Issues #36 - Point West Rotary
Transcription
Issues #36 - Point West Rotary
Issue No. 36: [April 1, 2011] Volume XXVI Gary Wants You to Know The Roseville-Sunrise Club is holding two events that you membership that might interest you. On May 21st is the Texas Holdem Tournament, $40 entry fee, no experience necessary! June 25th is the Trap Shoot Tournament, $95 experience (Class A, B, or C) or $65 amateur. There will be a raffle ($20/ ticket) for a $1200 Browning Safe. Save the Dates! th Apr 12 UC Davis Business Institute at 2 pm, contact Deb Baron May 14th Festa Di Vino at the Scottish Rite Masonic Center in Sacramento May 23rd Annual Golf Tournament, Northridge Country Club Meeting dates Places, and Speakers Invite a guest to one of the upcoming weekly meetings: Apr 8 Dawn Lindblom, CEO Red Cross Apr 15 Alan Anderson Director of Development Shriner’s Hospital Apr 22 Robert Rivinius, Past President & CEO California Building Industry Rotary Club Of Point West Founded, April 1985 Just Last Week by Dave Christenson Once again Point West Rotary continues to amaze me. The highlight of our meeting this week is what great work we are doing for kids in our community. Matt Byers gave the invocation reminding us all of the importance of good health. Greg Lauck introduced Suzanne Ambrosia the vice principal of Jonas Salk and two students, Gloria and Desmond who expressed thanks for our Club sponsoring their field trip to UC Davis program, Words Take Wings, which allows students to interact with an author. They came away with the message that anything is possible with hard work. WeeWeeek Weeek Continued on page 2 Volume XXVI Issue No. 36 April 1, 2011 Historic Moments: Origins of Group Study Exchange By Susan Hanf and Lauren Kalal Rotary International News -- 16 March 2011 In January 1964, the RI Board of Directors and The Rotary Foundation Board of Trustees approved Group Study Exchange as an Group Study Exchange team members visit a nuclear research project near official Rotary Geneva, circa 1967. From the November program. Thirty- 1967 issue of The Rotarian. four teams from 17 pairs of districts participated in the first round of exchanges during the 1965-66 and 1966-67 Rotary years. But young people had been traveling the globe with support from Rotary clubs well before this decision. In 1950, six young men from England went to New Zealand, led by English Rotarian Geoff Morton and financed by clubs in Yorkshire. They traveled the country, staying with Rotarians along the way. Rotarian Ralph Vernon proposed a similar endeavor in 1955 to clubs in northern New Zealand, who wanted to commemorate Rotary’s golden anniversary with a districtwide effort. District 39 (now districts 9910, 9920, 9930, and 9940) created the Rotary Overseas Travel Award program, and John Ledgerwood, of the Rotary Club of Hamilton, led the first team on a trip to Great Britain. Rotary International President (Just Last Week continued) We are reminded Festa di Vino is still looking for auction items and ticket prices will be going up after April 15th. Craig Evans updated us on the April 10th Rotary Day at the Rivercats. We will be providing tickets for twenty students from Jonas Saulk and ten students from Encina! Come out to the game and support this event. Walter Helm shared with us the progress Rotary International is having with Polio Plus. Lou let us know we are still ahead of the Sacramento Club in blood donations. Keep dripping everyone. Jaime Nelson introduced Glynn Thompson the Chief Academic Officer of the San Juan Unified School District. Mr. Thompson gave us an outline of plans that will have a major impact on Thomas Edison, Jonas Salk, and Encina High School. The plan will close Thomas Edison. The facility will be used for a kindergarten and learning center. Jonas Salk will turn into a K-8 school while Encina High School will change to a 6-12 school. The District is holding meetings to listen to feedback on the proposed changes. Lou Fifer, Doug Weill and Buzz Wiesenfeld all had great comments and questions for Mr. Thompson. They illustrated our continued involvement and commitment to these schools and their students. Our Club should be proud of these individuals and all the members who are working to make a difference at these schools. Jerry Avila introduced our speaker Jamie Susslin the host of The Ultimate Sportsman television show. Jaime chronicled her path to being a host of an outdoor adventure show from growing up as a tomboy to becoming a law enforcement officer, then private investigator, owner of a model agency, real estate agent to finally a TV host. You had to be there, especially to hear of her close encounter with a rhinoceros on a African dart safari. 