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Cantor Arts Center- Engaging the Undergrads
Aug. 12, 2016
This week our speaker will be Kim Mansfield who has been the Coordinator of Student Engagement at the Cantor Arts Center for three years. Before that, she was the Cantor's Educational Services Coordinator for four years. She holds BA in Film Studies from UCSB , and an MA in the History of Decorative Arts and Design from Parsons the New School for Design and Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum. Kim directs all aspects of Stanford student involvement, including managing the budget, increasing marketing of the museum to students through email and print media, and launching new initiatives, such as the summer internship program. She oversees recruiting, hiring, and pay for 25 part-time student workers, matching undergraduate and graduate students with meaningful work opportunities that complement their skills and interests. She also collaborate with their campus partners, including ResArts, the Stanford Arts Institute, and the Department of Art and Art History, on broader arts programming, such as Your Art Here, a program that places student artwork in six galleries across campus Despite the many opportunities available at Cantor, some student staffers feel that the center is underutilized. While it exists as an educational resource and is home to an impressive number of great works of art, students often don’t seem to see it as a space that’s accessible or approachable. “A museum is a place of learning and inquiry, and that is why we are here for students,” Kim says. “We want an active and engaged relationship with students. Everyone can take advantage of these rich resources, and there are numerous different ways to get involved.” Stanford has such a strong reputation for engineering and high tech, it will be nice to learn about the student’s opportunities to engage “the other side of the brain”… |
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International Service Update
Aug. 19, 2016
This week we will continue our effort to highlight our Club’s Avenues of Service with a presentation from our International Chair Patrick O’Regan. Patrick has been a Rotarian for over 25 years. He is a past club president (Falmouth (MA) Rotary) and has held leadership positions within Rotary at the Club and District level. Patrick practiced law on Cape Cod for many years but became a recovering lawyer after telling his then new bride, a native Californian, that Cape Cod was "below the snow line" - only to have 100 inches of snow fall on the cape the next winter. [Four way test fail?] Patrick now teaches a slate of classes on entrepreneurship at the undergraduate and graduate school level: entrepreneurial management, entrepreneurial finance, and entrepreneurial leadership. He also coaches business plan competitions participants and the venture capital investment competition for USF. Patrick also has a start-up in the clean tech space which is focused on water re-use. PAUR has a community based International program. Unlike other Rotary clubs, PAUR's program focuses on improving a single community at a time by getting to know the people in the community, developing a working relationship with the elected officials, and funding stakeholder driven projects related to healthcare, education and economic development. The community PAUR serves has had measurable results in the improvement of the in-country poverty level. Patrick will be providing an update on the many accomplishments of the International Committee in El Salvador. |
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Conservation Science at POST
Aug. 26, 2016
Our speaker on Friday will be Dr. Nicole Heller, the Director of Conservation Science at the Peninsula Open Space Trust. Healthy ecosystems are essential for community health and long-term resilience. This talk will share some of the new thinking about land conservation and stewardship, its role in community health, and application in the San Francisco Bay Area. Nicole is a conservation ecologist with 20 years of experience working in the field of biodiversity protection. Her research specialties are climate change adaptation, invasive species management, and informal science education through the arts, media and citizen science. Prior to joining Peninsula Open Space Trust, Nicole taught conservation, ecology, and sustainability science at Duke University and Franklin Marshall College. She also served as a communication expert for Climate Central and the Dwight Center for Conservation Science helping to translate climate science into practical action with publics, practitioners and policymakers. Her work has been published in academic and popular presses. Nicole is native to the Silicon Valley and has worked in California ecosystems most of her career. She has a PhD from Stanford University, a BA from Princeton University, and was a postdoctoral fellow at University of California, Santa Cruz.
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Aug. 27, 2016 10:00 a.m. - Aug. 28, 2016 6:00 p.m.
