3311 East Old Shakopee Road - Bloomington, MN 55425 Tel: 952-853-6562 August 2016 [email protected]Vol. 31 Issue 8 CONTROL DATA/CERIDIAN RETIREES CLUB SUNSHINE SYMPATHY Family of Raymond Jendro Family of Darlene Lewis Family of Norma Mecay Family of Herbert Rorke SEMINAR / EDUCATION Fall Series *************************************************************** COMPUTERS - Various Subjects - Thursday, Sep- tember 15. Frequently asked questions re Windows v. Mac. What is Chrome Book and is that the right choice? Maybe one just needs a tablet. ******************************************************************** AARP SMART DRIVER COURSE - Thursday, Sep- tember 29, 8:00 a.m. - noon Guy Moore will be our instructor. A registration form is included in this mail- ing. You do NOT have to be an AARP member to at- tend this class. ********************************************************************* THE STATUE OF LIBERTY - Friday, October 7 - In 1916 the United States received the gift of the Statue of Liberty from France. This is the 100th birthday of the gift. Historian, David Jones, will tell you the story, what it symbolizes and more on this historic event. ********************************************************************* TITAN SERIES - HARRY TRUMAN - Thursday, Octo- ber 27 - Dr. Worner has another Titan to tell us about. President Truman had to make decisions displaying great courage. He is rated as one of America’s greatest presidents. Come to hear why historians rate him so high. ********************************************************************* NEW EVENTS Fall Luncheon Vikings Stadium Tour Spam Museum Bus Trip SUMMER PICNIC Reservations for this year’s club picnic continue to be way too low. This picnic is a great bargain. You pay only $10 per person and the average cost per person is $57. The Retirees Club Board made the decision to offer you this Great Bargain. If you have been a regular attendees at this event but have not made reservations yet, get with it and do so now. The picnic reservation form is again a part of this mailing. RE- MEMBER, AUGUST 13 IS FAST APPROACHING. 2016 GOPHER FOOTBALL GAMES Entry forms for this drawing are very few. At the time of this mailing, the Club has more tickets unsold than we have drawing entries. The time for drawing lottery entries is not far off—again the time to enter is NOW. DATE CHANGE NEW VIKINGS STADIUM TOUR A 90 minute WALKING tour for a behind-the-scenes at look the clubs and suites, press box, locker room, gift shop and more. After the tour, you will have lunch at the well-known Jax Café. A reservation form is included in this newsletter.
24
Embed
SEMINAR / EDUCATION - quid.us / EDUCATION ... Aug. 28 Drowsy Chaperone - Artistry * Maureen Danner 952-300-1080 ... ing a score of rock hits including "Blue Suede Shoes,"
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
3311 East Old Shakopee Road - Bloomington, MN 55425 Tel: 952-853-6562
*************************************************************** COMPUTERS - Various Subjects - Thursday, Sep-tember 15. Frequently asked questions re Windows v. Mac. What is Chrome Book and is that the right
AARP SMART DRIVER COURSE - Thursday, Sep-tember 29, 8:00 a.m. - noon Guy Moore will be our instructor. A registration form is included in this mail-ing. You do NOT have to be an AARP member to at-
THE STATUE OF LIBERTY - Friday, October 7 - In 1916 the United States received the gift of the Statue of Liberty from France. This is the 100th birthday of the gift. Historian, David Jones, will tell you the story, what it symbolizes and more on this historic event. *********************************************************************
TITAN SERIES - HARRY TRUMAN - Thursday, Octo-ber 27 - Dr. Worner has another Titan to tell us about. President Truman had to make decisions displaying great courage. He is rated as one of America’s greatest presidents. Come to hear why historians rate him so high. *********************************************************************
NEW EVENTS
Fall Luncheon
Vikings Stadium Tour
Spam Museum Bus Trip
SUMMER PICNIC
Reservations for this year’s club picnic continue to be way too low. This picnic is a great bargain. You pay only $10 per person and the average cost per person is $57. The Retirees Club Board made the decision to offer you this Great Bargain. If you have been a regular attendees at this event but have not made reservations yet, get with it and do so now. The picnic reservation form is again a part of this mailing. RE-MEMBER, AUGUST 13 IS FAST APPROACHING.
2016 GOPHER FOOTBALL GAMES
Entry forms for this drawing are very few. At the time of this mailing, the Club has more tickets unsold than we have drawing entries. The time for drawing lottery entries is not
far off—again the time to enter is NOW.
