Thursday, April 28, 2016

Perfect Pair Homeless Alliance Drive: May 2-6,2016




Casady’s Upper Division service learning youth council, YAC (Youth Active in the Community)

is organizing a drive benefiting Oklahoma City’s Homeless Alliance. The drive is called “Perfect

Pair”. This drive specifically seeks men’s tube socks, bars of soap, and toothbrushes. Far from

insignificant, new socks, bars of soap, and toothbrushes make people feel human. This

small act of kindness could make a huge difference for hundreds of homeless in our community.

The Homeless Alliance is a non­profit organization that works to end homelessness in Oklahoma

City. A United Way partner, the Homeless Alliance provides assistance to many of Oklahoma

homeless including veterans, the mentally disabled, and those who struggle with substance

abuse. They work with several local organizations including NorthCare, The Veterans’

Administration, Healing Hands, Be the Change, and many local churches.

In addition to Casady students and their families donating items, YAC is also asking the Casady

Community to reach out to local dentists and merchants who might be willing to support the

cause and donate toothbrushes, mens tube socks, or soap. YAC is looking to make a

difference for a vulnerable segment of our community with this drive that reinforces Casady’s

mission to service learning by allowing students to take action and see the tangible results of

their efforts.

Ellison G.
Freshman YAC Project Facilitator











To drop donations
Primary Division: By Perfect Pair Red Wagon by entrance foyer.  Perfect Pair collection bags and volunteers will be on site to help collect items from 7:30-8:15 am

Volunteers on duty
Monday, May 2:  Carmen C, Paxton B.
Tuesday, May 3: Ellison G, Evie W
Wednesday, May 4:  Sanjay R., Payton B.
Thursday, May 5: Ellison G., Sahanya B.
Friday, May 6: Kate W. Hannah J.

Lower Division: By Giving Tree by the Front Office. Perfect Pair collection bags and volunteers will be on site to help collect donations from 7:15 to 8: 15 am

Volunteers on duty
Monday, May 2: Aubrey H., Dylan D.
Tuesday, May 3: Carmen C. Dylan D.
Wednesday, May 4: Dylan D.
Thursday, May 5: Dylan D. Gabrielle M.
Friday, May 6: Dylan D.

Upper Division: At collection boxes at Student Center.  Perfect pair collection bags and colunteers will be on site to help collect donations from 7:15-8:15 am

Volunteers on duty
Monday, May 2: Mason T., Hannah J.
Tuesday, May 3: Mason T., Kate W.
Wednesday, May 4: Mason T., Hannah J.
Thursday, May 5: Mason T., Kate W.
Friday, May 6: Carmen C., Mason T.

 
Monday's Collection
Upper Division 409
Lower Division 143
Primary Division 51  
603
Tuesday's Collection
Upper Division 42
Lower Division 56
Primary Division 40
138  +603 = 741

Wednesday's Collection
Upper Division 131
Lower Division 112
Primary Division 8
251+741=992

Thursday's Collection
Upper Division  225
Lower Division 203
Primary Division 310

Friday's Collection
Upper Division
Lower Division
Primary Division

Thumbs Up for Volunteers

Monday
Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

" Isn't that a field hockey player?  She is so kind"  LD student


ONE MORE DAY.....508 is our magic number


Five Science-Backed Strategies for More Happiness

--by Kira M. Newman, syndicated from Greater Good, Apr 29, 2016
Did you know that happiness has its own holiday?
Four years ago, the General Assembly of the United Nations proclaimed March 20 to be the International Day of Happiness. It’s easy to understand why they see happiness as something to celebrate: Happy people are healthier; they get sick less often and live longer. Happy people are more likely to get married and have fulfilling marriages, and they have more friends. They make more money and are more productive at work. Based on decades of research, it has become clear that happiness is not just a personal issue; it’s a matter of public health, global economics, and national well-being.
But it doesn’t come easy, as most of us know. Disappointments and annoyances grab our attention like gnats, and even the good things in life seem to lose their luster over time. Add to that a crammed schedule and mounting obligations, and happiness might just seem out of reach—achievable for other people, perhaps, but not us.
Fortunately, research suggests that happiness is something we can cultivate with practice. The Greater Good Science Center has collected many happiness practices on our website Greater Good in Action, alongside other research-based exercises for fostering kindness, connection, and resilience. Below are 11 of those happiness practices, grouped into five broader strategies for a more fulfilling life.

