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Weekly Update 
is emailed every Tuesday to PLATO members and  those interested in joining

Be sure to add: PLATO Office Operations and "info@platomadison.org" to your email contacts or approved sender list in order to direct PLATO emails to your Inbox and keep them out of your junk folder.
  • November 30, 2021 5:49 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    PLATO Weekly Update

    November 30, 2021


    CURRICULUM

    GIVING THANKS
    We'd like to thank all the course coordinators who retired in 2020 and 2021 for contributing their time and energy to fellow PLATO members. You have truly helped make PLATO a space where the love of learning never gets old!

    MARK YOUR CALENDARS
    The Course Schedule Calendar is now posted on 
    PLATO's Home Page to make it easy to locate registration and start dates for Winter and Spring Courses.  

    REMINDER
    These COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - visit the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.


    COURSES PAGE 


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    GOOD NEWS! In the coming weeks we will announce dates for the resumption of social gathering breakfasts and an in-person theater trip. PLATO's Executive Committee and COVID-19 Advisory Task Group have allowed us to begin planning for early 2022. Each event will require participants to follow COVID-19 protocols including masking and providing proof of vaccination or a negative test within 72 hours of the event.

    FALL WORKSHOP 

    Tending Our Grief: A Self-Care Workshop: This week Thursday, December 2nd from 1:30–3pm we will learn about various types of grief and healthy ways to potentially work with it. Hosted by grief support specialists Stephanie Steigerwaldt and Julie Swanson, this session will include a presentation, self-reflection time, and small group sharing so that participants can learn, reflect and connect. Registration is required.

    FALL LECTURE

    Wisconsin CocktailsJoin us next week on Friday, December 10th at 2:30pm for a festive, one-hour virtual lecture by author Jeanette Hurt. We'll learn the histories behind some of our state's most iconic drinks and discover why Wisconsin has a love affair with Brandy Old Fashioneds, Tom and Jerrys, boozy ice cream and more. Registration is required.

    Members are also welcome to access Past Recordings. 

    SELF-GUIDED WALKS

    Walking Tours of Dane CountyFind descriptions of 11 of the most popular self-guided walks designed to help you easily locate parking and guide you along the trail.

    THEATER 

    Partake in a variety of virtual options found on PLATO’s
     Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are added frequently.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR 


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Visit The Agora Features webpage for highlights from this past season, created and curated by fellow PLATO members for your enjoyment.

    Our Biweekly Offering for November 23 - December 6 is Woodpecker, a poem by Jane Hall, which offers a glimpse of how nature shapes this poet's work. 

    AGORA FEATURE 


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    NEW! PLATO Breakfasts to resume in early 2022 – see Special Events section above for more details.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your Autumn reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    DID YOU KNOW? November 30 - December 13, 2021

    Did You Know… An  enslaved African man, Onesimus taught Cotton Mather how to inoculate against smallpox. The concept of immunization came to the American colonies via Africa. In the early 1700s, Puritan minister Cotton Mather learned from Onesimus, a man he enslaved, about a method long used in West Africa, where a weakened form of the disease would be intentionally applied to a cut.

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about 
    Onesimus & past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at: ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE 


  • November 23, 2021 2:24 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    PLATO Weekly Update

    November 23, 2021


    CURRICULUM

    The Course Schedule Calendar is now posted on PLATO's Home Page to make it easy to locate registration and start dates for Winter and Spring Courses.  


    REMINDER

    These COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - visit the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE 


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    GOOD NEWS! In the coming weeks we will announce dates for the resumption of social gathering breakfasts and an in-person theater trip. PLATO's Executive Committee and COVID-19 Advisory Task Group have allowed us to begin planning for early 2022. Each event will require participants to follow COVID-19 protocols including masking and providing proof of vaccination or a negative test within 72 hours of the event.

    FALL WORKSHOP 

    Tending Our Grief: A Self-Care Workshop: On Thursday, December 2nd from 1:30–3pm we will learn about various types of grief and healthy ways to potentially work with it. Hosted by grief support specialists Stephanie Steigerwaldt and Julie Swanson, this session will offer participants an opportunity to learn, self-reflect and connect. Registration is required.

    FALL LECTURE

    Wisconsin CocktailsJoin us on Friday, December 10th at 2:30pm for a festive, one-hour virtual lecture by author Jeanette Hurt. We'll learn the histories behind some of our state's most iconic drinks and discover why Wisconsin has a love affair with Brandy Old Fashioneds, Tom and Jerrys, boozy ice cream and more. Registration is required.

