Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting

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Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
Vol. 6, No. 4.    The Internet Site for Environmental Information in Oklahoma   February 2018 - March 2018

                 Students from St. Mary’s Presented Soil Painting
                                                                          at the
                                                                                Environmental
                                                                                    Education
                                                                                        Expo
                                                                       From left to right:
                                                                             Sawyer, Boston, Amaar,
                                                                             Drue, Evi, Stella,
                                                                             and Umar

Wearing T-shirts created
                             for the occasion:
Back row:        Umar and Amaar Aslam
Front row:       Drue and Rhodes Molenda
Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
In this issue ...                                                              Quiz!! Quiz!! Quiz!!
Students from St. Mary’s Present Soil Painting                            In honor of the Year of the Bird, can you
               At the Environmental Education Expo Cover
                                                                          identify this bird?
Editorial Page                                      2
Not an Endorsement, but ...                                 2             Hint: It is known that this bird can fre-
Quiz!! Quiz!! Quiz!!                                        2                    quently be spotted in Oklahoma in
March Mammal Madness 2018                                   3                    late February - early March.
The National Gardening Association
                          with Nitrogen Game              4-5
Leopold Education Workshop                                  6
Water’s Worth It!                                           7
Sutton Scholarship Award                                    7
Oklahoma Envirothon                                         8
“The Science of Hiking”                                     8
Upcoming Events at Hackberry Flat Center                    9
2018 Monarch Conservation Webinar Series                    10
The Oklahoma Garden Planning Guide                          11
Oklahoma Garden Fest 2018                                   11
                                                                                           © Mark Olivier | Macaulay Library
2018 Tulsa Metropolitan Area Recycling Directory            12
Okies for Monarchs                                          12                       Answer on Page 11.
20th Annual Wildlife Youth Camp                             12
Live Bald Eagle Nest Camera                                 12
Lek Treks and More                                          13
10th Annual Red Slough Birding Convention                   13                   An environmental education newsletter for
Oklahoma Conservation Leadership Academy                    14                   the citizens of Oklahoma sponsored by the
                                                                                 Department of Biology at Oklahoma City
“Tree Communities with Lichens and Mosses                   14                   University. Items appearing in this newslet-
Mistletoe: Oklahoma’s State Flower?                        15-16                 ter do not necessarily reflect the opinions or
                                                                                 endorsement of the sponsoring organization.
Green Words for All Ages                                    16
The EnvironMentor on Facebook                               17                   Editor:   Beth Landon
                                                                                           blandon@okcu.edu
QuikLIST                                                    17
                                                                                 Please send any submissions to
Calendar Form                                               18
                                                                                 The EnvironMentor Newsletter
                                                                                 or The Calendar to:
  Not an Endorsement , but ...                                                   Environmentor@okcu.edu

                                                                                 Published bimonthly each year.
                                                                                 The next deadline is January 20, 2018.

                                                                                 If you wish to receive an email
                                                                                 announcing when a new issue
Just enter your email to join nature lovers from around the world in             has been uploaded, please send
making 2018 the Year of the Bird. Each month we will send you one                an email to Environmentor@okcu.edu.
simple action you can take to make a difference for birds and for the
planet.                                                                          Download your EnvironMentor Newsletter in
                                                                                 pdf form from:
The Year of the Bird Partners are:                                               http://www.okcu.edu/environmentor
                                            Cornell Lab or Ornithology
 Click on the URL below                     National Audubon Society             Visit The EnvironMentor Calendar at
           to sign up with your                  National Geographic             http://www.okcu.edu/environmentor/
                                                                                 Scroll down from The Newsletters. Regularly
                email address.                   BirdLife International          updated as information becomes available.
https://secure.everyaction.com/dS085IbtnkSVsloby5h1ig2
                                                                2
Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
Here is your gateway to
 March Mammal Madness 2018:
                https://mammalssuck.blogspot.com/2018/02/march-mammal-
              madness-2018.html#!/2018/02/march-mammal-madness-2018.html

Here is a selection of coming attractions:

The American Society of Mammalogists will once again be tweeting photos from their Mammal Im-
ages Library. Folks contributing from ASM include Brian Tanis, Sean P. Maher, Jessica Light, and
more! All the images there are free to download, and higher-res files of all the images can be re-
quested. The big bonus for the Mammal Images Library is that all the images have correct IDs and
are up-to-date taxonomically. What an amazing resource!

