SERTOMA CHRISTMAS Bismarck, ND
Transcription
SERTOMA CHRISTMAS Bismarck, ND
JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org SERTOMA CHRISTMAS Bismarck, ND INSIDE THIS ISSUE: SERTOMA CHRISTMAS IN BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA 1- DUCK RACE 2013 HELP NEEDED 3 10 WAYS TO SAVE ENERGY & MONEY ON NEW YEARS EVE 3- A CHRISTMAS CARAVAN FOR KIDS 5 A STORY ABOUT HEARING LOSS 6, THE CHRISTMAS PARTY RECAP 8 2 4 8 S anta Claus holding up presents and a horse-drawn sleigh are two of dozens of specially constructed light figures and scenes at the annual Christmas in the Park located at Sertoma Park in Bismarck. The Bismarck Sertoma Club sponsored attraction offers a variety of large and small secular and religious-themed displays. Christmas in the Park SPECIAL POINTS OF INTEREST: Birthdays & Anniversaries pg 10 Your Board, pg 9 Your Committees pg 7 -Where: Sertoma Park -When: open every night through Jan. 2 from 6 to 10 p.m. -Cost: $5 per car Christmas in the Park is up and running again this year in Sertoma Park, offering visitors a drive-through light display and the chance to help the community. Sponsored by the Sertoma Club, the event involves local businesses that sponsor light displays throughout the park. The $5 fee to get into the park contributes to numerous local projects. For the first time, the entrance to the event also will serve as a drop-off center for the Ruth Meiers Hospitality House, said Anne Bry a member of the Sertoma Club. “We’re asking people to bring hats, scarves, gloves and non-perishable food, and Ruth Meiers will be picking them up and distributing them,” Bry said. (Continued, page 2) 1 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org SERTOMA CHRISTMAS IN BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA (continued from page 1) Bry, who is the co-chairman of the club’s speech and hearing committee, said the Sertoma Club still is committed to providing help for people with hearing problems and difficulty with communication. Bry said the $5 donation goes to a budget of more than $10,000 that helps both adults and children get fitted for hearing aids, as well as to scholarships for speech therapy classes and to help outfit classrooms to have better acoustics so all students can hear the teacher. “We set up audio enhancement equipment throughout the school system. It's like bringing microphones into the classroom,” Bry said. The Sertoma Club also uses the money to fund improvements in the Sertoma Park area, funding the zoo and the Bismarck Sertoma Clubhouse, which is used year round. Christmas in the park opened last Friday and will continue though Jan. 2. 10 p.m. It is open nightly from 6 p.m. to http://bismarcktribune.com/news/local/it-s-christmas-in-the-park-at-bismarck-s-sertoma/article_d27d406e-fcdc-11df-a2c8-001cc4c03286.html 2 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org DUCK RACE STEERING COMMITTEE 2013 For future Steering Committee meetings we have scheduled a conference room at the library for noon on the following dates. We hope these times and days work for you. Tuesday, Jan. 15 Wednesday, Feb. 13 Wednesday, Mar 13 Tuesay, April 16 Wednesday, May 15 - Tentative -Too early to schedule 10 Ways to Celebrate 2012 to save energy & money By SUSANNA KIM (@skimm) Dec. 28, 2011 Homebodies and partygoers can save energy and money with these last-minute New Year's Eve ideas from four food, travel and event experts to celebrate 2012. Have a fondue party. Steve Carlson, CEO at food review website FoodSmackdown.com, suggests your guests bring one item to "dip" that shows their new year resolution. For example, bring bread and write on a tag, "I plan to make more dough (money) this year." Or bring pineapple or strawberries and write "I plan to be healthier this year." Bring angel food cake and write, "I plan to be more of an angel this year and give back". "The most creative one wins a prize," Carlson said. Set a table in an eclectic fashion, instead of matching. If you decide to host a gathering, feel free to expand outside of one color scheme or theme. "Then you don't have to have a bunch of matching place settings and can even find flatware, plates and cups at resale stores," Pykes-George, soon to be featured on the Food Network next year, said. Buy party items on sale after the holidays this year and use next year. Find creative, colorful decorations at department stores or whatever retailer is selling them at a discount. You can usually buy decorative