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Opening Keynote - DeVos Place Convention Center
The Presidential Election and Michigan's Transformation
Sunday, October 12, 2008 - 4:00 to 5:00 p.m.
Dan Rather
Award
winning journalist, author and philanthropist,
Dan Rather will
discuss the upcoming Presidential Election and what it might mean
for Michigan. A veteran White House correspondent, who covered
President Ford, and author of The American Dream, Rather confirms
what our founding fathers always believed: “that we are a country of
visionaries, in ways big and small.”
How is vision essential to
Michigan’s transformation – especially when it is a national
vision led by a new president? Launching our conference theme of
Achieving Michigan’s Transformation, this session will address how
we can all be visionaries for Michigan and the nation.
Presented in partnership with the Hauenstein
Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University
and the Gerald R. Ford Foundation.
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Luncheon Keynote -
Amway Grand Plaza Hotel
How Do You Store the Ketchup? Monday, October 13, 2008 -
12:30 to 2:00 p.m. Scott Page, professor of complex systems,
political science and economics, University
of Michigan; Ralph Smith, executive vice president, Annie E. Casey
Foundation; Sterling Speirn, president & CEO, W.K. Kellogg
FoundationAuthor of The Difference,
Professor Scott Page believes
that when we peer out of our silos and see people doing strange
things with the ketchup, we should see opportunity and
possibility. He shows - using logic not metaphor - that progress
depends as much on our collective differences as it does on our
individual IQ scores.
Page will share his fundamental insight – that
in problem solving, diversity is powerful stuff – with
foundation leader panelists in a provocative discussion that will
change the way we think about diversity and its role in
Michigan’s Transformation.

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Town Hall Keynote -
Amway Grand Plaza Hotel
Our Scorecard for Achieving Michigan's Transformation
Tuesday, October 14, 2008 - 8:00 to 8:45 a.m.
Breannah Alexander, member, Michigan Community Service
Commission and CMF’s Michigan Community Foundations' Youth Project
Committee; Craig Ruff, senior policy fellow, Public Sector
Consultants
In
spring 2007, the Center for Michigan began asking residents how
well Michigan is transforming its economy, government and social
systems during this complex time of change, challenge and global
competition as part of its
Michigan's Defining Moment (MDM)
campaign.
In this session, conference
attendees will participate in an MDM Community Conversation and
become part of the 10,000 residents the campaign plans to engage
by 2010. An
Envision Michigan story contest winner will also share
his essay of hopeful vision for Michigan’s future.
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Luncheon
Keynote -
Amway Grand Plaza Hotel
Our Blueprint for Michigan's Prosperity Tuesday, October 14, 2008 -
12:30 to 2:00 p.m. Bruce Katz, vice president,
Metropolitan Policy Program, Brookings; Angela Glover Blackwell,
founder & CEO, Policylink;
Rip Rapson,
president, The Kresge Foundation
America
has become a connected nation of 363 metropolitan areas – defining
a blueprint for America’s prosperity. More than two-thirds of
Michigan’s 10 million residents live in five metro area counties.
Join a conversation about the role philanthropy can play in the
four vital ingredients necessary for prosperous metro areas
and Michigan’s transformation: innovation, human capital,
infrastructure and quality places.
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Closing Keynote -
Amway Grand Plaza Hotel
Transformation Requires Creativity and
Activism Tuesday, October 14, 2008 - 2:30 to
4:00 p.m. Judy Collins, singer, songwriter &
philanthropist; Ruby Dee, actress & philanthropist; Tom
Beech, president & CEO, The Fetzer Institute
The media reminds us that this is a time of great
adversity for Michiganders. How can one individual or one
foundation make a difference and be involved in Michigan’s
transformation? Join legendary activists and philanthropists in an
inspirational conversation about creativity and activism
and how both are vital to overcoming adversity and capitalizing on
opportunities for transformation.
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