OLLI Observer
April 7, 2019    
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In This Issue
Reuter Center Closed for 
Paths to Creative Retirement Workshop
Friday, April 12, 2019

Please remember that we do not schedule any CFS courses, SIGs, lectures or other events at the Reuter Center Friday, April 12 through Sunday, April 14, 1 p.m. so that we can focus on our Paths to Creative Retirement Workshop.  Click here to read more about the Paths to Creative Retirement program.

Be sure to mark your calendars, and thanks for understanding.

OLLI VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

MANNA Foodbank
Working to end hunger and food insecurity in WNC

Habitat for Humanity's ReStore
Changing Lives One House at a Time

VOLUNTEER NOW...
Make A Difference!

We Remember

burning candle
Celebration of Life For Janet Barratt
Saturday, April 13,
3:30 p.m.
Brooks-Howell Chapel
266 Merrimon Avenue
Asheville, NC 

Janet Barratt passed away in January at home in the United Kingdom.  She and her husband David were OLLI members and taught at College for Seniors.  David and the couple's daughter Claire  are organizing a Celebration of Life event for her and would like to invite all who knew her to attend.


VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY

Learning at the Literacy Council 
Learning at the Literacy Council

The Literacy Council of Buncombe County provides free English instruction by trained volunteer tutors to over 200 adults annually, and typically has another 50 on a waiting list for a tutor. The Literacy Council needs more English for Speakers of Other Languages volunteers. 

The Literacy Council provides curriculum and lesson plans; no prior teaching experience or second-language proficiency required. Tutoring takes place once a week in a two-hour session scheduled at your convenience.

Calvin Allen is a volunteer who has been an ESOL tutor  at the Literacy Council of Buncombe County for five years. 

 For more information contact Erin at: [email protected] or 828-254-3442. 
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY
Asheville Middle School Reality Store
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Reality Store at Asheville Middle School is a financial literacy simulation for 6th grade students.  

We're looking for volunteers to work "stores" by helping students make their purchase decisions, and properly balance their household budgets.  

For more information please click here .
Or
 To sign-up, please visit this website. 


VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES

Green Opportunities' mission is to train, support and connect people from marginalized communities to sustainable employment pathways.


Green Opportunities also seeks an interim executive director.   Click here for the job announcement for this interim opportunity.


Spoken Word Performance
"Healing the Soul of Appalachia"
Friday, April 12, 7 p.m.
Attic Salt Theatre Company
2002 Riverside Drive, Woodfin, NC

DeWayne Barton
In association with Asheville WordFest 2019, WORD is presenting three dynamic wordsmiths: former staff storyteller for the National Storytelling Association, David Joe Miller, along with Asheville native and community building poet, DeWayne Barton and Moth Slam Champion, Lee Lindsey

 
Elisha Mitchell Audubon Society Program
Recent Changes in Bird Distribution and Diversity in the Smokies
with Dr. Andrew Laughlin

Tuesday April 16, 7 p.m.
Reuter Center, Manheimer Room

UNC Asheville professor Dr. Andrew Laughlin and his team are re-surveying portions of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park that were first surveyed 20 years ago by researchers from NC State. The current research concerns how bird communities have changed in response to Eastern Hemlock decline and whether any bird species are moving up or down the mountains as a result of climatic changes. Understanding how birds have reacted to these changes in terms of distribution and diversity is an important step in predicting how future changes may alter bird communities.
Dr. Andrew Laughlin

Dr. Andrew Laughlin is an assistant professor of environmental studies at UNC Asheville. His research interests include movement and migration ecology and animal responses to environmental change, with a focus on birds. His research has included studies of hermit thrush and veery habitat associations and tree swallow ecology.

All EMAS programs are free and open to the public

For more information, click here
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Behind the Scenes with NC Stage
Friday, April 26, 1:30 p.m.
Reuter Center, Manheimer Room
   Stones in His Pockets  
"With just two actors playing over a dozen parts, 
Stones In His Pockets is a comedic yet tragic take on the effects of the Hollywood dream in a small Irish town."

