Credit: Michael Ford

Fall
is such a funny, nostalgic time. Even those of us who don’t particularly miss
our school days can still fall susceptible to the classic fall-time itch: the
one that makes you want to fill a backpack with new pencils and notebooks and
go wait for the school bus. Maybe it’s the itch for new beginnings. (And if
we’d paid attention in Psych 101, maybe we’d know.)

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  But here’s a news flash for all you
post-school adults: There is a whole smorgasbord of electives out there that
don’t require coming down with bubonic plague sometime around midterms. No
homework, no tests, and no number two pencils. You can learn about that one
quirky thing you’ve always found intriguing. (Balloon sculpting, anyone?) Or,
learn a utilitarian task just for the chance to brag to your favorite
know-it-all: “Oh, you never learned how to install recessed lighting? How
funny. I mastered it long ago.” Now does that sound fun? You bet. Go ahead and scratch that itch: It’s time to go back to
school.

From
shower to stage

Calling
everyone who holds secret visions of stardom when they are singing in the
shower or in the car: Patricia Alexander hasn’t met an amateur voice she
couldn’t work with.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “You never know,” she says. “You never know. I believe in everybody.” A
particularly kind quality for a voice teacher, perhaps. But according to
Alexander, “very, very, very few” people are actually tone deaf. So take heart,
closet singers.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Alexander has been teaching voice
for over 25 years. She was the first voice teacher for her daughter, renowned
soprano Renรฉe Fleming. She now teaches full time through Eastman’s Continuing
Education Division, a task that includes teaching private students and a class
of adult singers, which she took on last year. Her first class had a wide range
of students: a lawyer, a retired nurse, a medical student, a chemical engineer
who just wanted to be able to sing church hymns. And their singing abilities
filled a wide range, as well. Some had never, ever sung before.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  She taught all the students
breathing, tone placement, how to read music, and took them through her proven
repertoire of folk, classical, and musical theater songs. The class was “so
supportive,” Alexander says. “They encouraged, they complimented.” By the end,
every student was confident enough to sing a solo in the class recital. With
Alexander’s help, could you be the next Renรฉe Fleming? You just never know.

Voice Class
for Adults
is offered through the Eastman School of Music’s Continuing Education Division,
26 Gibbs Street. Private lessons with a number of voice teachers are also
available. Cost: $248. 274-1400, www.rochester.edu/Eastman/ced/

Floating
on air

“The
balloon is my paintbrush,” says balloon artist Larry Moss. He’s been performing
with balloons since 1985 and has been a full-time balloon artist since 1995, so
he’s had time to think about metaphors to explain his unconventional vocation.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “People ask me ‘How can you get
respect for an art that doesn’t last?’ I like to compare it to sand art and ice
sculpture,” he says. “I teach people to create memories.”

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  You might call Moss a balloon
pioneer. He is the artist behind the giant orange octopus seen flying over the
Great Sodus Bay Screen Family Fest in July. It was a piloted, 20,000-balloon
sculpture that took Moss and his assistant five days to build.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  But Moss starts the students in his
Airagami classes out a little smaller. They learn to make cats and dogs then
move on to larger creations, like portraits. He likes his students to learn how
to be creative with their balloons.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “Rather than me giving recipes,
people end up walking out knowing how to use balloons as a medium,” he says.
His students have included professional clowns, high school students, and,
once, the staff of the Jefferson Road post office.

Airagami with
Larry Moss
is offered through Rush-Henrietta Continuing Education, 1799 Lehigh Station
Road, Henrietta. Pre-registration is required. Cost: $75. Info: 359-7805.

