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from president david

 
This week we had a club assembly and thanks to the club for making the effort to be early. I think a solid effort early in the Rotary is important and robust discussions give us the best opportunity for quality programmes. Thanks also to all the directors who I know put considerable effort to prepare for the night. I hope this to be the basis of the final budgets recognising there may be some changes during the year.
 
I was watching closely all the committee’s working and whilst some got finished close to the nights end most appeared to be working close to the finishing time. I let the committee’s work, but I recognised the need for all members to be aware of the clubs activities in total. I hope we may be able to summarise this in the next few meetings.
 
An important point raised by Jim that cannot be underestimated is the lower than expected return from CQ, most likely due to the economy, this programme has really be the pillar of our income and we need to manage this carefully. Please support this activity as best we can. I know we will make a success of the night.
 
Subs of course was briefly discussed, no increase is ever welcomed but it looks as though they will be between $220-$230, as I mentioned approx. 75% of the costs are Rotary Fees – More details will be provided.
 
Next week we have 2 really important guests, they being Allan Howell from the Geelong Regional Library & Heritage Centre, which will be terrific as we have all seen this historic icon for Geelong being built over the last few years, and also Don Williams who has had over 40 years Rotary service. It’s an achievement that requires celebration and acknowledgement.
 
Another great week in front of us
 
“be a gift to the world”   
David Farnsworth
 
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Not a lot to report, but wasn't it a great that we had a good turn-up for the committee meeting night and that most attendees actually arrived at the allotted time !!! It was interesting in our Committee that after a bit of discussion about how worthy all of the previous programmes were and how it would be difficult to cut any of them if we were requested to reduce our budget (due to the predicted lesser income from Circus Quirkus) we came to the conclusion that we should "clean the slate" and start again with no preconceived ideas about what projects we should be doing. So that's what we're doing - taking a step back to have a fresh look at what we could be doing this year. Yes it'll take a bit longer to get things going but it'll be worth it !!
 
Announcements
Ros wants us to spread the word about our guest speaker next week being Alan Howells - the Manager of the Library and Heritage Centre - who will tell the story of the new building and facilities.
Brenton said thanks to all who helped with the Barwon Water Barbecue last Thursday. We've offered to help Doug Thompson with the Uniting Care barbecue at Bunnings on 15th August. Volunteers give names to Brenton please.
Anne was happy to tell us that Matthew (our NYSF candidate) has been selected and will be going to Canberra early next year. Thanks to those who assisted with coaching.
Jim reported that the receipts to date for Circus Quirkus were approx $74,000 - well down on the target of $120,000 with only 2 weeks to go. He's now asking for volunteers - 10 for each session (12.30 and 5.00) so give your name to Jim please. You need to arrive about 45 minutes before the session starts to control the crowds.
Ross needs to update our individual dietary requirements with Lyndon Grove - vegetarian, gluten free or whatever. Email or phone Ross with your requirements or you'll just be served whatever's going. This applies to the fruit for dessert too - but if you ask for fruit, that's what you'll get every week.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Ross (on behalf of Lyndon Grove) needs confirmation re member dietary requirements, including new members, by this week’s meeting.   He has a list of current variations and needs to know if any of these have changed, please.
Note also that if you order a fruit platter for dessert (as a regular order) you can’t change it on the night just because you like sticky date pudding or choccy éclairs!
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POLIO THIS WEEK

Polio this week as of 22 July 2015
Last week, Forbes.com featured a live discussion on the global polio eradication effort with Dr Hamid Jafari, Director for the Global Polio Eradication Initiative at WHO, and Dr John Sever, Vice Chair of Rotary International’s Polio Plus Program.  A podcast of the discussion can be accessed here.  

 

  • 24 July 2015 will mark 12 months since the last reported case due to wild poliovirus in Nigeria had onset of paralysis.  See ‘Nigeria’ section for more.   As Nigeria approaches a year with no child paralyzed with polio this week, influential figures are calling for continued vigilance and commitment both from the Nigerian government and internationally.   
Wild poliovirus type 1 and Circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus cases
 

Total cases

Year-to-date 2015

Year-to-date 2014

Total in 2014 

WPV

 cVDPV

 WPV

 cVDPV

 WPV

 cVDPV

Globally

33

9

128

26

359

55

- in endemic countries

33

1

112

26

340

 52

- in non-endemic countries

0

8

16

 0

19

 3

  

- See more at: http://www.polioeradication.org/dataandmonitoring/poliothisweek.aspx#sthash.1AMPOHuw.dpuf

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news from the district

The following letter has been received from RI President Ravindran and TRF Chair Ray Klinginsmith
 

Dear Fellow Rotarians,

We’re delighted to report that [today] Nigeria has passed one year with no new cases of the wild poliovirus.

