“HomePlate” began in 2005 to answer a community need. No services existed in Washington County for youth experiencing housing instability. HomePlate has built programs to meet their needs. Bridget Calfee, Founding Executive Director, tells us about HomePlate’s journey of building programs and the joys and challenges seen along the way. Ms. Calfee holds a Masters of Social Work from Portland State University.
Video of Programs (search and sort)
Organized by Suzanne Thornton. Most in our humanist group at HGP have reached the age of maturity. We have all experienced lessons, experiences, and sometimes unusual events in our lives. HGP provides a platform for those who wish to tell their story. It does not have to be big and dramatic. Sometimes the very art of living is its own story. Today, Don Feller, Sheila Pastore, and Laurent Beauregard each share their personal story. Time is allowed for questions.
Presentation at Friendly House. Steven Bleiler discusses what's meant by quantum information, computation, games, and stochastics. Recipient of several teaching awards, Bleiler has published widely in various mathematics, physics, engineering, and art. He is in his 36th year at PSU where he is Professor of Mathematics and Statistics.
Doug Matheson shares the background to his social anthropology graduate research and how he turned that research into a non-academic book. Matheson grew up a missionary kid in India, attending only Seventh-day Adventist schools. He spent more than a decade trying to reconcile evidence with his beliefs. When he was 37, he “encountered the straw that broke the camel’s back” and then quietly left the faith. At age 62, he decided to do a second stint of graduate work, this time in social anthropology, to study the religion-exiting process.