Our Weekly Meeting

“Together, we see a world where people unite and take action to create lasting change — across the globe, in our communities, and in ourselves.”

We meet every Friday from 1:00 to 2:00pm at Wanderers Club, Illovo, Johannesburg. You can also join us on Zoom - https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86496040522.

Monday 12 September 2016

Committee Meetings this week, Vegetables, District 9400 Concert, Middelburg Video & Service.

Last Week
Geoff Green returned to tell us how to grow vegetables at home.  I must admit he makes it sound very complicated....just look at the picture!  Some of our members blanched at the thought of having to dig the soil down to about waist height!
It was an interesting talk all the same as he emphasised the need to create the right soil.  I did wonder if it wasn't cheaper to buy vegetables, even at Woolworth's prices.

Mike Lamb was amongst the many who had returned from holiday and he brought us a banner,

This is where Mike attended their meeting.....

 Meeting Information...

Thatchers Hotel
(formerly The Ramada)
Guildford Road,
East Horsley,
Surrey.We meet on Thursdays at 19.30 Thatchers Hotel
(formerly The Ramada)
Guildford Road,
East Horsley,
Surrey. KT24 6TBtel: 01483 280500

Looks a very nice place to meet though I hate to think how much the dinner cost in Rands!

Rotary Concert

I have forwarded this to Melodene to take the bookings stonestreet@mweb.co.za as it would be great to have a block booking for the Club.



THE JOHANNESBURG YOUTH ORCHESTRA COMPANY
in collaboration with
      ROTARY DISTRICT 9400

Presents


JYO SYMPHONY CONCERT 2016

with


The Johannesburg Youth Orchestra

Conducted by 
Eddie Clayton

Featuring soloist
Stephen Maycock (Clarinet)


Sunday, 25 September, 2016 at 15:00
UJ Arts Centre Theatre
Kingsway Campus, Auckland Park


Tickets are R150 per person
Which includes a free cup of tea.
(Students, pensioners and groups of 10 or more – R120)

Bookings through Computicket
For more information phone (011)484 1257 or 
email info@orchestracompany.org.za 

This Week - Committee Meetings
We will have the Board Meeting on Friday 23rd, after our normal Rotary Meeting.

Rotary Club of Middelburg Video
This is a brilliant video about a joint Education Project between Middelburg and a Canadian Rotary Club.  It has only had 17 views since April.....there is something wrong there.



