November 28, 2019 Vol. 20, No. 27
In This Issue FOUR SEASONS
Community Meal Thursday
Four Seasons, by Kevin Box, in real life is located in front of the Center for Transformative Learning on the UCO campus, but this week is hidden somewhere in our paper. Email contest@edmondpaper.com with the correct location to be entered in the weekly drawing. For more information, see page 4.
Inserted Today!
Our exclusive holiday calendar of events can be found on pages 18 & 19.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Thunderstorms High 67° Low 51°
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 Partly Cloudy High 60° Low 33°
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1 Sunny/Wind High 44° Low 25°
An annual tradition, which serves the needy and brings a community together, is once again scheduled to be held this Thursday as Edmond joins with the rest of the nation in celebrating Thanksgiving. Once again, the site of the Edmond Community Thanksgiving Dinner will be the University of Central Oklahoma’s Nigh University Center. Organizers are expecting some thousands of dinners to be served for the event. In addition, an estimated 600 valued volunteers pitch in to make the day special for the community and the people it serves. Outside of LibertyFest, the meal is one of the most organized events of the year and is made possible by those wishing to unselfishly serve
others. There will also be about 400 meals delivered to people who can not make it to the Nigh Center this Thursday. Those interested can also call 341-3602 or e-mail ECTD2019@ gmail.com. Then leave your name and phone number so a volunteer can call you back to take your order and home address. Whatever food is left over is scheduled to be delivered to other non-profit groups, that also assist the needy. Among those are the HOPE Center, Breakfast on Boulevard, the Samaritan House, Mobile Meals, Cook’s Nite Out and the Jesus House. The Edmond Thanksgiving Day tradition started in 1981 in a small way when the Paradise family
invited some people from their own families to join them for the traditional dinner. Since then, the tradition has grown greatly and only the ballroom at UCO can accomodate all the guests. For many years the dinner was prepared and hosted at First Presbyterian Church but it was felt that other churches could act as hosts as well. As the dinner attendance grew so did the structure of the group organizing it. A committee with representatives from the other churches was formed to take care of food lists, cooking, volunteer recruiting, equipment moving and the hosting of the dinner. This year the meal is 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday. For more information log onto www.edmondthanksgivingdinner.org or call 341-3602.