This is the longest the country has ever gone without a case of polio and a critical step on the path toward a polio-free Africa. We’ve come a long way since the bleak years when the virus reached its peak. It was only a decade ago that polio struck 12,631 people in Africa- three quarters of all cases in the world.

We congratulate Rotarians who have donated $688.5 million to fight polio throughout Africa, including more than $200 million to Nigeria. We congratulate Rotarians from Africa and around the world who have also devoted countless hours to immunize the children who now have the opportunity for healthier, happier lives.

With the ambitious scope of Rotary’s PolioPlus program, our efforts are having a far-reaching, transformative impact beyond the eradication of polio.

With the infrastructure put in place by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), Nigeria not only reduced its polio caseload by 90% in 2014, but it also successfully thwarted the world’s most lethal Ebola outbreak to date, in only 90 days, a response faster than even the U.S., and rightly praised by the World Health Organization as ‘world-class’.

In Nigeria and elsewhere, the Initiative provides a blueprint to reach all children with a package of lifesaving vaccines and health interventions. This is a vital step on the path to human development, as we know that with improved public health, more resources can be channeled towards education and economic growth.

If the stringent World Health Organization testing criteria are met, then Nigeria could be removed from the list of polio-endemic countries in September of this year.

However, our work is not done. We know that polio can easily return, with devastating consequences, if we don’t stamp it out now.

We must act, as Rotarians do, to build on the progress made and stop polio once and for all. We have a narrow window of opportunity to achieve this, and if we fail, we could witness up to 200,000 cases a year in the near future.

So how can we finally make history and end polio now?

Today, we must protect the progress made in Nigeria, and support Pakistan and Afghanistan, the other two remaining polio-endemic countries.

Protecting progress means enhancing surveillance, routine immunization, and community engagement in Nigeria and other countries where transmission has been stopped.

Supporting Pakistan and Afghanistan means full political and financial commitment to eradicating polio; vaccination of all children in these countries; high quality surveillance, and the accomplishment of all the expert recommendations as part of the GPEI’s Polio Eradication and Endgame Strategic Plan.

Visit endpolio.org to download a toolkit of materials to help you share this progress – and the need for continued commitment in the coming years – with your Rotary club, your communities and your elected officials.

This all requires time, energy and investment. Pakistan’s budget requirements for polio eradication activities from 2016-2018 amounts to $305.7 million, and if we can raise this sum now, a polio-free world will reap financial savings of US$50 billion over the next 20 years and prove what’s possible when the global community comes together to improve children’s lives.

Your donation to PolioPlus will be matched 2 to 1 by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, tripling your contribution.

Thirty years ago we told the world what Rotary believes: that we can achieve the eradication of only the second human disease in history. Our belief is becoming reality. For every child, let’s make sure that reality is a bright one.

Warm Regards,
Rotary International President K.R. "Ravi" Ravindran and Rotary Foundation Chair Ray Klinginsmith
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In the Blue Book towards the back (actually on page 24) you'll find a list of duties for the "Chair of the Day".
One of the items is to do a letter of thanks and forward them a copy of our bulletin which includes their presentation.
It's very important that this is followed up - we rely on high quality speakers being prepared to take some time to come and speak to us, so the least we can do is say thanks !!!!
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rotary moment

By Şafak Alpay, RI director-elect and a member of the Rotary Club of Istanbul-Sisli, Turkey

About ten years ago, an ambitious literacy campaign was started in our region using the Concentrated Language Encounter (CLE) method. Like all other clubs, my club Sisli participated with great enthusiasm, running a course for women in one of Istanbul’s slum neighborhoods.

