Saturday, 29 January 2011

Libwin, Cycling and a new General Secretary for RI.

Last week's meeting was a presentation by Rob Basson of Libwin on the ease of establishing proper library systems for big and small libraries.  It was apparent that the system maybe of use in some of our projects such as the CCCCC's.  We were also delighted to have Margi Bell of Libwin as our guest as well.

In fact we had quite a number of visitors.  The Rev Priscilla Everson came to tell us about progress with her Arts Project in Coronationville and introduce Eloise Cupido who is the Director, Adele Thomas came to promote the next Rotary Membership Seminar and Terry Marshall, who was Extension Officer from our Sponsoring Club, Morningside before we were chartered also came after a long absence.

This week it's quite a different talk.  12 of our members were acting as marshals in a cycle race at Henley on Klip last weekend.  This has now become such a good fund-raising option for the club that we will be involved with the Carnival City/Macsteel National Classic Cycle Challenge - 2011.   Steve Clemison and Bert Armstrong  (no relation) will be visiting us from the Rotary Club of Germiston, the organisers of the race, and talking about our possible involvement.


Getting to know John Hewko


 
 
 

Attorney John Hewko, who takes over as RI general secretary on 1 July, addresses participants at the 2011 International Assembly. Rotary Images/Alyce Henson
Rotary International named attorney and former senior U.S. government official John Hewko as its new general secretary, beginning 1 July. RI News recently sat down with him to talk about his background and why he took the job.
Within days of the announcement of your being hired, you met Rotary leaders in Ukraine and addressed incoming district governors in San Diego at the International Assembly. What did you tell them?
I expressed to them how honored and delighted I am to have been chosen as Rotary’s next general secretary. I also explained my motivation and interest in the position and assured them that my top priority will be to make sure that the Secretariat remains an effective and useful resource for the clubs, so that they are able to grow and are better able to carry out the mission of Rotary. I was particularly moved by the fact that the first Rotarians I addressed after the announcement were in Ukraine, where I had been a member of the Kyiv club in the early 1990s.
When did you first hear about Rotary?
My father has been an active Rotarian for almost 30 years in Clarkston, Michigan, a small town north of Detroit. Seeing my father’s enthusiasm for Rotary and the impact that his club’s service projects had on the local community made me appreciate the beauty of Rotary – grassroots people pulling together on their own initiative, trying to do good in their communities. When I would visit my parents while living abroad, my dad would occasionally invite me to speak at his club. I was always impressed by the quality of the members and their passion and dedication to the organization and its principles.  
Tell us about your experience with Rotary in Kyiv.
When I was working in Ukraine in the early 1990s, my father’s club was one of the sponsors of the first Rotary club in Kyiv. My dad came to the United States from Ukraine after the Second World War and had a strong interest in seeing Rotary develop in his former homeland. Through his involvement in helping the Kyiv club get up and running, I became interested in the effort and was fortunate enough to become a charter member of the club.
Why were you interested in the job of RI general secretary?
As I mentioned during my address to the International Assembly, first and foremost, the Rotary mottoes of Service Above Self and Doing Good in the World, The Four-Way Test, the focus on integrity, and the promotion of goodwill, peace, and understanding through the fellowship of business, professional, and community leaders – these are all ideas and concepts that I believe in and strongly support. For me, this will not be so much a job as a passion. Second, there is no organization in the world that is better positioned to carry out that mission. Of course, my dad’s involvement in Rotary sparked a keen interest. This is also an exciting time to be joining the Rotary family, as the organization tries to move to the next level through the implementation of RI’s Strategic Plan and The Rotary Foundation’s Future Vision Plan. Finally, the fact that Rotary is a truly international organization dovetails with my own professional and personal background and experience.
What professional experiences helped prepare you for your new role?
There were several. I was an international partner in Baker & McKenzie (B&M), the largest law firm in the world, with over 3,000 lawyers in more than 60 offices around the world. B&M is a very diverse and international organization, where a majority of the attorneys are non-Americans. Just as Rotary, it has to strike a balance between maintaining global standards and procedures, while at the same time allowing for enough autonomy at the local level. My time with B&M was spent almost exclusively outside the United States – in Russia, Ukraine, and the Czech Republic. So it was excellent training in terms of understanding how large, multinational, multicultural organizations operate, as well as understanding the challenges they face.
The other experience was at the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a U.S. government agency created in 2004 under President George W. Bush to provide development assistance to the world’s poorest countries. I managed the largest department at MCC, and during my tenure I oversaw the development and negotiation of foreign assistance agreements totaling $6.3 billion with 18 countries for transportation, water and sanitation, rural development, microfinance, health, education, and other development projects. I’ve also spent time in think tanks and written on international development issues. These experiences, I believe, have given me a perspective on the world that will allow me to better serve Rotary, its mission, and most important, its diverse membership.
How does Rotary’s work fit in with the international development world from your perspective?
There is currently a spirited global debate in the development community on how best to deliver assistance to the world’s poor. I would like to see Rotary at the discussion table, taking a leading role and making a meaningful contribution to this debate. I’d like to see Rotary partner more effectively with other foundations and strategic partners in order to better leverage our resources. In my opinion, one of the principal goals of government and nongovernmental organizations’ development activities should be to create the conditions for sustainable, private-sector-led economic growth. If you add up all of the official development assistance in the world, it pales in comparison to the resources available in the private sector. This is where Rotary, with its enormous network of private-sector leaders, can play a very important role.
What is the greatest lesson you learned from your international development experience that might be applied at Rotary International?
The biggest challenge is sustainability. The world is littered with humanitarian and development projects that ultimately failed because they were not sustainable. Putting a water pump in a village is only half the battle. Equally important is providing the village with the training and the financial means to operate, repair, and maintain the pump once the donor has left. If a project is not sustainable, if it can’t survive on its own without ongoing outside financial or technical support, then you may want to reevaluate its design. I would urge Rotarians to look at a potential project through two important lenses: Will it lead to economic growth? And, is it sustainable?
What are Rotary’s greatest strengths?
I think the greatest strength of the organization is its membership. You have 1.2 million professionals and businesspeople around the world, all with influence, all with connections, and all with a deep grassroots presence in their communities. There are very few nongovernmental organizations in the world with that kind of global reach and global presence.