In 2018 we welcome the contributions of the eMammal team. They will be live-tweeting camera trap
photos captured from citizen scientists and professionals all around the world. eMammal houses the
largest database of mammal detections in the world and includes open access favorite photos and
data. Staff contributing includes Stephanie Schuttler and Roland Kays from the NC Museum of Nat-
ural Sciences, and Jen Zhao and Megan Blance of the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute.

The Aldo Leopold Foundation @AldoLeopoldFdn will again provide the 'Inspirational Intermission"
images & quotes about conservation & land stewardship in both historical and contemporary con-
text. The Foundation’s mission is to foster care for people, land, and communities through the lega-
cy of Aldo Leopold, best known as the author of the conservation classic A Sand County Alma-
nac and founder of the field of Wildlife Ecology. They also have a very active FB page. Director of
Education Jennifer Kobylecky & Public Program Coordinator Anna Hawley will be spearheading ef-
forts from the Foundation.

ASU Library is getting involved too! Anali Perry, René Tanner, Mimmo Bonanni, Ashley Gohr, and
Joel Smalley have created a guide and curated online resources that lists recommended resources,
targeting a general K-12 audience to help with researching their brackets. A link to the guide will be
posted here when the bracket goes live March 1st!

                                                  3
Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
The Environmentor Newsletter has joined this Association (it is free to
                                       join). We have been receiving the weekly newsletter for a couple of
                                       weeks; there are at least five articles, at least ten photographs, and
                                       “Notable Discussions from our Forums.” They end each newsletter
                                       with “The Numbers from Last Week” which this last week read:
                                                                                             “864 members joined.
                                                                                4,673 posts written in our forums.
                                                                     1,070 photos posted to the plant database.
                                                                   974 plants added to personal inventory lists.”

                                       To top all these riches of
                                       information are some uplift-
                                       ing sayings most of which
                                       tell us what we can learn
                                       from plants such as:

From:

“Although 78% of the air we breathe is nitrogen (N) and although there is much nitrogen tied up in
the organic fraction of the soil, plants are unable to use this nitrogen for their growth. A process
known as nitrogen fixation – biological and synthetic industrial fixation – must occur for nitrogen in
the air to be converted to forms plants can use. Use the following game after a discussion
on nitrogen fixation, ammonium, volatilization, nitrate and denitrification.”

“Game Directions
Number of players per group: 2 to 6
Rules
1. Players will decide who will play first, second, third…sixth.
2. Players will place their markers in the space labeled Atmospheric Fixation, Bio-
logical Fixation or Industrial Fixation. Up to two markers may be placed on each of
the labeled spaces for entry into the given pathways.
3. Players will take turns spinning the spinner and moving their markers according to
the directions designated by where the pointer of the spinner stops. Players must
move their markers in the direction indicated by the arrows on the game board.
4. If a player lands on a labeled Kickstart space, he or she will advance his or her
marker 10 spaces. Kickstart spaces help equalize distances of pathways comprised
of a greater number of spaces.
Winning the Game
The first player who returns his marker to Atmospheric Nitrogen will explain his or her point of entry
(meaning of atmospheric fixation, industrial fixation, or biological fixation) and will describe the pathway fol-
lowed. Once the player has successfully completed the explanation, that player is declared the winner.”

For the complete information on this game and to get the spinner click              Game Board on the
   here: http://blog.nutrientsforlife.org/the-nitrogen-cycle-game-2/                   next page.
                                                        4
Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
GAME

  5
Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
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Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
"The 2018 'Water's
                                                                          Worth It' poster contest
                                                                          is now open to all children
                                                                          from kindergarten
                                                                          through 5th grade. You
                                                                          have until March 12 to
                                                                          submit the artwork. Win-
                                                                          ners will be announced
                                                                          during the 2nd Friday Art
                                                                          Walk in April AND the
                                                                          overall winner's artwork
                                                                          will be printed on the
                                                                          2018 Earth Day t-shirts!"

