Wit and Wisdom

Questions That Haunt Me:

How is it that we put man on the moon before we figured out it would be a good idea to put wheels on luggage?
If corn oil is made from corn, and vegetable oil is made from vegetables, what is baby oil made from?

Campbell Heritage

CELEBRATE CAMPBELL HERITAGE DAY

MONDAY, FEBRARY 15

SPEAKER: S.C. CO. JUDGE PAUL BERNAL

9:30 Doors open & Late Registration

12:00 Luncheon by Mama Mia’s Italian $17.00

Orchard City Banquet Hall

Info: Dan Furtado

Treasure Chest

Help Wanted—Treasure Chest We still need someone to take charge of the Treasure Chest while Jan is recuperating. You need a car and you can use one of the shopping carts she has to transport the goods. The quantity of merchandise can be much less than Jan brought. We really need to keep this going because it is one of our main fundraisers. Her helpers will be there to guide you. Won’t someone please volunteer? Call Marlene.

Chinese New Year

CELEBRATE CHINESE NEW YEAR

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17 11:30 A.M.

Lunch catered by Golden Harvest

Special Presentation

Orchard City Banquet Hall

Tickets Go on Sale 2/11—Deadline 2/13

Adult Center Office

NO Ticket Sales at Door

Sunshine

Sunshine…Irene Elardo

I am so sorry to report the death of original member Lee Turcotte after a long illness. A sympathy card was sent to his partner, Libby Harbour. Get Well cards were sent to Jan Delucchi and Shelly Schwartz.

Volunteers

VOLUNTEERS – SUPER IMPORTANT— PLEASE SAVE THIS PAGE
The annual AARP Activities Report is very specific as to volunteer categories. Our Standing Rules state all community-oriented volunteer activities of our members shall be considered “chapter-sponsored.” These activities are in no way conducted by AARP, which has no responsibility in connection with such activities. Therefore, we are changing our reporting categories to match AARP’s definitions. This will make that dratted year-end report much easier to tally.

PLEASE CUT OUT AND SAVE THE FOLLOWING DEFINITIONS SO YOU CAN CLASSIFY YOUR ACTIVITIES EASILY.

Advocacy/Legislative:  Non-partisan activities supporting the goals and strategies of AARP, your AARP State Office or a local community need. Examples include get-out-the-vote campaigns, writing letter to Congress on issues of concern, or hosting a community issues forum.

Education/Scholarships or other: Programs designed to identify and support the ongoing education of deserving students in the community. Any other school- or education- based community activity, such as literacy2 projects, adopt-a-school-      programs, tutoring, building a school playground, collecting school supplies for needy children or instructing seniors on how to use a computer should also be included in this section.

Fundraising: Projects like bake sales, silent auctions and other activities that raise money for the chapter’s community service projects (i.e. our Treasure Chest and Opportunity Drawing).

Health and Wellness: This includes chapter support for events promoting physical activity.

Hunger: Chapter efforts or programs that support or fight hunger. Examples include food drives or donating money to help hunger.

Long-Term Care/Nursing Home Support: Programs in which members provide friendly visits, reading, letter writing, etc. for shut-ins, residents of nursing homes and veterans’ facilities, as well as general support for such facilities.

AARP’S DAY OF SERVICE

AARP Driver Safety

AARP Foundation Tax-Aide

All Other: This general category includes all other chapter community service projects, including clothing drives, other support for needy members of the community, disaster relief or emergency preparedness, outreach to the disabled community, Habitat for Humanity, services to youth and seniors, etc.

In 2015 we had 66 members volunteering for a total of 3,151 hours!! Dave More contributed 1,517 of those hours. Congratulations, David! All, keep up the good work and remember to tally your hours in the above categories each month and submit the form below. It is not necessary to detail where you volunteer, only the category. This will make it so much easier for the year-end report to National.

LOOK FOR A LEGISLATIVE REPORT NEXT MONTH!

PLEASE BE SURE TO PUT THIS REPORT IN THE PURPLE ENVELOPE EACH MONTH! THANKS.

VOLUNTEER HOURS REPORT: NAME______________________________________MONTH: __________________

ADVOCACY/LEGIS. _________________   EDUCATION __________________  FUNDRAISING_________________

HEALTH/WELLNESS  ________________  HUNGER _________________  CARE/NURSING HOME ____________

DAY OF SERVICE _________________   DRIVER SAFETY _____________  TAX-AIDE _______________________

ALL OTHER ________________________________________________________________________________________

Dates to Remember

DATES TO REMEMBER

DEADLINE for articles for the Dispatch First Tuesday each month e-mail to mar2hruby@sbcglobal.net   snail (US) mail: Dispatch, 2156 Orestes Way Campbell CA 95008

Executive Board Meeting, Wesley Manor   Second Tuesday each month 10:00 am Chapter Meeting Campbell Community Center, Room Q80      Third Tuesday each month   9:30 am

Opportunity Tickets

Opportunity Tickets… Carol Barcelos and Sue McMillin

February drawings at three for $1 are:

Capers Loft Bar and Bistro ($50!) 1710 W. Campbell Ave, Campbell 374-5777 (Thanks to Ken and Margaret Schieck)
French Nails Manicure 2091 S. Bascom Ave, Campbell 408-879-0609 (Thanks to Marlene Hruby)
Campbell Express  (Thanks to the Howe Family)
December Winners Corrections:

Dickey’s BBQ: Dick Cress

French Nails: Dot McElligott & Barbara Robinson?

Campbell Express: Joy Walsh

Giant Cookie: Virginia Hansen

Curves: Merry Wilkins

AARP Tee Shirt: Lin Kao

Program

Program…Ken Schieck

We are privileged to have AARP Chapter 5151 member and Campbell vice-mayor Liz Gibbons speak at our February meeting. Liz will speak on topics of concern for anyone who lives in Santa Clara County. They include: Community Choice Energy, Affordable Housing, Rent control, Construction impact fees, Potential ballot measures in June and November 2016, and Envision Silicon Valley 2040 (transportation ballot measure), plus a brief overview of Campbell priorities such as a New Campbell Library and City council elections