1. Acknowledge the good

If we don’t feel happy, it’s tempting to look for things to fix: the job that isn’t prestigious enough, the apartment that’s too cramped, our partner’s annoying habit. But focusing on all the negatives isn’t the surest route to feeling better. Instead, a simple way to start cultivating happiness is by recognizing the good.
In the Three Good Things exercise, for example, you keep a journal devoted solely to the positives in your life. Each evening, you write down three things that went well and add some detail about each, including how they made you feel. For example, you might recall a heartfelt thank you from a coworker, a quiet moment drinking tea, or your daughter’s infectious laughter. Importantly, you also briefly explain why you think each good thing happened—which focuses your attention on the enduring sources of goodness that surround you.
2005 study invited participants to do this practice daily for a week, and afterward they reported feeling happier and less depressed than when they started. In fact, they maintained their happiness boost six months later, illustrating how impactful it can be to focus on the good things in life.
Many of those good things lie just outside our doorstep, and we can practice noticing them on aSavoringWalk. Here, you take a 20-minute walk and observe the sights, sounds, and smells you encounter—freshly cut grass, an epic skyscraper, a stranger’s smile. Each time you notice something positive, take the time to absorb it and think about why you enjoy it. On your subsequent Savoring Walks, strike out in different directions to seek new things to admire.
In a study by Fred Bryant of Loyola University Chicago, participants who took Savoring Walks daily for a week reported greater increases in happiness than participants who went for walks as usual. “Making a conscious effort to notice and explicitly acknowledge the various sources of joy around us can make us happier,” write Bryant and Joseph Veroff in the book Savoring.
If you have trouble seeing the good that’s already around you, another strategy is to create some. InCreating and Recalling Positive Events, you carve out time for yourself and fill your schedule with enjoyment.
When you have a day free, don’t rush around doing chores; instead, try three different happy activities:
Something you do alone, such as reading, listening to music, or meditating.
Something you do with others, such as going out for coffee, riding your bike, or watching a movie.
Something meaningful, such as volunteering, helping a neighbor in need, or calling a friend who’s struggling.
If your go-to happiness practice has been Netflix and a bowl of ice cream, this exercise can reconnect you with different sources of satisfaction. These three activities should offer you a sense of pleasure, engagement, and meaning, all viable paths to a satisfying life. A 2014 study found that even psychiatric patients with suicidal thoughts found value in doing this exercise, reporting more optimism and less hopelessness afterward.

2. Add happiness through subtraction


Even after we identify the positives in our life, we’re still prone to adapting to them over time. A good thing repeated brings us less satisfaction, until it no longer seems to contribute to our day-to-day mood at all; we take it for granted. That’s why, sometimes, it’s a good idea to introduce a little deprivation. 

In Mental Subtraction of Positive Events, you call to mind a certain positive event—the birth of a child, a career achievement, a special trip—and think of all the circumstances that made it possible. How could things have turned out differently? Just taking a moment to imagine this alternate reality creates a favorable comparison, where suddenly our life looks quite good.

In a 2008 study, participants who performed this exercise reported feeling more gratitude and other positive emotions than participants who simply thought about past positive events without imagining their absence. Mental Subtraction seems to jolt us into the insight that the good things in our lives aren’t inevitable; we are, in fact, very lucky.
If imagining absence isn’t quite enough for you, what about experiencing it for real? In the Give It Uppractice, you spend a week abstaining from a pleasure in order to appreciate it more fully. This pleasure should be something that’s relatively abundant in your life, such as eating chocolate or watching TV. At the end of the week, when you can finally indulge, pay special attention to how it feels.
In a 2013 study, people who gave up chocolate savored it more and experienced a more positive mood when they finally ate it at the end of the week, compared with people who ate chocolate as usual. This exercise may not only open your eyes to a single pleasure (like the miracle of cacao), but make you more conscious of life’s many other pleasures, too.

