OakLeafNewsletter_Ap..
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OakLeafNewsletter_Ap..
The Oak Leaf NEWSLETTER OF THE UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH OF OAK CLIFF EARLY APRIL 2008 SEE THE CALENDAR FOR MORE ng i m o c Up nts Eve Celebrating the 7th Principle On March 30, Kathy Moser returned to lead us in a service on responsible stewardship and partnership with our planet. See page 4 for more. APRIL 1 Photo by Rex Fountain FIRST TUESDAY SOCIAL ACTION FILM • 7pm Sunday Services – 10 am APRIL 6 – Let the Sky and Water Teem with Living Creatures – The 5th day of creation – Rev. Mark Walz APRIL 13 – Let the Land Produce Living Creatures...and Let us Make a Man – The 6th day of creation (Part I) – Rev. Mark Walz APRIL 20 – Earth and Justice Sunday – Ministry for Social Justice and Lay leaders will present the service. All are invited to gather later Sunday afternoon at our booth at the Earth Day festival at Lake Cliff Park. April 27 – And God Created Woman - The Last, Best Gift to the World – The 6th day of creation (Part II) – Rev. Marcia Shannon Welcome Visitors! We hope you find our services, programs, and groups stimulating and interesting. We extend a warm invitation to you to come often, and hope you will help us get acquainted with you! Please feel free to contact our minister, Mark Walz at (214) 337-2429 with any questions you may have. The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 Emmy Award-winner Danny Schechter's In Debt We Trust explores the relationship between Congress and the credit complex, and how it is having an enormously negative impact on the country's financial health. APRIL 15 UUCOC BOARD MEETING Tuesday, April 15 at 7pm. Contact Sandy McFeeley at (214) 941-9729 or [email protected] for any agenda issues. _______________________________ COORDINATING COUNCIL Scheduling is difficult. Time is precious. Watch for notice of a virtual CC meeting. APRIL 26 LABYRINTH WALK COFFEE HOUSE • 8pm HEADLINER: Reflecting Pool OPENER: Marilyn Duncan See page 6 for details! Mark’s Trail Please join me on the journey… In last November’s newsletter I shared with you an idea that is catching on with a great number of organizations, called micro-lending. A Bangladeshi economist named Muhammed Yunus and his Grameen Bank won the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize by pioneering a new category of banking known as microcredit (or micro-lending), which grants small loans to poor people who have no collateral and who do not qualify for conventional bank loans. In presenting their award, the Nobel committee recognized that lasting peace cannot be achieved unless large population groups find ways to break out of poverty. Yunus’ strategy was to do the opposite of what other banks were doing. If the others “lent to the rich, I lent to the poor. If they lent to men, I lent to women. If they required collateral, my loans were collateral free. If they required a lot of paperwork, my loans were illiterate friendly. If you had to go to their bank, my bank went to their village.” These aren’t gifts. But he found that by caring about these people and giving them a fair deal, they are able to put their motivation, skills, and business savvy to work. His repayment percentage on his market rate loans is a stunning 98%. The pressure on borrowers to honor the re-payment of their debts comes from neighbors and friends. They realize that additional loans will be forthcoming only if they all honor the terms of the ones they have already received. For most this is their only shot at survival. And 96% of his clients are women. The average loan was for only $200 American dollars. developing countries. And Kiva is even matching American lenders to the poor in Iraq. Through Kiva you get to choose whom you lend to. It could be a fruit stand or a goat-herding business. It could be somewhere in Eastern Europe or a village in Africa or Central America. They allow lenders to ask questions and the partners to report back. Most hear the details of what happens through their website. We have been a very busy church since I last wrote about this, but our Ministry of Social Justice team has been considering additional possibilities for our involvement in micro-lending. One scenario is to use the funds we have been collecting in our building fund, and to engage our children to create the team that manages our participation. Rather than investing the funds in a savings or money market account with its usual small return, what would it mean to invest our building fund in a project that built up the lives of others? What would it mean for our church children to make the decisions of who to lend to, and to create relationships with the families receiving our loans? What would it mean for those of us who chose to mentor our young congregants in this venture? Although these funds will eventually end up in bricks and mortar here on Kiest Boulevard, what would it mean to create a model at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Oak Cliff where we match our stated faith principles to our building