    Also, members are welcome to access Past Recordings. 

    SELF-GUIDED WALKS

    Walking Tours of Dane CountyFind descriptions of 11 of the most popular self-guided walks designed to help you easily locate parking and guide you along the trail.

    THEATER 

    Partake in a variety of virtual options found on PLATO’s
     Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are added frequently.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR 


    EDUCATION FUND UPDATE

    T'IS THE SEASON to give! Please consider including PLATO's Education Fund in your year-end charitable gift giving to help PLATO continue to provide scholarships for returning adult students at UW-Madison, as well as supporting the Odyssey Project and other local community programs. Since 2012, PLATO has raised more than $205,000, with this year's member donations providing $34,000 to support these educational efforts. Learn more and donate online at PLATO's Donate webpage and send questions to Rod McKenzie: rod.mckenzie@mail.tds.net.


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Visit The Agora Features webpage for highlights from this past season, created and curated by fellow PLATO members for your enjoyment.

    Our Biweekly Offering for November 23 - December 6 is Woodpecker, a poem by Jane Hall, which offers a glimpse of how nature shapes this poet's work. 

    AGORA FEATURE 


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    NEW! PLATO Breakfasts to resume in early 2022 – see Special Events section above for more details.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your Autumn reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    DID YOU KNOW? for November 16 - 29, 2021

    Did You Know… We’wha (a Zuni Two Spirit), a pottery and textile artist, was a Zuni cultural ambassador who took on both male and female tasks. We’wha was also a spiritual leader who endeavored to preserve the history, traditions, and knowledge of the Zuni people.

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about We’wha 
    and past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at: ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE 


  • November 16, 2021 3:20 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    PLATO Weekly Update 

    November 16, 2021


    CURRICULUM

    NEW! The Course Schedule Calendar is now posted on PLATO's Home Page to make it easy to locate registration and start dates for Winter and Spring Courses.

    REMINDER

    These COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - visit the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    FALL WORKSHOP 

    Tending Our Grief: A Self-Care Workshop: On Thursday, December 2nd from 1:30–3pm we will learn about various types of grief and healthy ways to potentially work with it. Hosted by grief support specialists Stephanie Steigerwaldt and Julie Swanson, this session will offer participants an opportunity to learn, self-reflect and connect. Registration is required.

    FALL LECTURE

    Wisconsin CocktailsJoin us on Friday, December 10th at 2:30pm for a festive, one-hour virtual lecture by author Jeanette Hurt. We'll learn the histories behind some of our state's most iconic drinks and discover why Wisconsin has a love affair with Brandy Old Fashioneds, Tom and Jerrys, boozy ice cream and more. Registration is required.

    Also, members are welcome to access Past Recordings. 

    SELF-GUIDED WALKS

    Walking Tours of Dane CountyFind descriptions of 11 of the most popular self-guided walks designed to help you easily locate parking and guide you along the trail.

    THEATER 

    Partake in a variety of virtual options found on PLATO’s
     Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are added frequently.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Visit The Agora Features webpage for highlights from this past season, created and curated by fellow PLATO members for your enjoyment.

    Our Biweekly Offering for November 9 - 22 is Olbrich Garden Gems, an artwork by Sherry Ackerman, inspired by an anecdote most grandparents can relate to. 

    AGORA FEATURE


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings – to resume next semester, depending upon the course of the pandemic.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your Autumn reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    DID YOU KNOW? for November 16 - 29, 2021

    Did You Know… We’wha (a Zuni Two Spirit), a pottery and textile artist, was a Zuni cultural ambassador who took on both male and female tasks. We’wha was also a spiritual leader who endeavored to preserve the history, traditions, and knowledge of the Zuni people.

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about We’wha
    and past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at: ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE





  • November 09, 2021 12:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    PLATO Weekly Update 

    November 9, 2021

    CURRICULUM

    COMING SOON

    Keep an eye on PLATO's Home Page - it will soon feature an updated Courses Calendar!


    REMINDER

    These COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - visit the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE 


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    FALL WORKSHOP 

    NEW! 
    Tending Our Grief: A Self-Care Workshop: The holidays can be a time of great joy but can also be a time when many of us struggle with grief. Join us on Thursday, December 2nd at 1:30pm to learn about various types of grief and discover some healthy ways to potentially work with it. This 90-minute workshop, hosted by grief support specialists Stephanie Steigerwaldt and Julie Swanson, will offer participants an opportunity to learn, self-reflect and connect to help us integrate our grief. Registration is required.