DATE CHANGE NEW VIKINGS STADIUM TOUR
A 90 minute WALKING tour for a behind-the-scenes at look the clubs and suites, press box, locker room, gift shop and more. After the tour, you will have lunch at the well-known Jax Café. A reservation form is included in this newsletter.
If you have a problem retrieving an electronic mailing, please contact our computer advisor John Janes by email: [email protected] Please remember, no address changes will be accept-ed by calling the club office.
BE SURE TO SEND ANY ADDRESS CHANGES TO THE CLUB OFFICE VIA U.S. MAIL, OR EMAIL AT:
Continue to suggest new events, seminar subjects and speakers, shows, one-day trips, etc. When the event schedule has the day/date/time open and the costs are within the club’s budget, we will try to schedule your sug-gested event. Send your suggestion to the club office. Thanks.
Spring Golf Outing Results By Guy Moore
The Spring-fling golf tournament was held on June 15
at Dwan Golf Course with 41 participants competing in
3 flights. The weather was a little touchy all week but
by tee time the golf gods were smiling on us and we
had a great day for golf.
The Flight winners are:
Flight A: 1st Bertie & David Mohling; 2nd Kay & Don
Roepke; 3rd MaryAnn Oleary & Jim Bush.
Flight B: 1st Marty Friede & Bob Milske; 2nd Gary
Glockner & Gordon Griffin; 3rd Rick Schoeller & Bill
Ritenour.
Flight C: 1st Don Eichten & Dennis Sathre; 3rd David
Hughes & Jay McCluskey; 3rd John Moeller & Jim
Caldwell.
Individual Winners:
Bertie Mohling; Sue Kirk; Guy Moore; Jim Bush; Bruce Eg-
gleston; Dennis Sathre & Dave Mohling.
It was a great event and fun was had by all. Thanks to the
Management and staff at Dwan Golf Course. Also thanks to
the folks who help in running the tournament – George
Madich (Chief Scorekeeper), Nancy Dostal (Photographer),
and Rhys Miller. Most of all, thanks to the golfers.
Don’t forget to sign up for the August 19 Summer Tourna-
ment. The registration form is included in this newsletter.
FALL LUNCHEON
A reservation form for this event is included in this newsletter. Again, the Club’s Board has a great lunch-eon and program planned. You will truly enjoy this annual event again.
CLUB MEMBERSHIP
This number is very slowly decreasing. The Club’s Board asks for your suggestions on how this number might increase. If you know of CDC retirees who are not Club members, tell them of what the Club does for current members and what it could do for them and ask them to call the Club office (952.853.6562) to learn if they are eligible. We hope they will
be eligible and we hope they join the club.
Techie News is a part of this newsletter
3
SCHEDULED EVENTS / SEMINARS
2016 Event Coordinator
Thur., Aug. 4 Lion King - Orpheum sold out Linda Hauck 952-854-4727 Sat., Aug. 13 Summer Picnic - Battle Creek Park * Board 952-853-6562 Fri., Aug. 19 Summer Golf * Board 952-853-6562 Sat., Aug. 20 South Pacific - Guthrie sold out Board 952-853-6562 Thur., Aug. 25 Twins v. Detroit Tigers - cancelled Sun., Aug. 28 Drowsy Chaperone - Artistry * Maureen Danner 952-300-1080 Sept.., 1-2 Two-day trip to Ft. Atkinson, WI * Judy Moss 952-808-5540 Wed., Sept. 7 Al & Alma’s Minnetonka Luncheon Cruise * Gerry Leinfelder 763-478-2486 Wed., Sept. 28 Miracle on South Division Street - Day Trippers * Dean Nerdahl 952.831-4804 Thur., Sept. 29 AARP Smart Driver Course * (date change) Board 952-853-6562 Wed., Oct. 5 Fall Luncheon - Mystic Lake * Board 952-853-6562 Fri., Oct. 7 The Statue of Liberty - seminar * Board 952-853-6562 Sat., Oct. 22 Cabaret - Orpheum * Judy Moss 952-808-5540 Wed., Oct. 26 Viking Stadium Tour * Board 952-853-6562 Thur., Oct. 27 Titan Series - President Harry Truman - seminar * Board 952-853-6562 Sun., Nov. 1 Spam Museum Bus Trip * Tom Moore 763-546-3784 Wed., Nov. 9 TSA, Airline, Airport Security - seminar Board 952-853-6562 Sat., Nov. 12 The Baker’s Wife - Artistry * Nancy Dostal 651-686-5450 Fri., Dec. 2 Elk & Moose Population - seminar Board 952-853-6562 Sat., Dec. 10 Christmas Party Board 952-853-6562 Sat., Dec. 17 White Christmas - Ordway Chuck Woldum 952-888-1065
* Announcement enclosed ** Call Event Coordinator for seat availability
Event Questions? - Call the Event Coordinator with questions/concerns about an event.