SERVICE: THE MOTIVES BEHIND MOTIVATION

Illustration by Dave Cutler
From the  of The Rotarian
You may be surprised to learn that in 1905, when Rotary began, it was not based on the idea of Service Above Self. Instead, the two main aims of the Chicago club were “the promotion of the business interests of its members” and “good fellowship and other desiderata ordinarily incident to Social Clubs.”
But for Paul Harris, that wasn’t enough. He wanted a club that would get involved in civic affairs and benefit the community. 
A prospective member, Chicago attorney Donald Carter, had been “struck by the selfish character of the organization,” according to Harris biographer Fred A. Carvin. The two conspired to introduce a Third Object of Rotary: “the advancement of the best interests of Chicago.” As Harris later remembered, “I concluded that the most practical method of introducing community service would be to find a worthy cause and then induce members to work for it.”
The club began by buying a horse for a farmer whose animal had died. Members also provided a newsboy with a suit of warm clothes. All along, Harris was planning bigger things, creating a committee to find civic projects for Rotary to participate in. The first issue it addressed was the lack of public restrooms downtown. There was only one choice at the time – a saloon. Once there, it was said, men could be tempted to take a drink or two. As for women, entering such an establishment was simply out of the question.
So Harris and his committee persuaded the Chicago City Council to fund public facilities to the tune of $20,000 (almost $500,000 today) in taxpayer money. And Chicago Rotarians got so much satisfaction out of seeing their work get results that “Service Above Self” became an operating principle, although it didn’t become one of our official mottoes until 1950.
In Rotary, it never has been easy to get every member – or sometimes even most members – involved in community projects. Many people join because they want to give back to society, and community service is what Rotarians often say makes their membership worthwhile. But clubs still struggle to find projects that will inspire their members and attract new ones.
Rotarians enjoy the meals, the socializing, the networking, and the fundraisers, but when a community service project comes up, often they are suddenly “too busy.” Too busy for service after you’ve joined a service organization? Every club leader I’ve ever talked to has heard it.
A major factor standing in the way of greater involvement is “time aversion,” according to Americus Reed, a professor of marketing at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. All of us have limited time on earth and we are, consciously or not, very choosy about how we spend it. In a series of studies, Reed and his colleagues showed that service-oriented people such as Rotarians are most likely to spend their time on specific charitable acts if they are given “moral cues” about how good a particular action will make them feel after they volunteer.
“Giving time more strongly reinforces the moral self, compared with giving money,” Reed and his co-authors say in “I Don’t Want the Money, I Just Want Your Time,” a paper recently published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. The research suggests that if club leaders want people to happily volunteer, they will first acknowledge that community service can be hard to fit into a busy life. Then they must work to associate the project with positive outcomes and feelings such as self-expression, connectedness, meaning, and joy.
Another way to make volunteering more rewarding is to make sure that each person is able to express his or her inner motivations. The Three Needs Theory, proposed by psychologist David McClelland in the 1960s, shows that most people are primarily motivated by one of three factors: achievement, affiliation, or power. Achievement-oriented people like to work on concrete tasks where excellence is valued and a sense of closure can eventually be found. Affiliation-oriented volunteers want to work in groups and have interactions with recipients of service efforts. Power-motivated people prefer to be in charge and are happy giving advice or being involved in tasks that result in personal recognition.
Assigning people to volunteer activities based on those personality traits is likely to result in happier volunteers who continue to offer their time, even if they may not be quite sure why their Rotary activities suddenly seem to fit so well. But if a full-fledged application of the Three Needs Theory seems a bit manipulative, consider the method used by the 69-member Rotary Club of Schaumburg-Hoffman Estates, Ill., to create more satisfying community service projects over a five-year period. The club has moved from doing one-off projects to developing ongoing projects to meet some of their community’s most pressing needs.
“Clubs that have community service projects that are soul-satisfying to all members are rare,” says Eileen Higginbotham, the club’s community service chair. “Even if a majority of members say they are happy with current projects, membership changes and people develop new interests.”
Higginbotham decided to lead an effort to find the projects that would have the greatest impact in the community and then motivate members by matching their talents to them. Club leaders, she says, “realized that we didn’t really know what our members even thought about community service.”
The first step was to ask members, in detail, what they wanted from their club. A 16-question assessment of club activities, including community service, resulted in an almost 100 percent response rate. “It gave us more confidence in what we were proposing to the club,” Higginbotham says. “You can put a lot of work into a project and then find that people don’t want to do it.”
The club then explored its community’s needs by “following the money.” They sent members out to ask organizations they had supported over the years what they really needed in a hands-on project. And they found out that many of their assumptions were a little off. Local seniors, for example, wanted a place to go on Saturdays, but the senior center sometimes had only one person working and could accommodate only about 25 people. Now “Rotary Social Saturday” brings in as many as 70 people. “The Rotarians who asked organizations about their needs have become our ambassadors to them,” Higginbotham says. These close connections ensure that as needs change, the club’s response can change quickly, too.
Clubs are on a never-ending quest for great projects – and for ways to motivate members to participate in them. The trick is to find the project that meets your members’ needs as well as your community’s.

Monday 5 September 2016

Onyi Nwaneri & Africa Tikkun, Play Pumps, TJ Acoustic & Earthquakes in Italy

Last Week
Onyi Nwaneri, who has a title much longer than her name, Head: Development, Marketing & Communications, regaled us with the amazing work that Afrika Tikkun does in South Africa.  She gave us an extremely interesting overview of our country and what resonated with many of us was that only 4% of the population pay tax.  I rather wondered if that wasn't a decreasing percentage?  Maybe inflation keeps it stable.