Sunday, 23 January 2011

Woodside Sanctuary, Alex Gano, Libwin and a Great Theme for the 2011 -12 Rotary Year.

Last week Hugh Rix laid on a breakfast for us at Woodside Sanctuary and explained how much money would be saved by the installation of Solar Heating...they spend R45 000 a month on electricity!  We also met our Ambassadorial Scholar, Alex Gano from Nashville.  Here he is holding up his sponsoring Rotary Club banner, Charleston, Illinois where he originally come from.  Unfortunately there were mice in the hold on the plane so, as you can see, it is a little frayed around the edges.  This is what the Charleston Rotary Club have to say about him:


Alex Gano, a Rotary District Ambassadorial Scholar for 2011, was the guest speaker at the December 21 meeting of the Charleston Rotary Club.  Alex graduated from Charleston High School in 2004 and received a B.S. from Vanderbilt University in 2008 with degrees in Economics and History.  For the last two and a half years Alex has worked as an admissions counselor at Vanderbilt.


On January 15, 2011, Alex departs for an eleven month Ambassadorial Scholarship at Witwatersrand University in Johannesburg, South Africa where he will pursue a Master’s degree in International Economics.  Alex will be the guest of the Rotary Club of Johannesburg which is in Rotary District 9400 and Mike Vink and his wife Linda.  He is looking forward to working with the local Rotary Club which has three exciting projects in the local townships: 1) wheel chairs for injured miners; 2) programs for children in orphanages who have lost one or both parents to AIDS; and, 3) providing electricity for a special needs orphanage.  Alex is also looking forward to the Rotary District conference in Botswana in June 2011.