    SEASONAL LECTURES

    Wisconsin Cocktails: You are invited to what is sure to be a festive virtual lecture by author Jeanette Hurt on Friday, December 10th at 2:30pm. We'll learn the histories behind some of our state's most iconic drinks and discover why Wisconsin has a love affair with Brandy Old Fashioneds, Tom and Jerrys, boozy ice cream and more. Registration is required.

    Hygge, Health and Happiness: With winter headed our way, now is a good time to revisit last year's "BadgerTalk" by Claus Andersen, UW–Madison Professor of Scandinavian Studies. Learn how hygge – a Scandinavian way of life – can benefit us right here in Wisconsin.

    And, as always, members are welcome to access Past Recordings. 

    SELF-GUIDED WALKS

    Walking Tours of Dane CountyFind descriptions of 11 of the most popular self-guided walks designed to help you easily locate parking and guide you along the trail.

    THEATER 

    Partake in a variety of virtual options found on PLATO’s
     Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are added frequently.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR 


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Visit The Agora Features webpage for highlights from this past season, created and curated by fellow PLATO members for your enjoyment. 

    Our Biweekly Offering for November 9 - 22 is Olbrich Garden Gems, an artwork by Sherry Ackerman, inspired by an anecdote most grandparents can relate to. 

    AGORA FEATURE 


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings – to resume next semester, depending upon the course of the pandemic.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your Fall reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    NEW BOOK “The Loneliest Americans” by Jay Caspian Kang. Click on the Social Justice Webpage button below for more on this book ranked as #1 New Release in Asian American Studies by Amazon.

    DID YOU KNOW? for November 2 - 15, 2021

    Did You Know…U.S. Patent # 473,653, issued on April 26,1892 to Sarah Boone, for the design of a tapered ironing board on a stand is still used today!

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about Sarah Boone 
    & past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE 


  • November 02, 2021 1:35 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    PLATO Weekly Update 

    November 2, 2021


    CURRICULUM

    PLEASE NOTE that Chuck Karabin's course, Contemporary Economic Issues has been canceled. It met on Tuesday afternoons at Capitol Lakes.


    INVITATION

    Ever considered leading a PLATO course? The Curriculum Committee is seeking new members to share their interests or expertise by offering a course. If this idea appeals to you, please visit our Propose a Course page to learn more about this process. Or you can contact Therese Stevens at thmstevens@gmail.com for more information. 


    REMINDER

    These COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - visit the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    FALL LECTURES

    NEW! Getting antsy for the upcoming holidays? Sign up for now for Wisconsin Cocktails, presented by author Jeanette Hurt, for what is sure to be a festive virtual lecture on Friday, December 10th at 2:30pm. We'll learn the histories behind some of our state's most iconic drinks and discover why Wisconsin has a love affair with Brandy Old Fashioneds, Tom and Jerrys, boozy ice cream and more.

    A Seasonal Favorite – with winter weather and darker days around the corner, now is a good time to revisit last year's "BadgerTalk" on Hygge, Health and Happiness, by Claus Andersen, UW–Madison Professor of Scandinavian Studies. Learn how hygge – a Scandinavian way of life – can benefit us here in Wisconsin.

    And, as always, members are welcome to access Past Recordings. 

    SELF-GUIDED WALKS

    Peruse descriptions of the most popular Walking Tours of Dane County compiled on one convenient webpage. These 11 self-guided walking tours are designed to help you easily locate parking and guide you along the trail.  

    THEATER 

    Browse a variety of 
    virtual
     options on PLATO’s
     Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are added  frequently.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR


    EDUCATION FUND UPDATE

    THE GIFT OF EDUCATION – helping PLATO help others. This week members will receive a mailing with the PLATO Education Fund's scholarship flyer and donation forms for the upcoming year. The flyer highlights our current scholarship and community organization recipients.This is all made possible by the generosity of PLATO members like you who value lifelong learning and want to provide much-needed financial support to others in need.

    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Visit The Agora Weekly Features webpage for highlights from this past season, created and curated by fellow PLATO members for your enjoyment. 