For additional information please contact Debbie Smith, debra.smith@normanok.gov or (405) 292-9731.
Or go to the website: http://www.normanok.gov/content/2018-waters-worth-it-poster-contest-now-open

  View the student conservation art entries for the 2018 Sutton Award in Jenks and see the amazing
  creativity that Oklahoma high school art students are capable of! Students create original art ac-
  companied by an essay about a current conservation issue. About 130 entries may be viewed M-F
  from 1-3 pm at The Hive gallery in Jenks (115 S First St). Winning entries will be on display at the
  NatureWorks Art Show and Sale February 24-25 at the Renaissance Hotel in Tulsa. Don't miss it!
  Here are just a few entries from last year.

  http://www.suttoncenter.org/art

  Sutton Scholarship Award

  Sutton Award for excellence in com-
  municating current conservation
  issues

  Honoring the contributions of individuals
  anywhere who effectively use the visual
  arts to convey current conservation mes-
  sages
  Providing scholarship funds to Oklahoma
  high school students who use visual me-
  dia to convey current conservation mes-
  sages.

                                                     7
Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
“The Science of Hiking” … from Medium
“George Orwell, Thomas De Quincey, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Søren Kierke-
gaard, Thomas Mann, Vladimir Nabokov, Henry David Thoreau and countless other writers have
remarked on the effects of time spent in nature on our intellectual and creative faculties. The physi-
cist Werner Heisenberg was a keen hiker, as were Paul Dirac, Otto Frisch and Lise Meitner, all of
whom reported having come to key scientific discoveries while out walking in the hills ...
Over the last few decades, the restorative effects of nature — understood intuitively by writers and
artists for centuries— have become a key focus of scientific research. With more than 50% of the
world’s population now living in cities, interest in the ramifications of our increasing alienation from
the natural world has led to an increased understanding of the importance of nature exposure in
terms of its impact on our psychological well-being.”

      To read the full article click on the URL below:
              https://medium.com/@jameshorrox/the-science-of-hiking-53e8260ab46d
                                                    8
Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
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Students from St. Mary's Presented Soil Painting
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Our Friends at the Oklahoma Coopterative
Extension Service are urging everyone to http://factsheets.okstate.edu/documents/hla-
begin planning their home garden now.       6004-oklahoma-garden-planning-guide/

  Along with the Oklahoma Garden Planning
  Guide there is information about the following:
  Choosing the site
  Planning the garden
  Gardening Tips
  Avoiding mistakes
                                                     from: http://jobbind.com/garden-exterior-
                                                     design-ideas/raised-garden-bed-designs-living
For more Fact Sheets on a                            -off-the-land-raised-bed-garden-ideas-using-
                                                     free-materials-creative-ideas-for-gardens/
    variety of topics click on:
                      Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service
                                 OSU Extension Fact Sheets

 Saturday, May 5, 2018
 9:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.

 OKC Garden Fest is back a the the
 Myriad Gardens again and will fea-
 ture herbs, perennials, annuals,
 native plants, culinary herbs, vege-
 tables plants, roses, produce, pot-
 tery, jewelry, wineries, succulents, ornamental grasses, milkweed, pollinator plants, wild-
 life habitat and food trucks. Activities for children will also be offered and there is no
 charge for attending.
 Wanting to start a butterfly garden or Monarch Waystation? We’ll have an intentionally-
 managed garden that offers food and habitat for the Monarch butterfly population. Sev-
 eral vendors will offer milkweed for Monarchs along with other pollinator friendly plants.
 New this year will be educational talks and demonstrations about gardens and pollinators.