Go behind the scenes of professional theatre with NC Stage Artistic Director and co-founder Charlie Flynn-McIver.  Explore the themes of this season's plays, talk with the actors, directors and designers about design concepts and the rehearsal process, and experience a scene or two performed live.  Join us for an insider's view of h ow theatre happens! 
 Free and open to the public.   For more information on NC Stage,  click here to visit their website  .
  Faith and Conscience Convocation: 
A Call for Accountability for Torture 
Sunday, April 28, 2-5 p.m. 
The Blue Ridge Room South (Room 203) 
UNC Asheville's Highsmith Student Union

  The Autumn Players
Sunday, April 28, 2:30 p.m. 
Reuter Center Manheimer Room
"The Constant Wife"
by W. Somerset Maugham,
 directed by Anita Chapman
In this sophisticated comedy of manners about marital maneuvers in 1920s London, an independent-minded woman discovers her husband is having an affair. Instead of playing the role of the wronged wife, she lays bare the hypocrisy of the double standard, presents an unsentimental analysis of marriage, and offers a sensible solution. 

The Autumn Players (affiliated with Asheville Community Theatre) is a troupe of seasoned actors dedicated to taking the theatre experience into the community. Their words jump from the page with conviction and emotion, and these actors make their stories come to life. Tickets are $7 at the door.



Second Section Offered for Fall 2019

A second section of Exploring CCRCs (Continuing Care Retirement Communities) will be offered in Fall 2019 to accommodate the many OLLI members with an interest in learning more about continuing care retirement communities. A combination of lectures and tours to CCRCs in our region, the class is a great option for those considering CCRCs now or in the future. It will take place during the inter-term break from July 31-September 13, 2019 and will run alongside the current class being offered.

Please note: It is mandatory to attend the first class for this course. 

For more information on the course contact Hannah at [email protected] or 828-250-3871

What past participants are saying about 
Exploring CCRCs:

"Moving into a CCRC is a major decision, I feel more confident that I fully understand the implications and things to consider. I have the information I need to make the best choice possible."

"Tina presented this course in an organized manner that made everything for me easy to understand. I now can make a conscious decision feeling I have all the factors in dealing with this life change."

'Tina is an exceptional instructor by providing 'fact sheets' prior to our visits as well as having preliminary discussion. This workshop was a great crash course on CCRCs."
Astronomy Club of Asheville
Thursday, May 2, 7 p.m.
Reuter Center Manheimer Room


"The James Webb Space Telescope: 
The Future of Space Sight"
Presented by  Naveen Vetcha
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Solar System Ambassador


Astronomers have been using the  Hubble Space Telescope for almost 29 years to observe and study the universe. Hubble has in many ways completely revolutionized our understanding of the universe.  But as amazing as Hubble has been, due to the vastness of the universe, it can't in fact see everything. To carry us forward we need a better telescope, one which is more sensitive and allows us a deeper view into the universe, and thus farther back in time - this is exactly what NASA's  James Webb Space Telescope  (JWST) is designed to do.

A true engineering marvel, the JWST will probe the universe to discover the first galaxies and stars formed after the Big Bang. Now scheduled for launch in 2021, the telescope will also be used to study the formation of stars and planets, as well as aid in the study of exoplanets.  Come learn about this extraordinary telescope that will take humanity a few more steps closer to understanding the universe!

The Astronomy Club of Asheville meets at the Reuter Center the first Thursday of the month (except January and July) at 7 p.m. with an interesting lineup of speakers and topics. OLLI members may attend club meetings and star gazes, with club members on hand to advise and assist them in the basics of astronomy and the techniques of observing celestial phenomena. For more information about the Astronomy Club of Asheville, visit their website at www.astroasheville.org.

World Affairs Council (WAC)
Tuesday, May 7, 7:30 p.m.
Reuter Center Manheimer Roo m

Andrew S. Terrell
Andrew S. Terrell: "Wing and a Prayer - Brexit as of May (The date, not the Prime Minister): An update." 

Americans have watched with curiosity and fascination the UK's referendum and the subsequent Parliamentary moves that have characterized Brexit. Come to the World Affairs Council May meeting to hear the latest and official word on Brexit. 

Andrew S. Terrell is the British Consul for Business & Government Affairs and Head of the UK Government Office (UKGO) in Raleigh. This office maintains and develops business, cultural, political and scientific relationships with the State of North Carolina and other communities throughout the southeast. Andrew is originally from Western North Carolina and has lived and studied throughout Asia and Europe.  He is a graduate of Warwick University and Richmond International University in the United Kingdom.