You can keep track of Alex’s adventures in South Africa on his Facebook account.  He also plans to Skype into the Charleston Rotary Club meetings once a month.  Thanks for coming and sharing your plans for the next eleven months Alex. Have a great trip and stay in touch.

You can see that he is beardless in this picture and that the new beard is an integral part of the economic course at Wits as it does save a considerable amount of electrical power over the duration of the course.



Our speaker this week is Robert Basson, GM of Libwin Library Systems.  

These are library systems that are used in schools from Roedean to Ixopo Primary and could be of interest to some of our projects such as CCCCC's.





RI President Elect Kalyan Banerjee unveils the theme for 2011 - 12

RI President-elect Kalyan Banerjee will ask Rotarians to Reach Within to Embrace Humanity during the 2011-12 Rotary year.
Banerjee unveiled the RI theme during the opening plenary session of the 2011 International Assembly, a training event for incoming district governors.
He urged participants to harness their inner resolve and strength to achieve success in Rotary.
"In order to achieve anything in this world, a person has to use all the resources he can draw on. And the only place to start is with ourselves and within ourselves," Banerjee said.
Once Rotarians find their inner strength, he continued, they can accomplish great things in their communities and around the world.
"Discover yourself, develop the strengths within you, and then unhesitatingly, unflinchingly, go forth and encircle the world, to embrace humanity," he said.
Banerjee emphasized the family as a starting point in serving others. "The communities we live in are not built of individual people but of families -- families living in homes together, sharing their lives and their resources and their common destinies. Good families lead to good neighborhoods, and good neighborhoods build good communities."
Rotarians can focus on projects that support families, such as those that provide safe housing or improve maternal and child health, he said.
Continuity in Rotary’s work, including polio eradication, is also important, Banerjee said. "There are so many things we are indeed good at: working for clean, safe water; spreading literacy; working in so many ways with the New Generations, our youth, in our newest Avenue of Service and assisting them to become the leaders of tomorrow."
Citing Mahatma Gandhi’s call to "be the change you wish to see in the world," Banerjee said Rotarians should also focus on change.
"If we wish for peace, we start by living in peace ourselves, in our homes and in our communities," he explained. "If we wish environmental degradation to stop, if we wish to reduce child mortality or to prevent hunger, we must be the instrument of that change -- and recognize that it must start within us, with each of us."
The theme inspired the roomful of Rotary leaders, including Jogesh Gambhir, governor-elect of District 3250 (India).
“It is a touching theme, but also very purposeful and meaningful,” said Gambhir. “I’m sure we can inspire the clubs into action to solve the problems in the community. That’s the ultimate goal of Rotary.”
“There are no words for me to describe how remarkable it was. To me, he was right on and weaved everything together beautifully," said Jane Millar, governor-elect of District 6290 (parts of Ontario, Canada, and Michigan, USA). "I am so thrilled to be a district governor when this man is president.
“I loved the focus on family, continuity, and change," she added. "Family is the center of everything, and not just our immediate family. It’s also about the family of Rotary and the world as one big family."

Tuesday, 18 January 2011

Champagne at the Sligchers


We have to have the host and hostess prominently displayed!  Unfortunately we were unable to attend but thanks to the grapevine it was obviously a great success.  Many thanks to Judy & Jankees for throwing their home open and to Jenine for the photographs!

Sunday, 16 January 2011

Welcome Amina, the Woodside Meeting and the Cycle Race.

Last week Amina Frense was inducted as our latest member.  We must be the most literate Club in Johannesburg with one practising journalist and three former journalists as members.   It is interesting that the former journalists have a preference for the classification "Journalism"!  Calvin Meter appears in the collage with his newly grown beard.  An improvement?  Our meeting was held at the SA Chefs Association Skills Kitchen as the University is not functioning yet.  President Graham Donet said that they had made a bid for our custom.  If the breakfast is anything to go by and it wasn't just a smooze.............???????

