MSCN Newsletter
May 2010
NEW MSCN HEADER (With border)
Welcome to our May newsletter!

May's newsletter features articles from senior colleges that offered courses on climate change and alternative energy this spring.  The classes were a big hit!  Please take a moment to read more about the MSCN Leadership Academies that will be offered this fall.  More info will follow about these academies.

Some submissions have been converted into pdfs to save space. These articles are high quality and well worth reading. Please download Adobe Reader if you are having trouble opening our attachments. We are also archiving each newsletter on the MSCN web site so if you delete your newsletter from your email in-box you can still find us online.

Please keep sending in those submissions from your senior college for the newsletter!
 
Kali Lightfoot
Executive Director  

 
Climate and Alternative Energy Courses Big Hit this Spring

Senior College at Bridgton is excited about its 4 week spring course "Climate Variability and Alternative Energy Sources." Each of the weekly sessions will feature a prominent speaker on topics of climate, geothermal energy, wind and solar, tidal energy. The course, scheduled to begin in April, has been received with great interest.

Submitted by Dee Miller, Senior College at Bridgton
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

One of the more exciting and popular courses this spring at Downeast Senior College in Ellsworth has been "Alternative Energy and More!" The first session on Geothermal Energy, was presented by two engineers from Oak Point Associates, Christine Lyle and Matthew Albert. They did a wonderful presentation on the geothermal heating and cooling system their company is presently building for the new Ellsworth Elementary/Middle School. 
Downeast Senior College members enjoying recent field trip
Downeast Senior College field trip




















For the second class, members toured the Ellsworth Dam with Richard Finnelly Jr. who showed them the intricacies of water power. With the recent rain, the turbines were certainly showing off the power they can produce. The group then traveled to Orono and toured the Advanced Structures and Composites Center on the University of Maine campus. Edwin Nagy, structural research engineer, took them on a wonderful tour of the facility, explaining the "Back-Pack Bridge" they have developed as well as many other projects they are working on. The tour was followed by a drive down to Pittsfield where members viewed a completed "back-pack bridge:" the Neal Bridge. At the final class, members will visit a wind mill in Hancock, Maine, and learn about wind power.
   
Submitted by Elaine Dow, Downeast Senior College
 
St. John Valley Spring/Summer Term Gets Underway
St. John Valley members intently engaged during a senior college course
St. John Valley class

The St. John Valley Senior College will hold its first session of Spring/Summer Term 2010 on Tuesday, April 13 with a one-session sing-a-long program entitled, Spring Into Song, led by Joanne Zafonte of Fort Kent.

Other sessions on tap for the St. John Valley Senior College Spring/Summer Term 2010 include: What Is Language? with Fr. Jim Nadeau; Medicine And Nursing From The Ancient Past To The Present with Roger Paradis; You Can Take The Allagash Out Of The Wild, But You Can't Take The Wild Out Of The Allagash with David Soucy; Aroostook Experience Field Trip (The Chill of the Cold War and the Wonder of a Wildlife Preserve) to the former Loring Air Force Base with Betty Rinehart; The Legacy of Our Ancestors' Employers with Chad Pelletier; Math, Magic, and Mystery with John Elliot; What Makes An Author? With Faye O'Leary Hafford; Seven Ideas That Shook The Universe with Ben Paradis; Contemplative Meditation with Rella Banzanilla; and Fashion After 50 with Kate Fecinta.

For more information about the St. John Valley Senior College, membership fees, session costs, and the Spring/Summer Term 2010 schedule, interested individuals should contact either the MSAD #27 Adult and Community Center at 834-3536 or the Madawska/MSAD #33 Adult and Community Education center at 728-6314.

Submitted by Peter Caron, St. John Valley Senior College
SAGE UMPI Tours WAGM TV

On March 31, a group of 35 UMPI SAGE members kicked off their Spring Session with a learning excursion to the WAGM-TV station, NewsSource 8, in Presque Isle. WAGM is the primary CBS affiliate and operates the area's FOX affiliate on its digital sub-channel. The SAGE participants got a look at the behind-the-scenes operations, learned some of the history of the station and met the team members who work there.