These lectures are free to WAC members and undergraduate students, and $10 at the door for all other participants.  OLLI members receive a discount on WAC membership. 


Summer Storytelling Retreat & Adventure
Connie Regan-Blake's 14th Annual Summer Storytelling Retreat & Adventure 
July 14-20, 2019
Asheville, North Carolina

Come to the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains for seven days of story-listening and story-telling along with coaching, community & supportive exploration. This 14th annual workshop welcomes all levels of expertise, from beginner to experienced teller. 

For more information and to register, click here

Questions? Contact Connie at: 828-258-1113 or by email at:  [email protected]
An MWW Gathering
Men's Wisdom Works
Special Interest Group 

Each of MWW's 16 groups is comprised of 8-12 men.  Groups meet at various times and places twice a month for 2 hours to discuss issues of personal importance. Groups socialize over breakfast, lunch, happy hour, & other social activities.

Men on the waiting list will either be added to existing groups, or we will form a new group if numbers suffice.

To learn more or to sign up on our wait list contact: Patrick Irwin at  [email protected]
Dear OLLI Members,
We want to remind all of our members that the Reuter Center will be closed on Friday, April 12, for our Paths to Creative Retirement workshop.  We have not scheduled CFS courses, SIGs or Fab Friday lectures for this day, so that we can focus our efforts on this national workshop. Please mark your calendars.

We hope that you will read Kirk Borland's story on Bryan Stevenson, who will appear at UNC Asheville on Thursday, April 25.  This event is part of the installation of UNC Asheville's eighth chancellor, Nancy J. Cable.  We have included a complete list of the many events scheduled to celebrate UNC Asheville and a new chapter in the university's leadership. Please note that we have scheduled our ice cream social for Thursday, April 25, in the hopes that our members will convene, enjoy some ice cream from the Hop and stay for the evening's lecture.  

Thanks to all of you for contributing to the success of our vibrant community of teachers and learners,
Catherine Frank
Executive Director


 Check the links here to see OLLI and UNC Asheville current events:
 
calendar
 

Many thanks to Nancy Gordon, who sent this image of a rare wildflower, Oconee Bells, from the College for Seniors Spring Wildflower Hike course, Saturday, April 6, 2019. 

Nancy writes,"According to Timothy Spira in  Wildflowers & Plant Communities : 'Oconee Bells was first collected in 1787 in Oconee County, South Carolina, by French botanist Andre Michaux. Harvard botanist Asa Gray discovered Michaux's collection in Paris nearly 50 years later and, recognizing it as a new species, described and named it, [but Gray never located a living specimen].  Shortia soon became a kind of Holy Grail for plant collectors. . . . nearly 40 years after Gray named it, Shortia was rediscovered by 17-year-old George Hyams in North Carolina bringing additional fame to a plant that Gray once characterized as 'perhaps the most interesting plant in North America'" (p.438).

Nancy reports "Our total wildflower count for the day was 46." Many thanks to Nancy for sharing the wonder of our beautiful mountains with us and to longtime instructors Marily Kolton and Lou Dwarshuis and all of our CFS instructors whose classes encourage us to see the world in new ways.
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Need tech help? 
Check out  The Geek Bar
Wednesdays, 8 - 9 a.m
Reuter Center, The Atrium

Are you having technical problems or questions regarding your smart phone, tablet or laptop? 
OLLI is happy to announce The Geek Bar, offered on Wednesday mornings from 8-9 a.m. in the Reuter Center Atrium. This is a great excuse to get good parking, a cup of coffee or tea and advice -- all before your first class!
Bring your device and question, and one of the Geek Bar Experts will try to address your issue. 

All platforms welcome (Android, Apple, Windows, etc.).  The Geek Bar is on a first-come, first-served basis.  We offer no guarantees, but our Geeks will do our best to be of help.  Note : This is not software instruction and is generally meant for specific, quick-answer issues.

If you have questions, or if you are a Geek who would like to work at the Geek Bar, feel free to contact Julia Loughran at:  [email protected]

Sally Ekaireb
Meditation 
Special Interest Group
Secrets of the Brain and Heart, 
a Broken Brain Podcast 
with Dr. James Doty
Monday, April 8, 4:15 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.
Reuter Center Room 206

Sally Ekaireb will initiate discussion on the connection between meditation, compassion and heart-centered thinking.  Yes, the heart does rule the brain.  In this podcast Dr. James Doty discusses the science behind this ancient wisdom. He then explains how we can use meditation to increase our conscious compassion to benefit our health and others.  