3. Find meaning and purpose

Creating and Recalling Positive Events reminds us that pleasure isn’t the only path to bliss; meaning can also bring us happiness, albeit a quieter and more reflective kind.
In the Meaningful Photos practice, you take pictures of things that are meaningful to you and reflect on them. Over the course of a week, look out for sources of meaning in your life—family members, favorite spots, childhood mementos—and capture about nine or ten different images of them. At the end of the week, spend an hour reflecting on them: What does each photo represent, and why is it meaningful to you? Jot down some of those thoughts if it’s helpful.
Amid the chores and routines, life can sometimes feel dull and mundane. Reigniting our sense of meaning can remind us what’s important, which boosts our energy and gives us strength to face life’s stresses. In a2013 study, college students who completed this exercise not only boosted their sense of meaning, but also reported greater positive emotions and life satisfaction as well.
We can also boost our energy and motivation by fostering a sense of purpose, and the Best Possible Selfexercise is one way to do that. Here, you journal for 15 minutes about an ideal future in which everything is going as well as possible, from your family and personal life to your career and health.
In a 2006 study, participants who wrote about their Best Possible Selves daily for two weeks reported greater positive emotions afterward, and their mood continued increasing up to a month later if they kept up the practice.
This exercise allows us to clarify our goals and priorities, painting a detailed picture of where we want to be. This picture should be ambitious but realistic so that it motivates us to make changes, rather than reminding us how imperfect and disappointing our lives are now. When we reflect on our future this way, we may feel more in control of our destiny.

4. Use your strengths

Just as we hunt for things to fix in life, we also tend to obsess over flaws in ourselves; our weaknesses loom large. But what if we put more time and attention into our strengths and positive attributes?
The Use Your Strengths exercise invites you to consider your strengths of character—from creativity and perseverance to kindness and humility—and put them into practice. Each day for a week, select a strength and make a plan to use it in a new and different way. You can repeat the same strength—directing your curiosity toward a work project one day and toward your partner’s interests the next—or work on different strengths each day. At the end of the week, synthesize the experience by writing about what you did, how it made you feel, and what you learned.
In a 2005 study, participants who engaged in this exercise for a week reported feeling happier and less depressed, and that happiness boost lasted up to six months. Use Your Strengths may help us transfer skills between home and work—applying our professional creativity to our children’s school assignments or our domestic kindness to our co-workers—and give us a confidence boost all around.

5. Connect with others

The practices above invite us to turn inward, tinkering with our attitudes and the way we view the world. But decades of science also suggest that turning outward and connecting to the people around us is one of the surest routes to happiness.
As a first step, you can try an adapted version of the Best Possible Self exercise for relationships to give you insights into what kinds of social connection you desire. In an ideal life, what would your relationships with your spouse, family, and friends look like?
One way to feel an immediate boost of connection is through Random Acts of Kindness. Random Acts of Kindness don’t have to be flashy or extravagant; they can be as simple as helping a friend with a chore or making breakfast for your partner. You can also extend your circle of kindness to strangers and community members, feeding a parking meter or offering a meal to someone in need.
In a 2005 study, participants who performed five acts of kindness on one day a week for six weeks reported increases in happiness. (This didn’t happen when they spread out their acts of kindness across the week, perhaps because a single kind act may not feel noteworthy on its own.) Researchers also suggest varying your acts of kindness over time to keep the practice fresh and dynamic.
Some of your acts of kindness may involve giving, and the Make Giving Feel Good practice helps ensure that giving does, indeed, bring happiness. Researchers Elizabeth Dunn and Michael Norton, among others, have found evidence that being kind and generous does make us happier, but they’ve also found that acts of giving are most effective when they meet these three criteria:
It’s a choice: Give because you choose to, not because you feel pressured or obligated to.
You connect: Giving can be an opportunity to make connections with the people you’re helping, so choose activities where you get to spend time with recipients, like helping a friend move or volunteering at a soup kitchen.
You see the impact: If you’re donating money, for example, don’t just give and move on. Find out what your money will be used for—like new classroom supplies or a cooking stove.
In a 2011 study, participants were offered a $10 Starbucks gift card to use in different ways: They either gave it to someone, gave it to someone and joined them for a drink, or used it on themselves while drinking with a friend. The ones who gave the card away and spent time with the recipient—connecting with them and seeing the impact of giving—felt happiest afterward.
Of course, the pursuit of happiness isn’t all sunshine and rainbows and mugs of tea and smiling children. Sometimes we need to tackle our insecurities and weaknesses, and we can’t just ignore our draining jobs and nagging relatives. But the practices here represent the other side of the coin, the one we often neglect: seeing, appreciating, and mobilizing the good.



