THE CHARBONNEAU VILLAGER 27
April 2019
Activities
■ From Page 20
For those who are already listed,
please check to make sure the
information in the blue-colored 2018
directory is current. The directory
information includes resident phone
numbers and it is possible that this
information may have changed. The
deadline for making changes is May
15, which is the date of the CCC
annual meeting.
If you have recently moved to
Charbonneau, be sure to contact the
CCC office staff at 503-694-2300 or
Office@CharbonneauCountryClub.
com and let them know how you
would like to be listed in the directory.
The directory will be printed and
delivered by the post office
exclusively to Charbonneau addresses
sometime in June.
Time to register for the “Walk to
Remember” benefi tting the
Alzheimer’s Association
Charbonneau’s Seventh annual
Walk to Remember will take place
Sunday, May 19 at 11 a.m. Our walk
this year will be a shorter route than in
previous years to accommodate a
larger range of ages and mobility.
Attendees will enjoy a lovely walk
through a Charbonneau neighborhood
followed by a free BBQ lunch and
entertainment at SpringRidge Court.
Please pre-register so we know how
many guests we will be serving. This
event begins and ends at SpringRidge
Court.
Several gift baskets are donated by
local businesses and will be raffled off
CHARBONNEAU
VI LL AG ER
VOL. 42, NO. 2 Q FEBRUARY
Q CHARBONNE AU, OREGON
2019
PRSRT. STD.
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
GRESHAM, OR
PERMIT NO. 32
Thank you,
Cindy! — Page 10
Singles club
goes all
female — Page 15
Hold the date for FREE document
shredding & drug disposal day
Windermere Real Estate and
Charbonneau Country Club are
teaming up to help you with some
spring cleaning. A shredding truck will
be stationed behind the Windermere
building for FREE on-site shredding of
documents June 1 from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. For more information, contact the
CCC office or Windermere. Canned
food donations accepted to support our
local food bank.
In addition, the CCC Disaster
Preparedness Committee has
arranged a drug disposal event.
There will be more information about
this event in the next issue of the
Villager newspaper.
With love in
their hearts
— Page 6
Ladies’ Poker Nite
Calling all Ladies! Charbonneau
resident Donna Rhoten would like to
start up a Texas Hold ‘em monthly
card game. She is hoping to put
together a fun group of like-minded
Charbonneau women who love to play
poker. Who is interested? Day or
evening? Please email her at
[email protected]. Donna will
contact each of you to begin forming a
monthly card game! Beginners are
welcome and no experience is
necessary.
Art For Life: Drawing
A second session of “Art for Life:
Drawing” will be offered on Tuesdays,
6 to 7:30 p.m. beginning April 2, and will
take place in the basement art room of
Charbonneau Country Club.
The course will run for six weeks
and will be limited to eight adults. The
focus will be on drawing, using various
tools, techniques and exercises to
ensure that each individual feels
successful. These sessions are
especially appropriate for, but not
limited to, anyone lacking confidence
with drawing or other related skills
and offer opportunity for questions and
discussions about art-related concepts
and mysteries.
Kimberly Boehler has a doctorate in
education with an emphasis in art
education. As an art educator, she has
taught all ages including 15-plus years
combined at Montana State University
and Southern Oregon University and
10 years at Ashland Middle School.
Kim lives in Charbonneau.
Call Kim Boehler at 406-579-7151 to
sign up.
Cost for 6 weeks is $65 ($60 = $5
materials). ■
ADVERTISE IN THE VILLAGER!
Contact Jesse Marichalar
Changes
for board
nominations
Published by
After taking the winter season off,
community theater group
WilsonvilleSTAGE is back with a
madcap comedy. With spring quickly
approaching, WilsonvilleSTAGE is
pleased to be coming back to
Charbonneau with three performances
of the uproariously irreverent “The
Complete Works of William
Shakespeare (abridged) [revised],”
directed by Rick Hoover.
Set under the guise of three men
attempting to run through the entire
works of Shakespeare in one go, the
three actors start off by introducing
themselves by their real names and
telling a bit about the show. But it’s
clear within the first few minutes that
this isn’t your usual, serious crack at
Shakespeare when one gives a
biography of Shakespeare that he
mixes up with a biography of Adolf
Hitler, setting the tone for the mishaps
throughout.
“They mention that they’re going
to be doing something
unprecedented by doing the
complete works of Shakespeare,”
director Rick Hoover said. “They
almost do it, but they abridge them
by saying that the comedies are all
basically the same story.”
MAY ISSUE DEADLINE IS APRIL 11th
— Page 2
Plus Event Calendar,
all club reports and
more!
The play’s the thing
The three actors crash through the
classic plays in a variety of styles,
including a rap song, a cooking show, a
football game, topped off with
“MacBeth” done in horrendously bad
Scottish accents, only to realize at the
end of act one that they’ve nearly done
all the plays. Finding themselves left
with “Hamlet,” more chaos ensues
before intermission. Rejoining the
stage, the actors finish strong,
eventually doing the whole thing
again, faster, and backwards.
“It’s a farce and a real family show,”
Hoover said, “and it’s great for people
who don’t know or hate Shakespeare
because they’ll see it in a completely
different light.”
Come see the madness unfold at
7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, May
24 and 25, and Sunday, May 26, for a
matinee at 2:30 p.m.
For tickets go to wilsonvillestage.
org or purchase tickets in the CCC
office.
Reach every resident in Charbonneau.
Inside the
Villager
New year, new
management
— Page 8
after lunch. Last year, this event raised
$7,142 for the Alzheimer’s Association.
If you would like to donate a basket,
volunteer or need more information,
please contact the Country Club or
SpringRidge Court (registration forms
are available at both locations). This
event is a wonderful way to show your
support for friends and family who
have been diagnosed or are caregivers
of someone with Alzheimer’s.
JON HOUSE
PAMPLIN MEDIA GROUP PHOTO:
971-204-7774
[email protected]