Sally Ekaireb became interested in health and healing in the 1990s.  She is certified as a Tzaddi Healer and Counselor, facilitates the Meditation SIG, and will be teaching The Holistic Approach to Health and Wellness at OLLI again this summer.

All OLLI members are welcome at our meditation programs.
SIG Contact:  Sally Ekaireb
Gardening
Special Interest Group
Vegetables: Diagnosing and Treating Problems to Yield a Successful Crop
Tuesday, April 9, 4:15-6:00 p.m.
Reuter Center, Room 206


Given up on growing broccoli and other veggies because you don't know what's attacking them?  No better people to address this topic than Angie Lavezzo and Chris Smith of Sow True Seed. Sow True Seed is a unique and fabulous local resource dedicated to providing open-pollinated, heirloom and organic vegetable, herb, and flower seeds to enthusiastic home gardeners and small market farmers. 

SIG contact: Marilyn Dishaw, [email protected]
Thomas Wolfe Short Story Book Club
Thursday, April 11, 5:30 p.m.
Thomas Wolfe State Historic Site
52 North Market Street, Asheville, NC


Ellen Brown, Author of John Apperson's Lake George  will lead a discussion of Thomas Wolfe's story "The Hollyhock Savers." 

This is the last in this year's series of discussions sponsored by the Wilma Dykeman Legacy,  a tax-exempt non-profit organization founded in 2012 to sustain and promote Wilma Dykeman's values by sponsoring workshops, events, and other programs. The core values of this extraordinary woman from Buncombe County included environmental integrity, social justice, and the power of the written and spoken word. For more information, visit wilmadykemanlegacy.org/

Carolinas' Nature Photographers Association  Special Meeting
Sunday, April 14, 5:30 p.m.
Reuter Center, Manheimer Room

"Understanding Creative Exposure, Learning to See Creatively and Understanding Color"
Bryan Peterson

B ryan Peterson is an internationally known photographer, speaker, workshop leader and website instruction host (with his well-known www.bpsop.com site)

The group anticipates a large turnout of members and nonmembers of Carolinas' Nature Photographers Association and has reserved some seating for members, and seating is limited to 150 members.

If you have questions, please contact Susanna Euston and Ken Smith,  Co-Coordinators, CNPA-Asheville,  [email protected]

The Carolinas' Nature Photographers Association (CNPA) was founded in 1992 to promote nature photography in the Carolinas, to help conserve and preserve the diverse natural ecosystems in the Carolinas and to educate others interested in nature and wildlife photography. The association is divided into regions for more close-at-hand activities. The CNPA-Asheville Region's goal is to develop a group that will more fully experience the beauty of Western  North Carolina through photography. Activities in the Asheville Region include monthly meetings, photo outings, seminars, workshops, exhibits, photo contests, and image critiques.

 The monthly meetings are held at the Reuter Center on the second Sunday of each month from 5:30-8 p.m.

 For more information please visit:  www.cnpa-asheville.org
To RSVP please email:  [email protected]
Garrett Artz
Fab Friday
"The Past, Present and Future of Asheville's Riverfront Revitalization
Presented by Garrett Artz, Executive Director of RiverLink
Friday, April 19, 11:30 a.m
Note that there is no Fab Friday on Friday, April 12 because of the Paths to Creative Retirement Workshop

Reuter Center Manheimer Room

Learn about the transformation and revitalization of Asheville's Riverfront along the French Broad River, a river once described as "too thick to drink and too thin to plow" by author Wilma Dykeman.  Discover some of the key events like the 1916 Flood and industrialization, and key leaders like Dykeman, the Dam Fighters, Jean Webb and Karen Cragnolin.  Learn about the success stories in local collaboration to improve water quality and the ongoing transformation of degraded properties into public parks and greenways.  RiverLink Executive Director Garrett Artz will cover this colorful history and provide a glimpse into the future of river revitalization.  Pictures from RiverLink's historical collection will help tell the story and time will be provided for a robust discussion.