 Location
                                                                     Answer to Quiz! Quiz! Quiz!:
 Myriad Botanical Gardens
                                                                           American Woodcock
 301 West Reno Avenue
 Oklahoma City, OK
 https://www.facebook.com/events/396516614133338/

                                             11
An initiative of the Oklahoma Monarch
                                                         & Pollinator Collaborative, a statewide
                                                         group of 40+ organizations and citizens
The M.e.t.’s Recycling Directory is the ency-            working together to ensure thriving Monarch
clopedia of recycling for the Tulsa Metro-               migrations for generations to come.

politan Area. In our directory, you will find            This seems to be a recent effort, but they
up-to-date information on the best places to             have an exhaustive list of events and a map of
                                                         pollinator gardens in and around Oklahoma
locally dispose of various items. Click here
                                                         City and Tulsa. You can help them build their
to access the full PDF version of the direc-             list of gardens all over the State of Oklahoma.
tory. For a printed booklet, call our office at
918-584-0584.                                            You can check out the website at :
                                                                http://www.okiesformonarchs.org/

Now Taking
                                                          Check out the
Applications for the                                      Live Bald Eagle Nest
20th Annual Wildlife
    Youth Camp                                                         Camera

“A week full of fun outdoor activities, conserva-
tion education and team building is in store for
up to 35 lucky teens selected to attend the 20th
annual Wildlife Youth Camp. Applications are
now being accepted for this summer's once-in-a
-lifetime event.”

“Applicants must be Oklahoma residents who
will be 14 to 16 years old as of June 24, 2018.”
“The application is online at
                                                          The feed is from the Sequoyah National
https://www.wildlifedepartment.com/education/             Wildlife Refuge near Vian, Oklahoma.
               youthcamp.htm.
                                                          There is also a way to view this on your
The page also includes additional information
about the camp and photos from previous
                                                          mobile devises. Check this out!
years. Applications must be submitted by 4:30
p.m. April 13, 2018.”                                        http://www.suttoncenter.org/live-bald-
                                                                      eagle-nest-camera/
                                                    12
Registration is now open for the
                             2018 Lesser Prairie-Chicken Festival!
                                       April 11-18, 2018
                               Featuring keynote speaker Al Blatt
    Al Blatt of Hartland, Minnesota is a writer, speaker, storytell-
    er and humorist. Al writes humor and nature columns for
    many newspapers and does regular radio shows about na-
    ture. He writes a number of popular cartoon strips that are
    syndicated nationally and is author of the book, "A Life Gone
    to the Birds." He is a columnist for Bird Watcher’s Digest and
    writes for a number of magazines and books. He is a trustee
    of the American Bald Eagle Foundation in Haines, Alaska. Al
    has hosted TV shows, speaks around the country, and has re-
    ceived numerous awards. Al speaks to anyone who will listen.
    His mother thinks he is special.

Join us in Woodward, Oklahoma, in northwest Oklahoma April 11-
18 for the 2018 Lesser Prairie-Chicken Festival. Besides seeing the
Lesser Prairie-Chickens (and so far 99% of participants have had
close looks!) and birding around northwest Oklahoma, we are again
offering these special features for 2017:
       An opportunity to view Greater Prairie-Chickens from blinds in Osage County, Oklahoma!
       Packages designed specifically for photographers!

    To access the registration pdf click on this URL:    http://lektreks.org/lek-treks-2018.pdf

If you have any question, feel free to contact John Kennington at 918-809-6325 or johnkennington@gmail.com

   In the Year of the Bird:
          “Annual Convention Marks
          a Decade of Bird Watching”
   “Three of Oklahoma’s bird watching hotspots will be toured
   as part of the 10th Annual Red Slough Birding Convention,
   hosted by the Idabel Chamber of Commerce May 5-8, 2018.
   The $125 registration fee covers the six tour options (including transportation to the conser-
   vation areas), three evening presentations, a banquet and the 2018 birding convention T-
   shirt.
   More information about the event, including the registration form and past bird lists can be found at red-
   sloughconvention.com
                                                        13
Applications for the 2018-19 OCLA program are now being accepted.
 Now known as the Oklahoma
 Conservation Leadership Academy                     CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE APPLICATION PACKET.
 (OCLA), the program was de-
 signed to bring engaged, creative                                Deadline for submission is March 2, 2018
 and active members of the com-
 munity together to learn about science-based conservation and how they can become
 conservation stewards in their community and beyond. For the first year of it's launch, the
 program was originally focused on Oklahoma City. This year, we are expanding our efforts
 to include representatives from around the state.

   OCLA is a yearlong program consisting of workshops, field trips, meetings, and socials.