    AGORA FEATURE


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings – to resume next semester, depending upon the course of the pandemic.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your Fall reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    NEW BOOK “The Loneliest Americans” by Jay Caspian Kang. Click on the Social Justice Webpage button below for more on this book ranked as #1 New Release in Asian American Studies by Amazon.

    DID YOU KNOW? for November 2 - 15, 2021

    Did You Know…U.S. Patent # 473,653, issued on April 26,1892 to Sarah Boone, for the design of a tapered ironing board on a stand is still used today!

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about Sarah Boone
    & past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE


  • October 26, 2021 3:45 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    PLATO Weekly Update 

    October 26, 2021


    CURRICULUM

    INVITATION

    The Curriculum Committee seeks new members to share their interests or expertise with other members by offering a course. If you are thinking of becoming a course coordinator, please visit our Propose a Course page to learn more about this process. Or you can contact Therese Stevens at thmstevens@gmail.com for more information. 

    REMINDER

    These COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - visit the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE 


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    FALL LECTURES
    There are several new lectures in the works with details to come soon – stay tuned! In the meantime, members are welcome to access
     Past Recordings. 

    Hygge, Health and Happiness, by Claus Andersen, UW–Madison Professor of Scandinavian Studies. With winter's challenges around the corner, now is a good time to revisit last year's "BadgerTalk" on hygge – the Danish word connoting close, cozy comfort – and show how this Scandinavian way of life can benefit us here in Wisconsin. 

    THEATER 
    At-home virtual options:

    The Tragedy of Macbeth  – A little later than now, in the ruins of a theatre, three witches make a prophecy. A warrior and his wife enter the darkness. A war begins. Yaël Farber directs James McArdleand Saoirse Ronan, in an elemental production about a world in transformation, the shadows in all of us, and one couple’s spine-chilling quest for power. Streaming Oct. 27-30.  

    Also, browse a variety of options on PLATO’s Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are added frequently.

    INVITATION
    Have you attended a talk you enjoyed and think more people should be aware of it? Are you curious about something and think others might be too? Send your ideas for new lecture topics and include the name of a speaker if you have it to mdiiorio1234@gmail.com.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR 


    EDUCATION FUND UPDATE

    ARRIVING SOON in your mailbox – the PLATO Education Fund's updated scholarship flyer and donation forms for the upcoming year. The flyer highlights the current scholarship and community organization recipients that PLATO funds. This is all made possible by the generosity of PLATO members who value lifelong learning and see value in providing much-needed financial supportto students and community organizations who might otherwise be unable to take advantage of educational opportunities due to financial need.


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Visit The Agora Weekly Features webpage for highlights from this past season, created and curated by fellow PLATO members for your enjoyment.

    AGORA FEATURE 


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings – to resume next semester, depending upon the course of the pandemic.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your Fall reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    DID YOU KNOW? for October 19 – November 1, 2021

    Did You Know...The winner of the 1980 Law and Economics Center Prize was a black man, Thomas Sowell, an economist, academic, and social theorist. His book, Knowledge and Decisions, was heralded as a "landmark work," selected for this prize "because of its cogent contribution to our understanding of the differences between the market process and the process of government."

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about Thomas Sowell 
    and past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE 


  • October 19, 2021 1:22 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    PLATO Weekly Update

    October 19, 2021


    CURRICULUM


    PLEASE NOTE that Don Reeder's course, Where is Everybody?, has been canceled. It met on Thursday mornings at Oakwood. 

     

    INVITATION

    PLATO is always looking for more members to share their interests or expertise with other members by offering a course. If you are thinking of becoming a course coordinator, please visit our Propose a Course page to learn more about this process. Or you can contact Therese Stevens at thmstevens@gmail.com for more information. 


    REMINDER

    The following COVID-19 Protocols are still in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - visit the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    FALL LECTURES
    Join us next week Tuesday, October 26th at 1:30pm for What is Critical Race Theory, and Why is it Controversial? In this timely 90-minute lecture with Gloria Ladson-Billings, Professor Emerita at UW-Madison, we will learn about how CRT applies to education and why it has become part of the culture wars in this country. Gloria Ladson-Billings is also the former Kellner Family Distinguished Professor of Urban Education in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. Please register online – it is required to attend.

    Until then, members are welcome to access Past Recordings of lectures online.

