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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

May 11, 2021


Meetings

May is Youth Service Month

5/13 GRSP Wrap up AND By-Law Revisions Vote
5/20 Russell Deese - Russels' Military Vehicles AT THE BISCUIT COMPANY
5/27 Regular Meeting
6/3

Our Rotary Family
BIRTHDAYS

5/1 Nathaniel Abrams
5/2 Lauren Radford
5/15 Angela Williamson
5/17 Charlene Parrish
5/20 Thomas Carlton
5/25 Bill Blackburn
5/27 Noel Ellis

WEDDING ANNIVERSARIES

5/4 Frank Helms (15)
5/4 Barbara Williams-Anderson (22)
5/8 Danny Braddy (125)
5/13 Will Brown, III (3)
5/15 Angela Williamson (11)
5/17 Charlene Parrish (125)
5/18 Kurt Stringfellow (19)
5/21 Susan Backofen (44)
5/21 John Blackmon (33)
5/22 Eric Ward (17)
5/23 Marta Turner (29)
5/26 Lorraine Williams Rahming (5)
5/26 Nic Rahming (15)

YEARS OF SERVICE

5/1 Eugene McNease (43)
5/1 Oscar Mims (66)
5/4 Bob Drummond (4)
5/5 Dicky Demott (6)
21 years in Rotary
5/7 Stuart Jackson (7)
18 years in Rotary
5/7 Robert Vice (1)
2 years in Rotary
5/7 Chris Lovelady (1)
11 years in Rotary
5/11 Ray Thompson (4)
9 years in Rotary
5/16 Lauren Radford (2)
6 years in Rotary
5/22 John Bracey, Jr. (6)
37 years in Rotary

Rotary Online

https://thomasvillerotary.org
https://rotary6900.org/
https://rotary.org/

ROTARY CLUB OF
Thomasville


Thursdays, 12:15 pm
The Plaza Restaurant
217 South Broad Street
Thomasville, GA 31792

LEADERSHIP

President John Brown
President-Elect Wayne Newsome
President Nominee Danny Braddy
Immediate PP Kim Walden
Treasurer Teri White
Secretary Angela Williamson
Foundation Fran Milberg
Membership Janet Liles
Public Image Mike Bixler

Next Week's Program

GRSP WRAP UP

Approval of Revised By-Laws

Members will be approving the revised by-laws on May 13. Angela sent you a copy of the by-laws on Tuesday, April 13. Please review and be prepared to approve. The Board has already approved. Thanks to all.

Reminder! Next Week's Program

Next Week's Program will be at The Biscuit Company at 219 Oak Street.  Russell Deese will have a few of his military vehicles with him and a fascinating story.

If you have not made a reservation for this meeting, please do so today!

Board Meeting

Rotary Board Meeting will be held Thursday at the Plaza 

History of Rotary Polio Eradiation Efforts

On 29 September 1979, volunteers administered drops of oral polio vaccine to children at a health center in Guadalupe Viejo, Makati, Philippines. The event in metropolitan Manila was arranged and attended by Rotarians and delegates from the Philippine Ministry of Health. James L. Bomar Jr., in a 1993 interview.   

When James L. Bomar Jr., then RI president, put the first drops of vaccine into a child’s mouth, he ceremonially launched the Philippine poliomyelitis immunization effort. Rotary’s first Health, Hunger and Humanity (3-H) Grant project was underway.

Bomar and Enrique M. Garcia, the country’s minister of health, had earlier signed an agreement committing Rotary International and the government of the Philippines to a joint multiyear effort to immunize about 6 million children against polio, at a cost of about $760,000.

In a 1993 interview, Bomar reminisced about the trip. He recalled how the brother of one of the children he had immunized tugged on his pant leg to get his attention and said, “Thank you, thank you, Rotary.”

The project’s success led Rotary to make polio eradication a top priority. Rotary launched PolioPlus in 1985 and was a founding member of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in 1988. Through decades of commitment and work by Rotary and our partners, more than 2.5 billion children have received the oral polio vaccine.

As a founding partner of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, we've reduced polio cases by 99.9 percent since our first project to vaccinate children in the Philippines in 1979.

Rotary members have contributed more than $2.1 billion and countless volunteer hours to protect nearly 3 billion children in 122 countries from this paralyzing disease. Rotary’s advocacy efforts have played a role in decisions by governments to contribute more than $10 billion to the effort.

Today, polio remains endemic only in Afghanistan and Pakistan. But it’s crucial to continue working to keep other countries polio-free. If all eradication efforts stopped today, within 10 years, polio could paralyze as many as 200,000 children each year.