This article is printed here with permission. It originally appeared on Greater Good, the online magazine of the Greater Good Science Center (GGSC). Based at UC Berkeley, the GGSC studies the psychology, sociology, and neuroscience of well-being, and teaches skills that foster a thriving, resilient, and compassionate society. Kira M. Newman is an editor and web producer at the Greater Good Science Center. She is also the creator of The Year of Happy, a year-long course in the science of happiness, and CaféHappy, a Toronto-based meetup. 

Earth Day 2016 @ Casady School, Saturday, April 23, 2016

NASA view of Earth from Space

It’s Earth Day, but ... 
What does that really mean?
Shouldn’t every day be Earth Day?
What’s up with celebrating the Earth every April 22nd?
Let’s step back to investigate when (and why)
this annual event began.
Explore 
on AwesomeStories.com
This story links to other AwesomeStories that give scientific, historic, political, economic, literature and film perspectives on the protection of our earth.

Litter Blitz Environmental Club Activity:  Adopt the Street Clean-up in honor of Earth Day 2016





8:30-11:30 amCyclones met at Jimmy's Egg for breakfast donated by the restaurant.  After getting gear and instructions on how to clean-up with safety guidelines in mind, Cyclones proceeded to clean up.  The project was facilitated by senior Namir Q.  Students were under the supervision of Mrs. Zesiger, Miss Infantino, and Mr. Delgrosso. 

Our Dean of Students, Miss Marion Tolon joined the environmental group cleaning up the allocated segment of Britton Road and Pennsylvania Avenue to the Casady Environmental Club.  

Photos courtesy of Mrs. Zesiger.




Gardening and Composting @ Casady in honor of Earth Day 2016 on Saturday, April 23, 2016

1:00 - 3:00 PM  Cyclones worked for two hours weeding, planning, planting, decorating, and watering. The project was facilitated by senior Anna M. and the supervision was provided by the Composting Club Sponsor, Mr. John Kelly
Composting Club Activity Participants were
- Anna M., - Paxton B.- Brett R.- Braydon M.- Sam H.- Namir K.- Grace P.- Dylan D.- Aubrey H.- Lauren E.- Lily H.  

Photos and list of participants courtesy of Anna M.'16.



 





Wednesday, April 27, 2016

May 7, Casady Wing, 1:30-4:30 FEDEX STRATEGIC PLANNING


Minutes of the meeting forthcoming 
YAC, YLOKC and Peace Week
Why?
YAC
YLOKC
Peace Week
What?
YAC
YLOKC
Peace Week
How?
YAC
YLOKC
Peace Week
For first meeting of 2016-2017


Facilitator:  Mr. Evan Walter, Casady's Development Director
I have the privilege of working with a talented group of colleagues and volunteers who share a common passion for Casady School and our students. As a team, we engage the Casady Community strengthening relationships and philanthropic support for our school and students.

Before Casady, Mr. Walter was a Principal at Gossamer Advisors.  He mentored clients on the art of fundraising in order to develop donors who: 

a. Give consistently,
b. Increase their giving over time, 
c. Give significantly at a time of great need, but not at the expense of their annual support; and 
d. Are loyal advocates for the organization in the community. 



To prepare for our FEDEX time, please take a few minutes to send your answers to the below questions to our facilitator of the Strategic Planning, Mr. Evan Walter  waltere@casady.org by 7:00 pm Friday.

1. Why are you actively involved in YAC?
2. What got you excited about YAC?
3. How can you inspire others to be involved in YAC?
4. What personal talents can you bring to YAC to make it good and be successful?