    NEW! At-home virtual streaming options:

    The Tragedy of Macbeth  – A little later than now, in the ruins of a theatre, three witches make a prophecy. A warrior and his wife enter the darkness. A war begins. Yaël Farber directs James McArdle and Saoirse Ronan, in an elemental production about a world in transformation, the shadows in all of us, and one couple’s spine-chilling quest for power.

    Designing Women – A WORLD PREMIERE – The place, Atlanta, the time, before and after the presidential election in November, 2020. The show contains adult language and themes, a confetti cannon, and, much like the television show that preceded it, fiery political debate and humor with many references to recent events. Written by L. Bloodworth Thomason, the same playwright who wrote the popular television series.

    AN AUDIO PLAY for listening at home: 

    Coal Country
    Written by Jessica Blank and Erik JensenCoal Country is an audio play that tells the story of the 2010 Upper Big Branch mine explosion in West Virginia, the most deadly mining disaster in recent U.S. history. It is a riveting, emotionally stunning work based on first-person accounts by survivors and family members. Blank and Jensen are a writing team who The New Yorker calls "among the foremost practitioners of documentary theater in the U.S." The performance is directed by Blank and features original music by three-time Grammy award-winning country/folk legend Steve Earle

    To accesCoal Country free for one month:

    · Go to audible.com

    · Search for Coal Country

    · Follow the prompts

    · After your 30-day free trial the cost is $7.95 per mont; cancel anytime.

    INVITATION
    Have you attended a talk you enjoyed and think more people should be aware of it? Are you curious about something and think others might be too? Send your ideas for new lecture topics and include the name of a speaker if you have it to mdiiorio1234@gmail.com.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Each weekwe offer for your enjoyment, a featured piece from contributors to The Agora, PLATO's journal of arts and ideas. This week we offer Foot of Yosemite Falls, a painting by Jim Albright.

    AGORA FEATURE


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings - due to the pandemic, we hope to resume next semester.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your Fall reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    DID YOU KNOW? for October 19 – November 1, 2021

    Did You Know...The winner of the 1980 Law and Economics Center Prize was a black man, Thomas Sowell, an economist, academic, and social theorist. His book, Knowledge and Decisions, was heralded as a "landmark work," selected for this prize "because of its cogent contribution to our understanding of the differences between the market process and the process of government."

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about Thomas Sowell
    and past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE


     

  • October 12, 2021 1:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    PLATO Weekly Update

    October 12, 2021


    CURRICULUM

    We hope that everyone is continuing to enjoy our Fall course offerings. Please note the following COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - see the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE 


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    NEW! AN AUDIO PLAY

    For listening at home: 

    Coal Country
    Written by Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen, Coal Country is an audio play that tells the story of the 2010 Upper Big Branch mine explosion in West Virginia, the most deadly mining disaster in recent U.S. history. It is a riveting, emotionally stunning work based on first-person accounts by survivors and family members. Blank and Jensen are a writing team who The New Yorker calls "among the foremost practitioners of documentary theater in the U.S." The performance is directed by Blank and features original music by three-time Grammy award-winning country/folk legend Steve Earle. 

    To accesCoal Country free for one month:

    · Go to audible.com

    · Search for Coal Country

    · Follow the prompts

    · After your 30-day free trial the cost is $7.95 per mont; cancel anytime.


    THEATER 

    For virtual streaming at home:

    Can I Live?
    Fehinti Balogun offers an invitation to a vital new digital performance about the climate catastrophe, sharing his personal journey into the biggest challenge of our times. Weaving his story with spoken word, rap, theatre, animation and the scientific facts, Balogun charts a course through the fundamental issues, identifying the intimate relationship between the environmental crisis and the global struggle for social justice, and sharing how, as a young Black British man, he has found his place in the climate movement. Available now through October 17th.

    And, browse a variety of options on PLATO’s Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are frequently added.

    INVITATION

    Have you attended a talk you enjoyed and think more people should be aware of it? Are you curious about something and think others might be too? Send your ideas for new lecture topics and include the name of a speaker if you have it to mdiiorio1234@gmail.com.


    FALL LECTURES

    Join us for “What is Critical Race Theory, and Why is it Controversial?” on Tuesday, October 26th at 1:30pm. Register here for this 90-minute Zoom lecture with Gloria Ladson-Billings, Professor Emerita at UW-Madison and former Kellner Family Distinguished Professor of Urban Education in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. She will talk with us about how CRT applies to education and why it has become part of the culture wars in this country. Registration is required to attend.