There are so many NGO's involved in training, education, job creation as well as government and service organisations like Rotary.  The small tax base really makes one appreciate the need for the work these organisations do to try and improve the lot of the majority of the population.

We have partnered with Afrika Tikkun in the past and maybe we should explore joint opportunities again.

Play Pump Kuruman District
Brian Leech has ensured that the Play Pump approved at the Club Assembly was installed last week.  This really is a worthwhile project as it is completely sustainable and fits in with one of Rotary International's areas of focus.  Many thanks, Brian.  Let's hope that we have sufficient funds to install the one that was proposed for the Free State.
















The TJ Acoustic Club
This was attended by Richard Tonkin, Cuthbert Gumbuchooma, myself and our partners.  It was an interesting evening with various 'turns' of varying quality taking the stage.  It was also inexpensive at R25 per head to get in and the most expensive dish on the menu was R45.  They seem to be interested in doing something with Rotary and we will see what pans out.

Lunch
We seem to have got it right....thank you everyone for your cooperation.  The next step is to see that it arrives on time!

This Week
Back by popular demand!  Geoff Green, as requested, is going to talk to us about growing vegetables at home as opposed to the townships.  Is this the beginning of the Rosebank Rotary Vegetable Fellowship I wonder?  My cucumber is bigger than yours?  We shall see.

This barren piece of ground became a vegetable garden and I'm sure our back gardens look nothing like this!





Blanket Drive
David Bradshaw attended the Blanket Drive Breakfast on our behalf.  It will be interesting to hear what he has to say.

Rotary Family Health Days
John Symons has this in hand and is contacting Morningside Club so that we can partner with them again this year.

SHELTERBOX AND ROTARY CLUBS TAKE ACTION FOLLOWING EARTHQUAKE IN ITALY

Buildings lie in ruins Wednesday, after a magnitude 6.2 earthquake leveled towns in central Italy. The quake killed at least 241 and left thousands homeless.
Photo Credit: Massimo Percossi/ANSA via AP
A 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck central Italy early Wednesday, killing more than 240 people and trapping an unknown number beneath rubble. Tremors were felt as far away as Rome, 100 km (65 miles) southwest of the quake's epicenter.
International disaster relief agency and Rotary International project partner  is sending a response team from its headquarters in the United Kingdom to the remote mountainous area of Italy where the destruction is most severe. The response team will arrive Friday, 26 August, to assess the area's needs.
Luca Della Volta, president of , the affiliate organization in Genoa, will accompany the response team. Della Volta is working with the Rotary Club of Rieti in District 2080, the club closest to the earthquake-affected sites, and will meet with officials of the Italian Civil Protection Department, fire department, and Red Cross to coordinate efforts.
If families and individuals made homeless by the disaster need emergency shelter, ShelterBox will send tents and other equipment from its locations in Italy and other sites across Europe. Della Volta says the most urgent need is for tents and relief supplies for the hospital of Rieti, where most of the patients from the destroyed hospital in Amatrice were taken.
"I am truly heartbroken over what has happened," says Della Volta, charter president of the Rotary E-Club of 2042 Italia. "As Rotarians, we are always available to help people in need."
Follow  for the latest updates.
Learn how you can help at .
Rotary Districts 2080 and 2090 in Italy have created a joint fundraising campaign to help communities damaged by the quake. Visit their Facebook pages for more information:

Monday 29 August 2016

Lunch, Firlands Fete, Jazz, Afrika Tikkun, an Invitation & BEER!

Last Week











It was a social meeting where we get to talk to each other and anything that may be necessary to discuss.  The discussion on the Elephant in the Room, otherwise known as LUNCH, was very fruitful.  As you see there is more choice and a range of prices.

The Elephant in the Room is something that is awkward but never discussed.  I am not sure that lunch fits into that category.

