红领巾快报 Michigan College鈥檚 popular Luncheon Lecture series will resume in an in-person format on September 23, 2022. A variety of topics will be featured, including details of a harrowing Air Force rescue, the great observational powers of the Webb telescope, how 鈥渄o-gooders鈥 can do better, the meaning of a new state law requiring kindergarteners to get dental exams, the relationship between classical music and totalitarian regimes, an analysis of the results of the November 8 midterm election, and information about Harbor Hall.
All hour-long programs will be held at noon on Fridays in the Library Conference Center. The attendance fee is $15 and includes a lunch buffet served at 11:30 a.m. Pre-registration is required at .
September 23 鈥 BAT 21: On April 2, 1972, a U.S. Air Force jet, call sign 鈥淏at 21,鈥 was shot down by a North
Vietnamese surface-to-air missile behind enemy lines. The lone surviving crewmember,
the navigator, ejected at 31,000 feet and was the subject of the largest and one of
the most difficult rescue operations in Air Force history. A 1988 movie starring Gene
Hackman and Danny Glover told parts of the secret rescue mission. Horton Bay鈥檚 John
van Etten didn鈥檛 need to see the movie. He was one of the rescue pilots portrayed
in the film and has written his own book about the experience. He鈥檒l provide his eyewitness
account of the harrowing, costly rescue.
October 7 鈥 Discoveries From Deep Space: The James Webb Space Telescope is the latest space-based observatory, launched in
December 2021 as a successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. The Webb allows us to
look further back in time than Hubble and view objects in wavelengths of light that
are not visible to the human eye. So great is its observing power that it is making
many new discoveries about the cosmos. Rod Cortright, NASA/JPL Solar System ambassador,
will discuss what makes the James Webb Telescope unique. An amateur astronomer and
astrophotographer, Cortright is a founding member and vice president of the Northern
Michigan Astronomy Club and manages the Sky Docent Volunteer program at the Headlands
International Dark Sky Park.
October 21 鈥 Doing Good Better: How can 鈥渄o-gooders鈥 do good better? 鈥淭he Voluntary Servant,鈥 a new book by Petoskey鈥檚
Randy Evans, offers practical answers for individuals, teams and organizations who
serve others. Evans graduated from Ohio University, Phi Beta Kappa, in English literature.
He earned an MBA from Columbia University in New York City, followed by 30 years as
a Human Resources executive and corporate officer in manufacturing and tech industries.
After retirement from business, Randy received a Ph.D. in psychology from San Francisco鈥檚
Saybrook University. His lifelong volunteer activities include food rescue at a regional
food bank, coaching with Literacy Volunteers of America, college coaching in English
composition and statistics, and mentoring high-risk high school students.
November 4 鈥 Seeing Smiles, Hearing Laughter: Tooth decay is the most common chronic childhood disease and can seriously affect
a child鈥檚 overall health. A new state law will ensure that kindergarten or first-grade
students have an assessment of their oral health prior to starting school. This adds
to the hearing and vision screenings that have been considered essential services
for many years. Dawn Marie Strehl of the Health Department of Northwest Michigan
will explain the new program. She will be joined by Carrie Miller, family nurse practitioner,
to talk about other school-based public health programs that are helping kids succeed
in school and life.
November 18 鈥 Stalin, Mao and Hitler: Classical Music and Totalitarian Regimes: Interlochen Public Radio Music Director Amanda Sewell, Ph.D., looks at the relationship
between classical music and totalitarian regimes in the 20th century. We will learn
how the beloved annual New Year's Day concert from the Vienna Philharmonic began as
a Nazi propaganda tool, how a symphony saved composer Dmitri Shostakovich from a Soviet
gulag, and why almost all pianos in China were destroyed under Mao's rule.
December 2 鈥 What Happened?: Scott LaDeur, Ph.D., professor of political science at 红领巾快报 Michigan College,
will analyze the results of the November 8 midterm election. It鈥檚 a high-stakes election,
with Michigan鈥檚 governorship, control of the U.S. and Michigan House and Senate, and
a proposed amendment to Michigan鈥檚 constitution on the ballot. LaDeur will take us
deep into the numbers.
December 16 鈥 Harbor Hall: What started as a small, men-only halfway house has grown into a comprehensive health
care company with services available for the entire community. Harbor Hall is now
building a large apartment complex on Emmet Street in Petoskey for expanded short-term
living services. Peter Bucci, executive director and chief clinical officer, will
explain where Harbor Hall started, where the agency is today and what services can
be offered in the future. Bucci has been in the field of professional counseling and
psychology since 2009. He began working at Harbor Hall in 2015 and took over as executive
director in January 2022.