fund, and build something wonderful on our way to building a wonderful church? Please let me hear from each of you. See you Sunday, Mark And there are groups like the non-profit Kiva.org that operate a people-to-people model, allowing individuals and groups to make loans as small as $60 to borrowers seeking to establish small businesses in The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 Page 2 Thoughts from the President Sandy McFeeley So where does the money go? Spring is arriving in little bursts of green, in the haunting fuchsias of redbuds in still-gray woods, and in big bursts of blue-purple flowers in front of my house. Signs of hope and growth are all around us. In adult RE, for example, two Credo groups have nearly completed their work and there are serious murmurs of interest in continuing this kind of small group ministry. A class for New UUs (and those of us still catching up) will soon begin. Religious education for our youngsters is also growing and stretching. We keep some old traditions like hunting Easter eggs and start new ones with planting wildflowers. Our recent focus on how we and our planet came to be in the first place, has generated new creation stories, drama, and beautiful works of art, and the wonderful glitter communion in mid-March. I really like the idea that my ancestors were stardust. In the May Oak Leaf, our incredible Treasurer, Kimberlyn Crowe, will have a summary of our financial situation: income, expenses, wiggle room, and how we're doing with both the endowment fund loan and the NTAUUS grant. Stay tuned! We are continuing to reach out to our Oak Cliff and south Dallas neighbors. The First Tuesday Films draw larger audiences each month, including many young people to the recent showing of China Blue, which documented the human suffering that goes into our chic jeans and other clothing from Asian countries. Other peace and justice initiatives are progressing well, with Mark leading crowds in prayer and attending planning meetings. On April 20th, Earth Day and Justice Sunday, you will find our church members at a UUCOC booth in Lake Cliff Park (Zang & Colorado in North Oak Cliff), where we’ll be letting the World South of the Trinity know we’re here. And more plans are in the works. We are bursting with ideas, hope, and energy. Our church coffers, however, are not bursting with cash. Member pledges, supplemented by rental receipts, are keeping up with the everyday operating costs – but just barely. And summer lies ahead. Some of our ambitious plans and programs for this year may succumb to an attack of the vapors, unless there’s a major whiff of smelling salts to revive them. Why is this happening? For all the usual reasons: Some members have left us permanently. Others have moved elsewhere in the country. Some have stopped pledging; and some pledge, but no longer give. And what can be done about it? Sure, we can be extra careful with the air conditioning and the dripping faucet. And of course we can make and fulfill our own financial pledges. And then we can . . . . How will you fill in the blank? The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 Oak Leaf Q&A Why has the format of the newsletter changed AGAIN? In the world of digital communications, it’s all about the right tool for the right job. Remember the story of Goldilocks and the Three Computer Programs? Heroic Gay Roberts had a program that was just too small. Willing volunteer Rex Fountain has a program that's way too big. Kathy has a program that's just right. So she gets to do the newsletter this month! Please let the editors know what you like and what you don’t like, and be prepared for even more changes next newsletter. :-) Page 3 Ripe, juicy tomatoes! Is anyone interested in learning more about the possibility of a UUCOC Community Garden? It sounds like a huge undertaking, but we have been approached by a local group that has already done much of the groundwork. Community Gardens of Oak Cliff is a group of gardening enthusiasts wishing to partner with organizations such as schools and churches to establish organic community gardens. They would provide advice (from how to lay out the plots to how to manage the garden), we would provide the land, and after preparing the garden together, each participant would maintain their individual plot. Many community gardens donate their excess produce to local food banks. Vivian Walz and Kathy Grey would like to schedule an informational meeting if enough people are interested. So let us know! Sign up on the sheet at church, or call or email either of us: [email protected] (214) 942-6207 or [email protected] (972) 660-2443 Celebrating the 7th Principle with Kathy Moser We were honored to have award-winning songwriter and environmental activist Kathy Moser return to our pulpit on March 30. Using music, essays and stories, she celebrates the wonder and beauty and wisdom of the natural world, and encourages people to move towards a more environmentally conscious lifestyle. At the forum following the service, Kathy shared her enthusiasm about sustainable building materials and