REMEMBER TO CHECK YOUR TICKETS TO VERIFY
DATE, TIME AND LOCATION
Ticket Reservations: If an event is SOLD OUT, even though your reservation was received before the cutoff date, we will put your reservation on a wait list and you will be notified.
4
The costumes/characters were designed to look like the objects and yet flexible enough for the cast members to be able to move, even dance, in them! From the opening song when the town’s people appear, to the end of the story, each and every perfectly placed gesture and the up-tempo music keep the show ticking along. The story may have been originally meant for adult high society centuries ago, but this updated produc-tion had something for all ages and was good fun throughout.
CRITICS CORNER
OAK RIDGE BOYS By Linda Hauck
The Oak Ridge Boys are an American country and gospel vocal quartet. The group was founded in the 1940s as the Oak Ridge Quartet. They became popular in southern gospel during the 1950s. Their name was officially changed to the Oak Ridge Boys in the early 1960s, and they remained a gospel group until the mid-1970s, when they changed their image and concentrated on country music.
Their most well-known country and crossover hits are "Elvira", "Bobbie Sue", and "American Made". The great music is the same. They range in age now from 68 to 77.
July 10 was a very entertaining afternoon for 66 retirees.
MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET By Linda Hauck
On December 4, 1956, four young musicians, Elvis Pres-ley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins gathered at Sun Records in Memphis for what would be one of the greatest jam sessions ever. MILLION DOL-LAR QUARTET brings that legendary night to life, featur-ing a score of rock hits including "Blue Suede Shoes," "Fever," "That's All Right," "Sixteen Tons," "Great Balls of Fire," "Walk the Line," "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On," "Who Do You Love?," "Matchbox," "Folsom Prison Blues," "Hound Dog" and more. Jerry Lee Lewis really threw his heart and soul into char-acter and was just hysterical jumping around on his pi-ano. This thrilling musical brings you inside the recording stu-dio with four major talents who came together as a red-hot rock 'n' roll band for one unforgettable night.
Sixty five retirees enjoyed an afternoon of luncheon and great nostalgic music at the Old Log Theater on July 13.
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST By Nancy Dostal
On July 20, Sixty-two retirees and guests enjoyed a recent production of Beauty & the Beast at the Chanhassen. Beauty and the Beast is a story not quite as old as time. It’s a fairy tale with both villains and heroes, romance, hu-mor, incredible dancing, stunning costumes/set and it de-lights audiences of all ages. Unlike most fairy tales we know when it was written, who wrote it, and why: in 1740, by Mlle. Barbot de Villeneuve as an adult entertainment for French salon society. The story revolves around Belle, the daughter of the village odd-ball who sacrifices herself to free her father who has been captured by a Beast. The Beast is in fact a Prince cursed to live as an animal until he learns to love. The wardrobe department deserves a standing ovation for the fabulous and impressive costumes in this production, we were all in awe. Most of the household objects/characters were in whites and golds.
Maximum ten (10) tickets per family – 2 for retirees & spouse/sig. other plus 8 for family & guests
# ___ adult retiree, spouse, sig. other @ $10.00 per person $__________ # ___ family guests (maximum 8 tickets at this price) @ $15.00 each $__________ #___ other guests (no limit) $30.00 per person $__________ ____ Total reservations Total dollars $__________
Mail reservation form and check to Ceridian Retirees Club
3311 East Old Shakopee Road, Bloomington, MN 55425
6
Thanks to those that continue to sign up to receive the newsletter electronically. We really appreciate it. Techie Questions from Members Do you have any specific questions about technology or something specific you would like to see covered in this column? Send your suggestions,
questions, and comments to the club at [email protected]. We will try to address them in future issues.