President Graham also announced that we had been able to assist the CCCCC's with having their stove repaired thanks to the generosity of Anvil and that we had supplied them with a boiling table that was much needed.  The next step will be to sort out the loos following our successful fund-raising dinner.

This week's meeting and breakfast is at Woodside Sanctuary and Hugh Rix is our host.  This will enable us all to see what we are trying to achieve with the Solar Heating Project and what Woodside is all about.






Woodside is further up Canary St above the UJ Boom into Bunting Rd.  The entrance is round the back, left into Dorbie St.





Don Lindsay sent everyone an email about the Henley Cycle Race.  Don't forget to let him know if you can be a  marshal.  The Club will make considerable money out of this and it is not a once off so please contact him asap.  I've reproduced  his email below:

As discussed at the meeting on Wednesday and previous meetings, we are going to assist with marshalling cycle races as a fund-raising project.  There are two on the calendar and we are now finalising arrangements for the first.

This is the Fast One cycle race and it is held in the Midvaal area south of Johannesburg on Sunday 30th January.  We have committed to 12 marshals and I now need the names of those who can assist.  We have to be on site at 05:30am and it will take about 40mins to get there.  You will be finished by about 10am.

To make this occasion more of a club event, we have been invited to a bring & Braai by the RC of Meyerton Henley on Klip on the banks of the Klip River.  Henley is really lovely and Gary & Heather Watson’s home is no exception.  So, please can you also diarise this as a club social outing.

In response to this email, please let me know if you are available to marshal at the race.  We’ll do the lunch numbers later.

Regards,

Don Lindsay
082 817 1971


Power of Attorney



Chinese ballet star Li Cunxin made international headlines in 1981 when he was forcibly detained inside the Chinese consulate in Houston, Texas, USA, after informing officials there of his intent to remain in the United States.
Charles Foster (right) with Kyle McLachlan
who portrayed him in the film.
Li had first come to Houston as a member of the Beijing Academy of Dance for a three-month cultural exchange with the Houston Ballet Academy. His skill earned him an extended stay, and Li passionately desired to continue in his art with the Houston Ballet.
Li’s attorney, Charles Foster, refused to abandon his client to the custody of consular officials, concerned that they would force the artist to leave the country against his will. During 21 hours of tense negotiations that followed, Foster obtained a federal court order restraining Chinese officials from taking further action. He also phoned senior U.S. government authorities, alerting them to the legal consequences of forcibly repatriating Li to China.
In the end, Foster’s persistence prevailed and Li was allowed to stay in the United States. He went on to become a principal dancer and star of the Houston Ballet.
The standoff at the consulate is a key scene in the movieMao’s Last Dancer, released by Samuel Goldwyn Films and ATO Pictures in August. Directed by Bruce Beresford and based on Li’s autobiography, the film stars Chi Cao as Li and Kyle MacLachlan as Foster.
“If it wasn’t for Charles’s knowledge of the applicable law, his quick thinking, and his dedication to me as his client, I am not sure how it might have turned out,” says Li, who now lives with his family in Australia.
“Li is a remarkably talented and courageous person who deserves all the recognition and accolades his book and the film are receiving,” says Foster, a member of the Rotary Club of Houston and a former Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholar.
The case helped spark a tradition at FosterQuan LLP of providing pro bono immigration legal work for the Houston Ballet and other local arts organizations. Foster is a founding partner of the law firm.
“What most audiences don’t think about is that major performing arts organizations, such as the Houston Ballet, have an ongoing need to navigate complex immigration laws in order to legally bring the best talent from around the world to perform here,” he says. “The process is time consuming and involves multiple federal agencies, so it requires experienced legal counsel.”
A recognized expert on U.S. immigration law, Foster also served as a senior policy adviser to both George W. Bush and Barack Obama during their presidential campaigns.
Foster studied law as a 1964-65 Rotary Scholar at Universidad de Concepción, Chile, sponsored by the Rotary Club of Corpus Christi, Texas.
“The Rotary scholarship experience was a huge influence on me,” he says. “I was [later] hired as an international lawyer, because I was deemed to be sufficiently bilingual to do international legal work in both English and Spanish.”
In addition, Foster says he “spoke to just about every Rotary club in Chile” and large numbers of clubs in Texas. After starting his own law firm, he became a Rotarian.
“It was a very natural thing to do, having been so involved with Rotary,” he says.

