This being the first weekend of March, there will be a lot going on. Below this weekend's events are the details of platforms for the whole month.

First, it's *MOVABLE TREATS* Sunday. So bring your desserts with you and place them on the table in the corner of our meeting room. Use sandwich bags or snack bags to wrap your desserts in serving-size portions and label them to indicate generally what they are. Mark your desserts if they contain nuts or peanuts and avoid heavy icings. There's a box for canned and dry-storage items in the corner of our entrance room as well. Suggested items include canned fruits, vegetables, and soups, fruit cocktail, applesauce, dry cereals, rices, juices, muffin and pancake mixes, etc.
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*The first Sunday also means that Fritz will be speaking and telling one of his children's stories. His topic is AN ISLAND OF GOODNESS--an exploration of how goodness can shine surrounded by violence and hatred. More details below.
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*The *POETRY GROUP *at meets at 9:30 before the Platform (and again on Mar 16).
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*ADVERTISEMENT*: Gov. O'Malley needs your help with the Maryland Legislature for his support of the Global Warming Solutions Act (SB-309, HB-712 <http://mlis.state.md.us/2008rs/billfile/SB0309.htm>). Please email, write, call, or visit your Delegate or Senator (even if you are sure they support the Act) and if so moved come to Annapolis for a rally this Wed Mar 5 at 10 am. For more information see: http://www.chesapeakeclimate.org/campaigns/campaign_detail.cfm?id=68
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The first Saturday means our *COFFEEHOUSE* on March 1, 7:00 pm -- Featuring Poet Gedalya Chinn. Gedalya spent his formative years bouncing around New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Maryland, and has the scars to prove it. He is a high school drop-out but managed to graduate from the University of Maryland Baltimore County with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theatre. Literary influences include Walt Whitman, Reinaldo Arenas, Anne Sexton and Samuel Beckett. When not writing poetry, he has spent the past few years writing plays and has had productions of his work mounted here in Baltimore. In June, he will marry the love of his life and is doing cartwheels and somersaults about that. Open mic follows the featured reader. Refreshments available. Donation requested.
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March 2: "*AN ISLAND OF GOODNESS*" by Fritz Williams, Leader, Baltimore Ethical Society All of Fritz's "Good Life" talks this year have been rewritten extensively. But on March 3 he will make an exception. In this talk, he will tell his own version of the story of the village of LeChambon, and he will tell it exactly as he first told it on January 8, 2006. "It was a talk that almost wrote itself," he recalls, "and the power of goodness in an era of violence and hatred shone right through it with a transparency that took me by surprise. I've told a lot of stories, but this may be the most moving, most powerful story of them all." * FRITZ WILLIAMS* is Leader of the Baltimore Ethical Society and serves as primary speaker, teacher, pastor, and organizational leader. Fritz also performs weddings and commitment ceremonies. He has worked as a parish priest in the Episcopal church, and as a writer and producer at public TV stations in Harrisburg, PA, and Detroit, MI.

March 9: *"SILENCE AND MY ROLE AS A MARYLAND LEGISLATOR"* by Delegate Liz Bobo, District 12B, Howard County Liz Bobo, local legislator, will discuss the week long silent retreat led by an American Buddhist monk that she attended in the last two years. Liz writes, "My ability to draw on what I learned at those retreats at the height of activity of the legislative session has proven very helpful. I have gained deeper peacefulness and equanimity." She will connect this experience to what she learned by listening to Hans Peter Durr, head of the Max Planck Institute in Munich, generally agreed to be the foremost quantum physics institution on our planet. * LIZ BOBO* has served in the Maryland House of Delegates for the last 13 years. She is currently chair of the land use & ethics subcommittee and a member of the natural resources and the environment subcommittees of the Environmental Matters Committee. Liz has been in public service 1976, including a term as Howard County Executive. (She is the first woman in Maryland to be elected county executive.) She is currently on the Commission on Environmental Justice and Sustainable Communities and is Co-Chair, Maryland Clean Car and Energy Policy Task Force. She was born in Baltimore, received a BA in literature and a JD, both from U. of Md., and is a member of the Md. Bar. Much more info about Liz is available at the House web site: http://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/06hse/html/msa12188.html

March 16: *"ETHICS AND MENTAL ILLNESS: PAST AND PRESENT"* by Denise Camp, Director, MARTYLOG Peer Support Mental Health Wellness & Recovery Center Prior to a true medical understanding of mental illnesses, people suffering with maladies of the mind were shunned, punished and locked away. With advances in medications and treatments, people with mental illnesses can live productive lives. However, they are still often shunned and stigmatized. How can we apply the Commitments of Ethical Culture to this oft misunderstood class of fellow human beings? *DENISE CAMP* is the Director of the MARTYLOG Peer Support Mental Health Wellness and Recovery Center in Pikesville. A graduate of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, NY with a B.S. in Biomedical Engineering, Ms. Camp was working on her Masters in Electrical Engineering when she was diagnosed with Clinical Depression (now known as Major Depressive Disorder). Though she continued to work as an engineer, Ms. Camp's illness eventually disabled her, keeping her out of the workforce for more than 10 years. With the right mix of medications, caring mental health professional and a psychiatric rehabilitation program called Prologue, Inc., Ms. Camp has become an outspoken advocate for the public mental health system by testifying in Annapolis and now actually works for the psychiatric program she once attended.

March 23: * "AMERICAN IDEALISM AT ITS BEST: THE LYCEUM MOVEMENT, 1830-1860"* by David O'Donaghue, Psy.D. The Democratic system requires both an educated populace and public forums in which to grapple with issues. David O'Donaghue, the founder and director of the Baltimore Lyceum, will explore how the Lyceum Movement met these objectives through the establishment of local educational centers, sponsoring such speakers as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, and Nathaniel Hawthorne on lecture circuits around the country. He will also tell us about his experience in continuing this tradition by re-establishing lyceums in the mountains of North Carolina, New Orleans and now in Baltimore. *DAVID O'DONAGHUE*, Psy.D. spent the first 15 years of his working life as a psychologist. He then chose to return to school to do doctoral work in philosophy, concentrating on the influence of German philosophy on transcendentalism and adult education. David is the founder and director of the Baltimore Lyceum.

March 30: *"SUSTAINABLE DESIGN: THE LEEDING EDGE"*by Kim Schaefer, AIA, Principal -- Terralogos Eco-Architecture Sustainable living is becoming more and more common, but many people are still unaware of some of the ways they can incorporate sustainability into their lives. Kim Schaefer is one of the founders of Terralogos Eco-Architecture, a firm that specializes in applying sustainable design techniques to existing structures. Kim will share with us her experiences in working in this area, as well as her reasons for focusing her business on sustainable design. Ms. *KIM SCHAEFER*, a LEED accredited professional, holds a Bachelor in Environmental Design from Texas A&M University and a Masters in Architecture from the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Ms. Schaefer has been involved in several international sustainable design projects, including work in Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, and Mexico. She is a Registered Architect in Texas, Virginia, and Maryland. Ms. Schaefer is particularly concerned with bringing sustainable design practices to affordable housing and with the revitalization of urban communities; to that end she has worked with such associations as Habitat for Humanity, the Sustainable Washington Alliance, the US Green Building Council, and A Rocha, an international Christian conservation group. In October 2006, she received the Innovator of the Year Award from The Daily Record for her sustainable design work.






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