If you are not attending, please consider sending your answers, they are very much appreciated.

A.B.
1. I am actively involved in YAC because I want to make a difference in the community.
2. Hearing everybody in YAC talk about how great it was made me excited to join.
3. I can inspire others to be involved in YAC by encouraging people to join the club, donate in drives, and come to meetings.
4. I can bring my leadership and organizational skills to YAC in order to make it good and successful. 
Unfortunately I will not be able to make it to the YAC planning meeting this Saturday. I will be attending a fishing tournament in memory of Will Harris' 16th birthday from 11 to 3. However, I would like to be a sophomore chair for the 16/17 school year. In addition to being a sophomore chair I would like to run for any other possible positions.

I am interesting in learning more about filling the treasurer position. I would like to chair the Fall Fest Clubs fundraiser and be involved in YAC's Fall Fest booth, etc. 

YAC could be improved by letting people know how many people are involved in YAC and how much they like being in the club. This year it seemed that the meetings lacked a leader and that they did not have a lot of organization. However, the members of YAC were always well informed about meetings and upcoming events because of the emails and announcements in chapel. 

What is PINK's FEDEX Time?


What is Strategic Planning?


Goal of the FEDEX Strategic Planning   (One adult perspective)
A more interactive, creative, collaborative and well organized club/student organization
-Mission, Vision, and Purpose 
a. Why do we exist?
b. How our mission, vision and purpose are reflected in our daily actions, weekly meetings and monthly activities
c. How can the meetings, calendars and activities promote the values of the club/organization and increase voluntary and connected SUSTAINABLE participation?
d. How can older students (juniors and seniors) be more connecting, collaborative and supportive to younger students (sophomores and freshmen)?
e. What should the role of the adult sponsor of the organization be?

-Leadership: Officers
a. What are the offices of the club/organization?
b. Are new positions needed to improve the engagement and retention of participants in activities?
c. What are the responsibilities of the offices?
d. Who can apply to be in that office? Why?
e. How are they selected?
f. Why are they needed?
g. What measures are in place to manage inactive officers and/or participants?  Why is this necessary?


- Yearly Schedule
Theme of the year
What do we want to do? Why? Who will be the main facilitator(s) of the project(s)?
What is ACTIVE in the Community?   Direct, Indirect, Advocacy, Research Projects
How are the theme and the mission connected to the monthly activities and weekly meetings?

Calendar for 2016-2017
August
September
October
November
December

January
February
March
April
May



Summer Strategic PlanningPlanning- Via SKype/ Face Time/ Google Hangout
YAC data from past strategic planning
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1qQ6I2QPfSoB3im6csHXrPpkzER_WJnvdi1OxPKzAJrg/edit
Needed Resource
Service Learning Brochure for parents and faculty
YAC brochure for students, faculty, admission, clubs
YAC and Service Lerning Open House is August
YAC freshman activity in August????
PEACE WEEK 2016 brochure

Time, dates, purpose
June
July
August


Data
Officers


If you are not able to attend, but are interested in running for the positions, please let Mrs. Clay know via e-mail what position.

Find below the positions YAC is in the process of developing from past Strategic Planning.  Also please send the project or projects you want to facilitate next year.  I attached a brochure that was created after 3 strategic planning sessions which has the YAC/YLOKC/and Service-Learning Program calendar
YAC Planning Team Executive Board (Aubrey)
How are the officers selected? Time spend on YAC and desire to make things happen in a collaborative inspiring way.
          - Co-presidents: Miranda Tortoricci,  Isaiah Levingston
          Vice president: Miriam and Safra Shakir 
          - Secretary:  Katherine Shoeffler
          - Treasurer: Johnny Lee 
          - Marketing/Communication/Social Chair: Grace Patton 
          - Grade Reps
                - Freshman: 
                - Sophomores: Anna Buckley, Sahanja Backtaram 
                - Juniors: 
                - Seniors:


Co-Presidents
-main speaker, leadership, guidance on projects, filter agendas, sets calendars.  Participates in service projects when schedule permits it.  Promotes "active" in the community

Co-Vice-Presidents
-work with the presidents to be the voice, VP steps up to lead meetings when president(s) are not present
-Help set and handle the agenda at meetings and participate in projects when schedule permits it.  This position is a step towards having full leadership of YAC the following year.  A President in training.  

