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DNA Forensics

January 25th, 2009
Speaker: Dr. Elliott Goldstein

Dr. Elliott Goldstein is Associate Professor of Biology at ASU, where he has taught since 1974. He received his Ph.D.in 1972, from the University of Minnesota. He teaches courses in Genetics and Molecular Biology, with specialization in control of messenger RNA during development of Drosophila, recombinant DNA, and Drosophilia oncogenes' role in learning and memory. Dr. Goldstein is the author is numerous articles and publications in his area of specialization.

This marked Dr. Goldstein's third appearance at HSGP!




Dreams from My Father by Barack Obama

January 18th, 2009
Event: Book Club

New meeting location: Chandler Main Library, 22 S. Delaware St. (South on Arizona Ave to Buffalo, East on Buffalo, South on Delaware.

President-elect Barack Obama's autobiography, published in 2004. The book offers fascinating details about his biracial identity and how it has shaped his life.




Meet Your New HSGP Board: Who They Are and Why They Are Humanists

January 11th, 2009
Speaker: HSGP Board Members!

Members of our HSGP Board of Directors for 2009 each gave a brief profile of themselves, including their early years, education, employment, family and friends and their past and current worldview. They also discussed how and why they became Humanists, along with their expectations of Humanism for the future.

We hope that there will be future meetings in which our members will share a little about themselves, so we can get to know our members and their fascinating backgrounds!




Annual Auction and Solstice/Human Light Party!

December 21st, 2008
Moderator: Susan Sackett

Our Annual Solstice Party and Fund-raising Auction is always a great event. We celebrated the Humanist holiday of HumanLight. We inaugurated our new board members and gave out the annual Helen Goldsmith Awards to our most deserving volunteers!




The Camel Bookmobile by Masha Hamilton

December 14th, 2008
Event: Book Club

The HSGP Book Club meets at the Mesa Library, Main Branch, 64 East 1st Street (East of Country Club Way at the intersection of N. Centennial Way -- N.W. corner.)

From Publishers Weekly:

Hamilton's captivating third novel (after 2004's The Distance Between Us) follows Fiona Sweeney, a 36-year-old librarian, from New York to Garissa, Kenya, on her sincere but naïve quest to make a difference in the world. Fi enlists to run the titular mobile library overseen by Mr. Abasi, and in her travels through the bush, the small village of Mididima becomes her favorite stop. There, Matani, the village teacher; Kanika, an independent, vivacious young woman; and Kanika's grandmother Neema are the most avid proponents of the library and the knowledge it brings to the community. Not everyone shares such esteem for the project, however. Taban, known as Scar Boy; Jwahir, Matani's wife; and most of the town elders think these books threaten the tradition and security of Mididima. When two books go missing, tensions arise between those who welcome all that the books represent and those who prefer the time-honored oral traditions of the tribe. Kanika, Taban and Matani become more vibrant than Fi, who never outgrows the cookie-cutter mold of a woman needing excitement and fulfillment, but Hamilton weaves memorable characters and elemental emotions in artful prose with the lofty theme of Western-imposed "education" versus a village's perceived perils of exposure to the developed world.




PostMormon.Org

December 07th, 2008
Speaker: Tom Donofrio and Paul Hahn

Many of you are aware of the billboard recently seen in Gilbert that reads "PostMormon.org -- You are not alone." Our speakers, Paul Hahn and Tom Donofrio, were local men who are part of the PostMormon movement (headquartered in Logan, Utah).

Paul Hahn grew up in Arizona and served a mission for the Mormon church in Rapid City South Dakota. After returning to Arizona, he spent 10 more years in the church before leaving it in 2007. Paul has been a software engineer for the past eight years, currently employed with Shamrock Foods. A 2004 graduate of DeVry University Phoenix, he currently resides in Queen Creek.

Tom Donofrio was a Mormon until 2002, when he formally resigned his membership. He came to Arizona from Pittsburgh as a Mormon missionary, from 1979 to 1981. After his two-year service, he settled in Arizona. He met his future wife during his mission and married six months after his service terminated. (She remains a faithful member of the LDS church.) Tom currently works for Industrial Refrigeration and Boiler Company as an ammonia technician. Their clients include some of the large food warehouses in the valley.

Tom and Paul gave us information about the Post Mormon organization and what effect it is having on the Mormon community. Visit their website at: http://www.postmormon.org.




Religion and Secularism, Emphasizing the Recent Turkish Conference

November 23rd, 2008
Speaker: Dr. John Carlson

John Carlson joined the religious studies faculty at ASU in 2005 after completing his Ph.D. in ethics from The University of Chicago Divinity School. He was also a founding member of the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, serving as the project coordinator for the University of Chicago office (2000-2003). He has received graduate fellowships from Pew Charitable Trusts (2001), the Bradley Foundation (2003-04), and the Erasmus Institute at the University of Notre Dame (2004-05). Professor Carlson is coeditor of, and contributor to, two books: The Sacred and the Sovereign: Religion and International Politics and Religion and the Death Penalty: A Call for Reckoning. He is also series editor (with Jean Bethke Elshtain) of the Eerdmans Religion, Ethics, and Public Life Series. Since arriving at ASU, he has published (or has forthcoming) articles from several journals including "Religion and Human Rights," "Journal of Religious Ethics," and "Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics." Currently, he is working on a monograph entitled "Human Nature, Limited Justice, and the Ordering of Relations in Political Ethics," a political-theological examination of how views of human nature and the divine shape our political understandings of justice. He is also co-editing a volume on religion, violence, and America. Professor Carlson serves as co-principal investigator of two research projects funded by the Ford Foundation: Public Religion, the Secular, and Democracy and Teaching and Talking about Religion in Public for which he is also project coordinator.

We also held our annual election of officers/board members at this meeting!




The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak

November 16th, 2008
Event: Book Club

The HSGP Book Club meets at the Mesa Library, Main Branch, 64 East 1st Street (East of Country Club Way at the intersection of N. Centennial Way -- N.W. corner)

From "Booklist":

Death is the narrator of this lengthy, powerful story of a town in Nazi Germany. He is a kindly, caring Death, overwhelmed by the souls he has to collect from people in the gas chambers, from soldiers on the battlefields, and from civilians killed in bombings. Death focuses on a young orphan, Liesl; her loving foster parents; the Jewish fugitive they are hiding; and a wild but gentle teen neighbor, Rudy, who defies the Hitler Youth and convinces Liesl to steal for fun. After Liesl learns to read, she steals books from everywhere. When she reads a book in the bomb shelter, even a Nazi woman is enthralled. Then the book thief writes her own story. There's too much commentary at the outset, and too much switching from past to present time, but as in Zusak's enthralling I Am the Messenger (2004), the astonishing characters, drawn without sentimentality, will grab readers. More than the overt message about the power of words, it's Liesl's confrontation with horrifying cruelty and her discovery of kindness in unexpected places that tell the heartbreaking truth.