Anyway, here's a possibility, though I'm not sure that Rotary refers to Rotary but that the Sushi bar is a rotary one.

Firlands Fete





































Hi  El Presidente Peter,

Just got the figures through – Books banked after float R59 598.90 compared with 53562.00 last year so that’s brilliant! Nearly R7000 up on last year.

Total banked so far for the day R775 000.



Once again Hazel and I can’t thank all the Rotarians and Anns for their tremendous support of Firlands both throughout the year with various donations of books and goods as well as all their hard work on at the Book Stall on Fete Day. We feel privileged and honoured to be a part of such a great Club as The Rotary Club of Rosebank.

Thanks to Dave Bradshaw for rallying the troops and organizing the duty roster before disappearing on holiday. That’s what you call “delegation” – a key management tool to escape hard work. WE’RE very grateful to Dave as it takes a major strain off us having to plan the logistics.

Thanks again Peter to you and the Club for all the support.

Regards

Eddie & Hazel

TSA Firlands CH





This Week

Jazz & Blues Evening on Thursday.  I have sent everyone an email about this rather last minute invitation.
As you may know we are looking into the possibility of supplying Martin, the blind jazz guitarist, with a guitar to replace the one that was stolen.  The guitar was his sole means of financial support.

The ‘TJ’s  …I have no idea what that stands for…..have invited us to attend a jazz and blues evening at Marks Park on Thursday 1st September at 19,30.

Martin will  be one of the musicians so it will give us the opportunity to meet him and the ‘TJ’s

The evening will include dinner and Richard Tonkin says it’s about R80 per head.

It sounds like an entertaining evening out.


I know it’s short notice but if you are able to come….and partners, guests etc…. just confirm with Richard Tonkin richard@richton-ebc.com

As you can see,you don't have to eat, just pay R25 to get in and have a drink if you want one.

Your host Graham Tonkin presents an evening of live acoustic performances, featuring:

·       Graham and Martin the Busker
·       Josh and the Band
·       Ernesto Starkus Maximus
·       Kathmandu with Brendan Peacock
·       Jonathan Taylor Ensemble
@ Marks Park Sports Club, Judith Road, Emmarentia
Doors open 19:30, music starts at 20:00
Admission: R25 at the door.

Plenty of off-street parking. Light meals and bar service.



James & Charlotte Croswell in the Wilds of Malaysia





James has sent 'Make up Pictures'  Many thanks James, we're looking forward to hearing about the Clubs when you are back.....and this is business not pleasure!





Guest Speaker
Our speaker this week is Onyi Nwaneri, Head Development, Marketing & Communications of Afrika Tikkun.  She was previously with the United Nations Development Programme, Regency International and the Nigerian Templars Barristers & Solicitors.  
Afrika Tikkun is dedicated to investing in education, health and social services for children, youth and their families through its Community Centres of Excellence and strategic partnerships. Here's their website http://www.afrikatikkun.org/

They seem to have loads of local and overseas sponsors.  It also struck me that with all of these initiatives going on in education and training for youth why does nothing much seem to happen?

An Invitation from Kyalami

Dear Pres. Peter,

RESERVE THE DATE !

Our Club would like to invite you to join us for an evening of relaxed fellowship and an extraordinary guest speaker at our club venue, the Kyalami Country Club, on Thursday, 6 October.

We have been able to secure well-known theatre personality Richard Loring to give a talk on “A Technicolor Career”.
Guernsey’s famous son Richard arrived in South Africa in 1970, making his mark as the Narrator in the production of “Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat”. He has not looked back since and as a singer, performer, producer and theatre owner has been a lasting influence in South Africa’s performing arts.

Cost of the dinner will be R150 p/person.

We will be ready to welcome your club members including partners and guests for this special occasion and look forward to receive your indication of interest to join us.

Peter Kastner
Rotary Club of Kyalami
Club Service & Administration Director
Cell      082 776 5033


Now here's a Rotary Fellowship that would appeal to quite a few of us!