Secretary
-take notes, filters YAC Pic for the week for DA and works with Co-Presidents and Vice-President to have the agenda set for meetings.  Takes minutes during meetings  Works closely with the Marketing and Communication offices on flyers, posters, business cards, t-shirt.  The Secretary has to know every decision officers are making to inform the Executive Board and the members

Co-Treasurers  (grant writer and handler)
-budgets
Needs to develop a grant application system to allocate $100 a month coming from S-L budget
Other funding comes from dues??? and Fall Fest fundraiser
Needs money for: Snacks for meetings.  Supplies for projects not available from the S-L program
We need to decide on a system for the snacks
a. Dues to purchase snacks for every meeting and thank you gifts to YAC leadership at end of year
b. Voluntary sign-up knowing that some will not sign-up or will forge

-Manage the funding YAC raises at Fall Fest and create a grant proposal for the $100 the service-learning budget provides to help youth initiatives on a monthly basis.  Read the proposals and make a decision of who gets the funding.  Sometimes teachers and students will be competing for the funding.  It can be tricky sometimes and you might not always make everyone happy.  That is why an application process is needed.  

-Apply for grants to enhance what YAC does and maybe help an intentional and direct funding connection with YLOKCasady needs.
Adult Grant Writing Resources:   Mrs. Clay helps  with grant writing, but we need to have grants checked by Mr. Evan Walter, our Development Director because he is an expert in the field and because we need to make sure he knows about any fundraising efforts going on at Casady at any level.

Marketing/Communication/social Chair:  
Undefined - New Position

Class Reps or Class Chairs:  
Facilitates grade projects.  Keep grades inform of YAC activities

Here are the guidelines on who can get what office.  The nomination coming from the seniors is a new development

YAC Officers - E-PLANNING TEAMS:  IN PARKING LOT: DEFINITION OF POSITION AND RESPONSIBILITIES.  
Facilitation Team
Management Team:  CO-PRESIDENTS: Main speakers, leadership, ownership - Seniors and Co-VP's: Familiar with all different areas - Juniors

Archives and Communication TeamSecretary  Any grade   Marketing and Social Media: Any one with the interest and skills in this area

Ways and Means TeamTreasurer  Any grade.  Position handling money has to have checks and balances.  Fall Fest Funding. $100 from S-L per month ($900 per year.  If not used by YAC, money is used for operating the service-learning office)  Grant Writer and overseer  Money coming to projects or going to projects
Human Relations Team: Social Relansionships Chair  Any grade.  Relationship builder.  We need to have one meeting a month dedicated to learn about who are the people around the table, connecting to each other.  Also we need to celebrate b-days at least 3 times a year, one per trimester.  This position will facilitate those activities in direc

Membership and Action Team:  Membership Team Chair should be a sophomore
-Freshman Project Chairs/ Class Reps
-Sophomore Project Chairs/ Class Reps
-Junior Project Chairs/Class Reps
-Freshmen Project Chairs/Class Reps





YAC members interested
I am interesting in learning more about filling the treasurer position. I would like to chair the Fall Fest Clubs fundraiser and be involved in YAC's Fall Fest booth, etc. YAC could be improved by letting people know how many people are involved in YAC and how much they like being in the club. This year it seemed that the meetings lacked a leader and that they did not have a lot of organization. However, the members of YAC were always well informed about meetings and upcoming events because of the emails and announcements in chapel. 
Thanks!

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

April 26 meeting

Agenda
Participation
Seniors: 0
Sophomores 1
Juniors: 2.  Isaiah came to excuse himself.  Miranda facilitated the meeting.  No one took minutes. The below conclusions are from Mrs. Clay.  Grace gave the history of YAC officers.  Miranda, Grace and Cathy (who was not at the meeting) are organizing the senior send off)
Freshmen 6

1. Change of date, time and location for Strategic Planning to May 7, 1:30-4:30 @ the Casady Wing.  the majority of YAC members were attending SPC in Dallas.  Thank you Mr. Walter for adjusting your schedule.  Snacks and drinks will be provided. Ellie G. volunteered to make snacks and drink choices.  Mrs. Clay contacted Mrs. Patterson to reserve the Wing.  Everything is a go. Now we just need people to sign-up to attend.  We will invite other clubs and STUCO to participate.
Suggested agenda for the YAC Fedex Strategic Planning meeting above.