SAGE UMPI at TV Station
SAGE UMPI at TV Station

Shawn Cunningham, News Anchor/Reporter, was the tour guide. As one SAGE member said "She was not only interesting but extemely personable." The staff behind the scenes explained the technicalities of broadcasting and answered many questions. Rene Cloukey, Sports Director, "gave us great sports insight". Meteorologist, Ted Shapiro,"schooled us about the art and actuality of weather". He encouraged those interested in learning more about weather to take his class at UMPI and stressed that anyone over 65 can take classes free. Ted took pictures of the group and showed them before his on-air weather report the next day. He also spoke briefly about SAGE. The group agreed that "this was two hours well spent", "it was a great learning experience", and "a SAGE trip we will long remember". 
 
UMPI SAGE courses this spring session will include Civil War Discussions, Moving to Music, Oldies But Goodies Film Series, Journalism Ethics, Creating an Artist's Book, Music in Your Life, Cooking for Two, Buddhism, Writing Poetry, and a two hour presentation titled "A Recollection of Life in the Maine Woods." They will end their spring session with a visit to the Aroostook National Wildlife Refuge.  

Submitted by Janet Snow, SAGE
 
Leadership Academies to be offered to Maine Senior College Members

After the last Maine Senior College Network Conference, we have had time to reflect and discuss ideas that were formulated in the leadership sessions.  MSC leaders have identified the need to bring new senior college members into leadership roles in their senior colleges. 

The MSCN Leadership Academies will be offered to current and new board members, officers and committee chairs and those identified in their senior college to have leadership potential.  The leadership academies will help to identify potential MSC leaders and encourage their participation in  leadership roles in their senior college.  Current leaders will have an opportunity to pass along invaluable knowledge and experience to the new potential group of Maine Senior College leaders.

Our hope is to encourage MSCN members to become involved in the operations of their senior colleges.  We hope these Leadership Academies will help to integrate new people into the future leadership of your senior colleges. 

A planning committee is hard at work on program planning.  More information on dates, locations and content will be available soon.

Please contact Fran Myers fmyers@usm.maine.edu or 228-8256 with any questions.

UM Augusta Senior College Takes to the Sea

What do you do with 28 senior college folks on a late spring day?  Why you take them to Seguin Island lighthouse with a First Order French-made Fresnel Lens!  This was just one of the highlights from Duane Prugh's lighthouse course at Senior College.   To read  more about this fanastic tour click below.

Link to PDF titled " Seguin Trip"
Western Mountain Senior College Collaborates

Collaborating with other organizations has helped make a difference with Western Mountains Senior College's "To Your Health" program.  Rosabelle  Tifft's article will explain more - Click below!

Link to PDF titled "To Your Health"
 
Poets Corner/Contest

WALKING WITH DAD 1941
(Pantoum)
 
Nighthawks screech and swoop
Big hand wrapped around mine
Dad and I walk the twilight city
Friendly summer neighborhoods
 
Big hand wrapped around mine
He tells family stories as we walk
Summer evening neighborhoods
To the downtown movies
 
Telling family stories as we walk
To the double feature at the Grand
The downtown movie
Creepy old movie house
 
Double feature at the Grand
Safe in the dark next to Dad
In the creepy old movie house
It's my first gangster film
 
Safe in the dark next to Dad
The top floor apartment on fire
It's my first gangster film
The hero is trapped in his wheelchair
 
The top floor apartment on fire
Gangsters wait outside
The hero trapped in his wheelchair
They're shooting through the door
 
Gangsters wait outside
How will the hero escape
They're shooting through the door
He drags himself to the window
 
How will the hero escape
Outside the ledge a four story drop
He drags himself to the window
the next roof a few feet away
 