ROTARY MEMBERS LINK LOVE OF BEER, CLEAN WATER CRISIS

Beer festivals have a strong fellowship component. When people are sampling beers, they are socializing and having a good time. Founders of the Beers Rotarians Enjoy Worldwide maintains a list of Rotary-sponsored beer festivals and encourages clubs to hold them.
Photo Credit: Libby March
When you sit down to enjoy a beer, you probably don't spend a lot of time thinking about one of its main ingredients – water. Or the fact that 3,000 children die each day from diseases caused by unsafe water.
A group of innovative Rotarians aren't just thinking; they're doing something about it.
Their group, , has organized events around the world and is working to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for Rotary's global water, sanitation, and hygiene efforts.
"By drinking a beer, I can help bring fresh water to a village in Africa," says Steven Lack, a member of the Rotary Club of Pleasant Hill, California, USA. "If you can drink beer and some of the money goes to doing good in the world, that is something you can feel good about."
Fellowships like BREW are Rotary's way of bringing together members who share a particular passion. Rotarian Action Groups unite members who have expertise in a specific service area. The beer fellowship's leaders realized that joining forces with an action group dedicated to providing access to clean water would create a sum larger than the two parts.
"Beer and water have a natural affinity; you need water to brew beer" says Moses Aryee, past president of the Rotary Club of Accra-West, Ghana, and co-chair of the beer fellowship. "Our vision is a global approach to fresh water around the world, because beer is around the world."
The fellowship members are working with the  to identify specific water projects to support by funneling 25 percent of the fellowship's dues to those projects, says Lack, the fellowship's vice chair.
The members also plan to approach major brewers on each continent to seek financial support for water projects, much as the nonprofit .
These projects have the potential to improve people's quality of life in several ways. Every day, 8,000 people die of waterborne disease. In addition, women in many parts of the world spend hours a day fetching water, time they could spend caring for their families, generating income, or making other contributions to society.
"We are very enthusiastic about the opportunities to work together," says F. Ronald Denham, a past chair of the Water and Sanitation Action Group and a member of the Rotary Club of Toronto Eglinton, in Ontario, Canada. "On our side, we can present and describe the projects. BREW will establish relationships with the breweries. And some of the members are senior executives in breweries. It's a wonderful synergy."

A BLUEPRINT FOR FUNDRAISING

Lack and Aryee founded the beer fellowship in 2014 after reaching the same conclusion at roughly the same time: Beer is fun and promotes fellowship, both of which make Rotary more appealing. And by bringing together people who share an interest in beer, you can unite them for the purpose of doing good.
"We're always talking about making Rotary fun," says Lack. "When people drink beer, they are socializing. It's one of those things that brings us together, that makes us equal."
In addition to working with the action group, the fellowship promotes the idea of good times and service by helping clubs organize beer festivals. These events appeal to younger people, raise money for club projects, and are easy to plan. According to Lack, all you need is to:
  • Approach a microbrewery or two to donate beer
  • Bring food or secure a food truck
  • Line up a band
  • Pitch a tent
"Microbrewing has become a huge industry, and this is definitely a way to capitalize on the popularity of that," notes Lack, who emphasizes that these fests aren't about getting drunk. The events typically last only a few hours and distribute small sampling cups that hold only four to six ounces. And standing in line limits the amount of time that people have to drink.
The State of Jefferson Brew Fest in Dunsmuir, California, attracts 1,500 people every August and last year netted $15,000 for club projects, says John Poston, a member of the Dunsmuir Rotary Club. It's been so successful, the club added a home-brew competition and cornhole tournament this year, and plans to expand the event to two days next year. Other growing festivals include the Weed Brew Fest in California and Brew on the Bay in Key Largo, Florida. The beer fellowship promotes a list of brew fests sponsored by Rotary clubs.

