Discovering The Mature Lifestyle
Mighty Wurlitzer pipe organ in Columbia Heights draws crowds. Page 2
Arts & Recreation
April 21 & 22, 2016
April Issue
Coloring book craze spreads to Calvary Cooperative BY SUE WEBBER CONTRIBUTING WRITER Jeanne Leer, who lives at Calvary Center Cooperative in Golden Valley, got an idea in November 2015. Why not start a coloring book group? The idea took off in January 2016. And unlike many New Year’s resolutions, it has been picking up steam ever since. At 11 a.m. each Thursday, residents who like to color gather in the ninth-floor Skyline Room to color together. The first meeting drew 24 people. As the intricate pictures are completed, residents have been treated to easels full of the coloring group’s work in a variety of locations in the building. “When we first started, I went to Barnes and Noble with some money from our Activities Committee and bought two coloring books and pencils,” Leer said. She picked up two more packages of colored pencils at Michael’s. Pages were taken from the books and passed around, so everyone had something to work on. Now, three months later, almost everyone has his or her own books and pencil sets. The group includes one male, Elmo Alexander, who said he’s taken a couple of art classes. “He does beautiful work,” Leer said. Leer said she knits and plays the piano in her free time, but she still enjoys having a friend come to her home and color with her. Noting that her daughter purchased a coloring book for a daughter who is working on her doctorate degree in physics so she can take a break occasionally,” Leer said, “You need something to scale down once in a while.” At Calvary Cooperative on a recent Thursday morning, Wilma Taute sat with a huge box of pencils, pens and brushes. “I bought them many years ago, but never gave them to the grandchildren,” Taute said. Now she shares them with Elmo, she said.
Calvary Center Cooperative’s Coloring Group meets once a week in the ninth-floor Skyline Room. (Photo by Sue Webber) Pearl Olafson, who just celebrated her 100th birthday, said she enjoys the chance to color with her friends. “Living here has helped me,” she said. “I’m so grateful.” Beth Potente worked on coloring the area around a message that said “Peace Be With You.” “It’s fun to come here and see your friends,” Potente
said. “When you get started doing a picture, you just don’t want to leave. It really grips you.” Pat Skogman, who was working on coloring an owl, said she got all her supplies at Michael’s. “You can find them all over,” she said. Skogman was experimenting COLORING - TO PAGE 3