2. Senior Send OFF:  Per senior request, the send off will be Wednesday, May 10 at 6:30 pm at Grand House.  The list will be from 30-50 people, Seniors requested the send off be with just YAC members.  There is an English AP the next day, but no members of the invitee list are taking that exam. Mrs. Clay will be away, therefore, she approached Mr. Bottomly for Casady supervision.  Miranda sent an e-mail to Coach T. and Dr. Powell.  Grace P. will take care of the senior send off "token of appreciation."

3. Project Perfect Pair still needs volunteers.  Sign up at Harper or contact Ellie G. or Evie W.  Collection will take place next week.  Volunteers will be excused from chapel and get service hours.  Duty:  Be at 7:15 at UD or LD.  PD: 7:30.  Remind and Motivate donors.  At 8:15 count donations and take them to the UD YAC room in Harper.

4. Voters Registration Project:  Luke A. visited with Dr. Raul Font, President of the Latino Community Development Agency on Monday.  Luke will be making contacts this week and coming back next Tuesday to request help attending 5 de mayo celebrations at Plaza Mayor where he hopes to have a booth to register Latino voters.

5. May 7, 6:30-12:00 is the YLOKC Piece Autism Walk.  YAC/YLOKCasady will be participating with the STUCO from Northwest Classen.  Volunteers needed.


Monday, April 25, 2016


World Peace YouthLIVE VIDEO CONFERENCE

Imagine witnessing history in the making. Join in live video discussions with youth from around the world who are sure to be our future world peace leaders. Hear their ideas on how to make the world a more peaceful place for all of us. 

These young Ambassadors of Peace are not only our future,
They are our present.

WHEN:  Saturday, April 30th
TIME:  1300 UTC / 0900 EST /OKC Time 8:00 am
click here for your time zone 

Seats are filling up quickly - Please reserve your place today!
(this is a free event)
Creating a Visible Change



Jules Lamore of Peace Pals International and Carlos Palma of Living Peace
Invite you to to join us on April 30th for our first live video webcast with youth panelist from around the world who will discuss The Fuji Declaration and share their views of world peace and how they are making a viable difference in the world today.


Learn more about our International Speakers

Brandon Perdomo
Introducing World Peace Youth Moderator
Brandon Perdomo

World Peace Youth is a joint partnership between Living Peace and Peace Pals International. Together, creating a platform where International youth commune to share ideas and experiences through live video.

            Living Peace            Peace Pals International


visit:  www.worldpeaceyouth.org to learn more.

8:00 AM Central Time, Saturday, April 30th


World Peace YouthLIVE VIDEO CONFERENCE

Imagine witnessing history in the making. Join in live video discussions with youth from around the world who are sure to be our future world peace leaders. Hear their ideas on how to make the world a more peaceful place for all of us. 

These young Ambassadors of Peace are not only our future,
They are our present.

WHEN:  Saturday, April 30th
TIME:  1300 UTC / 0900 EST /OKC Time 8:00 am
click here for your time zone 

Seats are filling up quickly - Please reserve your place today!
(this is a free event)
Creating a Visible Change




Jules Lamore of Peace Pals International and Carlos Palma of Living Peace
Invite you to to join us on April 30th for our first live video webcast with youth panelist from around the world who will discuss The Fuji Declaration and share their views of world peace and how they are making a viable difference in the world today.


Learn more about our International Speakers

Brandon Perdomo
Introducing World Peace Youth Moderator
Brandon Perdomo

World Peace Youth is a joint partnership between Living Peace and Peace Pals International. Together, creating a platform where International youth commune to share ideas and experiences through live video.

            Living Peace            Peace Pals International


visit:  www.worldpeaceyouth.org to learn more.