living “off the grid.” The slide shown in the photo on the first page is of a straw-bale cafe/office/ residence in the mountains of NC. (A recording of the service will be available on our website.) Kathy tours nationally and is in Texas finishing her 5th CD. She will be back in October, and will be performing for us at the Labyrinth Walk Coffee House. (Good job, booking agent Gene!) More info on Kathy and her projects is available at KathyMoser.com. The Children’s RE classes recently decorated three recycling boxes (for toner, ink, and cell phones), as well as the Building Fund Box. Rex Fountain said of this box: “It just screams ‘Take my picture!’” The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 ies t i v i t c oing A Ong Covenant and Activity Groups are a great way to meet people who share a common interest. Women's Birthday Dinner Out - Second Tuesday of every month at 7pm. Contact Mary K. at (214) 335-0346. Out to Lunch Bunch Everyone is invited to gather for lunch at a local restaurant following Sunday service. Games Night - Second Saturday of each month. 6:30pm, Barbara Kalley’s home. Bring healthy snacks. RSVP to (972) 572-7445. Dollar Llama Investment Group - Meets last Saturday of the month from 10am to noon in Hope. Open to all. A Course in Miracles Meets every Monday at 7:30pm in the Faith lobby. Contact Dee Lewis at (214) 337-3946 for information. UUCOC Singers - All are welcome. Practice is every other Thursday. For more information, call Glorian at (214) 372-2892. Social Action/Social Justice Ministry - Meets 2nd Tuesday of the month after RE. Free Pranayama Yoga Class – Saturdays 8-8:45am in Charity South. Info at [email protected] Page 4 Building old fashioned neighborhoods in a brand new way A little over one year ago, NTAUUS (North Texas Association of Unitarian Universalist Societies) Raible Place Trust began looking into the wave of the future in housing communities. They discovered the Cohousing Principle that was started in Denmark many years ago. Cohousing basically is a neighborhood designed and built by those who will be living in that neighborhood. The residents work together in the initial planning, site selection, development and construction of their own homes. This cooperation between neighbors builds a very strong community where all of the neighbors know and respect each other. NTAUUS selected Janet Martinique to investigate and initiate a cohousing project in the North Texas area. She worked with an outside consultant and visited numerous cohousing neighborhoods around the country. She is now President of our group. Over the past year, this initiative has resulted in the creation of our Wildflower Village. separate guest room to be heated, cooled and cleaned all year, when it will be used for only a few days. This practice of sharing facilities is used throughout the community for greater energy efficiency and affordability. The ultimate design of the homes will be developed by our design committee headed by Connie Fountain, working together with our selected architect, Gary Olp. Wildflower Village presently has a contract pending on a beautiful, quiet residential area in Duncanville. Claudia Klipp, who chairs our property committee, found the property; and we loved its easily accessible shopping and the medical facilities within walking distance. Jim Klipp, working with the city’s Planning and Zoning Department, will lead the effort to have the area rezoned for our own unique residential needs. Wildflower Village will consist of an initial 24 homes, a common house and a swimming pool. The common house will be a shared facility with kitchen, large multi-purpose room, craft room, home theater and two guest rooms. We are excited that ours will be one of the first elder, green cohousing neighborhoods to be built in Texas. Elder cohousing is built for couples or individuals age fifty and above, who are interested in aging in place in a totally sustainable neighborhood that will protect and preserve our environment. The homes will be built in a single-story, elderfriendly style surrounding a park-like open area. With shared guest rooms, the resident homes can be smaller and more energy efficient. This is because each house will not require a We have chosen Anderson Sargent to construct our homes. It is a local company that has been recognized many times over as one of the leading builders of energy efficient houses. The estimated heating and cooling bill for a typical unit will be less than thirty dollars a month. NTAUUS’s Raible Place Trust will follow through on their initial vision of energy-efficient, affordable housing for the next generations, by providing a loan for acquiring the property. Updates on our progress, as well as numerous pictures from our official photographer, Rex Fountain, can be found on our newly designed website wildflowervillage.org and in future articles in this newsletter. Our neighborhood group, which now consists of eleven individuals, meets twice each month on the first and third Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at the Cedar Hill Chamber of