July 15, 2022 Carnegie Newsletter

Page 1

401 MaIn Street Vancouver Canada V6A 2T7

(604) 665~2289

.cc, ~ 1> ~

1)

-Saturday, July 30& Sunday, July 31 in Oppenheimer Park and surrounding area!

Powell Street Festival is one of the largest and the longest-running community arts festivals in Canada, located in Vancouver's historic Japanese Canadian neighbourhood, Paueru Ga; - today known as the Downtown Eastside. The Powell Street Festival Society also offers year-round programs, and collaborates with local organizations, artists, and communities.


THE 7TH ANNUAL SANDY CAMERON MEMORIAL WRITIIN6 CONTEST Sandy was a writer and poet and an historian emeritus who traced the years of struggle for social and economic justice in the life of the Downtown Eastside. He contributed his thoughts and feelings on subjects as diverse as class and whale watching but tied everything to our ongoing ideation on social justice. This contest is to honour him and all who use the written word to express themselves. This is for writers and poets who identify with the struggles of the Downtown Eastside, who see and feel passion in living with spiritual, mental, and physical yearnings. It may be with wealth (too much or not enough), housing (too luxurious or not good enough), homelessness (seeing people or trying to ignore reality), both sides of addiction in the drug trade, the sex trade, "free" trade, community, women (murdered, missing what it is to be safe and creative), children and growing, festivals, ceremonies, memorials, special people and their contributions (past, present) all you do to make your life meaningful both now and towards the future. Whew! Prizes will be awarded for each category. 1St, 2nd & 3rd will be $100, $75 and $50 respectively. Additional non-cash prizes for entries deserving recognition. Guidelines for Writing Contest. 1. Writing must be the original work of the person submitting the contest entry & not fiction . . 2. If plagiarism is recognised the work will be disqualified and returned. Contact information for the writer must be provided with each contest entry. Essays: This means writing in sentences, with grammar and structure attempted. Poetry: All forms accepted. Must use the same font (typeface) throughout Subject is open to the individual author. It can be about most anything relevant to readers. In the words of Sam Roddan "[It] must have a bite. It must create some kind ofdisturbance, a turmoil in the heart, a turbulence of memory and feeling," The length of the essay can be 250-700 words, basically what can be printed on 1 page of the Newsletter. Poetry of whatever length, but no more than can be printed on 1 page. Deadline for submissions is noon on September 15,2022. Results will be announced at a special event during the Heart of the City Festival (early November). Each writer may submit only one essay and/or one poetry entry. Submit your work on paper to Carnegie's front desk or email it to carnnews@shaw.ca with contact info The theme for this year's Heart afthe City Festival is "Community is Our Mentor." Your essay and/or poetry can reflect what community has done and is doing and the need of others to read or hear it.


Create! Arts Festival July 23 - 24 From the producers of the Eastside Culture Crawl Festival comes an innovative art-making event; the CREATEI Arts Festival. The 2nd annual CREATE! Arts Festival is a community mitiative of the Eastside Arts Soc[eiy bringing together local artists and the community to explore; learn and create art together through a series of affordable and accessible art workshops, public art projects and artmaking demonstrations. Attendees of aB ages willleam how to create art such as print making) glass fusing, ceramics and painting; as well as explore performing arts such as poetry from Eastsida artists in a safe and comfortable outdoor space this summer. Workshop participants willl,earn how to create somettling they can take home; or pick up after firing. New this year! we will be offering a licensed festival site serving beer; wine and cider for attendees 1,9+from our partners at strange Fellows Brewing and a selection of food trucks!


'.,'

Gallery Gachet Returns! Hello dear readers, it has been over 2 years since our last newsletter. New and old subscribers rejoice, this July newsletter is full of exhibitions, community panels, workshops, and calls for artists and community makers alike. We at Gallery Gachet are ecstatic to continue our newsletter and share our programming after this extended slumber. We hope to see many of you at our upcoming events 0

Locked Up: The Soul Speaks Out July 23 - August 1~/ Tues - Sat / 12pm - 6pm

9 W. Hastings

Guided by Indigenous Elders and the immense talent & creativity of people in prison, the OBC Art & Justice team distributed art kits to people in prison at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Artists and storytellers were invited to share their voice and vision with us and the world. There was an overwhelming response from artists and storytellers eager to share their work. Please join us at Gallery Gachet to experience the amazing talent of these diverse artists, to honour their work, and to join us in building community towards positive social change!

