| Dorota Janik, Ph.D. & Sylwia Ptasinsaa, Ph.D. |
Rm 6 |
Continuing instruction for students who want to study the Polish language for everyday life situations, including phrases and conversational expressions. The course will include a practical approach to simplified rules of grammar, and will be supported by audio materials. The text will be announced in the first class. Materials fee $2.00.
| Michael Laatz, Dan Kaczorowski, Jane Derda,
& Shirley Sommer |
Rm 2/3 |
March 9. Dr. Jack Gordon-What really happened in Dallas and does it matter in 2012? The Kennedy Assassination.
March 16: Jim Aranowski-The Coveleski Enshrinement and family memories will be discussed.
March 23: Lisa Wilkowski-Maple Syrup, the drawing of sap from maple trees and the processing procedures.
March 30: David Cherrone-The Clay Township Fire Chief will give us current tips on home safety.
April 6: Good Friday-No Meeting
April 13: Salt Mines of Poland-A vivid documentary of an age-old occupation.
April 20: Dr. Sobol-Dr. Sobol will discuss his many humanitarian trips to Poland.
April 27: Maximilian Kolbe-A video presentation of a great Polish Saint.
May 4: Rev. Leonard F. Chrobot-A discussion of Polish Constitution Day.
May 11: Mothers' Day Program-Bring pictures of your mom and food to share with members. Club will furnish the sausage.
May 17: Bus Trip at 8:30 am to 6:30 pm on Thursday. It will be a 56 passenger deluxe trip to Chicago to visit a church, museum, restaurant, and supermarket. Details will be forthcoming.
Join the Auld Scotia Sage, a professional storyteller, to learn the art and techniques, the "do's and don'ts" and styles of oral storytelling for family, friends, libraries, and the general public. Students will be assisted in presenting stories with professional critique-not criticism, and have fun telling (not reading) stories of great variety. You can do it! Each session will teach elocution (diction) and power of the voice. You must sign a class waiver form to participate.
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One four-and-a-half hour session to refresh your driving skills. Become aware of age-related changes in your eyesight, hearing, and reaction time, and how to compensate. Become aware of problem areas, blind spots, proper left turns, right-of-way and intersection issues, effects of medication, update on signs and rules. We assess our own abilities via a personal driving capability index. You will be glad you took the course, and safer, too. Some insurance companies give graduates a discount. Late start on May 11, 2012. Fee: $12.00 for AARP members, $14.00 for non-members, paid to AARP instructor. No FLI tuition.
| Fred Schmiedeler, MBA |
RM 5 |
The instructor will help you evaluate your readiness, discover the potential of the idea for making a profit, create a business plan, prepare cash flow statements, marketing and legal considerations, business management, website, social media, and human resources.
| Gerry Welling, B.F.A. |
RM 6 |
If you've wanted to try drawing or have begun to dabble with it, this is the place for you. We will cover the basics. For the first class, bring an HB drawing pencil, a 2H drawing pencil, a medium charcoal pencil, a kneaded eraser, a straight edge (a ruler will do) and any drawing paper you already have. A drawing tablet about ten inches
wide or so would be fine, but we can provide paper that will
work for the first session. If you have a drawing board or
large clipboard, feel free to bring that, too. All you really need for the first session are the basic tools. You'll have a better understanding of what you might want to add to your toolbox after the first class or two.
Teacher fee: $5.00 paid directly to the teacher.
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