GOOD FOR CLUB MORALE

When Lenie Jordan, president of the Rotary Club of Franklin, North Carolina, and part owner of his town's microbrewery, heard about the fellowship, he got 20 members of the club to sign up.
"It has been a point of interest for many of our members, and an opportunity to come together in a more casual environment," says Jordan. "I would attribute at least one new member to the fellowship. She attended one of our field trips and said she wanted to join. It's had a positive effect both on membership, and on general morale."
The fellowship's interest in beer gives members an opportunity to share insights and to learn on an international scale. For instance, members recently heard how the composition of water can determine the type of beer an area is famous for. According to All About Beer magazine, Dublin became known for its darker beers because of its water's high alkaline content. Since yeast doesn't perform as well with high alkalinity, brewers gradually discovered they got better results by roasting the barley, which both lowers the alkaline level and makes a darker beer. Similarly, the soft water in the Czech town of Pilsen made it ideal for the world's first pilsners.
Another useful fact: Beer has historically provided a safe drinking alternative when clean water is in short supply, because of the boiling step in the brewing process.
"We've all been to places where we wouldn't drink the water," says Lack, but where "they make a heck of a beer."
In May, more than 60 members of the fellowship, including beer lovers from Russia, South America, Australia, Japan, India, Europe, Africa, and North America, gathered at the Devil's Door Brew Pub in Seoul during Rotary's annual convention, to sample what was on tap and to socialize. Lack says plans are in the works for a brewery tour every night in Atlanta, Georgia, during Rotary's 2017 convention.
"There are all kinds of microbreweries around the city, some owned by Rotary members," he says. "We're also looking to be able to pour beer in our booth (in the House of Friendship). You lose some credibility as a beer fellowship if you aren't pouring beer."

Tuesday 23 August 2016

Committees, Social, LUNCH! Donovan, Buffy Sainte-Marie and More.

Last Week
It was the first of our Committee Meetings within a meeting.  I've had almost no feedback.  The major problem was that so many Rotarians weren't there but as that also happens for any committee meeting I suppose that's to be expected.
One major difference is  that we have had practically no Committee Reports. Possibly that is because we are topsy-turvy with the Board Meeting but that'll be rectified next month.  The important thing is that every member of the Club becomes involved in some way or another.

This Week
It's a social meeting. Last year David Bradshaw was asked to stop having a speaker on the last Friday of the month so that we could be sociable and talk to each other.....and tell jokes.....and generally misbehave.

Lunch
I had a meeting with Wanderers after lunch last week to ask why we were being charged more than the bar price for our Chicken Cheese Burger and was told that it was to equalise the more expensive meals we had such as fish.  I pointed out that we have never had fish.  I also commented on the Vegetarian Pasta.  I immediately assumed it would be pasta with a Neapolitana sauce...not pasta with big carrots and vegetables on top!  Quite disgusting!
I have said that we should scrap the vegetarian option as we can order a pizza if necessary and should rather have a choice of ordinary dishes.  We will select two items from the menu each week for the following week.  I have done so arbitrarily this week.

Jean Bernardo's Bottle Top Collection
Jean's home has practically vanished under plastic bottle tops.  She dug herself out last week to say that the collection was coming to an end at the end of the month.  If you haven't gien her the bottle tops and tags by then you will have to start your own private collection. Maybe your great grandchildren will be able to sell it at great price.

Vegetable Growing



Everyone wanted Geoff Green to come back and chat about growing vegetables at home....he's coming on the 7th October.





District PR Seminar
Hugh Rix attended and this is what he had to say about it:

The Seminar was attended by thirty clubs and there will be a follow up in October. 

   District is planning a Black Tie Dinner, a Radio Telethon where listeners can pledge donations to the Rotary Foundation and other functions to raise money to celebrate the Foundation's centenary.
    

   Donovan  
  An interesting article about him below.  Buffy Sainte Marie wrote this song in the basement of The Purple Onion coffee house in Toronto in 1963 after witnessing wounded soldiers returning from Vietnam. She has described the song as being "About individual responsibility for war and how the old feudal thinking kills us all." Though not a hit for her it was covered by British folk singer Donovan in 1965 on an EP titled The Universal Soldier, which was a success and bought attention to the song. In the US it was released as a single peaking at #53. The song became an anthem of the Vietnam Peace movement.

