Due to the recent classification of docent volunteers into active and inactive volunteers and several active DRT members requesting and becoming emeritus, at the DRT meeting of March 28, 2022, after much discussion the DRT Board voted to dissolve the Docent Round Table as of July 1, 2023. The minutes of that meeting as well as the DRT's President's letter sent to the DRT Membership are listed below: Docent Roundtable Board Meeting March 28, 2023 Attendees: Christyann Evans, Connie Graham, Mary Kuhl, Maria Martinez, Chuck Milam, Bert Rosario, Carolyn Weiss and Tiffany Wylie Call to Order: Bert Rosario Approval of Minutes: The minutes were reviewed and approved. Vice President’s Report: Joyce Poulson For the trip to the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, 16 people have signed up, more than we have had in a very long time. The May 16, 2023 trip is to the Parsonage of Aimee Semple McPherson. Treasurer’...
Hi Mary! These are some of the things we’ve grown in our vegetable garden planted in raised beds in front of our house. As you know, I love taking photos & thought it would be fun to share these with you & the DRT group considering this week’s “Learning Together” explores Edible Plants. It has always impressed me how beautiful so many of the things we eat actually are! Winter vegetables are especially interesting to photograph after the rain when they are freshly washed & still have “pearls” of water on them. Enjoy! Stay well, Elsa
A toggle story, common in science reporting, is one that contradicts a previous story and is likely to be contradicted by a future story. So if you're discomfited by a story headlined "Universe older than previously thought, scientists say," just follow the advice in the joke about what to do if you don't like the weather in England: Just wait. Sooner or later you'll be reading "Universe younger than previously thought, scientists say." My favorite toggle story has toggled again. It involves the question of whether modern humans and Neanderthals did it -- interbreed, that is. Friday's Los Angeles Times reports that an examination of DNA has shown that the two species did indeed get it on 80,000 years ago, leaving a small residue of Neanderthal genes in modern people. We'll see if the story toggles back to the view that nothing happened between the two breeds. Meanwhile, it's understandable that people would cringe at the thou...
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