• RECORDED
    June 25
    Wednesday
    1:00 PM → 2:30 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Michael L. Manson, Educator and Fmr. President, The Robert Frost Society
    Locations: Hybrid - At Oasis and Online
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Robert Frost (1873-1963) was America’s last broadly popular poet. The first to read at a presidential inauguration, he was also the first to serve as poet-in-residence at a university. Everyone read Frost. He appeared on the new medium of TV and spoke at colleges and universities across the country. We’ll examine Frost’s life, biography, and...
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  • June 14
    Tuesday
    10:30 AM → 12:30 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Stephen Klatsky and Jerry Brennan, Baseball Aficionados
    Locations: Oasis at the Macys Home Store
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams were front-page news for decades, on and off the baseball diamond, and during and after their playing careers. This program discusses their interesting rivalry and...
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  • June 14
    Tuesday
    1:00 PM → 2:30 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Peter Bolland, MA, Professor of Philosophy and Humanities, Southwestern College
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    In Western religion, God is understood as all-knowing, all-powerful, and all-good. And yet, evil exists in the world. This paradox is known as the problem of evil. Join us as we examine this classic conundrum – how can God be good if he knows about evil and is capable of stopping it, and yet chooses not to? Why does God allow suffering? Either there is no...
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  • June 22
    Thursday
    10:30 AM → 12:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Steven Gimbel, Professor of Philosophy, Gettysburg College
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Pierre Curie was a French physicist doing groundbreaking work exploring the effects of magnetism on crystals. When he accepted Marie Sklodowska into his lab as an assistant, he had not realized he was starting a new experiment exploring her magnetism on his heart. The two would go on to become the first married couple to win the Nobel Prize. This lecture...
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  • RECORDED
    June 26
    Thursday
    1:00 PM → 2:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Leni Barry, MA, BSN, RN-BC, CDCES
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Good sleep is essential for overall well-being, yet many of us struggle to get the rest we need. Join us for an educational and informative webinar where we will dive into the importance of Sleep Hygiene and explore practical strategies to improve your sleep quality. As an expert in nursing and health education, Leni will guide you through key principles...
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  • August 27
    Thursday
    1:00 PM → 2:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Vidhu Vadini, M.B.B.S., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
    Locations: Online Class
    Learn how prevention and early action can make a difference in diabetes risk and long-term health. This webinar will explain the key differences between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, current research on risk factors, and practical strategies that may help reduce the risk of Type 2 diabetes. Vidhu Vadini, M.B.B.S., from the endocrinology, diabetes, and...
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  • June 15
    Wednesday
    10:30 AM → 11:30 AM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Thu Huynh, RD, LDN
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Whether you’re concerned about heart health, blood sugar, or just interested in maximizing your health, this class will help you identify simple and gradual lifestyle strategies that will help you meet your personal health...
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  • June 26
    Thursday
    2:00 PM → 3:30 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Tracy Baetz, Chief Curator
    Locations: Trip
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Discover all that made the Stewart Lee Udall Department of the Interior Building a “symbol of a new day” during the Great Depression.  On this guided walking tour, you will learn about the history of the stunning building and the Department via a selection of more than 40 New Deal-era painted murals, plus photographic murals by Ansel Adams. The tour...
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  • June 22
    Thursday
    1:00 PM → 2:30 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Bonita Billman, Art History Lecturer
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    The Baroque era was a watershed era for Spanish art. Several outstanding painters dominated the century, including Murillo, Zurbaran, Cano and Velazquez. Spanish painters of first rank stood with other European masters like Rembrandt, van Dyck and Rubens in portraying the court, genre and religious subjects so in demand. Not until Francisco Goya would...
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  • June 20
    Thursday
    10:30 AM → 12:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Steven Gimbel, Professor of Philosophy, Gettysburg College
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    The classical Greeks defined human beings as rational animals, but are we really? It turns out that our brains are actually wired in many circumstances to believe irrational ideas, to draw unsupported conclusions and believe them. We will examine a number of these cognitive biases and logical fallacies and consider ways to avoid...