items at 75 percent off after the holidays, Pykes-George said. (Continued on page 4) 3 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org 12 Ways to Celebrate 2012 to save energy & money (continued from page 3) Buy pre-made chocolate or pastry shells. If you want to make a decorative, elegant, yet simple dessert, buy pre-made chocolate or pastry shells. Take a pudding mix, then whip up some heavy cream. Fold the two together, spoon into the shells and garnish with a raspberry, powdered sugar, chocolate shavings or another garnish. "They are then bite-sized and really yummy," Pykes-George said. Who brought what? Carlson suggests this simple, interactive game with a group of friends or family. Everyone writes down one food or drink item they are going to give up for the New Year and put it in a jar. Someone reads them and people guess who wrote the item. Eat in. It's a simple financial reminder everyone needs periodically. Cooking rather than eating out is a great way to start 2012, Carlson said. For $4.99 to $5.99 per pound on sale this time of year, you can buy about a half pound of prime rib per person. Or, you can make a ham for cheap -- less than $1 a pound. Both meats are generally on sale this time of year at all grocery stores, Carlson said. Root beer floats. Carlson said for a family-friendly event that is great for kids, you could host a root beer float party. "Everybody can raise their glass for a toast at midnight -- as the caffeine will help keep you all up until midnight," he said. "Ice cream and soda is on sale this time of year. Be creative." Play New Year's Bingo. Nikki Carlson said make Bingo cards with squares listing funny things that happened to you and friends throughout the year. Depending on how candid people are in your group, you could enjoy learning about each other's years. Give your party some spark. Buy sparklers ahead of time that you can buy for cheap prices online through wedding websites, and light them at midnight outside with guests. Be careful about any fire or accident hazards. Or, you can make homemade cupcakes and buy toppers online at edibledetails.com for a professional look. A trip down 2011’s memory lane Nikki Carlson, co-founder at ChicExecs PR, and Carlson's wife, has a simple decorating idea: Put up clothes lines in the house and clothes-pin pictures throughout the house of events that happened in the last year. 4 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org A SERTOMA CHRISTMAS GALLATIN, TENNESSEE Christmas Caravan for Kids is an annual effort of the Gallatin Sertoma Club to raise money for less fortunate children in Sumner County so that they may have a better Christmas. Each year, a series of events are held to raise the needed funds. Proceeds are distributed so that each child in the group selected will be given a set amount of money and taken on a shopping trip via Entertainer Coaches provided by Music City Coach, All Access Coach, Corporate Motorcoach Travel, and NiteTrain Coach in the month of December. The amount of money each child receives and the number of children we're able to help depends on the support of our Sponsors and those who attend our event. Unfortunately, many children in Sumner County have little or no Christmas experience at all. Gallatin Sertoma Club desires to change that by launching and supporting Christmas Caravan for Kids, to help raise the needed funds so that some of the less fortunate children in Sumner County could have a better Christmas. sponsorships and the additional activities surrounding it. This only happens because of the generosity of local individuals and business owners who give generously of their time and funds. We do all that we can to make sure that every dollar counts toward our main goal, putting a smile on a child’s face for Christmas! Because of you, another child can have a better Christmas! Nearly every dollar raised goes to provide Christmas for each child each December, chosen through a very accurate and strategic process that qualifies them. They are provided dinner by a local business while meeting their shopping sponsors and visiting Santa for group photos. They are then taken on a shopping trip with their adult shopping sponsor via our entertainment coach sponsors. Each year our kids receive not only a shopping trip to buy whatever they want up to a certain amount, but other nice surprises provided by local business donors and other raised funds. GALLERY OF SMILING KIDS SHOPPING Our desire