Institute (1931-1937) and department head of the All-Union Institute of Experimental Medicine (1932-1937). He and his wife were liquidated in the great purges in 1938. Bauer made most significant contributions to biology. He developed an original theory of life and can be regarded as one of the founders of theoretical biology. After his arrest he and his works were prohibited and could not influence further development of biology. Bauer’s work is well known in Hungary and Russia, but essentially unknown elsewhere. I will discuss Bauer’s productive life that ended so tragically. I also will briefly outline the essence of his theory. Reference: Miklós Müller (2005) A martyr of science. Ervin Bauer (1890 – 1938). Hungarian Quarterly 46 (178), 123-131

About the speaker
Dr. Miklós Müller, professor emeritus, was born in Budapest in 1930. He obtained his MD from the Budapest Medical University in 1955. He was teaching and doing research in cell biology there. He moved to the USA in 1964 and joined Rockefeller University in New York where he continued his research in cell biology and parasitology. In 2005 he closed his laboratory and since then he studies the history of biology. He received a honorary doctorate from Université René Descartes (Paris V) and he is external memeber of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. He received the Knight’s Cross of the Order of Merit of Hungary for his contributions to science and support of art in Hungary.

 

 

"Advances in Neonatal Medicine in the 21st Century: Focus on Fetal and Neonatal Hemodynamics"
Istvan Seri MD, PHD, HOND előadása - 2011 December 2.

Abstract
This presentation will briefly review the recent advances in neonatology and summarize the advances in our understanding of transitional cardiovascular physiology in the fetus and the preterm and term neonate focusing on the clinical relevance of the novel findings. Application of novel technologies and the development of state-of-the-art comprehensive hemodynamic monitoring and data acquisition systems to gain better insights into tissue oxygen delivery and systemic and organ blood flow regulation during transition to extrauterine life will be discussed with a special attention to the clinical relevance of the findings. In addition, recent advances in fetal diagnostic and intervention approaches as well as the use of robotic technology to enhance delivery of clinical care to critically ill newborns in the neonatal intensive care unit will be reviewed using the experience and evidence obtained from the work of the comprehensive fetal and neonatal diagnostic and treatment center (Center for Fetal and Neonatal Medicine) at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and the Keck School of Medicine of the University of California.

About the speaker
Dr. Seri obtained his MD (1976) and PhD (1985) in Budapest, at Semmelweis University School of Medicine and the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, respectively. He completed his clinical training in pediatrics and neonatology at Semmelweis University and his basic and clinical research training in developmental physiology, and renal cellular physiology and neonatology at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden (1984-86) and at Harvard Medical School, Boston (1986-91). In 1991, Dr. Seri joined the faculty of the Program in Neonatology at Harvard Medical School. In 1994, he was recruited to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and the University of Pennsylvania where he served as the Clinical Director of Newborn Services and, in 2001, as the Associate Division Chief. Later in 2001, he moved to the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (CHLA) and the University of Southern California (USC) as Professor of Pediatrics and the Chief of the USC Division of Neonatal Medicine at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and LAC+USC Medical Center. Since his arrival at CHLA and USC, Dr. Seri has overseen the expansion of the USC Division of Neonatal Medicine and the creation of the Institute of Maternal-Fetal Health (IMFH). In 2006, Dr. Seri became the Director of the newly formed “Center of Fetal and Neonatal Medicine” at CHLA incorporating the Division of Neonatology with its academic neonatal network and the IMFH into one multidisciplinary center.

 

 

"THE RED MUD DISASTER OF KOLONTAR, HUNGARY AND LESSONS FROM THE UNITED STATES"
Andrew Voros előadása - 2011 November 4.

Abstract
Sediment and industrial byproduct management is a major disposal issue internationally. The United States alone generate 500 million tons of sediments dredged from the nation’s ports, dams and navigational channels, while an additional 150 million tons of coal combustion byproducts are collected. Various means of managing such massive volumes have been developed, including such massive impoundments as the one that was breached in Kolontar, Hungary. Accidents on that scale have occurred in US coal ash impoundments, and several innovative technologies have been devised to beneficially use these massive volumes, as well as to reinforce impoundments. This talk will touch on how a 2000 year old Roman technology and sediments from New York Harbor were used to remediate a massive environmental disaster in the US, and lessons that can be applied to the Kolontar Red Mud disaster.

