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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

July 22, 2019


Meetings

July is New Rotary Year Month

7/25 April Penton - Camp Stemtastic
8/1 Regular Meeting Kurt Piehler - FSU Institute on World War II and the Human Experience
8/8 Justin Allen - Broad Street Media
8/15 Regular Meeting - Jeremy Emmett to share plans for the new Marriott Hotel

Our Rotary Family
BIRTHDAYS

7/8 George Stephens, Jr.
7/11 Matt Brown
7/12 Gerhard Sommer
7/19 Coy Irvin
7/21 Dale Hodges
7/28 Bryant Beadles
7/28 Stuart Jackson
7/30 Ed Elam, III

WEDDING ANNIVERSARIES

7/9 Tom Callaway, III (42)
7/12 Paul Hancock (44)
7/12 Debbie Quinton (33)
7/12 Donald Sims (50)
7/23 Rick Piper (15)

YEARS OF SERVICE

7/1 Jeff Zoller (10)
7/1 Warren Stafford (39)
7/1 Sharon Patrick (15)
7/1 Donald Sims (30)
7/1 Scooter Grubbs, III (32)
7/1 Jay Flowers (9)
7/1 Lauren Vann (3)
7/1 Mary Beth Donalson (5)
7/2 Bill Dickey (4)
7/4 Alexzandria Bighams (0)
7/4 Erik von Hellens (7)
7/4 Nicholas Rahming (0)
7/5 Trent Reynolds (1)
7/6 Kim Walden (2)
8 years in Rotary
7/6 Ronnie Godwin (2)
24 years in Rotary
7/6 Eddie Smith (8)
7/9 Sally Hernandez (4)
7/11 Ben Wilds (6)
7/12 Eric Ward (7)
7/14 Frederick Buechner (3)
28 years in Rotary
7/17 Clay Campbell (7)
23 years in Rotary
7/18 Andre Marria (14)
7/22 David Lewis (9)
7/31 John Glenn, Jr. (22)
23 years in Rotary

Rotary Online

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

ROTARY CLUB OF
Thomasville


Thursdays, 12:00 pm
The Plaza Restaurant
217 South Broad Street
Thomasville, GA 31792 FacebookInstagram

LEADERSHIP

President Kim Walden
President-Elect John Brown
Immediate PP Andre Marria
Vice President Terry Rouse
Treasurer Teri White
Secretary Angela Williamson
Foundation Warren Ballard
Membership Adam Carvin
Foundation John Glenn, Jr.
Program Director Jay Flowers
Bulletin Editor Susan Backofen
Public Image Mike Bixler
Sergeant-at-Arms Mary Beth Donalson

This Week's Program

April Penton, Education faculty member at Thomas University, will speak to us about the exciting Camp STEMtastic program. In the 2013 - 2014 school year, the faculty at Thomas University met with local area schools to inquire about rising sixth grade students who exemplified an attitude and aptitude in the STEM areas and who would potentially like to participate in a week long summer camp where they would have an opportunity to explore those fields.

Thirty students were selected by their teachers to be a part of the pilot camp that met in June of 2014. The camp was called "The Science of Flight," and the campers learned about various topics related to flight and its progression.

Since its inception, the original campers have been invited back each year to continue to explore different STEM fields. Each year, Camp STEMtastic adds an additional cohort of rising sixth graders. By the time the students graduate from high school, they will have had an opportunity to participate in seven different STEM-themed camps.

This summer, four campus were held: Fresh Water & Marine Ecology; The Human Machine; Natural Resource Stewardship; and Bottle Caps to Benches. The Bottle Caps to Benches initiative is the culmination of a year-long effort. This group of students recently traveled to Indiana to unload their 2600 pounds of bottle caps and pick up 13 benches!


Rotary Means Business!

"Famous Lou" Alvarado spoke to us concerning the Rotary Means Business initiative at the District level. This is an opportunity to provide networking opportunities for Rotary members as we all like doing business with fellow Rotarians! These events are typically held monthly and are coordinated between multiple clubs.

There was good discussion regarding how we might launch this program and perhaps form a southwest Georgia 'Council'.

We need volunteers
Back to School Blitz - August 3rd

Reach Out and Invite Someone to Rotary!

Rotary's Role in Ending Polio

Rotary has been working to eradicate polio for more than 30 years. Our goal of ridding the world of this disease is closer than ever.

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.

We've helped immunize more than 2.5 billion children in 122 countries. So far, Rotary has contributed more than $1.8 billion toward eradicating the disease worldwide.

Today, polio remains endemic only in Afghanistan, Nigeria, 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.