"Tree Communities with Lichens and Mosses"
Saturday, April 14, 2018
Presenter, Dr. Sheila Strawn, Lichenologist
Tree Communities will first show participants how to differentiate between
mosses and lichens, where each grows, and how each reproduces. In the
class we will describe their most important characteristics and how to begin
identifying them. Websites will be given for further study. During the field
study, you'll learn how lichens and mosses interact with other organisms on
trees, recycling resources among them. You will begin to see how these or-
ganisms change the environment and how humans change their environ-
ment. You will learn to use a hand lens to view intricate structures of organisms that live on trees and recognize char-
acteristics of lichens and mosses that determine their roles in tree communities.
Contact Tenkiller State Park Naturalist, Leann Bunn (Leann.Bunn@travelok.com) to register
                                                                                         Sheila A. Strawn, Ph.D.
                                                                 Author, Lichen Study Guide for Oklahoma and Surrounding States
                                                                                                     sastrawn@hotmail.com
                                                          14
At this time of year, when we long
                                                                             for spring but the trees are still
                                                                             bare, it's easy to see that some
                                                                             trees have strange clumps of
                                                                             greenery in their branches: mistle-
                                      and                                    toe. In old times those clumps were
                                                                             a promise that green spring would
                                                                             come again.
                                                                             There's a story that mistletoe be-
                                                                             came Oklahoma's “state flower” in
                                                                             February of 1893, when the Territo-
                                                 Buzzard                     rial Legislature met for the second
                                                                             time. John A. Wimberley, the
                                                                             youngest member of the House of
                                                                             Representatives, had heard that
                              Mistletoe:                                     other states had floral emblems.

                Oklahoma’s State Flower?
                                                                             Although Oklahoma was not yet a
                                                                             state, he thought we should have a
                                                                             state flower too.
European mistletoe (Viscum album) clusters on the branches of host trees.
Photograph by FrankFriday,
                     Naylor June 16, 2017                               His fellow legislators suggested
                                                                        everything from daisies and forget-
                                                                        me-nots to roses. But Rep. Wem-
From the National Geographic article, “How Mistletoe Became Everyone’s  berly remembered that during the
Favorite Parasite.” To read the entire article, click on:               previous hard winter, when many
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2015/12/151218-mistletoe-christmas- settlers had died, mourning families
holiday-kissing-parasite-birds-cancer/                                  had had no flowers for the graves.
                                                                        All they could find was mistletoe,
                   From The Earthteller,                                for at least a bit of green.
                                                                             So in memory of the lost settlers,
                                               Fran Stallings                mistletoe was voted our offical
Facts                                                                        “flower.” The Oklahoma Rose be-
                                                                             came our state flower in 2004, but
                                                                             mistletoe is still our “state floral em-
Mistletoe's green leaves may be a promise of spring
                                                                             blem.”
for us, but it can threaten the trees it grows on.
Oklahoma has several native species of mistletoe.
Different sources identify Phoradendron serotinum,
P. leucarpum, or P. flavescensis as our emblem.
                         Sycamore Mistletoe which is identified as
                      Phoradendron serotinum, ssp. macrophyllum

The genus name Phoradendron means “tree thief” and
with good reason! Ancient European peoples thought
that the green mistletoe was preserving the energy of
the tree through the winter, saving it for spring. But in
fact mistletoe steals from a tree. Its green leaves can
make most of its own food by photosynthesis, but it
takes its water and minerals from its host, burrowing
into the branches with root-like haustoria. It is a “hemi-                  A tree on Venice Boulevard at 33rd Street.
parasite.”                                                                                            Oklahoma City
                                  (Continued on Page 16 )
                                                         15
(Continued from Page 15)
Many kinds of birds can eat mistletoe's white berries. Wiping the sticky seeds off their bills onto the
bark of the same tree or the next one they visit, they spread the plant. Of course their droppings
spread the seeds too. In fact the name “mistletoe” comes from old words meaning “bird droppings.”
The “tree thief” can weaken its host's branches. And in an Oklahoma ice storm, its extra leaf surface
can catch so much ice that branches break under the weight. You may see some trees so infested
with mistletoe that they look like evergreens in winter!