About the speaker
Andrew Voros is Marine and Coastal Policy Director for veteran New York State Assistant Majority Leader Senator Owen Johnson, and is a Member of the national Sea Grant program’s New York Bight Ocean Science Council. For over a dozen years he held appointments as an Adjunct Research Scientist at Columbia University’s Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering, and Visiting Researcher at Rutgers University’s Institute for Marine and Coastal Sciences, and taught Environmental Policy at Columbia’s Center for Environmental Research and Conservation. Mr. Voros directed the bi-state marine resources Legislative Commission between the states of New York and New Jersey, and was a founder of the ongoing Integrated Ocean Observing System effort in the Mid-Atlantic Ocean. Mr. Voros worked for nearly 10 years in tropical rainforest conservation in West Africa, making extensive field collections of rainforest species for the American Museum of Natural History in New York. He has appeared as a guest on BBC’s World Service, National Public Radio, and CNN’s Larry King Live.

 

 

"Lajos Kassák and László Moholy-Nagy: Two Free Spirits"
Boreczky Elemer előadása - 2011 Június 9.

Abstract
In my lecture, I am trying to capture the thinking of two Hungarian artists, Lajos Kassák and László Moholy-Nagy, in their artwork. I suggest that their contribution to the construction of a new environment, new space and time, is comparable to the well known Hungarian “Martians” in the field of 20th century science. Both Kassák and Moholy-Nagy often considered these pieces to be experimental and playful exercises as opposed to their more serious work of teaching and organizing the community of artists and artisans in pursuit of the future. Starting with the collapse of the old world of Austria-Hungary, I briefly sketch the diverging paths of these two free spirits: the master (Kassák) and his disciple (Moholy- Nagy), one returning to Hungary and building himself daily to face hostile regimes and preserve the free spirit of destruction and construction, while the other taking flight and becoming the mastermind, “the great inspirator,” behind the Bauhaus, one of the most influential institutions of 20th century art and architecture, in exile. The lecture attempts to highlight a rare moment in history when free spirits find new means of expressing the new spirituality of the scientific, urban, industrial, technological age, the age of work and workers, in their work.

About the speaker
I am a retired lecturer of ELTE University, Budapest, staying in the U.S. on a Fulbright scholarship. In the past semester I taught two courses at the Hungarian Institute within the European Studies program of Rutgers University. I had also taught Hungarian language and European Studies at Rutgers before: in 1997-9 and in 2007-8. I taught courses on John Wyclif’s and King Sigismund’s Reformation, about the disruption of late medieval order and the rise of the idea of Europe, and on Travelogues and Utopias, about the construction of the idea of the good life in heaven and on earth by travelogues imaginary and real. As a Fulbrighter I taught a course on the Cultural Archeology of Central European Regions, on volatile nations and their cultural monuments; and on 20th Century Art and Music in Central Europe - about capturing the spirit of the age by the construction of new time and space.

These diverse fields of interest may also be explained by my somewhat irregular career. After losing my job as a translator at the Hungarian Academy of Science and as a lecturer at the University of Economics in 1976 for political reasons, I freelanced for several years. I translated works by Karl Popper, Karl Mannheim, and especially Imre Lakatos (Proofs and Refutations). I also worked as a sailing instructor and a skipper on tourist boats. In 1981, I found employment at a child guidance clinic in a poor district of Budapest. Working in an admirably dedicated team of psychologists and challenged by the problems of poor and often delinquent children and their families, I soon understood the importance of bringing the pure forces of friendship, intellect, reason and spirituality into developing relationships with my clients, which would create a powerful field of fresh energies for them to re-consider their situation and resolve their problems. I understood my role as a combination of a peripatetic teacher and a secular spiritual helper. While honored by the friendship of mostly poor, often Roma families, I continued translating books. I learned much from translating Carlos Castaneda’s Fire from Within, Pronsias MacCana’s Celtic Mythology, and Paul Moorhouse’s Salvador Dali.

When I was allowed to teach again, I soon found employment as a teacher of English culture at ELTE in 1990, starting to work on a rational method of exploring invisible patterns and discourses that delineate the themes, the scope and the boundaries of cultures in the classroom. I taught courses on English-speaking cultures, the development of mental landscapes and new mythologies in English children’s literature, and the use of travelogues in constructing the idea of the good life. I did my PhD on the disruption of order and its rational reconstruction in John Wyclif’s works on dominion. The results of my reading of John Wyclif’s political theology were published by Brill Academic Publishers in 2007, under the title of John Wyclif’s Discourse on Dominion in Community.

 

 

"In the Whirl of Cultural Changes - Hungary between 1711 and 1848."
Gábor Vermes előadása - 2011 február 24.