Commerce building in Cedar Hill. New people are invited come early, at 1:30, to be brought up to date on what we are doing and what has already been done. We also have one social event each month. Our social calendar and meeting refreshments are coordinated by Barbara Kalley. Our group has attracted members from as far away as Nevada and Austin, Texas. We even have an observer who is writing a book on elder housing. If you feel that this may be something that you might be interested in, please join us. In the never-to-be-forgotten words of Mister Rogers, “Won’t you be my neighbor?” Jim Klipp, Marketing Chair New NTAUUS Rep On the way to NTAUUS meetings in far-off Carrollton, Marjorie Flowers will have a new carpool pal, Marcia Shannon. Our thanks and hugs go to Julie Culbertson, who recently resigned this post. We're counting on Marjorie and Marcia not only to support NTAUUS in all its endeavors, but to solve all the world's problems on their drive to and from the meetings. Thanks to all of you. The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 Page 5 Friends and Family at Labyrinth Our Newest Member The newest member of UUCOC is Walk Coffee House April 26 Bonnie Roberds. A few now-andagain visits many months ago turned into regular Sunday morning appearances—sometimes accompanied by Buck, her husband, or Clay, one of her sons. And on the last Sunday of March, even before finishing a six-week Credo Group, Bonnie signed the membership book. She brings to us her thoughtful, reflective approach to life, and a wonderful sense of humor. We are delighted to welcome her to our church. Jenni Mansfield Peal is no stranger to the Labyrinth Walk Coffee House. Her character ballads and engaging songs won her friends and fans as a solo folk-singer. Now, with her first original ensemble, Reflecting Pool, she returns as chanteuse. Jennie is joined by Bob “Zen Bubba” Williford on lead guitar and dobro; Paul Marroquin on violin; and Mark Wilson on bass and mandolin. Reflecting Pool will swing and sing to your mind's eye and your heart's ear. Opening for Reflecting Pool will be Marilyn Duncan, singer, songwriter, Oak Cliff Dweller. Marilyn performed at our fall festival a couple of years ago, and is a regular performer at the Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, DC. April Birthdays Remember, tickets are only $8 for UUCOC members. Doors open at 7:30; show starts at 8pm. 3 – Randy Schoesler 5 –Barbara Bauke 6 –Tanja Evans 11 – Ian Grey 13 – Delphine Humphrey 13 – Louanne McGhee 16 – Julie Culbertson 19 – Kaij Spencer 21 – Sebastian Ulibarri 23 – Sherry Lewis 25 – Cheryl Johnson 25 – Kricket Percival 28 – Jim Monroe See LabyrinthWalkCoffeeHouse.com for more information. Calling the Feminine Spirit On the last Sunday of April, Rev. Marcia Shannon is in the pulpit, with the reflection “And God Created Woman – The Last, Best Gift to Our World.” All UUCOC women and girls are invited to participate. Contact Marcia Shannon ([email protected]) to plan your part in the service and to offer your unique talent and viewpoint for that day. 2008 Worship Service Attendance Adults 60 54 48 53 56 54 52 42 36 43 38 30 Children 44 44 45 54 50 47 43 24 18 12 6 0 6 11 8 6 10 7 8 10 8 Jan 5 Jan 13 Jan 20 Jan 27 Feb 3 Feb 10 Feb 17 Feb 24 Mar 2 The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 10 8 11 6 Mar 9 Mar 16 Mar 23 Mar 30 Page 6 Springtime Project: Your Basic Life-Planning Documents March 1 – April 30, 2008 Attorneys Sandra McFeeley and Roy DeLay are again offering a package of basic life-planning documents. The service includes initial consultation; preparation of draft documents; discussion and revision, as needed; and a meeting for the formal signing. Documents typically include: • Simple will (not one structured mainly for tax planning) • Medical power of attorney • Directive to physicians (sometimes called a living will) • Durable power of attorney • Declaration of guardian. Susan Ammons and Marjorie Flowers, our Notaries Extraordinaire, have generously offered to help with the signing formalities. Three payment options: Level 1: Normal rate of around $500 for the package. Level 2: If your circumstances require: $25 per document. Level 3: If your circumstances are limited: Discuss privately with attorney. ALL payments (except copying costs) go directly to UUCOC!!! ALL attorney discussions are in confidence. Feel free to call either one of us. Roy DeLay, III (214) 750-9027 Do You Sandra McFeeley (214) 941-9729 ? What if UUCOC earned a penny every time you searched the internet? Or if a percentage of every purchase you made online went to support our church? Well, now it can. GoodSearch.com is a Yahoo-powered search engine that our church is registered with. It donates half its advertising revenue, about a penny per search, to the charities its users designate. Over the past year or so, UUCOC has received a small but steady stream of checks from GoodSearch, as a result of users like you. Just go to www.goodsearch.com and enter Unitarian Universalist Church of Oak Cliff as the charity you want to support. The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 