is to increase the number of kids we can help each year. The amount of money each child receives and the number of children we are able to help depends on participation at events, corporate http://gallatinsertomaclub.org/caravan.htm 5 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org My Story – Living with Hearing Loss (By Lou Touchette) Growing up on a large farm and being the eldest of five children placed responsibilities on me at a young age. At the age of 9-years my father taught me how to drive tractors. Sometimes I would be plowing a field with the engine at full throttle for several hours at a time. Back then tractors did not have mufflers to dampen the noise. Nor were there sound protectors that could be worn over ones ears. For the next ten years this abuse of my hearing continued. In 1961 I joined the US Force and for twenty years I was a Jet fighter aircraft mechanic. My daily routine consisted of long hours on the flightline exposed to the screaming of jet engines. In those days there was no emphasis on the wearing of ear protection. I suppose it may have been available but when it was suggested that the noise might hurt my ears, being 19-years of age, I was convinced that I was tough and could “take it.” Years later it became mandatory to wear protection when exposed to engine noise but by then I’m sure the damage had been done. I should have had some clue that I might have a hearing loss when in the mid 1960’s I developed tinnitus (a ringing in my ears). Perhaps I’m unusual but I eventually discovered that my brain had accepted the ringing as music in the form of an orchestra playing in the distance. I’ve always been a person who enjoyed singing and/or humming so this was great. It was not annoying and almost enjoyable accompani- ment at times when I was humming a tune. By 1977 I had quickly moved up through the enlisted ranks and had become a Maintenance Superintendent at the Air Defense Command Headquarters. It was only when my boss called me into his office after I had hosted a maintenance conference, did I realize that I may have a hearing loss. When the General said he wanted me to have my hearing checked I was both confused and embarrassed. He told me that when I was taking questions from attendees at the end of the conference, that I was giving answers that had nothing to do with the questions being asked. So, in 1977 I was diagnosed with a severe hearing loss and fitted with two hearing aids. Since then I have gone from those ugly black military style black glasses with hearing aids built into the stems to modern digital Behind the Ear hearing aids with telecoils. My hearing loss story did not end with my retirement from the air force. I had a follow on career as a quality control inspector with the Boeing Aircraft Company. Until my subsequent retirement from Boeing in 2000 I worked in the factory where aircraft were being assembled. The noise level from all of the riveting continually filled the air. By the time I had retired from Boeing my hearing loss had gone from severe to profound. In the early 1990’s I joined a local chapter of the national Self Help for Hard of Hearing people (SHHH) which has subsequently become Hearing Loss Association of America (HLAA). It was while a member that I was introduced to the FM System and the neckloop. My first act was to buy new hearing aids with telecoils. Soon after I heard about the “Induction Loop” and purchased one for our local SHHH chapter. Over the past 15-years I have become a strong advocate for “Looping.” The Induction loop today is affectionately referred to as the “Hearing Loop.” After moving to Arizona I joined the board of Adult Loss of Hearing Association (ALOHA) in Tucson where I have taken on the challenge to “Loop Tucson.” As part of this undertaking I give demonstrations on looping to various groups upon request. I conduct workshops to train people on how to install loops in their homes. To date I have over 100 loop installations behind me and am dedicated to teaching others what I know. I’m inclined to believe that my hearing loss was due to noise exposure. However, my mother developed a severe hearing loss in her late 50’s and by the time she died at the age of 84 it had progressed to Profound. She had no noise exposure. The only other family member with a hearing loss was my grandfather on my father’s side of the family. Being a farmer and driving tractors and other farm machinery for over 50years I think that like me, his