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Getting Pregnant

August 28th, 2008
All the information you need on how to become pregnant - eBooks, Reviews, Message Board, informative articles, and much more

The best time to get pregnant?

August 28th, 2008
Latest information on how to become pregnant includes tips and trick and the long awaited ebook by Heather Barnard - The No Nonsense Guide to Getting Pregnant.

Le Point 47 dans le dossier Les Médias

August 18th, 2008
Postuler a priori l'équivalence de l'imagination pure de l'expert et du savoir scientifiquement démontré?
en réaction à "l'Entretien" paru le 6 août 2008 dans L'Humanité intitulé "Différencier maladie mentale et troubles de la personnalité"
propos du Dr Roland Coutanceau recueillis par Marie-Noëlle Bertrand.

“La schizophrénie de l’adulte” par M. Saoud et T. d’Amato

August 18th, 2008
Le mérite de ce livre est d'avoir mis l'accent sur la nécessaire matérialité biologique des causes et des mécanismes responsables des manifestations des troubles schizophréniques.
Le reproche que je serais tenté d'adresser à l'ouvrage est de ne pas attirer l'attention sur le fait que la majorité des "preuves" sur lesquelles la psychiatrie prétend se baser ne sont en fait pas des relations de "cause à effet", mais plutôt des corrélations.

Community gardening in St. Louis, Gwenne Hayes-Stewart, 27-Jul-2008

August 3rd, 2008
Gateway Greening established more than 170 community gardens on abandoned land in the City's urban core. These gardens provide food for the table and food for the soul, serve as safe places to gather and are often the only asset in threatened neighborhoods. Learn how groups gather around these projects and the impact these gardens have on their lives.

For the last 13 years, Gwenne Hayes-Stewart has served as the executive director of Gateway Greening, the non-profit community gardening organization in St. Louis. During her tenure, the organization developed from a small non-profit serving a few hundred people working in 30 community gardens into one serving over 2,800 people working in more than 170 community gardens, neighborhood greening projects, and citizen-managed open spaces. She is a Master Gardener who founded the Great Perennial Divide in 1998. She has been a Rotarian for 18 years. She serves on the advisory board of the Horticulture Department, St. Louis Community College at Meramec and Board Secretary of the American Community Gardening Association. Among her awards are two national recognitions, The American Horticulture Society's Urban Beautification Award and the National Garden Club's Award of Excellence.

To discuss our podcasts please visit http://www.live.ethicalstl.org/platforms on our community site.

World travel 101: Creating respect in a hostile world, Mark T. Cockson, 20-Jul-2008

August 2nd, 2008
Hostels, hostelling, and hostel programs create world class citizens who are culturally sensitive. World Travel 101, an educational program, will demonstrate this.

Mark T. Cockson is the executive director of the Gateway Council of Hostelling International-USA. Mark has a background in teaching, social work and administration in the not-for-profit world. Mark has a love for travel and nature that he expresses through gardening and photography.

To discuss our podcasts please visit http://www.live.ethicalstl.org/platforms on our community site.

Local food equals good politics and good eatin’, too!, Andy Ayers, 13-Jul-2008

July 27th, 2008
This platform address will explore the movement to local foods that led the New Oxford American Dictionary to christen as its "new word of 2007" the word "locovore." This movement has developed tremendous momentum solely due to grassroots interest - without the help of politicians, lobbyists or corporate sponsors - because it just makes so darn much sense to so many Americans. Eating local presents people with the opportunity to improve the environment, support hard-working farmers and take an ethical stand against the pervasiveness of commercialism in American life while enjoying a healthier lifestyle and the best tasting food available anywhere.

Andy Ayers and his wife, Paula, owned and operated Riddle's Restaurant in Bel Nor where they began featuring locally grown ingredients on the menu in the early 1980's. The couple opened Riddle's Penultimate Café and Wine Bar in the University City Loop in 1985 and ran it for 23 years before selling the restaurant to their daughter, KT, who operates it now.