AllDuaI CaD forSubmissioas

2023

Deadline September 1st, 2022 Gallery Gachet welcomes proposals for exhibitions and projects that engage our mandate in interesting and


challenging ways. We welcome work in any medium, including photography, video, performance art, drawing, installation, ceramics, textiles, community- and socially-engaged practices, and more. We accept proposals for solo, group, curated, or major exhibition projects, as well as screenings, workshops, performances, and collaborations. Themes addressed through the art work could include (but are not limited to) modes of healing, therapy, and ceremony; culture, spirit, and psyche; housing, displacement, and land restitution; neurodiversity, (dis)ability justice, and accessibility; substances, medicines, harm reduction, and safe supply; institutions and the asylum; poverty, criminalization, and marginalization; climate crisis and mental health; mad pride and the mad arts movement. We value practices emerging from lived experience and self-expression, although disclosure of personal narratives is not required. Gallery Gachet artist fees meet 2022 CARFAC rates. We provide support for openings, catering, marketing, AlV equipment, and installation for a five-week exhibition run at Gallery Gachet.

Call for Members Looking to connect further with local artists and community ing for volunteer members to contribute to daily operations. install, flyer distribution, etc. The next information session details of available tasks is at Gallery Gachet 9 W Hastings email volunteer@gachet.org (mailto:volunteer@gachet.org) ship at Gallery Gachet.

from 'the Library The Community Death Care Project, a series of sessions and workshops that illuminates topics surrounding death and dying, has two sessions to look forward to this month. On July 28th from 2:00 PM-4:00 PM Dr. Stefanie Green will be reading from her memoir, This Is Assisted Dying, and hosting a Q&A. Her book aims to show readers that assisted dying is less about death than about how we wish to live. The reading will take place in the Camegie Theatre, no registration is required. Four documentary shorts will be screened in the Carnegie Theatre on July 30th from 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM. Each short film offers a creative, quirky, and sometimes humorous take on how death and dying inform the ways we live. A uni~ue retired cemetery superintendent, an off-beat musical instrument inventor, a cartoon flailing through a fatal diagnosis, and a child making friends with a ghost make up the colourful roster of films that will be shown. After a long hiatus the Criterion Collection display is making a come-back. The Criterion Collection is a selection of culturally important and classic films across all genres and there are hundreds of films available. There is also a collection of select Sunday comics on display. So if you're interested in a funny cartoon or a critically acclaimed film we have you covered. For more information visit the Camegie Branch, call (604) 665-3010, or email info@vpl.ca. Izzy

members? Gallery Gachet is currently lookTasks may include gallery greeting, exhibition to learn about the benefits of membership and St, August 2nd at 5pm. Please for additional information regarding member-

Moonlight Reverie Peek-a-boo Moon Coyly veiled By broken clouds A magical moon An incandescent or~ Appearing then " Reappearing Burning in a lazy arc To disappear at dawn Like a fugitive dream Stewbaba


Photo by David Cooper

Coast Salish advocate Kat Rorris remembered as 'pmar of beauty, grace aDd strength' It is with heavy hearts that we share the news of the passing of Kat Zucomulwat Norris on July 7, 2022. Her family announced her passing and their family friend Seislum Glen C. Williams led them in a quiet ceremony at Kat's bedside at St. Paul's. A member of the Lyackson First Nation, Kat was a cultural educator, working in Lower Mainland elementary, high schools and universities; she was a respected community activist, theatre artist, counsellor, and powwow organizer. Her traditional name Zucomul'wat is from her Musqueam great great great grandmother. A survivor/ thriver of the Kuper Island Residential School, Kat was on her healingjourney. Kat appeared In the Heart of the City: the Downtown Eastside Community Play in 2003 and in 2017 became the first DTES Heart of the City Festival's Elder in Residence where she advised us on community protocol, and participated and shared knowledge at Festival events up to and including last year's Festival in 2021. She said that taking care of sharing knowledge with the next generation is a form of activism. Kat was wonderful and funny and welcoming; she loved making people laugh and feel good. We will miss her terribly. Love from all of us at the DTES Heart of the City Festival


Office of the Mayor

CITY OF VANCOUVER HRlTlSH

COHJ~HlL·\

rarlamatinn "NATIONAL INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DAY" WHEREAS