Sainte-Marie naively sold the publishing rights to this song for a dollar to a man she met one night at the Gaslight Cafe in Greenwich Village who wrote a contract on a napkin. She recalled to The Guardian July 31, 2009: "Ten years later I bought it back for 25,000 bucks – the good news is that I had 25,000 bucks."

Here's Buffy Sainte-Marie with the original version....for those of you who like this sort of thing







      HALL OF FAME SINGER DONOVAN BECOMES A ROTARY POLIO AMBASSADOR
Hall of Fame folk singer and polio survivor Donovan recently became a Rotary polio ambassador.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Planet Earth Publicity
Legendary singer and polio survivor Donovan Leitch, better known simply as Donovan, has joined Rotary in its fight to eradicate the paralyzing disease that afflicted him during much of his childhood.
Donovan contracted polio at age three in Glasgow, Scotland. The disease weakened his right leg and left it thinner and shorter than the other. Confined to his bed for much of his childhood, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame singer said his father would read him poetry.
In a recent , Donovan said that listening to poetry piqued his interest in creative writing. “If I hadn’t had that experience maybe I wouldn’t have gone on to write and sing my own songs for the past half a century.
“I feel strongly that having a disability in one area makes you explore others instead. That was the case for me after having polio,” says Donovan, who recently became a Rotary polio ambassador.
Donovan went on to record several hit albums and singles in the UK, United States, and other countries. His top singles include “Mellow Yellow” and “Hurdy Gurdy Man.” Donovan collaborated with The Beatles on songs including “Yellow Submarine” and has shared the stage with musical icons Bob Dylan and Joan Baez.
“Having had polio never held me back as I got older. Although having one leg smaller than the other isn’t much fun I could always get about without any trouble,” Donovan says. “Luckily in the music industry everyone was only interested in my singing and playing and not the size of my legs.”
As a Rotary polio ambassador, Donovan will support the , a collaboration between Rotary International in Great Britain and Ireland and the Royal Horticultural Society. The purple represents the colored dye that health workers use during immunization campaigns to mark the fingers of children who have received the polio vaccine.
“It was very easy to join this campaign because I had polio, and I wanted to tell everybody that it’s almost eradicated around the world,” Donovan says. “This is very important. I want to help with that last push, which is always the hardest. ”


Tuesday 16 August 2016

Philippa Robinson, A New Style Business Meeting, Blanket Drive & RI President for 2018/19

Last Week
Philippa Robinson gave us a most entertaining talk about what it was like to be on SA Masterchef.  How it was a bit like being a soldier in war.....hours and hours of waiting and then an adrenalin rush as you go over the top, metaphorically, of course.  Having a 'minder' all the time, or was it a prison warder?


It was a fun talk and I don't have a picture because now it is even easier for me to forget to take one but this one certainly captures the flavour of the moment.


This Week
It is our experimental style business meeting where we will effectively have Rotarians sitting in committees so that they will be able to have a committee meeting and also give feed back to the Club.
It will probably take a bit of getting used to but many other Rotary Clubs function this way and if we can cut out the need for yet another meeting, so much the better.


Blanket Drive

We have received photos of some of the 100 blankets purchased by Power Construction through us.  These are being handed out at Diepsloot Old Age Home and this is one of the few pictures that doesn't make it look as if the ANC are supplying the blankets.   ANC T-shirts are being worn by the people distributing them....just by chance, of course.

Here are the final figures for the Blanket Drive....congratulations to David Bradshaw who put it all together.

Thanks to all those who helped, with special thanks to Jane Lagaay (S.G. Mobility) who bought 900, James Croswell (Power Construction) 100 and to the efforts of Cesare Lidovich and Tutty Faberwith the separate weekends at Norwood Mall.