profound hearing loss was noise induced. read text assignments and let others with good hearing take notes in class. (Continued, page 8) 6 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org YOUR TOPEKA EVENING CLUB COMMITTEES: AWARDS/INCENTIVES COMMITTEE Dan Hejtmanek, Chairperson Deb Zimmerman ATTENDANCE CHAIRPERSON Bernice Hejtmanek AUDITING COMMITTEE Dennis Handke, Chairperson Pat Riordan CLUB HISTORIAN Terry Beck DUCK RACE COMMITTEE Marc Linton and Donna Linton, Co-Chairpersons MEMBERHSIP COMMITTEE Terry Beck, Chairperson Celia Cuthbertson, Norm Stahl Steve Lachowsky NEWSLETTER CHAIRPERSON Dara Montclare daramontclare@yahoo.com PROGRAM COMMITTEE Marc Linton, Chairperson Matt Dowd, Mark Braun, Jim Deines, Bill Riphahn RETENTION COMMITTEE Terry Cuthbertson, Chairperson Matt Dowd Pat Riordan SAFE EARS COMMITTEE Veronica Laliberte, Chairperson Marc & Donna Linton, Terry & Celia Cuthbertson, George Laliberte SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE Celia Cuthbertson, Chairperson Terry Beck Deb Zimmerman SERTOMAN-OF-THE-YEAR COMMITTEE George Laliberte Matt Dowd SERVICE TO MANKIND COMMITTEE Bill Riphahn, Chairperson Celia Cuthbertson SHARP COMMITTEE Deb Zimmerman, Chairperson Debbie Escobar SOCIAL/BANQUETS COMMITTEE George Laliberte, Chairperson Celia Cuthbertson Veronica Laliberte SPONSORSHIP COMMITTEE Dan Hejtmanek, Chairperson Celia Cuthbertson All committees remain open for additional members. If interested, please contact Shawn Jurgensen at shawn@williamson-law.com. 7 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org CHRISTMAS PARTY: DECEMBER 11th Terry and his wife, Christine, hosted the Sertoma Club Christmas party. There was plenty of food upstairs and downstairs with Christmas decorations that rivaled any Macy’s Department Store displays I ever saw! Sorry, I forgot my camera, so use your imagination and picture all of us having a splendid time as we saw some people we haven’t seen in a while and got to know others that were new to Sertoma. Wishing you all a happy holiday season, and thanks Terry and Christine for getting us started in your beautiful home. My Story – Living with Hearing Loss (By Lou Touchette) (continued from page 6) We’d share what we had learned. This was a very effective solution to my poor hearing. Today I have an arsenal of tricks that serve me well. I am however, still trying to reverse an old bad habit of bluffing. I find that I do this when my brain gets tired and Auditory Fatigue has set in (my brain no longer is able to process what it thinks it is hearing). The future is looking brighter for me. Inspired by a lady whom I serve with on the ALOHA Board, I have an appointment to be evaluated for a Cochlear Implant (CI). Like me she was constantly struggling to hear but after receiving her CI a few years ago, she is like a new person. She is no longer an introvert and has become a very outgoing person. I figure if she could do it, so can I. Stay tuned!!! 8 http://lwhl.arizona.edu/sites/default/files/My% 20Story_Lou%20Touchette_no%20color.pdf EVENING CLUB SERTOMANS: I’d love to highlight some of our own members or member’s friends. If you, or anyone you know is willing to tell their hearing loss story, let me know. daramontclare@yahoo.com. Thanks!! JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org 2012—2013 OFFICERS FISCAL TERM: P RE SID ENT SHAWN JULY 2, 2012—JUNE 30, 2013 J URG EN SEN V IC E - P R ES ID ENT —P R ES I DENT PAT R IO RDA N EL ECT V IC E - P R ES ID ENT —SE CO N D MA RC LI NT O N SE C RETA RY DE B ZI M ME RMA N T REA S U R ER DE B ZI M ME RMA N O N E -Y EA R T WO -Y E A T ER T ER CEL (MOR E BOA R D DI RE C T O RS : R BOA RD D IR E C T O R RY B EC K RY C UT H B ER T SO N IA C UT H B ER T SO N A N D / OR C OR REC T ION S 9 TO F OL L OW S HO RTL Y) JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org B I R T HDAYS / A N N IV E RS A RIE S BIRTHDAYS ANNIVERSARIES in SERTOMA: Dec 7 Joe Cox Jan 16 Bernice Hejtmanek January ‘73 Lee Dodson Jan 21 Bill Riphahn January ‘84 Jeff Jones Jan 25 Deb Zimmerman January ‘09 Jay Bachman SERTOMA CLUB UPCOMING EVENTS SAVE THE DATE: April 18-20, 2013 Sertoma Annual Convention, St. Louis, MO 10 JANUARY 2013 T O PE KA C LUB EV E NIN G N UM BE R: SE R T O MA 1 0 4 5 6 CLU B www.TopekaSertomaClubs.org TOPEKA EVENING SERTOMA CLUB REMINDER - Dinner meetings are held the first and third Tuesday evenings of every month at Jayhawk Towers in the Senate Room at 5:30pm 11
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