SOURCES
Oklahoma lore: http://newsok.com/article/3683115 quotes The Oklahoman (April 19, 1925)
For nordic mythology, see http://www.theholidayspot.com/christmas/history/mistletoe.htm
Facts:
         https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/all/phoradendron-leucarpum-p-serotinum/

         https://urbanforestrysouth.org/resources/library/citations/american-mistletoe-phoradendron-
         serotinum-var-serotinum-infection-in-trees/

 Green Words for All Ages
                                                Do you like to read about current news? This book
                                                has it. Do you like to read about literature? This
                                                book has it. Do you like to read about history? This
                                                book has it. Tides have won battles, lost battles,
                                                and postponed battles throughout history. Do you
                                                like to read biographies? This book has it. And yes,
                                                it has science and stories as promised, but they are
                                                the kind of anomalous stories that can keep you en-
                                                thralled. It is common knowledge that the moon af-
                                                fects tides, but there is so much more to this. (Did
                                                you know that, as the moon moves away from the
                                                earth, tides are decreasing?). Observing tides has
                                                been one of the first citizen science projects. Even
                                                though Hugh Aldersey-Williams lives in the Norfolk
                                                area of Britain, his interests and, ultimately, his sub-
                                                jects for this book, The Tide, range to every conti-
                                                nent on earth and even into the cosmos. Aldersey-
                                                Williams does not relate all of this from the comfort
                                                of his chair; he relates his experiences with such an
                                                attention to detail you will believe your feet are wet.
                                                This review can end with a single word: Enjoy!
                                                                           Review by Sarah Markham

                                                   16
On February 23, 2013 The EnvironMentor
dipped a toe into social media. We made
this decision because, at this time, there
are two to three months between issues of
the Newsletter. During this past gap an im-
portant event had an application deadline of
April 1st so an announcement went out
from Facebook. We won’t bother you with
anything trivial, so …

  “Like” The Environmentor on
           Facebook!!

                                                                  10301 South Sunnylane Road
QUIKList Oklahoma                                                        405-814-0006
Leopold Education Project                                                    http://
   http://www.aldoleopold.org/Programs/                          www.museumofosteology.org/
                 lep.shtml                                       Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
            Type in Oklahoma                                        Saturday 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.
                                                                     Sunday 1 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Oklahoma Blue Thumb
         http://bluethumbok.com/
                                          Project Learning Tree (PLT)
Oklahoma Blue Thumb Association                          http://www.plt.org/
    ok.bluethumb.association@gmail.com    http://www.forestry.ok.gov/project-learning-tree

Oklahoma Envirothon                       Project WET
       http://www.oklaenvirothon.org/                         (Water Education for Teachers)
                                               http://www.bluethumbok.com/project-wet.html
Oklahoma Green Schools
      http://www.okgreenschools.org/      Project WILD
                                                    http://www.projectwild.org/
Oklahoma Master Naturalists
       http://okmasternaturalist.org/
                                           As with all hyperlinks in The EnvironMentor
Oklahoma Native Plant Society              Newsletter, these are clickable.
         http://oknativeplants.org/
                                           Do you know an environmental group in Okla-
Oklahoma Recycling Association (OKRA)      homa that should be listed. Send that infor-
       http://www.recycleok.org/okra/      mation to:
                                                      environmentor@okcu.edu

                                          17
Most people who remember The EnvironMentor Newsletter know that the pages at the end of the issue
were reserved for The Calendar. Being online has some great advantages. When you downloaded your
copy of the newsletter you may have noticed the box on the right side of the webpage. This is a conven-
ient listing of the next events from The Calendar. This will always be up-to-date because it happens au-
tomatically. For more information on the event just click on it and a window will open up with all the de-
tails. If you wish, you can access the rest of the calendar from the there.

     To have your event posted to The Calendar, copy and paste the following list into an email, fill
     in as much information as you wish, and send it to: Environmentor@okcu.edu

     Title of your event:
     Start Date and Time
     End Date and Time
     Location
     Location Address
     Contact Name
     Contact Phone
     Contact Email
     Details in Narrative Form
     Location Link
     Event Link
     Map Link

                      Please note: We are not able to publish for-profit information.

To go directly to The Calendar click on:
           http://www.okcu.edu/environmentor

                                                    18
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