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301.624.2888

www.frederick.edu/ilr

17

Spring ‘18

Thursday Courses

Introducing Kirby Lee Maybush…

ILR837  Personal Self Defensive

Tactics

1 Session, 3 hours

Rape/robbery/assault is not a selective crime, it has no regard

for age, race, or social status. In this class, you will learn basic

common sense rules that can be used to protect yourself before,

during, and after an attack. Research shows that educated

citizens are best equipped to protect themselves. The class has

been described by some students as “an insurance policy you

never want to have to use but which is comforting to have.” The

class is designed for all ages and is strictly classroom based; this

is not a physical class.

Instructor:

Captain Kirby Lee Maybush retired from

the Frederick County Sheriff’s Office with 45 years of law

enforcement. He has taught self-defense/defensive tactics at

police academies, sheriff’s academy, correction academy, military

police, and numerous organizations in the area. He has been on

TV and radio in reference to the classes. Several women after

attending CPT Maybush’s classes stated not only were they able

to prevent a sexual/physical assault it also increased their self-

esteem and self-confidence, improved their personal lives, family

ties, and work relationships.

4-Digit Number: 7969

Thu, 9am - 12pm, 2/1

Location: Conference Center (E Building)/E106

Total: $29.00

ILR855  The Human Condition:

Why I Do the Things I Do

5 sessions, 10 hours

As human beings, we are social creatures surrounded by others

who influence us in multiple ways through our work, play and

daily interactions. We will explore how our basic assumptions,

beliefs, values, decisions, and the way we perceive ourselves is

impacted by others, and how our responses and reactions in

turn, influence them.

Instructor:

Barbara Angleberger has a Master’s in Counseling

Psychology, with 42 years experience in education. She was a

counselor with FCPS and served as an adjunct faculty member

and Foreign Language Coordinator at FCC before transitioning to

a full-time psychology position for 27 yrs. During that time, she

chaired the Social Sciences Department. The courses she taught

include: General Psychology, Abnormal Psych., Social Psych,

Human Growth and Development, and Psych of Adolescence.

4-Digit Number: 8154

Thu, 1pm - 3pm, 2/8 – 3/8

Location: Conference Center (E Building)/E125

Tuition: $30.00

Fee: $84.00

Total: $114.00

MD residents age 60+ pay fee only

ILR413 Well, It’s About Time - Part I

6 sessions, 12 hours

It may come as a surprise, but “time” is the most frequently

used word in the English language. From music (“Time is on My

Side”- Rolling Stones; “Does Anybody Really Know What Time

it Is”- Chicago) to literature (“It Was the Best of Times, It Was

the Worst of Times” - Charles Dickens) to sports (“Time Out;”

“Overtime”) to television (“Real Time with Bill Maher”...), you

get the idea. But what is time really? Although we experience it,

use it, and depend on it, we really never consider exactly what

it is. This course explores the true nature of time from several

viewpoints; from the Scientific, to the Cosmological, to the

Human experience and point of view, time is as pervasive in our

lives as breathing.

Instructor:

Bob Rubock (see page 4 for bio)

4-Digit Number: 7996

Thu, 10am - 12pm, 2/8 – 3/15

Location: Conference Center (E Building)/E126A

Tuition: $40.00

Fee: $89.00

Total: $129.00

MD residents age 60+ pay fee only

ILR842  A Republic If You Can Keep It

6 sessions, 12 hours

What were the keys ideas that were debated and adopted at the

Constitutional Convention and how did they shape the policies

of the United States in the intervening 230 years? Learn about

the Constitutional Convention and ratification process, and

the economic system devised by the Founders including the

first Treasury Secretary, Alexander Hamilton...”Learn to think

continentally”. Why did Washington and John Quincy Adams’

warn against foreign entanglements? Explore the erosion of

some of the core principles during the post-World War II, Cold

War, and post-Cold War periods and efforts taken to reverse the

degradation of these principles. The Constitution was created in

1787...is it still valid in the 21st century?

Instructor:

Jeffrey Steinberg is both an analyst and

practitioner of U.S. national security policy. He has been

an investigative journalist for more than 40 years, serving

since 1986 on the editorial board of a weekly publication,

Executive Intelligence Review, and writing for a range of

international newsletters and magazines; and has also

participated in various advisory capacities for U.S. government

officials on a wide range of national security issues, from

strategic defense policy, to the war on terrorism, to the war

on illegal narcotics, to the economic dimensions of national

security. He has lectured internationally on issues related to

national security. Steinberg is the author and/or co-author

of hundreds of articles and special reports on a wide range

of national security issues, current affairs, and history.

4-Digit Number: 7913

Thu, 9:30am - 11:30am, 3/15 – 4/26

No Class: 3/29

Location: Conference Center (E Building)/E123

Tuition: $49.00

Fee: $105.00

Total: $154.00

MD residents age 60+ pay fee only