An advocate, writer and speaker on behalf of local foods and local growers, Andy received the Lewis C. Green Environmental Service Award in 2006 for his work. Since leaving the restaurant to the next generation, Andy is growing a new start-up business that distributes food directly from local farms to the best restaurant kitchens in the St. Louis area.

To discuss our podcasts please visit http://www.live.ethicalstl.org/platforms on our community site.

Poetry: The power of silence and the role of imagination, Walter Bargen, Poet Laureate of Missouri, 29-Jun-2008

July 26th, 2008
A poem is sculpted on the page. The words, punctuation, and the line direct us to the music of the poem, but it’s what the poem is wrapped in, perhaps skims or floats over, the white of the page, that silence that lies behind the poem that gives voice and power to the poem itself. Is there an inherent ethic to be distilled from this silence? And what part does imagination play in this tango between the poem and the page, between the poem and silence? Does the poetic imagination create the world, and if so, has imagination failed us? There will be more questions than answers - as e.e. cummings wrote: always the beautiful answer/that asks the more question.

Walter Bargen has published eleven books of poetry and two chapbooks. The latest are: The Feast, BkMk Press-UMKC, 2004, a series of prose poems, winner of the 2005 William Rockhill Nelson Award; Remedies for Vertigo (2006) from WordTech Communications; and West of West from Timberline Press (2007). Theban Traffic is scheduled for publication in May of 2008. His poems have recently appeared in the Beloit Poetry Journal, New Letters, Poetry East, and the Seattle Review. He was appointed to be the first poet laureate of Missouri in 2008.

To discuss our podcasts please visit http://www.live.ethicalstl.org/platforms on our community site.

Searching for a title, Phyllis Plattner, 15-June-2008

June 22nd, 2008
Artist Phyllis Plattner will discuss the path that led to her recent multiple panel paintings which are as yet still untitled. Based loosely on an altarpiece format they grapple with the stunning contrasts among opposing aspects of human behavior: the tragically ubiquitous habit of making war and the universal urge for beauty, spirituality, and love.

Phyllis Plattner was born and grew up in New York City and greatly benefitted from that geographic happenstance by the easy access to the great museums of the city. It was while standing in front of a Van Gogh and a Gaugin at the Museum of Modern Art at about age eight that she realized for sure that she wanted to be an artist when she grew up. Since then she has never stopped painting, through college at Bennington in Vermont, and graduate school in Claremont, California, and all through her teaching career at Washington University School of Fine Arts (which it was then called), at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, (which is now called MICA) where she still teaches, and in Florence, Italy. She has exhibited her work in various galleries and university museums in this country, and in small exhibits in Italy and France.

To discuss our podcasts please visit http://www.live.ethicalstl.org/platforms on our community site.

Searching for a title, Phyllis Plattner, 15-June-2008

June 22nd, 2008
Artist Phyllis Plattner will discuss the path that led to her recent multiple panel paintings which are as yet still untitled. Based loosely on an altarpiece format they grapple with the stunning contrasts among opposing aspects of human behavior: the tragically ubiquitous habit of making war and the universal urge for beauty, spirituality, and love.

Phyllis Plattner was born and grew up in New York City and greatly benefitted from that geographic happenstance by the easy access to the great museums of the city. It was while standing in front of a Van Gogh and a Gaugin at the Museum of Modern Art at about age eight that she realized for sure that she wanted to be an artist when she grew up. Since then she has never stopped painting, through college at Bennington in Vermont, and graduate school in Claremont, California, and all through her teaching career at Washington University School of Fine Arts (which it was then called), at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, (which is now called MICA) where she still teaches, and in Florence, Italy. She has exhibited her work in various galleries and university museums in this country, and in small exhibits in Italy and France.

To discuss our podcasts please visit http://www.live.ethicalstl.org/platforms on our community site.