LH30. ELECTING THE AMERICAN PRESIDENT – 2020

This two-session course will explore the procedures of electing the American president in 2020, including the party nomination process, the general election in November, and the vote of the Electoral College. The course will give special consideration to the Electoral College because of the possibility that the College can, as happened in 2016, select an individual for the presidency who did not receive the most votes in the general election.

ML29. ELECTING THE AMERICAN PRESIDENT – 2020

This two-session course will explore the procedures of electing the American president in 2020, including the caucus and primary process leading up to the nominating conventions, the general election in November, and the vote of the Electoral College. The course will give special consideration to the Electoral College because of the possibility that the College can, as happened in 2016, select an individual for the presidency who did not receive the most votes in the general election.

LH20. RELIGIOUS THEMES IN PIANO MUSIC

The first session will focus on compositions based on hymns and chorales in musical settings by master composers. The program will include such hymns as: Adoro te Devote, A Mighty Fortress is Our God, Now Thank We All Our God, and Brother James Air. The second session will include representative pieces having religious titles and imagery with references to art and literature. Included in the program will be compositions by Franz Liszt, Richard Wagner, Ludwig Van Beethoven, Olivier Messiaen, Michael Glinka, and Johann Kuhnau.

ML20. RELIGIOUS THEMES IN PIANO MUSIC

The first session will focus on compositions based on hymns and chorales in musical settings by master composers. The program will include such hymns as: Adoro te Devote, A Mighty Fortress is Our God, Now Thank We All Our God, and Brother James Air. The second session will include representative pieces having religious titles and imagery with references to art and literature. Included in the program will be compositions by Franz Liszt, Richard Wagner, Ludwig Van Beethoven, Olivier Messiaen, Michael Glinka, and Johann Kuhnau.

ML43. BOOK REVIEW AND DISCUSSION ON BEING MORTAL: MEDICINE AND WHAT MATTERS IN THE END

This will be a 4-session Zoom discussion of the book: Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End by Atul Gawande. You will need to obtain and read the book on your own. The class will cover two to three chapters of the book each week. In order to facilitate good discussion, specific discussion questions will be assigned in advance for each week. We encourage you to take part in all four sessions, do “homework” between sessions, and share your thoughts, concerns, and personal plans for the end of life with other participants.

LH23. POETRY: NECESSITY FOR THIS MOMENT; HOPE FOR THE FUTURE

“It is difficult/to get the news from poems/yet die miserably every day/for lack/ of what is found there.” William Carlos Williams, Asphodel, That Greeny Flower After participants share past experiences with poetry, we will engage poems that delight and evoke a sense of well-being, even laughter. Then we will read aloud and respond to poems on the pandemic, climate change, and systemic racism. We will tune in to voices of resistance and cries for justice and empowerment in poems written by poets of color, immigrants, refugees, and other marginalized persons. We will savor poems that nourish our souls, offer hope, evoke joy, and inspire loving action.

LH47. RETIREMENT – A TIME OF CHANGE IN IDENTITY AND PURPOSE

When we wake up the first morning after retiring, we realize that we are no longer defined by the work we do. We ask ourselves, “Who are we now?” We need to find another identity and outlets that give us purpose. It is time to reflect on our skills and interests and search for how that can be expressed in new ways. We can find meaning in deeper friendships, volunteering, service projects, continued learning, hobbies, or even part-time work. Any of these can bring us a purposeful identity. If we missed this opportunity in pre-retirement, the time to start is now.

ML47. RETIREMENT – A TIME OF CHANGE IN IDENTITY AND PURPOSE

When we wake up the first morning after retiring, we realize that we are no longer defined by the work we do. We ask ourselves, “Who are we now?” We need to find another identity and outlets that give us purpose. It is time to reflect on our skills and interests, and search for how that can be expressed in new ways. We can find meaning in deeper friendships, volunteering, service projects, continued learning, hobbies, or even part-time work. Any of these can bring us a purposeful identity. If we missed this opportunity in pre-retirement, the time to start is now.