Have you upgraded to Windows 10 yet? If not, you must know that the free upgrade to Windows 10 has ended as of July 29th. Will Microsoft extend this offer or come out with another offer. Anything is possible but from what I can determine it doesn’t sound like either of those options is going to happen. One thing that Microsoft has announced is that they will con-tinue to make the upgrade to Windows 10 free if you use assistive technologies. If you are like me, you probably are won-
dering what is assistive technologies. Well here is a brief description:
Typically features which aid users with physical disabilities like poor eyesight or limited mobility. That said the official Mi-crosoft Accessibility page for Windows 10 is wide ranging and lists assistive technologies that many people will use as a
matter of course:
Use Magnifier to see items on the screen
Use text or visual alternative to sounds
Use the On-Screen Keyboard (OSK) to type
Using Keyboard shortcuts
Hear text read aloud with Narrator
Make your PC easier to use with Ease of Access Settings
Use Speech Recognition to control your PC
As such there is some confusion around exactly how liberal Microsoft will be in applying this new free upgrade rule.
So stay tuned. As I am writing this before July 29th there are not a lot of details of exactly what is going to happen after that
date. Hopefully in the next month of so I can give you an update on this subject.
Electronic Delivery Signup If you haven’t already signed up for electronic distribution please consider joining the members who are generating a sav-ings for the club and at the same time experiencing the advantages of electronic delivery listed below:
Cost Per Person Active Member Inactive Member $ 25.00 $40.00
Reservation Cutoff and Last day to cancel unless sold out: August 31. No tickets mailed. Check in at dock Directions: from Ceridian, 494 west to highway 7 west, right on CR 19 North, left (west) on Shoreline (15) for 1-2 miles, left at light on Interlachen Blvd, over small bridge to a Y, go left on Tuxedo Blvd 1 mile, go to end of street. Parking on the left. Street address is 5201 Piper Road, Mound, MN 55364. phone: 952-472-3098
Overnight Trip Ft. Atkinson WI 2-day motor coach tour
$295 per person (2 per room) INACTIVE .. $245 per person (2 per room) ACTIVE $360 per person (1 per room) INACTIVE .. $310 per person (1 per room) ACTIVE $50 deposit/person Thursday September 1 DAY ONE Depart Burnsville 7:00am 9:00am Have a Lefse Omelet Wrap & a piece of pie (included) at Norske Nook Restaurant in Osseo WI 10:00am leave Osseo 12:00pm Arrive at the International Crane Foundation in In Baraboo WI. 12:30pm After introduction, be seated for a 20 minute video. Then two guides will give a tour along the pathway (motorized carts are available – no charge). It is the only place in the world where you can see all fifteen crane species. ICF has gained acclaim as one of the world’s leaders in the conservation of endangered species. Learn about the tech-niques used to preserve some of the rarest birds in the world. The tour is about an hour with time in the gift store and the Donnelley Building. They have the chick cam and other educational exhibitions. There are many trails for guests to walk along. You may need to bring insect repellant. 2:00pm leave ICF 3:30pm Check into the Holiday Inn Express, Ft. Atkinson. There is an elevator and hotel has an indoor pool. Welcome Reception in lobby – punch and cookies. Holiday Inn Express – Fort Atkinson, 1680 Madison Avenue, Fort Atkinson, WI 53538 phone 920-563-3600 5:00pm Leave the Holiday Inn. 5:15pm Arrive at Fireside Dinner Theater to shop 5:40pm Seating for dinner begins. Enjoy the Thursday Evening Signature Buffet – Sample menu: Chef Carved Beef Tenderloin and Roasted Breast of Turkey, Barbecued Pork back Ribs, Chicken Kona Kai, Fresh Norwegian Salmon, Sweet Potato Soufflé, Whipped Idaho Potatoes, Bouquetierre of Garden Vegetables, Shrimp and Scallops Marinara, Chicken Parmesan, Polynesian Pork Tenderloin, and Swedish Meatballs. Buffet is accompanied by their Signature Aloha Salad, Freshly Baked Breads, Southern Pecan Pie; coffee, tea or milk (served at your table). 7:00pm Groups are seated in the theater. 7:30pm Showtime. Performance of “SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN,” the greatest movie musical of all time live on The Fireside stage. This is a lightning paced, toe-tapping, rib-tickling Broadway version of the Gene Kelly masterpiece. Show fea-tures a stellar cast of talented young Broadway and regional singers and dancers. Great songs include “Good Morn-ing,” “Make ‘Em Laugh,” “You Are My Lucky Star,” “Fit As A Fiddle And Ready For Love,” and “Broadway Melody.” The unforgettable title song “Singin’ in the Rain” is the featured number, complete with the hero dancing his way through a real rainstorm! 10:00pm Estimated time of conclusion of show. 10:30pm Estimated time to return to the hotel.
