September 4, 2022 – Rev. Marti Keller

“Bread and Roses and Dirty Work –
a look at essential jobs and the toll of labor
inequality in this country, past and present”

Rev. Marti Keller is the granddaughter of a garment workers union leader in Boston, at a time of sweat shops and dangerous working conditions. Her activist work has always been at the intersection of gender, economic, and racial inequalities. She headed up two advocacy organizations for women and children, worked in the arena of reproductive justice for Planned Parenthood, and for the Unitarian Universalist Women’s Federation.

  • Facilitator: Patton White
  • Musician: Jean Heinrich

August 28, 2022 – Dr. Mark White

Mark White is a proud member of the First E, and it only took him ten years to learn to spell “existentialist,” two years less than it took to learn “epidemiologist.”
He has two sons, two daughters, and two dogs. Most important, he has a wonderful wife, Shelly Joan Ahmann. They have been married for 23 years.

A week ago, Mark completed a memoir called “Memoirs of a Disease Detective.” It took 13 years, and he would never have done it if Libby hadn’t turned him on to Carol Lee Lorenzo, a superb writer, teacher, and friend. The book is about his life where he and his Filipina wife traveled the world teaching and fighting epidemics in the Philippines and Uganda. Most were tropical diseases such as cholera, typhoid, malaria, measles, etc. They also investigated an Ebola virus epidemic, two earthquakes, and the eruption of Mount Pinatubo. It threw so much ash into the atmosphere that the global temperature fell by two degrees C for two years. Don’t get any ideas for global warming. His line editor commented that the book made her laugh many times and cry once. What a great review.

God knows if he’ll get a publisher, but if all fails, he’ll publish it myself. JK Rowling got 12 rejections before somebody took Harry Potter, and even then, Scholastic Press published the first edition. Writing about the past may not seem something an existentialist should do. But it is. You have to make up all that dialog you couldn’t remember. In seeking the truth, Mark emailed most of the people who appear and asked them to fact-check, a profoundly humbling experience.

As Faulkner says, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.” He looks forward to seeing all his old friends at the First E, and meeting some new ones.

  • Facilitator – Kathy McGuire
  • Musician – Mick Kinney

August 21, 2022 – Rev. Kim Palmer

Stories of Mom: Lessons for a Lifetime

We learn a great deal from those who raised us, sometimes about how to be and sometimes about how not to be. We all have these stories and I’ll be sharing mine with you, along with the lessons I’ve accumulated over much of a lifetime. 

Rev. Kim Palmer is an ordained Unitarian Universalist minister serving as an affiliated community minister with the Unitarian Universalist Metro Atlanta North congregation. She is a board-certified chaplain and has served Emory University in the dual role of chaplain and spiritual health researcher until retiring last year, along with her wife Marty. She continues to train chaplains and support research projects at Emory and elsewhere as a contractor. When not working, she and her wife chip away at numerous house and yard projects, while they dream of the time they can begin traveling.

  • Facilitator – Jan Lister
  • Musician – William Chelton

August 14, 2022 – D. Patton White

It’s about time! (and space, and energy…)

D. Patton White (he/him) has worked as a dancer and choreographer since 1982, for the stage, site-specific work, and dance for the camera.  As Artistic/Administrative Director of Beacon Dance since 1990, he has sought innovative ways to bring art to the public, including site works throughout DeKalb County parks and nature centers, the High Museum of Art, in the former Sears building in Atlanta, in Freedom Park, at the Atlanta Contemporary Arts Center, the B Complex in southwest Atlanta, the Emory University Campus, and on the Atlanta Beltline.  He currently teaches part time at Emory University.  He has been an artist in residence at UNLV, Rice University, and Emory University, and has conducted numerous community residencies and his work has been funded by the NEA, South Arts, GCA, Florida Council on Arts & Culture, among others.  He has been a member of Alternate ROOTS since 1997.

  • Facilitator – Cindy Lou Who
  • Musician – Craig Rafuse

August 7, 2022 – Dr. Jon Herman

“Thinking About Family, Thinking About War: A Picture Worth a Thousand Tears.”

Jon Herman is a recently retired associate professor of religious studies at Georgia State University, where he taught classes in Asian religion, comparative mysticism, and critical theory in the study of religion. He is the author of Taoism for Dummies, and several articles on topics such as interfaith dialogue, contemporary conceptions of “spirituality,” religious studies and public education, environmentalism, Neo-Confucian mysticism, and the late science fiction author Ursula K. Le Guin. He is currently researching for a book on the Jewish existentialist author Martin Buber’s unpublished lectures on the Taoist classic, the Tao Te Ching.

During his retirement, Jon has been authoring “Herman’s Toteboard,” a (liberal) blog offering election analysis and political commentary. You can find the blog at www.thetoteboard.org.