About the speaker
I left Hungary in 1956 as a recent graduate of the Eötvös Loránd University. My field then was geology. After several months of camp-life in Austria, I arrived to the United States in 1957.  I worked as a geologist in oil-exploration in Texas, Luisiana, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. It was in Luisiana that I realized that notwithstanding the fact that I had a very interesting life, I was in a profession that did not suit me. I always wanted to become a historian, but in Stalinist times the humanities were so distorted that I rather chose a career in a natural science. However, once I was in America I could follow my heart's desire. I started to apply to universities and was very fortunate in having been accepted by Stanford University in California. I started my new university studies at Stanford in history in October, 1958. I received my Master's Degree in 1961 and my Ph.D. in 1966.
After temporary teaching jobs and scholarships (to Austria for a year), I became employed by the Newark Campus of Rutgers University in 1972; I retired as professor emeritus in 2001.

My research field has been Hungarian history. In addition to articles and book reviews, my major work so far is the biography of Count Istvan Tisza, which attempts to offer a portrait and analysis of his period as well. It was published in 1985 in the East European Monograph Series and distributed by Columbia University Press. Agnes Deak, an outstanding Hungarian historian translated it, and Osiris-Kiado published it in two editions, in 1994 and in 2001.
Currently, the title of my manuscript is:  "In the Whirl of Cultural Changes: Hungary between 1711 and 1848." I have a contract with the Balassi Kiadó of Budapest, and if all goes well, it will be published in Hungarian translation by Hungarian Book Week in June, 2011.

Gabor Vermes

 

The life and works of János Bolyai and his impact on the history of culture
Prékopa András előadása - 2010 november 3.

János Bolyai (1802-1860), the world famous mathematician, is the greatest figure in Hungarian Science. On November 3, 1823 he wrote to his father: out of nothing I have created a new, different world. The date marks the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry that changed the course of mathematics, opened the way for the modern physical theories of the 20th century and changed our way of thinking. The speaker will tell, in simple terms, the fascinating story of this discovery, the extraordinary life of János Bolyai and how he influenced the history of human culture.

About the speaker:

András Prékopa is professor of operations research, mathematics and statistics at Rutgers University. He is also emeritus professor of L. Eötvös University of Budapest. He received Ph.D. from Eötvös University in 1960, is a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the New York Academy of Sciences and other academies and professional societies. His main scientific interests are: probability theory, optimization, convex geometry, history of mathematics, applications of mathematics in engineering, economics and other fields. He is recipient of the Széchenyi prize (1996), the middle cross (2005), from the Hungarian Government and the Gold Medal from the European Operational Research Societies (2003). He is married to Kinga Széchenyi, writer and sculptor, they have two children and two grandchildren.

 

On November 24, 2009 two American scientists were awarded the honorary membership of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences at a well-received event which was organized by the Consulate General of Hungary and the Rockefeller University in New York. Nearly 50 professors and scientists of Hungarian origin from the New York area participated in the ceremony. Many of them met for the first time at the event and had been unaware of their colleagues’ Hungarian descent.

These highly qualified scientists, internationally recognized academics and researchers of Hungarian origin follow in the footsteps of world-renowned scientist, such as János Neumann, Ede Teller, Jenő Wigner, Tódor Kármán and Albert Szentgyörgyi and continue the impressive Hungarian contribution to scientific life in the US. Today´s Hungarian-American scientists and researchers are proud heirs to their great predecessors.

During the official visit of Pál Schmitt, the President of the Republic of Hungary to New York on September 19-24, 2010, the Consulate General suggested that the Hungarian President meet with the Hungarian scientists and university professors living and working in the New York area.

At the Consulate General’s event in New York held on September 23, 2010, President Pál Schmitt suggested that the scientists present should establish a Hungarian Scientific Society, and offered his knowledge, experience and the support of the motherland to this endevour.

The resulting nation-wide initiative will be called the Hungarian Scientific Society of New York and will be hosted in the future by the Consulate General in New York. The society will further the regular meetings and cooperation of the scientists of Hungarian origin. On account of the regular dialogue, the Consulate General in New York and the Hungarian community could mutually benefit from the prominent scientific lectures held at the Consulate General.

We hope that you attend the first program of the Hungarian Scientific Society of New York. The inaugural lecture will be on the topic of “The life and works of János Bolyai and his impact on the history of culture” and will be held by Professor András Prékopa.

New Yorki Magyar Tudományos Társaság - 2011.