On graduation day, one young woman who was among those to receive their certificates captured everyone’s attention. She had both her lower arms missing, and as her certificate was placed under her armpit, Emine timidly asked her instructor to get the sheet of paper she kept in her pocket. It was a thank-you letter written to the person who taught her to read and write.

We couldn’t help but think, “She could read, yes, but how could she possibly write?” The instructor thanked her for her lovely letter, and also thanked the friend who had helped her write it, at which point Emine was furious.

“I wrote it myself,” she protested, “give me a pencil and a piece of paper, and I’ll show you how.”

And to our amazement, she wrote down the first sentence of her letter using a pencil she clutched between her toes. As we tried hard to hold back the tears and overcome our astonishment, her classmates were cheering and applauding.

A Rotary moment is when the magic happens.

If you’re curious, the sequel to this story went like this: The Istanbul Rotary Club fitted Emine with state-of-the-art prosthetic arms, which operated by receiving and interpreting signals from her brain. She started to wear a watch, something she had longed for all her life. She continued to work hard on her literacy skills, and finally become a CLE teacher herself.

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leave of absence

 

David Sinclair is on leave from 15th August to 23rd September and then 27th September to 10th October

Robert Johnson is on leave from 2nd September to 10th October

Terri Bosna is on leave from 3rd September to 14th October

Ray Dunn is on leave until Christmas time.

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THE NEXT 4 WEEKS

 
 
30th July 2015      Geelong Regional Library & Heritage Centre      Guest Speaker - Alan Howell
Lyndon Grove
Chair - Ros Horne
Welcome, Badges  and Property - Ray Dunn & Doug Green
 
5th August 2015 (this is WEDNESDAY)
CIRCUS QUIRKUS AT THE ARENA
performances at 12.30 and 5.00
 
6th August 2015
NO LYNDON GROVE MEETING
 
13th August 2015 - DG Visit
Lyndon Grove
Chair - David Farnsworth
Welcome, Badges  and Property - Peter Hudson & Colin Hunt
 
20th August 2015 - Fellowship evening including "theme and trivia"
Lyndon Grove
Chair - Colin Bayliss
Welcome, Badges  and Property - Peter Jackman & Linda Kelly
 
 
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celebrations 24th to 30th july

 
This is where I get to celebrate my own birthday on 25th !!!!
and that's all for this week folks!!!!
 
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INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES

 

Make it a point to do something every day that you don't want to do. This is the golden rule for acquiring the habit of doing your duty without pain. – Mark Twain, 1835-1910, American Writer and Humorist

Experience is one thing you can't get for nothing. – Oscar Wilde, 1854-1900, Irish Dramatist/Novelist/Poet

It is better to offer no excuse than a bad one. – George Washington, 1732-1799, 1st President of the United States
 

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Humour ?

My boss is without peer when it comes to the rules and regulations that customs officials must follow. But when it comes to the law, well, that's a different story.
We were attending a court case in which we were prosecuting a smuggler. The judge asked the court, "Who is making these allegations?"
My boss stood up and proclaimed, "I am the alligator, your honor."
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I urgently needed a few days off work, but, I knew the Boss would not allow me to take leave  I thought that maybe if I acted "Crazy" then he would tell me to take a few days off.  So, I hung upside-down on the ceiling & made funny noises.
My co-worker asked me what I was doing. I told her that I was pretending to be a light bulb, so, that the Boss might think I was "crazy" and give me a few days off.
A few minutes later the Boss came into the office and asked, "What are you doing?"  I told him I was a light bulb.  He said, "You are clearly stressed out. Go home & recuperate for a couple of days."  I jumped down & walked out of the office.
When my co-worker followed me, the Boss asked her  "and where do you think you're going?!"
 She said, "I'm going home too, I can't work in the dark!!
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"How long have you been driving without a tail light?" asked the policeman after pulling over a motorist.
The driver jumped out, ran to the rear of his car, and gave a long, painful groan.
He seemed so upset that the cop was moved to ease up on him a bit.
"Come on, now," he said, "you don't have to take it so hard. It isn't that serious."
"It isn't?" cried the motorist. "Then you know what happened to my boat and trailer?"
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"We used to play spin the bottle a lot when I was a kid. A girl would spin the bottle and if it pointed to you when it stopped, the girl could either kiss you or give you a dime. By the time I was 14, I owned my own home." --Gene Perret
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Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
Sage