Jon’s wife Ellen has recently retired as the coordinator of Threshold Ministry, an organization providing assistance to the homeless and those suffering other effects of poverty. She had previously worked in religious education, and university, prison, and hospital chaplaincy, and is still working tirelessly to combat homelessness. Jon and Ellen are the parents of two young adult daughters, both adopted from China. Molly is the director of communications and children’s ministry at St. Martin in the Fields Episcopal Church in Brookhaven, and Carly is a student at UGA, studying public health.

  • Facilitator – Marsha Mitchiner
  • Musician – Kathy McGuire
Jon and Ellen

July 31, 2022 – Rev. Marsha Mitchiner

“Is it hot or is it just me? Some thoughts on perspective”

Our Fellowship Minister, Rev. Marsha Mitchiner, has served the Congregation for
over two decades, since ordination by us, following her study with Lanier Clance.
She counsels, connects, and contacts members and friends, and for those who need it,
performs the laying-on of hands in her role as a massage therapist. Many of us can
vouch for the quality of her work, and appreciate the wisdom, restraint, and compassion
she brings to the job of caring for our Congregation. Marsha speaks once each quarter, and helps smooth the functioning of the Congregation innumerable times in between.

Facilitator: Patton White
Musician: Charli Vogt

July 24, 2022 – Dr. Marian Meyers

‘A Trojan Horse in the News: Neoliberal Academics as “Credible” Sources’

Dr. Marian Meyers

My talk is about how academic scholars — supported by billionaire-funded libertarian and
neoliberal foundations and centers – have become go-to experts for mainstream news
organizations (including the New York Times and Washington Post), and in that capacity
have been able to promote neoliberal ideas and beliefs.

Marian Meyers is a professor emerita in the Department of Communication and a former
affiliate of the Institute of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Georgia State
University. Her most recent scholarly work has focused on neoliberal ideology in
mainstream media and how the media are complicit in promoting and naturalizing neoliberal beliefs and values. Her research interests also include the media’s portrayal of women and other socially marginalized groups from an intersectional perspective that views race, class, gender and other markers of social identity as inextricably connected. She has published articles and books on topics ranging from the status of women in higher education, the portrayal of women in the media, how African American women journalists cover the news, and neoliberalism and the media.

  • Facilitator: Libby Ware
  • Musician: William Chelton

July 17, 2022 – Barbara Brown and Sharyn Dowd

“Braver Angels – Depolarizing Political Conversations among Americans”

Sharyn Dowd
Barbara Brown

Braver Angels Georgia co-coordinators:
Barbara Brown (left) – Sixth-grade special ed teacher, former business owner.
Sharyn Dowd (right) – Retired pastor and university Bible teacher

Sharyn Dowd is retired from an associate pastor position at First Baptist
Church of Decatur (GA). She previously taught Scripture at Lexington
(KY) Theological Seminary and at Baylor University. Besides her work
for Braver Angels Georgia, Sharyn volunteers at Edgewood Church in
Atlanta, serves on the board of a small nonprofit working to reduce
Female Genital Mutilation among the Pokot tribespeople of Kenya, and
enjoys her family in Mableton.

“We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.” – Abraham Lincoln

Facilitator: Wade Marbaugh
Musician: Jean Heinrich

July 10, 2022 – Dr. Robert Baker

“The strange origins of religious tolerance in North America”

Dr. H. Robert Baker is Associate Professor of History at Georgia State University and is
the author of Prigg v. Pennsylvania: Slavery, the Supreme Court, and the Ambivalent
Constitution (2012) and The Rescue of Joshua Glover: A Fugitive Slave, the
Constitution, and the Coming of the Civil War (2006). His scholarly articles have
appeared in the Law and History Review, Common-Place, and the Journal of Supreme
Court History. He holds a Ph.D. in History from UCLA, where he studied with Joyce
Appleby. He has been a Fulbright Fellowship and has been a fellow at the Institute for Constitutional Studies. He also writes about wine, law, and contemporary culture for the blog Tropics of Meta.

  • Facilitator: Jan Lister
  • Musician: Mick Kinney

July 3, 2022 – Don Perryman

“What’s on your Bucket List?”

Don Perryman is a graduate of Georgia State U. and a retired teacher of English and gifted ed at high schools around Fulton County. His interests include meals out with relatives and friends, low-stress hiking and camping, philosophizing, swimming laps at our city pool – and poetry. Last year he self-published Hearts Bigger than Brazil, a mostly autobiographical collection of poems written over a lifetime. He currently lives in Roswell with his husband, Gilson Satel.

Facilitator: Lorraine Fontana
Musician: Bill Chelton