Ragtime
on the recorder

You
may remember recorders from elementary school music class. They were probably
lumped together in the box with the castanets, tambourines, and other abused
instruments deemed appropriate for children. Frank Amato, a retired chemist and
president of the Rochester chapter of the American Recorder Society, wants to
set the record straight.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “People think of it as a simple
instrument,” he says, “but I’ve played very demanding music on the recorder.”
He’s played music from the 1300s and 1400s — the recorder’s heyday — as
well as classical pieces and even ragtime, depending on his audience. The
recorder’s structure is simple: It has a whistle-like mouthpiece and a body
with seven or so holes that players cover and uncover with their fingers to
make music. But Amato says that with the deceptively simple recorder you can
play the equivalent of any of the parts in a string quartet.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Amato played clarinet and saxophone
through high school, college, and his time in the Navy. But when he went back
to music, he went back to the recorder, an instrument that doesn’t require the
same muscle strength of other wind instruments and one on which it is easy to
learn the fundamentals.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  He, along with other chapter members
in the 45-person group, volunteers during regular chapter meetings to teach
newcomers and beginners. Some of these people have been playing for years, some
even have music degrees and can teach beginner through advanced intermediate
levels. Anyone with an interest is welcome.

The Rochester
Chapter of the American Recorder Society
meets twice a month from
September through May. There is a yearly membership fee. There will be a
registration meeting on Tuesday, September 9, at the Lutheran Church of the
Incarnate Word, 597 East Avenue, 7:30 p.m. 225-6808.

I’ll
toast to that

The
international organization of Toastmasters was created to help people become
comfortable with public speaking. But to the timid, Linda Penniston, president
of the Life Learners Toastmasters, promises that guests “don’t have to open
their mouth if they don’t want to.”

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  There are 15-plus Toastmaster groups
in Rochester, with at least one group meeting every day of the week. Most are
open to new members. All the clubs follow the guidelines set by the
international organization. There are manuals, roles for everyone to play
during the meetings, and fixed agendas. Beginners are assigned a mentor who
guides them through their first three speeches. Other benefits of membership,
Penniston says, are leadership skills, learning how to take constructive
feedback, and how to sound polished when talking off the cuff. You’ll get
feedback on every speech, and it is always in the sandwich approach: something
nice, suggestions for improvement, something nice again. Humiliation is not on
the program.

The Life
Learners Toastmasters
meet on the first and third Saturdays of the month at 2011
East Main Street, at 5 p.m. 385-6417, www.lifelearners.org. To find another
Toastmasters group, go to www.toastmasters.org.

Talking
to the divine

Charlene
Hacker got her first deck of Tarot Cards for her 13th Christmas. She thought
they were something electronic because she could feel them vibrating through
the wrapping paper. She gave her first reading to her grandmother, predicting a
new husband and more children. To her family’s laughter, Hacker put the cards
away. But when her grandmother several years later married a man with children,
she pulled those cards right back out.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Hacker now runs Psychic’s Thyme, a
bookstore and learning center specializing in New Age arts. She teaches a
number of classes, including how to read Tarot Cards. A Tarot reading,
according to Hacker, is 75 to 80 percent accurate, if not more. But it depends
on the reader and how well they know and feel comfortable with their deck.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “You have to let the information
flow through you, and learn to trust your intuition,” she says. Where does the
information come from? “From spirit, from divine,” she says. “That realm you go
to when you’re dreaming.” The cards tell people about their past, present, and
can help steer people away from negative events in the future.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “Forewarned is forearmed, as my
mother used to say,” Hacker says. Prosaic advice from a woman who talks to
spirits.

Tarot Card
Reading
is
taught at Psychic’s Thyme, 16 Edmonds Street. For a schedule call 473-4230 or
visit www.psychicsthyme.com

Cut
a rug village-style

“Folk
dancing is something that is truly for folks. In villages… you would see
anything from little children… to grandparents,” says Alene Boyar, one of three
teacher-dancers with the International Folk Dancers. Boyar has been dancing
since 1968, and she can’t remember when she started teaching.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  The International Folk Dancers get
together to learn and practice Balkan, Eastern European, and some Scandinavian
and Israeli folk dances. There are line dances, circle dances, couple dances,
and even a couple of square dances. No one needs to be very athletic or
coordinated to participate in at least part of the evening: dances range from
“incredibly easy to incredibly difficult,” Boyar says.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Teaching is concentrated at the
beginning of the evening, and as the night progresses people can request some
of their favorite dances. But the teachers will re-teach dances on request.