2 Volume XXVI Issue No. 36 April 1, 2011 (GSE continued) The program was so successful that district leaders in New Zealand decided to continue it after the anniversary celebrations had ended. Over the next few years, teams from New Zealand traveled to Canada, India, Japan, Sri Lanka, and the United States. New Zealand Rotarians welcomed visitors from these countries as well as from Pakistan. In the early 1960s, the Trustees began considering programs for non-Rotarians that would promote international goodwill and understanding. One plan was for small groups of young business and professional men to travel from one Rotary district to a district in another country. Harold T. Thomas, a New Zealand Rotarian who served as RI president in 1959-60, shared information about the Rotary Overseas Travel Award with the Trustees. Soon after the Board and Trustees approved Group Study Exchange, Vernon and other Rotarians with experience in group exchanges and vocational training were invited to finalize the details of the new Foundation program. In the nearly five decades since, more than 70,000 young men and women have traveled the globe as part of Group Study Exchange teams. What pets do when we’re at work UC Davis Institute for Regenerative Cures Business Tour On April 12th at 2:00 pm is our second business tour. It is a tour of the UC Davis Medical Center, 2921 Stockton Blvd., in Sacramento of the Institute for Regenerative Cures. For patients and families suffering from chronic disease or injury, the promise of stem cell therapies offers great hope. UC Davis is a leader in advancing that promising goal. It has brought together physicians, research scientists, biomedical engineers and a range of other experts and collaborative partners to establish the UC Davis Institute for Regenerative Cures, a facility supported by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. The new $62 million Institute is located on the University’s Sacramento campus, where collaborative, team-oriented science is working to advance breakthrough discoveries and bring stem cell therapies and cures to patients everywhere. It benefits from being on a campus near a nationally designated cancer center, a renowned neurodevelopment institute, state-of-the-art imaging and biophotonics programs, and an academic medical center that is at the forefront of advanced patient care. The institute’s facilities include primary laboratories, a shared-vector core, microscopy and cell sorters, space for academic, postdoctoral and administrative offices. Those members wishing to attend please RSVP to deborah.baron@me.com or call 488-6350 Brittani in Argentina (Our GSE Student) An excerpt from her blog: In Argentina, it's definitely Trivia Question of the Week Who had 50s No. 1s with Rag Mop, Sentimental Me and You, You, You? a culture where everyone is always keeping busy and doing something-no matter the hour of the day. It's funny because sometimes I just like to relax and lay in my bed and listen to music. I was just relaxing in my room one day, and my mom came in and asked if everything was okay, of course! I guess my mom perceived it as something being wrong but that definitely wasn't the case! So I explained to her that I don't need to be constantly doing something or be out of the house to be happy. I'm perfectly content sometimes just doing nothing and relaxing. Sundays are normally family days, where we go to the grandparent’s house in the countryside and spend the day there. I’m tan and freckled more than ever. It gets extremely hot here. It’s crazy though because the weather can change incredibly fast. 3 Volume XXVI Issue No. 36 April 1, 2011 My Favorite Catholic Joke Rotary Club of Point West (Catholics are some of my favorite people) 'Father', he confessed, 'it has been one month since my last confession. I had sex with Nookie Green twice last month.' The priest told the sinner, 'You are forgiven. Go out and say three Hail Mary's.' Soon thereafter, another parishioner entered the confessional. 'Father, it has been two months since my last confession. I've had sex with Nookie Green twice a week for the past two months.' This time, the priest questioned, 'Who is this Nookie Green?' 'A new woman in the neighborhood,' the sinner replied. 