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  • June 20
    Thursday
    1:00 PM → 2:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Dorothy Trench Bonett, Writer
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Did women have a Renaissance? The historical answer is yes. But what does this mean? In her talk, Dorothy Trench Bonett will discuss the effects of humanism on women’s education in 15th and 16th century Europe and introduce women like Sophonisba Anguissola, Marguerite de Navarre and Louise Labe who painted, sculpted and wrote poetry and plays in this...
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  • June 15
    Wednesday
    1:00 PM → 2:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Carroll Gibbs, Historian/Author
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    The struggle for African American freedom and justice in what was for many years the nation's largest state was long and complex. While much has been made of the signal year of 1619, the black presence in Texas began more than 80 years earlier. Through war and revolution, lynching and Jim Crow, the observance of Juneteenth reminded its celebrants that a new...
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  • June 16
    Thursday
    10:30 AM → 12:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Julie Kurzava, Faculty, Loyola University
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Beginning in the 1920’s, popular music was largely created by the songwriters of the American Songbook, who created an enduring cultural legacy in song. And then came Elvis. By the late 50’s these song writers were out of business. Julie Kurzava examines how the post war social upheaval is reflected in popular music in the mid 50's. The post war...
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  • June 16
    Thursday
    10:30 AM → 12:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Julie Kurzava, Faculty, Loyola University
    Locations: Oasis at the Macys Home Store
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Beginning in the 1920’s, popular music was largely created by the songwriters of the American Songbook, who created an enduring cultural legacy in song. And then came Elvis. By the late 50’s these song writers were out of business. Julie Kurzava examines how the post war social upheaval is reflected in popular music in the mid 50's. The post war...
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  • June 16
    Thursday
    1:00 PM → 2:30 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Bonita Billman, Art History Lecturer
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    In the 18th century it was a milestone in a young gentleman’s life to make the Grand Tour of Europe with a final destination in Rome, the eternal city. A status symbol, a mark of culture and education, the Grand Tour marked a young man’s (and occasional young woman’s) coming of age in Britain—a sort of finishing school. This art history lecture will...
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  • June 17
    Friday
    10:30 AM → 12:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Steven Gimbel, Professor of Philosophy, Gettysburg College
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    No thinker has been more foundational to human thought than Aristotle who launched virtually every field of study from Physics, chemistry, and biology to law, literary theory, and economics. We know him as a philosopher, but his system encompassed all of human thought at the time and provided the launching point from which so much of what we now believe...
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  • June 24
    Monday
    10:30 AM → 11:30 AM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Elaine Apter, Secretary, League of Women Voters, Montgomery Cty.
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    (Please note that this class has been converted to Online Only.) Many factors will be contributing to how voters are receiving knowledge about candidates and issues in the 2024 Presidential Election. We will discuss AI, social media, TV, international interference and how they are affecting the 2024 Presidential Election...
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  • Out of stock
    June 26
    Monday
    10:00 AM → 11:30 AM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: Volunteer Coordinator
    Locations: Trip
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Please join us for Oasis Volunteer Day at Comfort Cases. Comfort Cases serves children being placed in foster care.  Most are removed from their homes with little more than the clothes on their backs.  Through Comfort Cases, these children receive a special bag containing a cozy new pair of pajamas, a brand new warm blanket, and a new stuffed animal to...
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  • June 26
    Monday
    10:30 AM → 12:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: John McCarthy, Montgomery County State's Attorney
    Locations: Online Class
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    (At the instructor's request, the date of this class has been changed from June 15 to June 26.)  Prosecutors are public servants and are expected to behave ethically in accordance with accepted standards. At what point does their misconduct have an impact on the lives they are sworn to protect, and what should the penalty for misconduct...
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  • June 26
    Monday
    10:30 AM → 12:00 PM
    Sessions: 1
    Instructor: John McCarthy, Montgomery County State's Attorney
    Locations: Oasis at the Macys Home Store
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    (At the instructor's request, the date of this class has been changed from June 15 to June 26.) Prosecutors are public servants and are expected to behave ethically in accordance with accepted standards. At what point does their misconduct have an impact on the lives they are sworn to protect, and what should the penalty for misconduct...
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