Attention UUCOC Middle-Schoolers An Invitation arrived today, Wednesday, April 2, for our youth ages 11-14 to participate in an overnight weekend conference being held by First Jefferson UU Church in Fort Worth. Tammy Hayward, the church member organizing this event, also happens to be a pediatrician whose passion is working with middle school youth. The details of the Invitation are below: What: Middle School Youth Conference When: April 12 - 13 Time: 8AM Sat. - 9:30AM Sun. Who: Any youth ages 11-14 or in grades 6-8 Where: First Jefferson Unitarian Universalist Church, Fort Worth Why: They have fun, meet new friends, play games & participate in social action (a service project involving the East Side Ministry) If you are interested in attending, please contact Marcia Shannon as soon as possible. If three or more of our young people are interested in attending, an adult from UUCOC will chaperone this trip. Deadline for registering a group to attend from UUCOC is April 6, 2008. The adult chaperon will return youth to UUCOC by 9:00 AM so they may participate in play & music practice. 3rd Saturday Work Day April 19 will be an informal work day—just come on out if you have a little time and energy to put into the buildings or grounds. Contact Scott at (214) 693-8882 if you want a specific assignment! Page 7 Adult Religious Education A message from the DRE Deepening Marcia Shannon, M.Div., Director of Religious Education As did UUCOC’s first Credo Group, the follow-up Credo Groups have proved equally successful in fostering connections and caring within small groups of church members. The Credo Group structure has provided an avenue for personal growth and spiritual development, which ultimately strengthens the fabric of our community. Members of the current Credo Groups are moving towards closure of a meaningful time of connecting each week. As the groups draw to an end, participants will likely react differently. Some members will not want to stop meeting as a Credo Group, as they have found a safe place to learn to love themselves and one another. Some members will be ready for a break, in order to process and practice what they have learned and experienced. Some members will have had issues emerge in the Credo Group that will lead them to seek out professional guidance to continue the momentum of their journey. Still a number of other participants will be searching for ways to continue to explore the mysteries of our world and our spiritual paths in subsequent Religious Education Groups. There is no right or wrong way to respond to the closing of a group experience that has proved meaningful. A sense of fulfillment and loss may both be present. To each participant and leader of the Credo Groups, I would like to say, you have been courageous in making yourself vulnerable enough to participate in a group learning to love one another and oneself. In order to continue a process of building our connections to one another and to strengthen the overall fabric of our faith community, I would like to introduce a variety of ways we can continue to “deepen” at UU Church of Oak Cliff. The following are options for Deepening Groups that would be open to all members, in addition to Credo Group participants: • Exploring sacred journeys, through journaling or the writing of spiritual memoirs • Exploring the art of listening as a manifestation of love, through the practice of a variety of listening and reflective techniques • Exploring the inner self, through the path of guided meditation and reflection • Exploring how to love yourself and your body through a focus on transforming ones body image, utilizing art as a medium • Exploring ones morphing faith as one learns how the UU Church transformed historically I envision two or three Deepening Groups running concurrently during the Adult RE Hour. Two or more of the Groups could meet on a week night at the church or elsewhere, if participants could commit to a day, time and location. Each group would be made of up to six to eight persons and run for a three month time period. The groups would be facilitated by Volunteer Leaders or Staff Members. Suggested format: an opening reading, time for check-in and sharing, discussion or exploration of the topic, then a time for feedback and a closing reading. Groups meeting during Adult RE time would last an hour. Groups held in the evening or at an alternative location could run longer. Please consider how you would like to continue your own process of deepening as an individual, as a small group and as a faith community. I would like to schedule an orientation meeting soon to hear your suggestions, entertain comments, and answer questions. I look forward to the next step in our journey together. The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 Page 8 Children’s Religious Education Continuing with themes related to the creation of the earth and all of its creatures SPECIAL DRAMATIC PERFORMANCE: Sunday, April 6 On April 13th Mark will talk about that special “day” of creation when the land produced living creatures. As