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Aug. 31, 2016 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
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Sep. 05, 2016 8:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Join us as we set-up the American flags on University Avenue in Palo Alto. |
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Stanford Distinguished Careers Institute
Sep. 09, 2016
This week we will hear from Dr. Philip Pizzo about the Stanford Distinguished Careers Institute. Dr. Pizzo was one of our Salon presenters in 2015, but the enthusiasm to hear him speak was so overwhelming we ended up having to turn people away. We hope to rectify this on Friday. For those of you who missed it, the Stanford Distinguished Careers Institute (the DCI) offers highly accomplished individuals from all walks of life the opportunity to come to Stanford for a yearlong residential program of personal renewal and societal engagement. The program seeks participants who are ready and eager to pause, think, explore, develop and prepare for their futures as citizens of their local, national, and global communities.
DCI believes that we live in an era in which previously accepted norms of length of career and age of retirement are undergoing significant change toward longer careers and deferred retirement. These shifts are coupled with increasing global life expectancy and a rapid increase in the number of senior citizens the US will experience over the next decades. Beyond the “baby boomer generation,” the prospect for a significantly longer life requires that we rethink aging and reconsider the role of higher education for individuals who have already been successful in one or more career pathways and who are looking for a new direction focused on direct contributions to societal needs.
DCI hopes to offer an extraordinary opportunity to already established leaders from the public and private sectors, including business, academia, health, and beyond, who are ready and eager to reflect on their life journeys, explore new pathways, and redirect their lives for the common good.
Philip Pizzo, MD, is the David and Susan Heckerman Professor and Founding Director of the Stanford Distinguished Careers Institute. Dr. Pizzo served as Dean of the Stanford School of Medicine from 2001 to 2012. He received his MD from the University of Rochester, and then completed an internship and residency at Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Boston. Between 1973 and 1996 he served as head of the National Cancer Institute’s infectious disease section, as chief of the NCI’s pediatric department, and as acting scientific director for NCI’s Division of Clinical Sciences. From 1996 to 2001 he was the physician-in-chief of Children’s Hospital in Boston and chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Pizzo is the author of more than 615 scientific articles and 16 books and monographs. He has received numerous awards and honors, among them the John Howland Award, the highest honor for life-time achievement bestowed by the American Pediatric Society. He was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 1997, and to the Governing Council of the IOM. He served on the Governing Board for the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, and is a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Rochester, of the Board of Overseers for Koc University in Istanbul, Turkey, and of the Board of Directors of the Ludwig Institute. He is a member of the Board of Directors of MRI Interventions and the Academic Advisory Council for Merritt Hawkins.
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Sep. 10, 2016 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
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Sep. 11, 2016 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
We'll be opening up the Rotary Beehives to take a look inside.
This event will be a ton of fun for little ones too, so bring the family! We'll be tasting some delicious honey as well.
[If you'd like to be up close and see inside the hive, please wear closed toed shoes with socks, long pants, and a long sleeve shirt. Please refrain from wearing perfume or strongly scented lotions. Ask Kendal if you have any questions.]
Please RSVP on the link in the email.
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Annual Visit of District Governor
Sep. 16, 2016
It will be our pleasure give a warm PAUR welcome to our speaker on Friday: District Governor Jeff Orth. Jeff joined the Rotary Club of Gilroy California in 1999. He served as Club President in 2005-2006 during the 100th Anniversary of Rotary. Jeff is most proud of the formation of “JumpStart”, a District wide program providing “at-risk” youth with pajamas, sport bags, alarm clocks and notebook computers, for chartering the Gilroy Sunrise Club, and for comprehensive Area Club collaboration on local and international projects. Jeff has held positions at both the local and District level, including Area Representative for the Foundation, Assistant Governor, Youth Service Chair, Lieutenant Governor and District Conference Chair. He is a member of the Paul Harris Society and is the recipient of the Ward Garing Award for exceptional service to the youth in District 5170. Jeff is serving as District Governor for 5170 in 2016-2017. Jeff enjoys being a Rotarian for the many service opportunities and for the leverage that Rotary can provide for maximum benefit to others. He has experienced first-hand the truth in the saying, “I joined Rotary for business and fellowship. I stayed in Rotary to change the world”. A graduate of the University of California at Davis, Jeff has advance credentials as a Charted Financial Consultant and a Chartered Advisor in Senior Living from The American College. He owns a coast-to-coast financial planning/wealth management business with clients in eight states. Jeff and his wife, Barbara, have three children (one of which you may know) and four grandchildren.