Fab Fridays happen every Friday during our Fall, Winter and Spring terms in the Reuter Center's Manheimer Room.  Members and guests are invited to socialize and then enjoy presentations on a wide range of topics.  Purchase lunch in our Reuter Café or bring your own brown bag.  These programs are free and open to everyone.
History Book Lovers
Special Interest Group (SIG)
The Path Between the Seas: 
The Creation of the Panama Canal, 1870-1914
by David McCullough

Friday, April 19, 1 p.m.
Reuter Center Room 120

History Book Lovers SIG meets on the third Friday of each month to share books, engage in discussion and connect with other OLLI members who love history. In upcoming months they will read

May: The Wright Brothers by David McCullough
June: A discussion of Kublai Khan 1215-1294, Emperor of China

All OLLI members are welcome.  SIG contact: Mike Wang, 267-243-3011,  [email protected]
Travel SIG 
Friday, April 19, 2 p.m.
Reuter Center, Manheimer Room

2 - 3 p.m. Safaris in S. Africa, Kenya/Tanzania  with Chuck Baer                

3 - 4 p.m. -  Switzerland  with Daniel Beerman
                 

 
Please contact one of the following Travel SIG members if you have any questions or want to share 
your travel adventures:
Madan  Joshi ( [email protected])
Kathy  Gainey ( kathleen.m. gainey@ outlook.com  )
Kathleen  Buehner ( kbuehner@ hotmail.com
Lauren  Azoulai ( lazoulai@ gmail.com)
           
Death Café  
Friday, April 19, 5 p.m.
Reuter Center Lower Atrium

Death C afé  is an engaging gathering with storytelling and conversation about a topic that too often alienates people in our death phobic culture. At Death  Café
 participants break into small groups of five or six people and discuss personal stories related to the death of loved ones, loss of jobs, relationships or marriages or loss or death of parts of ourselves. These programs are facilitated by Greg Lathrop, Said Osio and Karen Sanders from Third Messenger.  Click here to find out more about this month's Death Cafe conversation.

Celebrate UNC Asheville
and 
Installation of Chancellor Nancy J. Cable 
Tuesday, April 23 - Friday, April 26
UNC Asheville Campus

Chancellor Cable will be formally installed as UNC Asheville's Eighth Chancellor in a special ceremony on the Quad on Friday, April 26 at 3 p.m., joined by North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, local legislators, UNC System leaders, higher education colleagues, friends, family and the campus community. Author, educator and interfaith leader Eboo Patel will give the invocation, with John DeGioia, 48th President of Georgetown University, giving the installation address. The ceremony is free and open to the public. A reception on the Phillips Lawn will follow the ceremony at 4:30 p.m.


UNC Asheville's Eighth Chancellor, Dr. Nancy J. Cable, is a nationally recognized leader in higher education, educational access, financial aid and affordability, and liberal arts and sciences curricula. She holds a B.A. from Marietta College, an M.A. from the University of Vermont, and a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Virginia, and joined UNC Asheville in August 2018, after serving as president of the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations. She brings to the university a depth and breadth of experiences in leadership roles at liberal arts institutions, in generating external resources for the enhancement of the university, and in facilitating the implementation of an ambitious strategic plan.

Spring Member Social
Thursday, April 25, 4:30 p.m.
Reuter Center Lower Atrium

Join your OLLI friends for a chance to socialize, enjoy ice cream from The Hop (including vegan options) and other light snacks and cheering beverages.  This is an opportunity to celebrate spring and our OLLI community.  Come for this event and stay for Bryan Stevenson's lecture!

Free and open to OLLI members.
UNC ASHEVILLE PRESENTS: 
Bryan Stevenson, A Man of Our Time
by Kirk Borland
An expected capacity crowd will gather at UNC Asheville's Kimmel Arena on Thursday, April 25, to hear Bryan Stevenson, a passionate advocate for the poor, the incarcerated and the unjustly condemned. A graduate of Harvard Law who established the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) in Montgomery, Alabama, Bryan Stevenson is also author of the best seller Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption. His appearance will mark the second in an ongoing "visionary lecture series" conceived by Lin and Dave Brown and dedicated to "impacting the policies of society that nurture a better life for large numbers of people."
Bryan Stevenson Lecture
Thursday, April 25, 7 p.m.
Doors open at 6 p.m.
Kimmel Arena, 
UNC Asheville Campus

Bryan Stevenson, the attorney, activist and best-selling author of Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption who led the team that created the first national memorial to victims of lynching, will speak at UNC Asheville's Kimmel Arena at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 25. Doors will open at 6 p.m. The talk is free and open to everyone, with support from The David and Lin Brown Visionary Lecture Series and The Van Winkle Law Firm Public Policy Lectures.

