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Past Meetings and Topics
  


What's in the IPCC Report on Global Warming

October 05th, 2008
Speaker: Dr. John Sadowsky

Our member, John Sadowsky, was our guest speaker. John is a communications systems engineer. He holds a Ph.D. and has studied both engineering and mathematics. He was a professor at Purdue and ASU for nearly 15 years, and is currently a staff engineer at General Dynamics. He is also the political chair for the Sierra Club Palo Verde Group (greater Phoenix area).




School Vouchers: Will Your Tax Dollars Support Religious Education?

September 21st, 2008
Speaker: Dr. David Berliner

DAVID C. BERLINER is Regents Professor of Education at Arizona State University. He has taught at the Universities of Arizona and Massachusetts, at Teachers College and Stanford University, as well as at universities in Australia, The Netherlands, Spain, and Switzerland. Dr. Berliner is a member of the National Academy of Education, a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, and a past president of both the American Educational Research Association (AERA) and the Division of Educational Psychology of the American Psychological Association (APA). He is the recipient of awards for distinguished contributions from APA, AERA, and the National Education Association (NEA). He is co-author (with B. J. Biddle) of the best seller The manufactured crisis, co-author (with Ursula Casanova) of Putting research to work, and co-author (with N. L. Gage) of the textbook Educational psychology, now in its 6th edition. He is co-editor of the first Handbook of educational psychology and the books Talks to teachers, and Perspectives on instructional time. His newest book, Collateral damage (with Sharon Nichols) is about the corruption of professional educators through high-stakes testing. Professor Berliner has also authored more than 200 published articles, technical reports, and book chapters.




The Periodic Table, by Primo Levi

September 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 Amazon.com:

Writer Primo Levi (1919-1987), an Italian Jew, did not come to the wide attention of the English-reading audience until the last years of his life. A survivor of the Holocaust and imprisonment in Auschwitz, Levi is considered to be one of the century's most compelling voices, and The Periodic Table is his most famous book. Springboarding from his training as a chemist, Levi uses the elements as metaphors to create a cycle of linked, somewhat autobiographical tales, including stories of the Piedmontese Jewish community he came from, and of his response to the Holocaust.




Images of Mars and Interplanetary Science

September 07th, 2008
Speaker: Richard Leis Jr.

Richard Leis, Jr. is Operations Specialist for the HiRISE Operations Center at University of Arizona in Tucson. He is also an HSGP member. In his work he focuses on downlink activities, such as downloading and processing images, leading image validation efforts, testing operations software, managing documents, writing Perl scripts, and participating in public outreach events. He is also involved in the Transhumanism movement.

Richard gave an outstanding PowerPoint presentation with slides of views of Mars and other planets in our solar system.




Home Solar Power Installation

August 24th, 2008
Speaker: Clark Jones

Clark Jones showed pictures and graphs and discussed some of the practical issues of a real solar electric system, which was of interest to all. To learn more about this fascinating field, read his report to the IEEE Computer Society: http://www.hsgp.org/Clarks_Solar_Power_CS.pdf




Break, Blow, Burn, by Camille Paglia

August 17th, 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:

The still-vocal critic of Sexual Personae, a book that drew on poetry and painting for its de-deconstructions of gender, checks in with an anthology of 43 poems, along with her own close readings of them. Her introduction offers a jumble of justifications for undertaking such a project (though she is "unsure whether the West's chaotic personalism can prevail against the totalizing creeds that menace it," she hopes it will), but the readings themselves reveal Paglia's fascination with poetry, which she likens "to addiction or to the euphoria of being in love." The book's first half presents canonical work that Paglia has found "most successful in the classroom" (Shakespeare, Blake, Dickinson, etc.). The second features mostly canonical modernist and confessional work (Stevens, Williams, Toomer, Roethke and Plath), with a few more recent pieces. Clocking in mostly at two to four pages, Paglia's readings sound a lot like classroom preambles to discussion—offering background, lingering over provocative lines, venturing provisional interpretations. Some of what she says comes off as grandiose (Roethke's " 'Cuttings' is a regrounding of modern English poetry in lost agrarian universals"), some as boilerplate, some as inspired. Though hit-and-miss, Paglia's picks and appraisals provide the requisite spark for jump-starting returns to poetry.




The Origins of Religion - Imagine That!

August 10th, 2008
Speaker: Jerry Walp

Jerry Walp and his wife, Judy, are members of the Humanist Society of Greater Phoenix. Jerry was born and raised in Ohio and attended a small midwest technical school, graduating with a degree in Industrial Engineering. He spent the next 27 years working for a company in Colorado. Now retired, he has written five books, including Dominance and Delusion: Why We Do the Things We Do (written under the name M. A. Curtis -- and available in our library!). According to Jerry, Dominance and Delusion offers a new and controversial theory with respect to human behavior. It is a analysis of the human animal from an engineering standpoint. The book lays out the reasons why he believes we behave the way we do. His presentation was based upon the revolutionary ideas in his book.

The Walps are both retired. Judy is a volunteer with the American Red Cross and Jerry is a gardener, growing fruits and vegetables for the food bank. They have one son and two grandchildren.




The Evolution of Human Behavior

July 27th, 2008
Speaker: Dr. Kevin McGraw

Dr. Kevin McGraw is Assistant professor of Evolutionary and Systems Biology at ASU School of Life Sciences. Dr. McGraw holds an M.S. from Auburn Univ., and a Ph.D. from Cornell. In addition, he has done post doctoral studies at U.C.-Davis.

Dr. McGraw is the author and co-author of numerous books, articles and papers. He was awarded the 2005 Outstanding New Investigator Award by the American Ornithologists' Union. His contributions come in the field of avian visual communication and coloration, and he is credited with pioneering a new approach to the study of ornamental traits. By taking an integrative approach that combines concepts and techniques from evolutionary biology, behavioral ecology, behavioral endocrinology, avian nutrition, and immunoecology, he has helped to solve questions about why and how birds assume the colors they do. He is a world authority on the carotenoid pigments of skin and feathers and other sources of color. By addressing how colors are synthesized, influenced by access to dietary components, and affected by health, condition, and heritage, he has greatly advanced our understanding of how avian ornaments develop and evolve.