The

City

hQmc"J.,'Uld5

of V<illt<nfVCt £()nrt,)jl1y a(:knQ\vfedg<!'s thM i.f: is on the of the' l\-fusql.l.C.4m,.. Sql.llOl:m.i~h •.."'od Tsolcil ...\"'aututh. 'PetJI,lc5;

wsceded

t:MditiOIl41J

AND WHeReAS

The Covereo Oenered of Canada declared June 21.·'~as National Abu:r'igin~ Oay 24;yea.rs "'50 as an 0ppofhmity to ho:nout,.leMn AAQrdlect (m l.ht "rkh,. diverse cultures ut Indigenous.: Peoples,. and:the tUti'que h~tibg~.•.. lr.ldlt:h:m5 .•.and k:nuwledg.~ of fit-:s~ Nadot1so ••M~th~~ and b:luit P('>Q:pl~s;

AND WHHUlAS

Ma.y 23" lOll marked one ytM sJn<e thit <onflrtn<1tion Qf U Esh:wicwey (the :t\lisslng) at- the Kamloops lrtdb.xt Reslde.rtti-itl SchooL it h.l.s been. a yeat QC reckQnltlg with the 1,:~sld~nHal $(.l\Q<)[tttg~t:y~ with (:t:»'\ri:un~hQ(t$- of thc.HJ$.md!J QCun~O.l~ked graves Jp (.'Qt)"I;JJ'\uolties across: the count"ty. We send our deepest sympathies to aU Indtgenous people who contlnec to expcriotll«. the dev01:d,dl.llg impad$ of C.-n;ll4:af'" r~-S.id('{\ti•.••school sysh~m; f()12UHU

AN!) WHHlEAS

IndigenQu5 pcoples ccnrlnue to face r.'u::i~m~di~rimloa.tionf and a.CTU$$ the c\)\mtry, we :-e-main committed to upholdi"g she Truth and Jt,~condli~ti()", COIDlnis!1ion;

A1"D WIiF.ltIlAS

Th~ City 0{ Val,couver has a ces:po»sibiHty to ex.:amh,e Us own role of o<(:upyln,{! th~.$t' la.nds and its own position "ithin a fund~mf!''"t.:l.uy settler-colonial con.stntrl •.we recogstize. that we are on a long jOUfl)(!:)" to .rq>,ait and make right Qill' relaticus ,,,,,ifh h\dige,",ous Nt\liotU and Peoples;

A,NDWHEkEAS

The conteiburlons of Indjgc.u.ou~ Peoples to Vancoltvcr's pa!tt. present and future arc $ignifi(;OIInt but often not: "vaeU recognized ••net we cC)ounit to lifelong. tC"inun~ 4\bout lte<ondli.ation and the profound w;a~ that fndilJt.·tlOlL'i residents have shaped our dtYs rich ('uit-ure and vibrant communities:;

ANI) WHEllEAS

first Nations* lnni~ and Meti.s;,Peoples make. \tit.1.1 cOlltribulions to i.\dv.l.ncing.l'.n1s~ culture.-:qujty~ s.&J~ty#.an.4 (Qrtunt.u'tity w~llb4dl1g tlu:()ughQ~t the City of V3.tl(Quver~we ,~cog.ni~ and .ackacwtedge Sam .l\>1cJ<ay, ~isga~.a artist and Jeng-Hme resident of the Downtown Easfsider whose outw'Qrk we p(o"dly wear lod,,)· £or this )'ea(.$ Natil)X1-,t lndiSCfiQ\t'i Pc()pl~ O.••. y Celebrartcn at Camegte Centre;

and m.a.cgimdi7.ation in Vancouvcr lttca- C"..aUs to Adion identified by

ofV~ucou.ver is striving ro be a City of Reconciliation". ceearlng <hangte .,nu new relatjons based on n):uhuU t,J,ndfttst\lnding and respeen

'rhe City'

I,. Kermedy Stewart .•.Mayor 21~~2022.••,

of the City of Vancouver,

tong-term, systemic

DQ HEREDV PROCLA~t

Tne_sdu}" f,me

"NATIONAL INDIGENOUS l'EOPLES DAY"


..

;.'