13
Friday September 2 DAY TWO 7:00am Have bags ready for pick up and take time for breakfast (included) at the hotel. 8:00am Leave Ft. Atkinson WI 9:30am Arrive at The House On the Rock near Spring Green, WI. Opened in 1959, this is a complex of architecturally unique rooms, streets, gardens and shops designed by Alex Jordan. The “house” itself is atop Deer Shelter Rock. Ad-ditions were made to the original structure and other buildings were added over the course of several decades. The complex now features three sections: The Streets of Yesterday (a re-creation of an early 20th century American town); The Heritage of the Sea (featuring nautical exhibits and a 200-foot model -- 61m-- of a fanciful whale-like sea creature); and The Music of Yesterday (a huge collection of automatic music machines). Also see the world’s largest indoor car-ousel among other attractions on a self-guided tour. Take time for a light lunch (on your own) at the food concessions before leaving Spring Green. 1:45pm Leave House on The Rock. 3:45 Arrive in La Crosse, WI at Piggy’s Restaurant along the river. 4:00pm Have a pork chop dinner with dessert (included). Return to Burnsville approximately 7:15pm. Burnsville Parking Site: From Ceridian, take Cedar south to the first exit, Hwy 13 (right, south) through Burnsville. Left (south) on Nicollet for .7 miles to Civic Center Parkway on the left. Burnsville City Hall/Police/Ice Arena are in this area. Proceed to the Ice Are-na parking lot (on the right). - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Reservation Form for Ft. Atkinson trip Sept. 1-2
Check amount $____ ($50 per person) No. of Reservations _____ Final Payment due July 29
Retiree Name ____________________________ Spouse/Guest Name __________________________
Active Club Members – Retiree? Yes ___ Spouse ?Yes _____ Annual Guest Yes ________
Sharing a room: Yes _____ With whom: ___________________________________________________
MIRACLE ON SOUTH DIVISION STREET - DayTrippers Theater/Bloomington Eagles Club Wednesday September 28
Coordinator: Dean Nerdahl - 952-831-4804
Doors open: 11:30 a.m. Lunch: Noon Show: 1:30 p.m. Menu: Swedish meatballs, Chicken Kiev, house green salad, macaroni salad, rolls & butter, Mandarin orange cake.
Cost Per Person Active Member Inactive Member $25.00 $40.00
Reservation Cutoff and Last day to cancel unless sold out: September 16 No Tickets mailed
A hilarious and heartfelt play about a miracle in the family barbershop. A comedy delivering a solid message on faith, why we believe what we believe and how we can adjust to life’s surprises.
Question: How many days in a week? Answer: 6 Saturdays, 1 Sunday Question: When is a retiree's bedtime? Answer: Two hours after he falls asleep on the couch. Question: How many retirees to change a light bulb? Answer: Only one, but it might take all day. Question: What's the biggest gripe of retirees? Answer: There is not enough time to get everything done. Question: Why don't retirees mind being called Seniors? Answer: The term comes with a 10% discount. Question: Among retirees, what is considered formal attire? Answer: Tied shoes. Question: Why do retirees count pennies? Answer: They are the only ones who have the time. Question: What is the common term for someone who enjoys work and refuses to retire? Answer: NUTS! Question: Why are retirees so slow to clean out the basement, attic or garage? Answer: They know that as soon as they do, one of their adult kids will want to store stuff there. Question: What do retirees call a long lunch? Answer: Normal. Question: What is the best way to describe retirement? Answer: The never ending Coffee Break. Question: What's the biggest advantage of going back to school as a retiree? Answer: If you cut classes, no one calls your parents. Question: Why does a retiree often say he doesn't miss work, but misses the people he used to work with? Answer: He is too polite to tell the whole truth. And, the very favorite.... QUESTION: What do you do all week? Answer: Monday through Friday, NOTHING..... Saturday & Sunday, I rest.