(ASL interpreters will be present in addition to an auditory loop system in the auditorium.)

Verdi Comes to Terezín
Thursday, May 2, 2 p.m.
Reuter Center Manheimer Room
 
Composer Murry Sidlin
Murry Sidlin, President and Creative Director of The Defiant Requiem Foundation, and creator and conductor of the multimedia concert drama 
Defiant Requiem: Verdi at Terezín, will speak about this work to be performed June 1, 2019, at the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium.

When he first learned the story of Rafael Schächter and the 150-person Jewish choir that performed Verdi's Requiem 16 times while imprisoned in the ghetto/concentration camp Terezín, why he was compelled to uncover how and why these Jewish prisoners, who faced death every day, chose to learn and perform a Latin, Catholic mass during their darkest hours. Ultimately it became his personal and professional mission to show the world how Schächter and his fellow Jewish prisoners demonstrated that it is possible to respond to the worst of mankind with the best of mankind.

 


A question and answer session with Maestro Sidlin will follow the talk. The event at the Reuter Center on May 2 is free and open to everyone.

Smart Driver Class
Friday, May 3, 1-5 p.m.
Reuter Center 120

The four-hour AARP Smart Driver Class offers numerous tips  for coping with inevitable changes in perception and reaction  time, as well as increased hazards on the roads with faster cars  and busier traffic. Participants can expect to review the rules of  the road, learn tips to respond to aggressive drivers and gather  general safety tips such as how to make left turns into heavy  traffic. The course, offered nationwide, is designed to help  participants avoid crashes and remain safely behind the wheel.

The cost is $15 for AARP members and $20 for all others. Contact
instructor Celeste Selwyn at [email protected] to register.

The Reuter Center Singers Present:
Dear Appalachia: Our Mountain Music Heritage
Saturday, May 4, 7 p.m. 
 Sunday, May 5, 3 p.m.
Reuter Center, Manheimer Room


Dear Appalachia: Our Mountain Music Heritage  explores in song the rich traditions of Appalachia with deep roots in Western North Carolina.  Multiple ethnic groups brought forth the folk songs and ballads, with African-American spirituals and country gospel the most prevalent.  The singing of this music was used to keep family cultural heritages alive and to rise above dreary, monotonous circumstances through fantasies of escape and revenge.
 
Selections to be performed include "Sourwood Mountain," "Poor Wayfaring Stranger," "Shenandoah," "Soldier's Joy," "The Unclouded Day/Will the Circle Be Unbroken," "Travelin' Thru," "Old Dan Tucker," "Go 'Way from My Window," "Sun is Gonna Shine," and more.  These sounds of Appalachia in story and legend will be heard in the many musical genres derived from various European and African influences.  These include English ballads, Irish and Scottish traditional music, hymns, and African-American blues.
 
Chuck Taft, who has directed the choir for its full 20-year history, will conduct and Nora Vetro will accompany on the piano.

With 20 years as a singing organization, the Reuter Center Singers have fostered connections among members and the community at large  from the beginning, and is the community chorus based at OLLI, the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at UNC Asheville.  They rehearse on Monday evenings from 6:15-8:15 p.m. at the Reuter Center and welcome new members.
UNC Asheville STEAM Studio Summer Classes

UNC Asheville's STEAM Studio is excited to announce their summer class series for adults. They have 3 classes available and they are suitable for beginner to advanced wood workers. 

**For information of Wood Sculpture, Click Here

***For information on Wood Bending, Click Here

**For information on Bowl Turning, Click Here


 

For more information, or to register, please email: [email protected]


OLLI would like to thank its Creative Retirement Exploration Weekend (CREW) Major Sponsor, Beverly-Hanks and Associates for their longtime support of our programming.
www.beverly-hanks.com



Osher Lifelong Learning Institute | 828-251-6140 | [email protected] | http://www.olliasheville.com
Reuter Center, CPO #5000
UNC Asheville
One University Heights
Asheville, NC 28804