Thank you all for your support and connection to National Indigenous Peoples Day here at the Camegie Community Centre. With the combined effort of all of you - we distributed buttons, crafts, 700+ shirts acknowledging NIPD with artwork created by Community . Member Sam Mckay, and served over 500 delicious Indian Tacos! I wanted to share that the event also offered music, song and dance with a combined in person and online total to over 2000+ people. I sincerely appreciate the effort of everyone taking the day to come down to the Camegie Community to be part of such a special day. Special shout out to you all ~ Thank you, Haw'aa Nicole

CARNEGIE INDIGENOUS PROGRAMS JULY 2022 Everyone WELCOME! Monday July 18- 5:30pm Cultural Sharing Program

July 4 - Theatre 5:30pm Cultural Sharing Program "Learn how to make a rainbow drenmcatcher"

B-J-N-G-O

Tuesday July 5 - Theatre 12;30pm Indigenous Crafts with Elders.- . "Learn how to make rainbow dreamcatcher"

T~~saay JulJ' 19 tre 12:30pm Indigenous Elders "Learn how to make mini d~nt.mearrings·

Wednesday July 6 - Seminar Rm 3:00pm Elder Chat - Drop by for a coffee and chat Elder in Residence Les Nelson

JUly 20 - Seminar Rm 3:00pm Elder Chat - Drop by for a coffee and chat with Elder in Residence Les Nelson

Monday

a

Nig~t!

Wednesday

with

Monday Juty 11 - Theatre 5:30pm Culturat Sharing Program "Learn how to make a rattle"

Monday July 25- Theatre 6:0(}pm Cultural Sharing Program "Burning the Bannock- Pride event"

July 12 - Theatre l:GOpm. Indigenous Crafts with Elders "Learn how to make a rattle"

.Tuesday July 26 - TIteatre 12:30pm Indigenous Crafts with Elders "Learn how to make a cedar rose"

Wednesday July 13 - Seminar Rm 3:00pm Elder Chat - Drop by for a coffee and chat with

Wednesday July 27 - Seminar Rm 3:00pm Elder Chat - Drop by for a coffee and chat with Elder in Residence Les Nelson

TuesdaJ'

Elder in Residence Les Nelson


THE CARNEGIE CENTRE

[FromHum 101's 2022 Yearbook]

Living in Vancouver for over fifty years, I have witnessed many changes and have experienced many highs and lows in the storied history of the city. In the last two decades, I have lived the majority of my life in the "Downtown Eastside," and the main cornerstone ofthat existence would have to be Carnegie Centre. I can honestly say that without the resources in and around the Carnegie Centre, life on the Downtown Eastside would not have been possible. In my younger days I passed by the Carnegie Centre many times and never gave it a second thought - at the time not realizing the importance it would play in my later years. It must be some twenty years now, but I can remember the first time I set foot in Carnegie and I believe it was to have a meal. The food at Carnegie is very nutritious and inexpensive, which came in handy for someone like myself who was on a limited budget. Living in those SROs it was next to impossible to keep food in your rooms. I also buy my lunch for work from Carnegie. Yes, the Carnegie kitchen staff did help keep this body healthy and for this Iwill always be grateful for your service. The free haircuts also helped keep myself well-groomed for the day to day living in Downtown Vancouver. Yes sir, lining up on those early Sunday mornings was an adventure in itself! , Many a day I might have given in to the dark side of my nature, but rather than waste time in my addictions, I found salvation at Carnegie. Out of curiosity, one day I decided to join up with the Camegie Theatre workshop. In high school I was too much of a loner, so this was my first experience with stage acting, . and I went on to form some long-lasting relationships. Yes, the Carnegie Theatre group was a positive experience in more ways than I can say, and I've enjoyed acting in films as a stand-in for Cree actor Tom Jackson, and have had scores of other roles. The Downtown Eastside Small Arts Grants given out through the Carnegie also helped guide me onto a new path as an artist that I find myselfliving today. It all started with a grant for making some eagle feather boxes, and has now led me into a new passion for film-making . •For myself, it's not about fame or fortune, it's all about getting out of bed to tell stories that are relevant to me. I have had the privilege of attending many of Hum 101 's Saturday night "Documentaries for Thinkers" evenings, curated by Hum alumnus Terry Lui, and held in the Camegie auditorium, also known as our very own Carnegie Hall. I never realized how much I like documentaries (thanks Terry). It's not the size of the audience that m~es a good film, it's the growth and change in the main characters, and the journey they take us on! It's this connection to a person, place or thing that ultimately has a profound change on who I am. The Carnegie Centre has made such a change in me ... and though I may not be able to have the entire Camegie with me at home, my new filmmaker side is working on a scale model! My most recent films produced as a student (I'm now a graduate) of InFocus Film School are "Einstein" and "Homeless in Vancouver," both from March 2022. On a more serious note, I was honoured to attend the February 14th Annual Women's Memorial March through the DTES. As the father of a young lady who left us way too soon, this march brought me a lot of spiritual and emotional comfort. Every year for 31 years, this march through the Downtown Eastside has both started and ended at Carnegie Centre. So as you can see, the Carnegie certainly is one of those places that has had a great impact on my personal struggles and victories in the DTES, yes it has! By Claude F. Ranville