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Ocean Conservation
Sep. 23, 2016
This week we will hear from Barbara Page about the Anthropocene Institute‘s work towards ocean conservation. Barbara is cofounder of the Anthropocene Institute along with her husband Carl Page. Since 2012 the Anthropocene Institute has been focused on reinventing technologies in energy, water, food, oceans and cultural change. It proposes to nurture new technologies and cultural institutions required for the long term viability of humanity and preservation of biological diversity. It partners with private companies, academic institutions, NGO's, and government agencies as required. Barbara’s focus at Anthropocene has been in ocean conservation where she has been working to address overfishing, habitat loss, pollution, and a slate of other issues.
Prior, she was a Director of Applications at Oracle where she was for nine years, founded Open Web U, a next generation platform for hosting classes, tests and surveys for certification training. She is a member on the U.S Japan Council. She holds a BA in Public Policy from University of Chicago, MS in Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology from Ohio State University, and a PhD in Education from Stanford University. She is on The Nature Conservancy California Board. |
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Sep. 28, 2016 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.
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November Ballot Measures- Non-partisan
Sep. 30, 2016
Did you receive your California General Election information guide in the last week? The one that comes in at hefty 223 pages. The one where the ballot measures “quick” reference guide is 9 pages long. With 17 propositions on the ballot did you think to yourself “How will I be able to slog through this nightmare of initiatives”? You are in luck. Join us for our meeting this Friday and some of your perplexity will begin to fade. Our Speaker will be from the League of Women Voters. The L W V is a nonpartisan political organization encouraging informed and active participation in government. Their goal is to empower citizens to shape better communities worldwide. Through their many presentations to our Club they have enlightened us and demystified the current ballot. Don’t count on the barrage of political advertising to give you an un-biased overview, get in the know for the election with us. As they say: “Because Democracy is not a Spectator Sport” http://www.easyvoterguide.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/EVG-CAGeneral-Nov-8-16-Final.pdf
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New Member Talks
Oct. 07, 2016
Join us on Friday to learn more about two of our newest members. This time around we will hear from members Sophie Tsang and Sharon Tennison. Sophie will no doubt expand on her journey from Taiwan with a degree in Civil Engineering, to her Masters in Computer Science at Northwestern, to her MBA in Marketing and Finance at Santa Clara University, to selling real estate right here. Sharon has been a speaker at our club before. She is the founder and president of the Center for Citizen Initiatives (CCI) that has dedicated itself to supporting political and economic reforms in Russia. She has been a member of the Palo Alto noon club, but wants to join our merry band. While she is sure to give us some details of her journey to us as well, she could tell us something about Rotary across Russia, or she also could speak to a knock-out plan to bring the sewing industry back to America. You will just have to find out for yourself. |
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Oct. 08, 2016 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
WHERE: Palo Alto Baylands Park A docent from Environmental Volunteers will guide our hike at Palo Alto Baylands. Many of you are familiar with the organization for our club thru Community Outreach has financially and physically supported it for various projects. It will be a fantastic opportunity to learn about various plants and birds. Don't miss the chance! |
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Pacific Forest Trust
Oct. 14, 2016
On Friday we will have the pleasure of hearing from Laurie Wayburn, President and Founder of the Pacific Forest Trust and its co-CEO. Her topic will focus on innovation in forest conservation and stewardship. PFT is a national leader in conserving forest land for a variety of critical purposes, such as headwaters protection, enhancing wildlife habitat, generating sustainable income for forest owners, and sequestering carbon and thus helping to address climate challenges. Recent legislation signed earlier this week by the governor has highlighted the importance of forests in dealing with our state’s ongoing water problems. Laurie is an accomplished forest and conservation innovator who advises policymakers at the state, regional, national, and international levels. She pioneers new approaches to develop sustainable resource economies using her deep experience in the fields of conservation, ecosystem services, and sustainability. A preeminent authority on the climate and ecosystem benefits of forests, she leads efforts enacting climate change policies that unite conservation and sustainable management with market-based approaches. She has received several highly prestigious honors bestowed for her leadership and is a frequent speaker, writer, and media commentator on working forest conservation. Prior to co-founding Pacific Forest Trust with Constance Best in 1993, Laurie worked internationally for 10 years in the United Nations Environment Program and Ecological Sciences Division of UNESCO. She later served as Executive Director of the Point Reyes Bird Observatory and was the Founder and first Coordinator of the Central California Coast Biosphere Reserve. Laurie is a graduate of Harvard University and currently serves on the Northwest BioCarbon Initiative Steering Committee, the American Forest Policy Steering Committee, and the Land Trust Alliance Advisory Council.
