April Recognizes Magazines & More

April 2008
Message from the Chair: April recognizes magazines and more

Dear family of Rotary,
In this world of immediate information through the Internet, e-mails, blogs, and cell phones, the very idea of celebrating Magazine Month sounds somewhat old-fashioned.

Although information about Rotary Foundation programs is immediately available at www.rotary.org, your Rotary magazine is still the best place to read in-depth accounts of the Foundation’s remarkable work around the world.

In fact, the many pamphlets, guides, and request forms available from The Rotary Foundation continue to play a major role. For example, printed take-home instructions are still the most effective way to ensure that Foundation seminar information is reviewed at a later date.

Every Rotarian should carry a copy of the latest Rotary Foundation Facts (159-EN), a concise, up-to-date summary of the activities of the Foundation, which is published each November and available from the RI Secretariat.

When recognizing our magazines and other printed materials, let’s not forget that the timeliest way to get information is on our Web site. During April, for example, the Future Vision Committee will report to the Trustees, who will be making many decisions about the future of the Foundation.

These decisions will be reported on Rotary.org, and I ask you, as so many did in October, to comment online so that your Trustees will have the benefit of your opinions. Since its inception, the Future Vision Committee has relied very heavily on the opinions of Rotarians at all levels.

In this final lap, we need these thoughts more than ever, and our Web site provides an excellent way to get your feedback.

Our Web site is indeed essential today, so let’s include it in our celebration of Magazine Month.

Robert S. Scott
Trustee Chair, The Rotary Foundation, 2007-08

Tips for funding Rotary’s US$100 Million Challenge - 22 February 2008

In the push to finish polio, Rotarians are pressing ahead with Rotary’s US$100 Million Challenge to match the $100 million grant received from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The nearly 33,000 Rotary clubs in the world are each being asked to contribute at least $1,000 annually for three years.

On New Year’s Day 2008, 20 hardy District 7190 (New York, USA) Rotarians, dubbed the “Polar Bears,” plunged into the frigid waters of Lake George to raise $25,000 in support of Rotary’s challenge.

“There is really no way to look very elegant when you jump into 33-degree [Fahrenheit] water, but we raised a ton of money and major awareness for Rotary and polio,” says District Governor Harriet Noble. “Too cool, no pun intended.”

Until Rotary’s challenge is met and polio is eradicated worldwide, the Polar Bears say they’ll continue their frosty dips into Lake George, inspired by their founder, Don Wildermuth, of the Rotary Club of Wilton.

The Rotary Club of Parker, Colorado, USA, has raised more than $6,000 for the challenge by contributing $50 per member from its service fund and matching each additional member contribution up to $25 from its foundation.

“A number of members of the Parker club have either had polio or have watched loved ones suffer and die from polio,” says club president Bill Shriver. “The club believes that no human being anywhere should suffer from this crippling and sometimes fatal disease. Eliminating suffering is what Rotary is all about.”

Hundreds of community projects helped fuel the previous polio eradication fundraising campaign in 2002-03. Among them, Rotarians ran in the Los Angeles Marathon, bicycled from Russia to the Netherlands, sponsored theater performances in Tokyo, skydived over England, auctioned off artwork in India, sold staterooms for a Canada-to-Alaska cruise, and individually sold 2,000 pieces of a puzzle in Turkey depicting Mother Teresa immunizing a child. Here are some ways your club or district can set its creative wheels in motion:

• Auction or raffle off a luxury car, boat, house built as a vocational service project, vacation packages, tickets to sports events.

• Create special items for sale, including CDs, DVDs, cookbooks, craftwork, and Push to End Polio T-shirts, bumper stickers, and toy bears.

• Organize special events such as a walkathon, telethon, golf tournament, car rally, festival, fun fair, flea market, variety show.

Other Rotary clubs and districts are looking for ways to support Rotary’s US$100 Million Challenge in their communities. So be sure to share your fundraising success stories, including photos, in the “Add a comment” section following this and other polio-related articles on the RI Web.

 

 

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