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Search tags: Community-Service
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review 2018-01-14 22:33
Community Service (Broken Mirrors #3) by Vaughn R. Demont
Community Service - Vaughn R. Demont
Some of my notes from Goodreads:
 
"Here we go again: info dumping and making things up on a fly (to add page count?) and reminiscing while everything is going to sh*ts. Why am still I reading this? @.O
Ah, right, challenge. And stupid notion that I must finish a book if I am past 75%."
 
 
"Omfg, stab me, stab! me! You don't frigging explain everything to your nemesis, you just KILL them! I swear my eyes are rolling all the way across *deh pond* right now!"
 
 
"This why I don't like present tense and cheap tricks horror books. You can't have a decent battle. The hero has to pause and reflect and both the hero the villain have to keep yapping at each other in the middle of life/death struggle. It's triple annoying! Maybe THAT is meant as horror? And damn if I am not tempted to dnf this bs at 80% :/"
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text 2017-03-28 03:06
Community Service 2017 – Operation Tuli

 

Small Boys become Big Men

 

“Operation Tuli”

In cooperation with

Alpha Phi Omega – Lambda Eta Chapter, Isabelita Rosueta Organization and Olongapo City Health Department

 

In Memory of Bro. Joel Castillo

 

April 21, 2017 | 8AM, Sta. Rita Health Center, Olongapo City

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text 2016-11-05 03:26
Southbourne Surf Life Saving Group Review: Patrolling as a Valuable Community Service

 

Life on the beach is like a child's box of marbles. It come as a result of the fascination to collect as many of those tiny pleasurable toys although they are all of one shape but of different sizes and colors. In like manner, we all want to “collect” as many visits to the beach as we can even though the water is essentially the same everywhere in the world though the sand or pebbles may differ in size and color.

 

It may not be that hard to explain the attraction we feel for the outdoors, especially the wide open sea. After all, our bodies, as well as the whole surface of our planet, are made up of over 70% water. Do we simply long to go back to the comfort of our Paradise prior to our birth – that is, our mother’s watery womb? Perhaps.

 

Not surprisingly, we can see why many people live much of their lives sailing on the sea or living by the shore and making a living out of the sea’s bounties. Because of this, a big percentage of the human population is attached to the sea and its vast blessings. And since the sea can be as unpredictable as the weather, the dangers that lurk there are even more diverse and foreboding.

 

While monitoring the seas and the weather can be done remotely using satellites or wireless instruments without endangering human lives, ocular and actual inspection requires patrolling the seas and the surrounding area using efficient motor-powered boats and modern sophisticated equipment.   

 

Accidents in the sea occur not only on the beach where many people congregate, especially during weekends, but also in other areas where some people may be sailing, exploring or conducting other activities to avoid fraud. As such, Southbourne Group Surf Life Saving Club volunteers patrol the beach at Southbourne during Easter Weekend, during regular weekends and on bank holidays from May to October. This essential task provides vital protection for tourists and visitors as well as for the whole community, especially those who ply their trade near or by the sea.

 

Southbourne Group trains people to become involved in lifesaving in order to maintain an effective and dependable club dedicated to serving the community. This allows club members to gain the proper training and be part of the social network to make them as useful club members as well as community residents. And for the young lifesavers, this provides a solid foundation not just for a great hobby or career but also the training and experience for other pursuits in other fields. 

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review 2016-03-17 18:36
About The Giving Tree
The Giving Tree - Shel Silverstein

This book is so fantastic! I love the sad, but lovable story about the boy who takes too much from the tree! This book would be perfect for whole group discussions on the environment, on personal responsibility and duty, and on giving back. I would love to read this book to a fifth grade class and then take part in a community service project of some sort! This book will also be a staple in my classroom library. 

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text 2015-06-22 09:50
Lupang Pangako Community Service 2015

 

Lupang Pangako. It's the area at the top of a mountain in Brgy. Amungan, Iba, Zambales where the Aetas affected by the Mt. Pinatubo eruption in 1991 were relocated. It was almost a two-hour journey from Subic where the office and most of IROG Foundation's volunteers are based. To say that the road to Sitio Lupang Pangako was not easily accessible would be an absolute understatement. However, that didn't take away the fun of the road trip from us.

 

The counterintuitive notion of "the more you give, the more you receive" had been proven true once again.

 

A documentary video by Logicgateone Corporation

Source: youtu.be/2Crpd3HbwHM
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