    In the meantime, members are welcome to access Past Recordings.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR 


    PLEASE NOTE

    We have new contact information! 

    PLATO’s new phone number and mailing address:

    Telephone: 608-572-6869

    Mailing Address: 6209 Mineral Point Rd. #203, Madison, WI, 53705-4549

    Our email address remains: info@platomadison.org


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Each weekwe offer for your enjoyment, a featured piece from contributors to The Agora, PLATO's journal of arts and ideas. This week we are pleased to present Margaret Mary, a poem by George Faunce, that is sure to delight grandparents and grandchildren alike.

    AGORA FEATURE 


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings - due to the pandemic, we hope to resume next semester.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your early Fall reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    DID YOU KNOW? for October 4-19, 2021

    Did You Know… Maria Tallchief was the first Native American woman to break into ballet. Elizabeth Marie Tallchief was born in 1925 in Oklahoma; her father was a member of the Osage Nation. At age 17, she moved to New York City to pursue her dreams of becoming a dancer.

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about Maria Tallchief 
    and past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about.  Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at: ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE 


  • October 05, 2021 11:40 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    PLATO Weekly Update

    October 5, 2021

    CURRICULUM

    We hope that participants and course coordinators are enjoying this Fall's course offerings! Please note the following COVID-19 Protocols continue to be in place for in-person participants:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - see the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE 


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    FALL LECTURES

    Join us for What is Critical Race Theory, and Why is it Controversial?” on Tuesday, October 26th at 1:30pm. Register here for this 90-minute Zoom lecture with Gloria Ladson-Billings, Professor Emerita at UW-Madison and former Kellner Family Distinguished Professor of Urban Education in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. She will talk with us about how CRT applies to education and why it has become part of the culture wars in this country. Registration is required to attend.

    In the meantime, members are invited to access Past Recordings.

    THEATER

    NEW! For virtual streaming at home:

    Plays by Latinx Playwrights 
    This 10th annual Crossing Borders (Cruzando Fronteras) Festival of new plays by Latinx playwrights, curated by José Zayas, features Paz Pardo’s "Ciertas Astillas/Certain Shards" and Francisco Mendoza’s "Machine Learning"; juliany f. taveras’ "Syzygy Or, The Ceasing of the Sun"; and Nick Malakhow’s "Optional Boss Battle". Available now though October 10th.

    Can I Live?
    Fehinti Balogun offers an invitation to a vital new digital performance about the climate catastrophe, sharing his personal journey into the biggest challenge of our times. Weaving his story with spoken word, rap, theatre, animation and the scientific facts, Balogun charts a course through the fundamental issues, identifying the intimate relationship between the environmental crisis and the global struggle for social justice, and sharing how, as a young Black British man, he has found his place in the climate movement. Available at October 11th - 17th.

    And, browse a variety of options on PLATO’s Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are frequently added. 

    An invitation from Special Events Committee: Have you attended a talk you enjoyed and think more people should be aware of it? Are you curious about something and think others might also be? Send your ideas for new lecture topics and include the name of a speaker if you have it to mdiiorio1234@gmail.com.

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR 


    PLATO UPDATE

    We’re on the move! 

    PLEASE NOTE PLATO’s new phone number and mailing address:

    Telephone: 608-572-6869

    Mailing Address: 6209 Mineral Point Rd. #203, Madison, WI, 53705-4549

    Our email address remains: info@platomadison.org

    PLATO has had a long partnership with the UW-Madison Division of Continuing Studies (DCS) where they provided staffing, office space, and other supports. As we’ve updated you during the past year, this partnership is changing.  

    In June we hired our own office coordinator, Stephanie Steigerwaldt. And now, due to space restrictions imposed on DCS by campus building projects, we have moved out of the DCS office at 21 N. Park Street and moved our files and equipment to Oakwood Village West.

    We appreciate the support of Oakwood Village in making space available to us. Despite all the recent challenges, PLATO’s offerings are going strong with Fall courses, lectures and walks underway to engage our members in meaningful, life-long learning opportunities. 


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Each weekwe offer for your enjoyment, a featured piece from contributors to The Agora, PLATO's journal of arts and ideas. We begin October with Heatwave, a collage by Grethe Brix-Leer.

    AGORA FEATURE 


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings - due to the pandemic, we hope to resume next semester.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your early Fall reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    NEW ARTICLE It’s easy to see why they consider books dangerous..." says Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Leonard Pitts Jr. Click on the Social Justice Webpage button below for more on Pitts’ column written during last week’s national Banned Books Week . 