The
International Folk Dancers
meet twice a month, on various Fridays, at the Friends
Meeting House, 84 Scio Street. Call 377-1805, 461-9266, or 244-4572 for a fall
schedule. The International Folk Dance Club of Rochester, a group with some
overlap with the Friday group, meets on Monday evenings. Call 624-1964 for
times and location.

Test
drive that cordless drill

According
to John Rutigliano, assistant manager at Home Depot, the free how-to clinics at
the store are hands-on enough and give people enough opportunities to practice,
to “make it all seem possible, make it worthwhile, and like something you can
do.”

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  The how-to clinics were so good they
were what lured Rutigliano, a self-professed computer guy, into a job with the
store.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “You really walk out with great,
specific suggestions, and you actually get to try the tools on our dime,” he
says.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  The clinics cover everything from
sealing a driveway to laying a ceramic floor to installing ceiling fans.
They’re free, and people can give the tools and techniques a whirl before going
home because, as Rutigliano points out, seeing something on a shelf and
actually using it are two very different things.

How-to Clinics at Home
Depot, 770 Jefferson Road. Evening and weekend classes are scheduled on a
monthly basis. 427-0390.

Sporting
with glass

“Glass
blowing is more like a sport,” says Elizabeth Lyons, director of the More Fire
Glass Studio. “You learn the techniques and then you practice. The art part of
it comes after.”

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Lyons and other instructors at the
studio teach five levels of glass blowing. In beginners’ classes students make
their own glass tumblers and can eventually — in the next levels — move up
to creating sculptures and decorative pieces. Other workshops include
beadmaking, a class that is nearly always full, and special workshops with
visiting glass artists.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Though working with hot glass can
seem intimidating to the uninitiated, according to Lyons the beginning classes
really, truly require no experience.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “We love beginners,” she says. The
only thing you need is a real desire to learn.

Glassblowing at More Fire
Glass Studio, 80 Rockwood Place. Cost: $220. 242-0450, www.morefireglass.com.

Be
a Good Samaritan

“Most
of us at some point in our lives will witness someone having an emergency. And
most of us will want to help,” says Sally Wade, director for health, safety,
and community volunteer services at the Greater Rochester Chapter of the Red
Cross. When you realize how many CPR (Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation) courses
the Red Cross offers, at how many different times of day, and finally, that you
can learn CPR in three-and-a-half hours, there seem to be no more excuses.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Don’t forget the gosh-darned
usefulness of it all. In CPR classes you learn how to recognize an emergency,
when to call 911, and what to do if someone is choking or needs you to breath
for them. You can learn CPR for adults, for children and infants, or for all
three. Then there’s CPR-AED, where, in addition to CPR training, you can learn
how to operate an Automated External Defibrillator (those machines that TV
doctors are always using after they yell ‘clear!’), which are starting to show
up everywhere from airplanes to conference rooms.

CPR training at the
Rochester Chapter of the Red Cross, 50 Prince Street. Cost: $45. 241-4453,
www.rochesterredcross.org.

Drive
like you mean it

Jim
McGrath, owner of Jim Terry’s Driving School, just wants to bring the driving
public up to speed. He estimates that 99.5 percent of people think they are
good drivers. So why do all the accidents happen?

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “You can think you’re a good driver,
but it could be that everyone else is watching out for you,” he says. They’ll
be watching out if they took a defensive driving course, anyway.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  The course at Jim Terry teaches
people simple techniques to drive more safely, alerts them to changes in the
driving laws, and refreshes the things they learned in driving school all those
years ago. One six-hour course knocks 10 percent off your insurance costs for
three years and reduces your driving record by four points.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  According to McGrath, after taking
defensive driving, 80 percent of people think everyone should take it. And
McGrath agrees: There’s no shame in driving on the safe side of the road.

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  “Defensive driving is about driving
safely,” McGrath says. “It’s not about driving three miles an hour. That’s just
frustrating for everybody.”

Defensive
Driving
is taught the third Saturday of the month at Jim Terry’s Driving School, 1225
Norton Street. Cost: $40. 266-1381.