Charities Supported

Paltive Care (Bara) 100
Phutaditjhba (Alex) 100
Gracepoint Methodist (various) 100
Lesedi Community (Lanseria)    80
St. Vincent de Paul Society       65
SAPS Trauma (Anns)                40
Thandanani (Zandspruit)          30
Assemblies of God (Alex)          20
St. Francis, Alex                       20
Super Group (SG Mobility)       900
Power Construction 100
Rivonia Catholic Church 252
Highlands North Boys Interact   30
Leventon Bonner                    41
King Edwards School               80
Rainbow Creche                      30
Boikanyo (Protea South)          106
Gracepoint                              11

Total:                                2105


SAM OWORI IS SELECTED TO BE 2018-19 ROTARY PRESIDENT

Samuel Frobisher Owori, a Ugandan businessman and a member of the Rotary Club of Kampala, will become president-nominee on 1 October.
The 2016-17 Nominating Committee for President of Rotary International has unanimously nominated Samuel Frobisher Owori, of the Rotary Club of Kampala, Uganda, to be the president of Rotary International in 2018-19. He will be declared the president-nominee on 1 October if no challenging candidates have been suggested.
Owori says he sees in Rotary "an incredible passion to make a difference." As president, he plans to "harness that enthusiasm and pride so that every project becomes the engine of peace and prosperity."
Owori's chief concerns as a Rotary leader are membership and extension. Since he served as district governor, the number of clubs in Uganda has swelled from nine to 89. He urges past, present, and future leaders to work together to engage more women, youth program participants, alumni, and community members to increase Rotary's membership in the coming years.
"There are many places which need Rotary and numerous potential members who have never been invited," he says. "The problem is Rotarians who got in and closed the doors."
Owori is chief executive officer of the Institute of Corporate Governance of Uganda. Before that, he was executive director of the African Development Bank, managing director of Uganda Commercial Bank Ltd., and director of Uganda Development Bank. He has studied law, employment relations, business management, corporate resources management, microfinance, and marketing at institutions in England, Japan, Switzerland, Tanzania, and the United States, including Harvard Business School.
Since becoming a member in 1978, Owori has served Rotary as regional Rotary Foundation coordinator, regional RI membership coordinator, RI Representative to the United Nations Environment Program and UN-Habitat, and RI director. He has been a member or chair of several committees, including the International PolioPlus Committee, the Drug Abuse Prevention Task Force, and the Audit Committee. Most recently, Owori served as trustee of The Rotary Foundation, chair of The Rotary Foundation's Finance Committee, and a member of the Investment Committee. Owori is a Benefactor of The Rotary Foundation, and he and his wife, Norah, are Major Donors and Paul Harris Fellows.
The Nominating Committee members are Sudarshan Agarwal, Rotary Club of Delhi, Delhi, India; Şafak Alpay, Rotary Club of Istanbul-Sisli, Turkey; Ronald L. Beaubien, Rotary Club of Coronado, California, USA; John B. Boag, Rotary E-Club of District 9650, New South Wales, Australia; Elio Cerini, Rotary Club of Milano Duomo, Italy; Luiz Coelho de Oliveira, Rotary Club of Limeira-Leste, São Paulo, Brazil; Frank N. Goldberg, Rotary Club of Omaha-Suburban, Nebraska, USA; Kenneth W. Grabeau, Rotary Club of Nashua West, New Hampshire, USA; Jackson S.L. Hsieh, Rotary Club of Taipei Sunrise, Taiwan; Mark Daniel Maloney (chair), Rotary Club of Decatur, Alabama, USA; Barry Matheson, Rotary Club of Jessheim, Norway; Kazuhiko Ozawa, Rotary Club of Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan; Ekkehart Pandel, Rotary Club of Bückeburg, Germany; Noraseth Pathmanand, Rotary Club of Bang Rak, Thailand; Robert S. Scott, Rotary Club of Cobourg, Ontario, Canada; John C. Smarge, Rotary Club of Naples, Florida, USA; Michael F. Webb, Rotary Club of Mendip, Somerset, England.