The USC Hum graduation in the Camegie Centre was a delight. Thank you to the Carnegie for the use of your space. Thank you to the staff of Hum for a wonderful course and graduation ceremony. We are pleased and grateful to have been part of the Hum family. Wishing the Hum staff, Hum participants and future participants all the best. -

-

HumAlum

THE PATH Ghia Aweida Iwalk the trails set my footsteps into the path told to children listen and pay attention stories are important for no written language enhances memory to make my mark onto a new path where my feet walk is the path I built

never walked between trees a path shaded through trees on sunny days but beware of thunderstorms warned the sign climbing mountains but tracing footsteps in the snow in a blizzard without a loss not going crazy while paving our path

earning to hunt to gather with a teacher is fun, work alone no pressure exerted going with a partner being led by another to learn paths ones I paved with my footsteps where my feet walk is the path I build


Book Review, Hearts Amok: A Memoir in Verse

••• I

Poetry in the Park launched its first session, with inspiring leadership from Kevin Spenst, at Oppenheimer Park on July 7th. Kevin led us through several poetry writing sessions which were fun, connected us to the trees we were under, and enhanced our writing skills. Plus, bonus, he gave me his latest book of poetry, an exhilarating romp through contradictions of love in multiple verse forms. Hearts Amok renders a hobo sensibility riding a poetic freight down a track twisted by romance, that at times feels it's about to plunge down a chasm where the trestle has been blown away. As revealed by the title this truly is a story of hearts in crisis explored with couplets, triplets, quatrains, prose poem sonnets, and free verse that evolves into pantoum glosa. All of it, a romantic riot that reminds us over and over that love is always ongoing new beginnings, "tomorrow we'll dawn ourselves again" "all our collaborations, beginnings again and again." This comes after we learn that "Love is a cross-eyed / psychypomp for palookas, after we have a stomach that falls into "a zero-gravity thought that you're no longer / mine ... " as we move on to another number of first dates where we are, "interviewing / interviewers for the optics of the heart," where we end up, "tumbling apart as strangers." But, as we have been reminded in the first poem, there is never giving up, "until infinity flat-lines for broke," and fortunately, this book is dedicated to one who "Later coming to midway through life's journey" ... "runs into me like she's about to jump into a lake." I've given away a bit of the story here, but these poems need to be read for the sheer delight, read aloud for the enjoyment of sexy bouncy syllables in syntax connecting to pleasure voice and ear and heart: On higher ground, my bed has sprung a squeak. Tempest tossed, we let it squawk. Thanks Kevin for your eloquent expressions of despair, for never giving up, for flights of joy beyond bliss, for great poems, and for a wonder-filled poetry workshop under the trees. Gilles Cyrenne '

Poetry in Parks - Oppenheimer Park Edition! Join us the first Thursday of the month in Oppenheimer Park to write and share poetry from 1:OOpm-3:00pm, Join us July -r 2022-April6 2023 to create fresh focal poetry, Everyone welcome and encouraqed to attend! No previous experience necessary.


Engraving Words!

