Events

« Tuesday October 19, 2010 »
Tue
Start: 5:00 pm
  Tuesday, October19, 5:00 p.m. Forrest Linebarger will cover cost-effective strategies for building zero-energy homes. He will explain how to build homes that produce all the energy they use at costs similar to conventional construction. He will also discuss how to design net-zero houses to get the most out of our local climate. And, he will cover tax incetives and rebates that further reduce the costs of efficient building methodologies. Zero-energy homes reward their owners with new levels of comfort, health, and reduced monthly expenses. Forrest is CEO of Vox Design Group, a Mountain View designer and builder of beautiful and energy-efficient residential and commercial buildings. He graduated from UC Berkeley, and he founded the Contractors’ Organization for Professional Standards. He has also served on the Board of Directors for Innovative Housing, a provider of housing for low income residents. The Green Dream Team is a group of experts dedicated to providing you with the most comprehensive selection of services to improve, remodel, build, furnish, and landscape your home - always in an eco-friendly and sustainable way. For more information, contact Rich Wingerter at 650-207-8014 or visit http://www.meetup.com/Green-Making-for-the-Silicon-Valley-Area/calendar/14807143/  
Start: 7:00 pm
    Barry Spector Tuesday, October 19, 7:00 p.m.  Madness at the Gates of the City: The Myth of American Innocence  BUY NOW As the post-modern world lurches toward the disasters and bereavements that signal the end of an age, we turn to myth to comprehend the elemental forces that move through our lives, to know who we are, to understand which stories inform our consciousness. MADNESS AT THE GATES OF THE CITY, writes Robert Johnson in his introduction, shows how America regularly re-enacts old patterns that cause us to subvert our goals and miss the deeper meaning in events. But by looking at American history, politics and popular culture through the lenses of Greek mythology, indigenous wisdom and archetypal psychology, the author discovers new hope in very old ways of thinking. This book should appeal to anyone interested in myth, Classics, history, psychology or progressive politics.  Barry Spector's book is a strikingly imaginative rumination on our society, reaching back into Greek mythology to illuminate the world today. It is a fascinating blend of literature, history and myth, and while we have had many critiques of contemporary America, his is unique in the way it draws upon the Greek gods to examine, with devastating accuracy, our present deities of war and greed. This is truly an original work. --Howard Zinn, author of ''A People's History of the United States'' Spector writes about American history and politics from the perspectives of myth, indigenous traditions and archetypal psychology. He is a regular contributor to Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche and the online journal Mythic Passages.
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