part of the worship service, several of our children will perform a short play with puppets, called Menagerie of The Mind. 9:00–9:30am – Play practice 9:30-9:45am – Music practice 11:15am RE – Creation of Animals We’ll use Mammals Who Morph, the third book in a series by Jennifer Morgan. It’s an adaptable reading that can be read by, or read to, all ages. Each class’s discussion will be geared to the understanding and interests of those children. Play practices are scheduled for Sundays before church and one on Tuesday evening, April 8. The script has gone out to all the parents, and we are hoping for great participation. Please contact Marcia Shannon as soon as you can, with questions or your child’s RSVP. SPECIAL MUSICAL PERFORMANCE: April 20th is Justice and Earth Day Sunday at UUCOC, with the service to be presented by the Social Action Ministry and other lay leaders. The kids will help Rachel Betzen perform a wonderful song called The Children's Peace Song. This beautiful music features voices and percussion, and all our children are urged to be part of the presentation. Practices are scheduled for Sundays, April 6 & 13 after the play rehearsal, and on Tuesday April 8. Please note that at the first practice on Sunday, April 6, we will discuss possible alternative dates for the evening practices. Invitations and lyrics have been sent to all the parents, who should contact Marcia with questions and their child’s RSVP. Tuesday, April 8 7:00-8:00pm – Play practice 8:00–8:30pm – Music practice Saturday, April 12 10-11:30am – RE planning meeting – NEW TIME Sunday, April 13 9:00–9:45am – Last play practice 10:00am – Presentation of Menagerie of the Mind 11:15am RE – Creation of Men Each class will make a cardboard image of a boy or a man, and then decorate it with symbols or images of how men are special and unique. A great opportunity to talk about the uniquely masculine ways of acting, thinking and communicating—and the ways girls and boys are not so different after all. Sunday, April 20 9:00–9:45am – Last music practice 10:00am – Performance of The Children’s Peace Song 11:15am RE – Justice Sunday & Earth Day Discussion in each class of the Islamic people, ideas, traditions, and religious beliefs. Saturday, April 26 10-11:30am – RE planning meeting – NEW TIME Sunday, April 27 Youth Group Leader Gay Roberts helps plant wildflower seeds on Easter Sunday. The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 11:15am RE – Creation of Women Each class will make a cardboard image of a girl or woman and then decorate it with symbols or images of how women are special and unique. A great opportunity to talk about the uniquely feminine ways of acting, thinking and communicating—and the ways girls and boys are not so different after all. Page 9 Unitarian Universalist Church of Oak Cliff 3839 W. Kiest Blvd. Dallas, TX 75233 Minister: Rev. Mark Walz Office hours Wednesday 10am-5 pm or call for an appointment Office (214) 337-2429 • Cell: (214) 755-4315 Email: [email protected] Director of Religious Education: Marcia Shannon (214) 226-3662 UUCOC President: Sandra McFeeley (214) 941-9729 Vice President: Kathy Grey (972) 660-2443 Secretary: Vivian Walz (214) 942-6207 Treasurer: Kimberlyn Crowe (214) 339-0585 Trustees: Rex Fountain, Ed Stofko, Wilbur Roberts, and Mathias Schmassmann April Newsletter Editors: Sandra McFeeley and Kathy Grey Children’s Religious Education (continued) The second quarter of children’s RE is underway. Creative and gifted volunteers are leading classes from April through the end of June. Children (Ages 5-8) Roy DeLay & Emily Brock Youth (Ages 9-12) Jim Wrightsman & Chris Snively Teens (Ages 13-17) Kimberlyn Crowe & Stephen Betzen NOW is the time we begin to recruit teachers for the 3rd Quarter of the year. The volunteer position is a 13-week commitment to teach, mentor, nurture and listen to the children of our church. The adults best suited for this role are those who can: • Attend church & RE regularly for 12 weeks • Participate in two planning meetings per month with the DRE • Participate in an Orientation Workshop the last week of June (date not to conflict with General Assembly) • Using materials provided by the DRE, creatively implement the program themes and outlines for their particular age group • Assist with preparation for special programs and/or a youth group one evening per week. If you think you might be interested or have any questions, please contact Marcia Shannon, DRE, at (214) 226-3662. And look for the sign-up sheet on the Youth Bulletin Board. It could be your most profitable quarter of the year! The Oak Leaf • Early April 2008 Wanted: Young People Looking for middle and high school students interested in forming a Youth Group at UUCOC. Qualifications: • Desire to develop leadership skills • Willingness to have fun together & plan social events • Commitment to community service • Courage to engage youth from other congregations • Motivation to meet one evening during the week Interested? Apply to Youth Director, Marcia Shannon Page 7
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