    DID YOU KNOW? for October 4-19, 2021

    Did You Know… Maria Tallchief was the first Native American woman to break into ballet. Elizabeth Marie Tallchief was born in 1925 in Oklahoma; her father was a member of the Osage Nation. At age 17, she moved to New York City to pursue her dreams of becoming a dancer.

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about
    Maria Tallchief and past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about.  Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at: ksmichaelis@gmail.com).


  • September 28, 2021 2:19 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    PLATO Weekly Update

    September 28, 2021


    CURRICULUM

    Fall courses have begun! Please keep in mind that all participants for in-person courses must follow these COVID-19 Protocols:

    · Wear masks inside of Host Location buildings.

    · Follow social distancing guidelines.

    · Follow any additional guidelines required at Host Locations - see the Courses Page or check with your course coordinator.

    COURSES PAGE


    SPECIAL EVENTS

    FALL LECTURES

    NEW! Join us for What is Critical Race Theory, and Why is it Controversial?” on Tuesday, October 26th at 1:30pm. Register here for this 90-minute Zoom lecture with Gloria Ladson-Billings, Professor Emerita at UW-Madison and former Kellner Family Distinguished Professor of Urban Education in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. She will talk with us about how CRT applies to education and why it has become part of the culture wars in this country. Registration is required to attend.

    Until then, members are invited to access Past Recordings.

    THEATER

    NEW! For your virtual streaming pleasure:

    Ian McKellen on Stage: With Tolkien, Shakespeare, Others and YOU: Sept. 17 – Oct. 3. With stories and anecdotes from his illustrious career on stage and screen, Ian McKellen performs extracts from his most iconic performances, including Shakespeare's King Lear and Tolkien's Gandalf from Lord of the Rings. Filmed live in London’s West End by the National Theatre and presented by TBD Studios.

     Three Plays by Tracy LettsSept. 29 – Oct. 24. Streaming from Steppenwolf Theatre, Tracy Letts explains, “These plays share at least one thread: a world off-kilter. They feel very much like stories for 2021.” 

    1) Night Safari: The nocturnal habits of the Panamanian Night Monkey, the life cycle of the Paradoxical Frog, and the mating rituals of middle-aged male homo sapiens. This wry monologue poses the question: Are we so distant from the whims of our biology? Enjoy your tour, and please remember – do not feed the animals. 

    2) The Old Country: Two men in a diner drain the last drops of their coffees and think about ordering dessert. In the denouement of their (physical, intellectual, and sexual) lives, they wax nostalgic and try to communicate across a wide divide. 

    3) The Stretch: And they’re off, for the 108th running of the El Dorado Stakes! But this race is long-distance... and maybe not what it first seems…

    And, browse a variety of options on PLATO’s Virtual Theater Trips page where new items are frequently added. 

    SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR


    FEATURED AGORA WORKS

    Each weekwe offer for your enjoyment, a featured piece from contributors to The Agora, PLATO's journal of arts and ideas. This week we are pleased to offer All the Colors Happening Again, a poem by Norman Leer.

    AGORA FEATURE


    SOCIAL GATHERINGS

    Social Gatherings - due to the pandemic, we hope to resume next semester.


    SOCIAL JUSTICE EVENTS & READINGS

    Select from a range of topics and formats 

    for your early Fall reading, viewing, or listening, 

    curated by PLATO's Diversity Awareness Committee.

    DID YOU KNOW? for September 21 – October 4, 2021

    Did You Know… Special Olympics athlete Chris Nikic crossed the finish line to become the first person with Down Syndrome to complete an Ironman triathlon. Guinness World Records recognized Nikic's achievement after he finished a 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bike ride and a 26.2-marathon run at the Ironman Florida competition in Panama City Beach in November 2020.

    Visit the Social Justice Webpage for more about Chris Nikic
    & past DID YOU KNOW? features.

    DID YOU KNOW? – spotlighting notable contributions made by non-mainstream individuals you might not have learned or read about. Suggestions for inclusions are welcome (send to Kathy at: ksmichaelis@gmail.com).

    SOCIAL JUSTICE WEBPAGE


PLATO is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization supported in part by:



info@platomadison.org

Facebook: @platomadison

608-572-6869

6209 Mineral Point Road #203
Madison, WI 53705








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