Events

Saturday, July 10, 2010
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 10:00 pm

This is an auction item, $20 per person. There is room for more participants.

Join people for an evening of fun. The evenings begins with appetizers on the porch followed by dinner.

Then the games begin. There are a variety of games available and the spirit is fun-filled and non-competitive.

Dessert and coffee end the evening.

If you have not signed up yet, call or e-mail Mary Ellen Stanton 703 631 7081 or camstanton1@gmail.com.

Sunday, July 11, 2010
Start: 10:30 am
End: 12:00 pm

National Arboretum 3501 New York Ave, NE, Washington DC.

Take a 40 - 45 minute open air tram tour of the 446 acre gardens and collections. Before or after the tram tour, drive, bike, or walk the nine miles of roadways to visit plant collections, National Bonsai and Penjing Museum, herb garden, aquatic plants, and exotic koi fish and much more.

WE WILL MEET AT THE TRAM KIOSK BY 10:30 SO THE WE CAN GET TICKETS FOR THE 11:30 TOUR.

Friday, July 30, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 2:30 pm

Rosemary Ziskind is coordinating a Fine Dining Lunch by Culinary Students at Stratford University, 7777 Leesburg Pike (on Ramada Road) Fifth Floor, Falls Church (allow extra driving time due to nearby construction).

Buffet includes breads, salads, pates, vegetables, entrees, and desserts. Serving begins promptly at 11:00 AM. Arrive early to see students preparing our meal. Lunch is $15.75 (includes tax) no tips.

Alcoholic beverages are not included. Wine is $4.00 per glass.

TO GUARANTEE SEATING, PAYMENT MUST BE MADE AT TIME OF RESERVATION. CONTACT ROSEMARY ZISKIND AT 703 534 8708 OR rpziskind@yahoo.com BY JULY 10 TO LET HER KNOW IF YOU ARE ATTENDING AND TO LET HER KNOW IF YOU ARE A VEGETARIAN.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 10:00 pm

The award winning movie will be shown followed by discussion

Sunday, September 12, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

Jone Johnson Lewis, NoVES Senior Leader, kicks off the 2010-2011 program year with an opening address: Individualism? Relationships? Community?  Are these in conflict, inherently, or do they work together?  Come consider what it might be to live in relationships and build community where every individual matters.  

Sunday, September 19, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

Lisel Burns, Leader Emeritus of the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture (BSEC) invites us to consider our nation’s historic responsibility for distorted development in Haiti. She proposes ways that members and local Ethical Societies can assist Haitians and Haitian Americans in developing local partnership projects with earthquake-affected Haitian communities. These partnerships can transform communities both here and there.  Lisel has been visiting Haiti as a community development organizer since the mid-1990s and BSEC has ongoing support programs in Leogane, at the epicenter of Haiti’s January 2010 earthquake.

Start: 1:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm

Ethical Culture Leader Lisle Burns will lead a workshop on September 19 following platform. The workshop will be held at Blueberry Hill, home of member Helene Shore. The space is limited. Please see Marianne Moerman for details.

Sunday, September 26, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

In honor of International Peace Day on September 26, NoVES celebrates peace building.

Sunday, October 3, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

Whether you're able to attend the Saturday Parenting Beyond Belief Workshop or not, on Sunday you'll be able to hear Dale McGowan on the promises and challenges of "Raising Free Thinkers." More on Dale McGowan, his books, and his work: Parenting Beyond Belief

Sunday, October 10, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

The term “social justice” provokes a wide variety of reactions these days.  How should Ethical Humanists view it - as an uncontroversial effort to make our political and economic relationships more  fair or as a politically charged coercive redistribution of resources?  How should we envision and actualize social justice? How radical should we get? Hugh Taft-Morales, Leader, Baltimore Ethical Society and former Leader-Intern at NoVES, explores these questions, guided by Ethical Culture history and his own yearnings to do it justice.  

Sunday, October 17, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

Jone Johnson Lewis, NoVES Leader, will address the tendency in our modern society to look for the "quick fix" to solutions, often at the cost of finding a solution that will actually work. Whether we're talking about personal or interpersonal life, work or politics and social change work, Jone looks at alternatives to jumping in to fix something right away.

Sunday, October 24, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

Lisa Kemper, interfaith chaplain at York Hospital in York, PA., discusses the complexity of making ethical choices. With so many environmental and social causes and competing issues, it can be overwhelming to decide what is "right". We can't do everything, but we all can do something.

Sunday, October 31, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

Ethical Culture Societies and many other religious groups have a mission of working for social justice. Sometimes the term is defined broadly to include justice for future generations and non-human species—but even then, does it cover everything worth striving for? In this platform, Perry Beider,  president of the Washington Ethical Society, will argue that the ideal society envisioned in Ethical Culture depends critically on social justice, but encompasses other ethical goals as well. Our work for justice may be more coherent, and perhaps even more effective, if we recognize the broader whole of which it is a part.

Sunday, November 7, 2010
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm

Every religion has something at its center. For most it is something supernatural. But what is at the center of a naturally-based religion like Ethical Culture? To say that its founder, Dr Felix Adler, plucked out the supernatural and substituted ethics in its place is accurate but not satisfying. How does that inform and animate our daily lives? How does it lend meaning to our existence? Drawing from one of Dr. Adler’s few books, The Religion of Duty, Ethical Culture Leader Tony Hileman approaches these and other questions through the lens of ethical responsibility.

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