'Very well,' sighed the priest. Go and say ten Hail Mary's. At mass the next morning, as the priest prepared to deliver the sermon, a tall, voluptuous, drop-dead gorgeous red headed woman entered the sanctuary. The eyes of every man in the church fell upon her as she slowly sashayed up the aisle and sat down right in front of the priest. Her dress was green and very short, and she wore matching, shiny emerald-green shoes. The priest and the altar boy gasped as the woman in the green dress and matching green shoes sat with her legs spread slightly apart, but just enough to realize she wasn't wearing any underwear. The priest turned to the altar boy and whispered, 'Is that Nookie Green?' The bug-eyed altar boy couldn't believe his ears but managed to calmly reply, 'No Father, I think it's just a reflection from her shoes'.. 2010 - 2011 Board of Directors President Gary Hardesty Secretary Lisa Ryan Treasurer Scott Daulton Directors Club Service I Richard Price Club Service II Trish Harrington Community Service I Craig Evans Community Service II Toney Sebra International Service Robert Halleck Vocational Service I Jamie Nelson Vocational Service II Cori Badgley Past President President-elect Al Howenstein Jennifer Curtsinger Publicity/Membership DeWana Ljung Sergeant at Arms Gary Pevey Admin. Assistant George Daniels Visit our website for more information http://pointwest.clubwizard.com CALENDAR OF UPCOMING PWR MEETINGS Penguins Did you ever wonder why there are no dead penguins on the ice in Antarctica where do they go? Well, wonder no more!!! It is a known fact that the penguin is a very ritualistic bird, which lives an extremely ordered and complex life. The penguin is very committed to its family and will mate for life, as well as maintaining a form of compassionate contact with its offspring throughout its life. If a penguin is found dead on the ice surface, other members of the family and social circle have been known to dig holes in the ice, using their vestigial wings and beaks, until the hole is deep enough for the dead bird to be rolled into and buried. The male penguins then gather in a circle around the fresh grave and sing: "Freeze a jolly good fellow, freeze a jolly good fellow." Then they kick him in the ice hole. MARCH 25 PWR Meeting APRIL 1 PWR Meeting 8 PWR Meeting 15 PWR Meeting 22 PWR Meeting 5180 District Governor Governor Jo Ann Lemmon’s newsletter http://pointwest.clubwizzard.com/IM Upload/11-02-01-District-5180News.htm 4 Volume XXVI Issue No. 36 April 1, 2011 THE FOURWAY TEST 1. Is it the TRUTH? 2. Is it FAIR to all concerned? 3. Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS? 4. Will it be BENEFICIAL to all The Object of Rotary The Object of Rotary is to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage and foster: FIRST The development of acquaintance as an opportunity for service; SECOND High ethical standards in business and professions, the recognition of the worthiness of all useful occupations, and the dignifying of each Rotarian’s occupation as an opportunity to serve society; THIRD The application of the ideal of service in each Rotarian’s personal, business, and community life; FOURTH The advancement of international understanding, goodwill, and peace through a world fellowship of business and professional persons united in ideals of service. Missed a Meeting? Here are some of the nearby clubs. For a complete list in our District go to www.rotary5180.org/clubmeetinglocations.aspx or make up on-line at www.rotaryclub.org to experience eClub. 11:30 am – 12:00 pm 7:00 pm 7:00 am 12:00 pm 6:30 pm 7:00 am 12:15 pm 5:30 pm 7:00 am 12:00 pm 7:00 pm 7:15 am 12:15 pm 2:15 pm MONDAY South Sacramento – Casa Garden Restaurant Sacramento – Radisson Hotel Fair Oaks – F. O. Comm. Clubhouse TUESDAY Sacramento Breakfast – Gonul’s J Street Café’ Arden Arcade – Community Service Center Marconi Sheriff’s Substation Carmichael – Café’ Capri Restaurant WEDNESDAY Rocklin Loomis Basin – Whitney Oaks Golf Club North Sacramento – Double Tree Hotel Midtown Sacramento – Café’ Bernardo THURSDAY Roseville Sunrise – Carrows Restaurant East Sacramento – Salvation Army Folsom – Rotary Clubhouse at Lew Howard Park FRIDAY Natomas – Hamilton Inn and Suites Granite Bay – Piati’s Restaurant West Sacramento – Pheasant Club Newsletter articles are accepted at any time but must be in an electronic Word format submitted to Barry via email at malibubarry@gmail.com. Articles submitted before noon on the Monday before publication will be included in the next newsletter. Please note that I am not responsible for misinformation given to me by others herein, however, I do endeavor to make each newsletter as accurate as possible. Let me know of any errors that you notice so that I may correct them in future issues.