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What Is Retirement?

With Dr. Morley Glicken, Executive Director of The Institute for Personal Growth

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Are you ready for retirement, and have you planned accordingly? The importance of financial and mental preparedness before retirement is crucial, according to Dr. Morley Glicken, the Executive...

Parkinson Voice Advocates

Educating the Community Through the Parkinson Voice Project

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Parkinson Voice Advocates is a group of people with Parkinson’s whose voices have been restored through our SPEAK OUT!® & LOUD Crowd® therapy program through the Parkinson Voice Project.

Sleep from A to Zzzzzzzzz

With Dr. Andrea Wilkinson

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In this episode, we share some of the audio from a past workshop called “Sleep from A to Zzzzzz”. Dr. Andrea covers how sleep affects the brain + body and the three sleep systems that work to...
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From Brooklyn to Stuyvesant to Monteith College

From Brooklyn to Stuyvesant to Monteith College

With Martin Herman, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Wayne State University

Listen to Martin Herman’s journey from Manhattan's Stuyvesant High School to Wayne State University’s Monteith College, and everywhere in between.  Martin made undergraduate general education more meaningful by creating the environment of a small liberal arts college within a large university. In 1969, he became chair of Monteith’s Division of Humanistic Studies, a position he held until the University decided to phase out the College in December 1975. 

Martin explains his path from an undergraduate degree from the College of William and Mary, to Yale, to the University of Michigan, to teaching musicology at Colorado College.

Herman is also one of the founding fathers of SOAR (Society of Active Retirees), a lifelong learning program affiliated with Wayne State. Established in 2003, it offers non-credit classes to retirees and all who remain devoted to continuing education. Its faculty, consisting largely of retired faculty members from area universities and colleges, all volunteer their services and, as Herman says, “consider it an important contribution to the well-being of the community by helping to fulfill an unmet need. People are living longer, and not all of them want to sit in front of a television set watching reruns and game shows.” 

Martin was also involved in the i.Detroit project, created by Marcus Lyon, which spotlights 100 Detroiters and their community involvement. A strong commitment to education and spirituality — along with actions taken to realize those commitments in Detroit — has brought Martin Herman a place in a new book, i.Detroit — A Human Atlas of an American City.


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