Sunday, 9 January 2011

Welcome Back & A Happy New Year!



Our members have been scattered far and wide over the holidays so we'll do what we did last year, let anyone who wants to talk about what they've been up to over the holiday period.

We will already have had our first Board Meeting this year so there will almost certainly be a bit of business to transact but other than that it's a slow social start!

Enjoy the Teddy Bear's Picnic and "I said my Pyjamas and put on my Prayers" in the video bar.

And our New Year Champagne Festival thanks to Jankees & Judy Sligcher!


We would also like to remind you of our invitation, to have an informal New Year “Champagne on the Sligcher Stoep” (weather permitting otherwise the house will have to do!) for “New Dawn” Rotarians and their partners.
We hope you all can make it on Sunday the 16th of January from about 1 pm to 9 Sutherland Avenue Craighall Park

Coming from Jan Smuts avenue, you  take “Eastwood” in the direction of Parkhurst. Eastwood becomes Sutherland, when you take the left “fork” after the little circle.
Just hop over the “stop” street and drive down approximately 350 m and find the house on your right hand side.(Number 9 is next to number 13)

Could you please confirm your intention to take part in this “bubbly” affair by Wednesday the 12th of January during our regular meeting or reply by email. We would like know whom to cater for as we will do some Satéh on the braai !

We will supply a couple of bottles of bubbly, but you are welcome to bring your own, should you be afraid we will run out or when you are particularly partial to your own brand!
A couple of salads may come in handy as well as some bread (French Loaves), Please let me know who would be volunteering to do a salad!

See you on Sunday the 16th of January


Cheers,

Judy and Jankees
9 Sutherland Avenue
Craighall Park
011 7882548
0832514795





Rotary at the Rose Parade in Pasadena.


Float entered in the 1923 Parade by the Rotary Club of Pasadena

Since 1890, the Tournament of Roses has been ushering in the new year with a parade of spectacular floats and enthusiastic marching bands down the streets of Pasadena, California, USA.
Rotary became a part of the pageantry in 1923, when the Rotary Club of Pasadena entered a float in the 34th annual Rose Parade.
The club participated in three more Rose Parades – 1927, 1946, and 1966 – before making it an annual tradition in 1980. That year, recognizing the parade’s potential for promoting Rotary to an audience of millions worldwide, clubs in the western United States decided to sponsor a float in honor of the organization’s 75th anniversary. The Rotary Rose Parade Float Committee was later formed and continues to coordinate the fundraising for and construction of the float today.
Putting together a float is an ambitious undertaking, not least because parade rules dictate that the entire surface be covered with organic materials such as flowers, fruits and vegetables, or seeds. Hundreds of Rotary, Rotaract, and Interact club members from the United States, as well as Canada and Mexico, donate their time to build and decorate the float.
Float themes have reflected Rotary’s efforts to eradicate polio, its commitment to service, and its humanitarian programs. The theme of the 1998 float, “Bringing the World Together,” celebrated the 50th anniversary of Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholarships and highlighted the Foundation’s work to build peace.
The 2001 theme, “Recognizing Tomorrow’s Leaders,” celebrated the many young people Rotary has channeled into positive leadership roles through the Rotary Youth Leadership Awards program.
On 1 January, the Rotary Rose Parade Float Committee will celebrate 32 consecutive years in the parade with a float proclaiming the 2010-11 RI theme, Building Communities -- Bridging Continents .
Rotary International does not fund the float; the Rotary Rose Parade Float Committee receives donations from individual clubs and Rotarians.