GOD’S PLAN FOR AGING Most seniors never get enough exercise. In His wisdom God decreed that seniors become forgetful so they would have to search for their glasses, keys and other things thus doing more walking. And God looked down and saw that it was good. Then God saw there was another need. In His wisdom He made seniors lose coordination so they would drop things requiring them to bend, reach & stretch. And God looked down and saw that it was good. Then God considered the function of bladders and decided seniors would have additional calls of nature requiring more trips to the bathroom, thus providing more exercise. God looked down and saw that it was good. So if you find as you age, you are getting up and down more, remember it’s God’s will. It is all in your best interest even though you mutter under your breath. Nine Important Facts To Remember As We Grow Older #9 Death is the number 1 killer in the world. #8 Life is sexually transmitted. #7 Good health is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die. #6 Men have 2 motivations: hunger and hanky panky, and they can't tell them apart. If you see a gleam in his eyes, make him a sandwich. #5 Give a person a fish and you feed them for a day. Teach a person to use the Internet and they won't bother you for weeks, months, maybe years. #4 Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in the hospital, dying of nothing. #3 All of us could take a lesson from the weather. It pays no attention to criticism. #2 In the 60's, people took acid to make the world weird. Now the world is weird, and people take Prozac to make it normal. #1 Life is like a jar of jalapeno peppers. What you do today may be a burning issue tomorrow. Don't ignore this message. This is your only warning.
19
THE STATUE OF LIBERTY - seminar Creekside Community Center Friday, October 7 - 9:00 a.m.
Coordinator: Board - 952-853-6562
Last day to register or cancel: September 29 unless sold out
Costs Per Person: $5.00 (checks not returned)
In 1916 the United States received the gift of the Statue of Liberty from France. This is the 100th birthday of the gift. Historian, David Jones, will tell you the story, what it symbolizes and more on this historic event.
CABARET - Orpheum Saturday, October 22 - 2:00 p.m.
Coordinator: Judy Moss - 952-808-5540
Last day to register or cancel: October 10, unless sold out
Cost Per Person Active Member Inactive Member
$25.00 $45.00
The story is of Cliff Bradshaw, an American author in Berlin, who encounters singer Sally Bowles at the seedy Kit Kat Klub. Sally is fired by the club's owner and moves in with Cliff and the two fall in love. As the Nazis begin taking control of the German government, the atmosphere at the club, and the lives of Cliff and Sally, begin to change dramatically.
I feel like my body has gotten totally out of shape,
so I got my doctor's permission to
join a fitness club and start exercising.
I decided to take an aerobics class for seniors.
I bent, twisted, gyrated, jumped up and down, and perspired for an hour. But,
by the time I
got my leotards on,
the class was over.
Know how to prevent sagging?
Just eat till the wrinkles fill out.
21
RESERVATION FORM
VIKINGS STADIUM TOUR Wednesday, October 26
Coordinator: Board: 952-853-6562 Last day to register or cancel: October 10, unless sold out
Bus leaves Creekside 9:00 a.m.
Cost Per Person Active Member Inactive Member
$40.00 $70.00
This is an event you will want to attend. You will have a guided tour and marvel at this new Twin Cities structure. Facts and figures about the architectural features roof and signature glass pivoting doors will be discussed. After the tour, you will have lunch at the well-known Jax Café: Polish sausage, sauerkraut and cheese pierogis, chocolate mousse, beverage. Return to Creekside approximately 2:30.
TITAN SERIES - PRESIDENT HARRY TRUMAN - SEMINAR Thursday, October 27 - 9:00 a.m.
Creekside Community Center
Last day to register or cancel: October 17 unless sold out
Costs Per Person: $5.00 (checks not returned)
Dr. Worner has another Titan to tell us about. President Truman had to make decisions displaying great courage. He is rated as one of America’s greatest presidents. Come to hear why historians rate him so high.
TITAN SERIES - PRESIDENT HARRY TRUMAN - SEMINAR - October 27
Costs Per Person: $5.00 (checks not returned)
Retiree Name ____________________________ Spouse/Guest Name ________________________
Active Club Members - Retiree? Yes _______ Spouse? Yes _____ Annual Guest? Yes______
Names of Guests (non-members MUST pay full guest price) _______________________________________
Retiree’s address: Street_______________________ City ___________________State _____ Zip ________
THE BAKER’S WIFE - Artistry Saturday, November 12 - 2:00 p.m.
Coordinator: Nancy Dostal - 651.686-5450
Last day to register or cancel:
Cost Per Person Active Member Inactive Member
$20.00 $35.00
A heartfelt musical about romance, love and bread. A French town has been without baker for weeks. A young baker arrives with a beautiful wife who is then swept off her feet by an young ladies man. Baker so sad that he quits baking and the town citizens unite to get the bakers wife back. This musical tells you the end of the story.