Outside the ledge a four story drop
I dig nails into Dad's hand
The next roof a few feet away
I hold my breath take squinty look
 
I dig nails into Dad's hand
Dad escaped from the Nazis
I hold my breath take squinty looks
Dad fled to America
 
Dad escaped from the Nazis
The hero leaps and survives
Dad fled to America
 It's good to be a family again
 
The hero leaps and survives
America's our new home
It's good to be a family again
Dad buys us strawberry ice cream
 
America's our new home
Nighthawks screech and swoop
Dad buys us strawberry ice cream
We walk illuminated streets home
 
Ruth Bookey, Augusta Senior College

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SORTING LENTILS
  
The package said to sort them, so sort I did--
Laboriously pinching black ones out,
Curious hot-orange ones that looked wet off a beach,
And a few speckled ones--before I began to doubt.

I fingered those that were wrinkled or thin or bent in upon themselves
And threw them out too,
Plus a very few that had sprouted early.

At last, out dropped a stick and a stone, lying large across the lentil cobbles.

Out they went,
Along with a lone albino bean that I first thought a stone and treated like one anyway,
Chucking them into the awful trash with all those lentils--
Ones that were out-of-round or not properly green or yellow or brown--
Thinking, too late, that all were equally good;
That all my sorting was blunder and waste;
That I'd not know now how the real thing should taste.

I thought: what a helluva way to run a soup!

And I thought: the package should read
"Get rid of the damned sticks and stones.
Leave the blessed lentils alone."

Paul L. DeVore, Acadia Senior College

 ~~~Looking for our Poet Laureate! ~~~
 
This contest is open to all members of the Maine Senior College Network.  For more information, please select the link below.

MSCN Poet Laureate Competition Submission (pdf)

Don't forget the prize for the crowned Poet Laureate is a Kindle! Not sure what a Kindle is? Please take a look at the following links:

Amazon Kindle


Free Conference on Hearing Loss and

Interested in learning more about hearing loss and aging?  Click link below to see information about a free conference:

Link to PDF Titled 'Hearing Loss and Aging'


What is Safe Passage?

Safe Passage is a non-governmental organization working in Guatemala with poor, at-risk children and families who are living and working around the Guatemala City garbage dump, Central America's largest, toxic landfill. Safe Passage's programs and staff aim to empower this community, create opportunities and foster dignity through the power of education. Senior College students have worked with Safe Passage in the past by bringing a team of people to volunteer in the program classrooms in Guatemala City. If you would like to learn more about the work of Safe Passage or how you might get involved, please visit the website at www.safepassage.org. If you are interested in scheduling an informational presentation from a Safe Passage staff member, please contact outreach@safepassage.org or phone (207) 846-1188.
In This Issue
Climate and Alternative Energy Courses Big Hit This Spring
St. John Valley Term Gets Underway
SAGE UMPI Tours WAGM TV
Leadership Academies to be Offered to Maine Senior College Members
UM Augusta Senior College Takes to the Sea
Western Mountain Senior College Collaborates
Poets Corner/Contest
Free Conference on Hearing Loss and Aging
Maine Senior College Network
Maine Senior College Links
Featured Links
Maine Senior College Network Display Boards
Don't forget to go to the Maine Senior College Network 
web site to find out what is happening around the state!
Maine Senior College Network
Links
 
 
  
Featured Links
 
 
 
 
The Maine Senior College  Network Display Boards
are available to any senior college that would like to borrow them.   For more information, check out the link below.
 
  
About Us
 
Maine Senior College Network
P.O. Box 9300
Portland, Maine 04104-9300
(207)780-4128
(207)780-4317 (fax)

Kali Lightfoot
Executive Director
 
Anne Cardale
Director of Operations & Communications
Director of Conferences
fmyers@usm.maine.edu
 
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Submissions
Please submit your articles and photographs to Fran Myers at fmyers@usm.maine.edu .
 
Deadline:  Second week of each month for the following month's edition