Welcome to Summer everyone! I decided since the summer season is very big for traveling, knowing the warm season is the most popular time to move around, that this issue would be best used in sharing something those relocating to B.C. whether just within the Country and Provinces itself or internationally should absolutely know! Through my returning to B.C. in May I ran into the ongoing never changing issue of Provincial health care over the matter of when your B.C/MSP coverage begins to that of the health cards and coverage people hold from other Provinces that are still active during this transition ... ' I learned that not much has changed since the last time I moved west from somewhere else, Canada! LOL It turns out the B.e. MSP coverage accepts almost no other health coverage from anywhere in Canada. This is not good for those with ongoing health issues that requires regular care with Drs and the medical community, I am one of those people! And this time around in my settling in and fighting for my right to ongoing medications I discovered something NEW through a liaison at one of the DTES clinics and I thought what a shame that something like this has been available for who knows how long but that the general public has not been informed of this? And so I decided I would be the one to change that by doing something about it! For anyone needing to apply for immediate MSP coverage (wherever you're from) due to one's health there is a form that can be filled out with your professional medical teams help, that once filled out allows you a fair opportunity and chance to have the 3 month WAIT PERIOD for your residency and health coverage benefits LIFTED! In short you can have access to your B.e. health care needs sooner than all of us frequent travelers ever knew or thought we could! Here's the link to the form that I happily discovered was available to the public online, making access to filling it out a lot easier and sooner than long waits for appts with someone to seek the form from. Here's a good cheer for the little things (albeit) however small they might be! https:llwww2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/healthlforms/293fil.pdf If for some reason you have trouble and are not able to access the MSP Coverage Waive Form with the link I've shared and or wish to have the form given directly to you instead, you are more then welcome to reach out to me directly and request that I send a copy of it to you! I would love to help in whatever way I can and hear about your issues for those of you interested in sharing! Jennifer Cooleyl

s

Play Safe in the Wonderful Summer Days ahead! Remember to use Sunblock & to Stay Hydrated! :-) thewriterwon@gmail.com


Quick announcement - coming this fall the rs" Annual DTES Heart of the City Festival! Plans are in the works for this year's upcoming Wednesday

October 26 to Sunday November

year's theme is "Community and honour the Downtown

is Our Mentor"

DTES Heart of the City Festival to take place 6,2022.

This

- to acknowledge

Eastside community

and the

people, organ izations and artists of the DTES who continue mentor all of us with their support,

to

ideas and encouragement.

Presented by Vancouver Moving Theatre and long time producing partners, Carnegie Community Centre and the Association

of United Ukrainian Canadians, along with multiple

Festival community

partners and artists.

If you have a project or a program idea to contribute for the Festival, give Teresa a call: 604-728-6867.

or suggest

www.heartofthecityfestival.com

...

Carnegie Volunteer Updates Pool room reopening • The Camegie pool room will be opening as soon as early July! We are currently looking for volunteers to monitor the room on weekday mornings, from lO-lam! • Afternoon and evening shifts will be added later this summer. • To register for shifts, please contact the Volunteer Office at carnegievolunteerprogram@vancouver.ca or at 604-665-2709. • We are inviting both people that have volunteered at Carnegie in the past and new volunteers for training sessions. The updated "Volunteering at Carnegie" training includes new mandatory health and safety protocols, is required for all new and returning volunteers. • Food Preparation, Runner, and Server roles are being offered in the kitchen at this time. • Drop in opportunities have resumed for kitchen roles, as required. • Limited Pool Room and Oppenheimer Park volunteer opportunities will be available. • Learning Centre shffts will resume when the Learning Centre reopens in the fall. Sign up for an upcoming Volunteering orientation and training session if you are: • A returning volunteer (No application needed) • A new volunteer: make sure you have completed a volunteer application on: https:llvancouver.calparksrecreation-culture/volunteer-at-carnegie-centre.aspx • Are able to commit to 1 regular scheduled shift (3 hours) per week, or are interested in doing drop in shifts with the kitchen • Regular shifts available are mornings 9am-12pm, afternoons 1-4pm, evenings 5:30-8:30pm Are able to commit to 1.5 hours of "Volunteering at Carnegie" health and safety orientation and site tour. For kitchen volunteers, this is often followed by 2 hours of kitchen training Please connect with Harris or Terence at Carnegievolunteerprogram@vancouver.ca or 604-606-2708 to sign up for one of the orientations below! FRJOA Y JULY 15 - Returning and New Volunteers- I 0:30am-2pm (Last 2 hours with Kitchen if applicable) TUESDAY JULY 21 - Returning and New Volunteers- 10:30am-2pm (Last 2 hours with Kitchen if applicable)


CRUNCHTOWN ~ dtes

o

~~.

.

b.-;:::/l.J c. ('

.... . 1// 1ft ~~

~~

·".i.J1N

/'flJ

IHf.R£ YOU HAvE

\...

)%

tr. C,.,'! HALL

,sOLVTlONS 10 PJ<oBL£MS SOLVING

'Wt1Ho

FINDINGV

1

Atly PR.oBI:...EM S A-r AL.L. -Jvsr

A PMHW-1Y

TO NOWI/ER£

PR.oV/'PING

A PA'H·

HAPPY

wrruoor HIf<lrJG

TRAILS


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.