CLB Donation from Club 50/50

CLB Donation from Club 50/50
Captian R. Cooper Receives Cheque from Club President Bram Walters Feb. 2010

Friday, February 19, 2010

Join an International Network of Volunteers and Friends
Right now, Lions are improving communities around the world. We're meeting to plan a local project. We're sponsoring international exchanges for young people. We're bringing clean drinking water to a remote village. We're building. We're sharing. We're repairing. And we're having fun.

We have community clubs that meet in person. Cyber clubs that meet online. And special interest clubs that can be based on your profession, a hobby or anything you care about. Each club matches the needs of its members to help them support their community – right now.

Lions Clubs Members
Lions are groups of service-minded men and women who are interested in improving their communities. We are young people, families and Baby Boomers alike. To become a Lion is to become an active volunteer, a member of a respected international organization, a leader in your community and a friend to people in need. Learn more about what we do.

There are many reasons to become a member. As a Lion, you'll:

Help your community and gain valuable skills
Make an impact on people's lives – locally and internationally
Learn to be a leader – and lead a respected organization
Network with business people in your community and around the world
Energize your life and have fun
You'll grow personally and professionally. And you'll know that what you do is worthwhile and appreciated.

Port Rexton Lions Club

Who Are Lions?

Lions meet the needs of local communities and the world. Our more than 1.3 million members in 205 countries and geographic areas are different in many ways, but we share a core belief – community is what we make it.
When it comes to meeting challenges, our response is simple: We serve. It's something that unites Lions around the world. And it's unconditional. Lions aren't limited by continents or restricted to certain causes. We help wherever, whenever and however we can.
Whenever a Lions club gets together, problems get smaller. And communities get better. That's because we help where help is needed – in our own communities and around the world – with unmatched integrity and energy.

We're also one of the most effective. We get the job done.
Our History

1917: The Beginning Chicago business leader Melvin Jones asked a simple and world-changing
question – what if people put their talents to work improving their communities? Almost 100 years later, Lions
Clubs International is the world's largest service club organization, with more than 1.3 million members in more
than 45,000 clubs and countless stories of Lions acting on the same simple idea: let's improve our communities.
1920: Going International Just three years after our founding, Lions became international when
we established the first club in Canada. Mexico followed in 1927. In the 1950s and 1960s international growth
accelerated, with new clubs in Europe, Asia and Africa.
1925: Eradicating Blindness Helen Keller addressed the Lions Clubs International Convention
in Cedar Point, Ohio, USA, and challenged Lions to become "knights of the blind in the crusade against
darkness." Since then, we have worked tirelessly to aid the blind and visually impaired.
1945: Uniting Nations The ideal of an international organization is exemplified by our enduring
relationship with the United Nations. We were one of the first nongovernmental organizations invited to assist
in the drafting of the United Nations Charter and have supported the work of the UN ever since.
1957: Organizing Youth Programs In the late 1950s, we created the Leo Program to provide
the youth of the world with an opportunity for personal development through volunteering. There are
approximately 144,000 Leos and 5,700 Leo clubs in more than 140 countries worldwide.
1968: Establishing Our Foundation Lions Clubs International Foundation assists Lions with
global and large-scale local humanitarian projects. Through our Foundation, Lions meet the needs of their local
and global communities.
1990: Launching SightFirst Through SightFirst, Lions are restoring sight and preventing blindness
on a global scale. Launched in 1990, Lions have raised more than $346 million for this initiative. SightFirst targets
the major causes of blindness: cataract, trachoma, river blindness, childhood blindness, diabetic retinopathy
and glaucoma.
Today:
Extending Our Reach Lions Clubs International extends our mission of service every day
– in local communities, in all corners of the globe. The needs are great and our services broad, including sight,
health, youth, elderly, the environment and disaster relief. Our international network has grown to include more
than 200 countries and geographic areas.
Local Projects
Weekly Bingo
50/50
Support of Bishop White School
Help for Sick & Needy
Fund Raising for Clarenville Hospital
Annual Seniors Dinner
Annual Santa Claus Parade
plus
Much More