You have made the Rhine a very special place, and on March 23rd, we are going to have an opportunity to celebrate together and show our support for this organization that you have help to make so valuable to the community.
Please join us at the Episcopal Center on Duke Campus for the Spring Benefit for the Rhine.
This entertaining Saturday evening will begin with a wine reception and the opportunity to hear about all of the fascinating current and upcoming events, research and activities at the Rhine including the launch of our new website.
In this special event, PEN Award-winning historian and widely known voice of esoteric ideas, Mitch Horowitz explores how decades of mind-body and psychical study have now delivered us to a threshold moment in which the insights of psi research are converging with therapy and spirituality to provide new, day-to-day applications of the extra-physical capacities of thought. Do not miss this exciting and intellectually challenging evening. Books by the author will be available.
Gold Circle participants provide the highest level of support to the Rhine. Gold Circle supporters will have a special opportunity to join a small group for coffee Sunday morning March 24 to meet with Mitch Horowitz personally and hear more about the work he is doing.
Alex Tanous Library at The Rhine, Sunday, March 24, 10am - Noon. Gold Circle only
Visit the Rhine website and view the event listing for more information. There are additional activities that will be added to this event as they are finalized.
About Mitch Horowitz
Mitch Horowitz, is a writer-in-residence at the New York Public Library, a lecturer-in-residence at the University of Philosophical Research in Los Angeles, and the PEN Award-winning author of books including Occult America;One Simple Idea: How Positive Thinking Reshaped Modern Life;Mind as Builder; and the The Miracle Club: How Thoughts Become Reality. Mitch has written on everything from the war on witches to the secret life of Ronald Reagan for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Salon, Time.com, and Politico.
The Washington Post says Mitch “treats esoteric ideas and movements with an even-handed intellectual studiousness that is too often lost in today’s raised-voice discussions.”
He is the voice of popular audio books including Alcoholics Anonymous and The Jefferson Bible. Mitch has discussed alternative spirituality on CBS Sunday Morning, Dateline NBC, NPR’S All Things Considered, and throughout the national media.