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Oct. 15, 2016 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
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CASA Child Advocacy Society
Oct. 21, 2016
Our speaker on Friday will be the Executive Director of Child Advocates of Silicon Valley: Karen Scussel. In 1977, a Seattle juvenile court judge concerned about making drastic decisions with insufficient information conceived the idea of citizen volunteers speaking up for the best interests of abused and neglected children in the courtroom. From that first program has grown a network of nearly 1,000 CASA and guardian ad litem programs in 49 states and the District of Columbia. Child Advocates recruits, trains and supports volunteer Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASAs) to work one-on-one with foster children, ensuring that each child’s critical emotional and educational needs are met and their voices heard while navigating the court dependency system. Their mission is to provide stability and hope to children who have experienced abuse and neglect by being a powerful voice in their lives. Their vision is that every child has a positive view of the future and the opportunity to become a productive, healthy adult. Karen has been associated for over fifteen years and has advocated for 15 children. She has been a member of the Child Advocates Board of Directors, including Board Secretary and member of the Executive Committee, Interim Director of Volunteer Services, Interim Director of Programs and Education Advocacy Supervisor. Karen became the Executive Director in October 2012. Karen started her association with Child Advocates as a CASA volunteer while working for the private sector. She was one of the original members of the Santa Clara County Middle School Education Court committee, and received the San Jose Junior League Volunteerism at its Best award in 2013. In 2014, Karen was named one of the 100 Women of Influence in Silicon Valley by the San Jose Business Journal. Prior to joining Child Advocates, Karen had over 25 years of human resources management and executive experience at Hewlett Packard Company and Agilent Technologies. She has managed large, complex global programs and has developed management and employee development programs, including mentoring and coaching programs. Karen grew up on the East Coast and in the Midwest and earned a BA in Psychology from Vanderbilt University and Master’s Degree in Business from Washington University in St. Louis. |
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Oct. 22, 2016 9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
WHAT: Make a Difference Day service day with YCS, Interact and Youth Service WHEN: Saturday, October 22 9:00AM to 2:00PM WHERE: Cesar Chavez School, 2450 Ralmar Ave., EPA or Los Robles Dual-Immersion Magnet Academy
PROJECTS include painting playground benches and tables, and other campus beautification with youth and adult volunteers.
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Oct. 25, 2016 7:00 p.m.
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Syria Mapping Project at the Carter Center
Oct. 28, 2016
On Friday we will be very fortunate to hear from Christopher McNaboe of the Carter Center about the Syria Mapping Project. The Carter Center, in partnership with Emory University, is guided by a fundamental commitment to human rights and the alleviation of human suffering. It seeks to prevent and resolve conflicts, enhance freedom and democracy, and improve health. Founded in 1982 by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, the Atlanta-based Carter Center has helped to improve the quality of life for people in more than 80 countries. Since 2012, the Syria Conflict Mapping Project has worked to analyze open source information related to the Syrian conflict in as much detail as possible, with the goal of assisting mediators and humanitarian responders. Using these publicly available resources, as well as regular consultations with stakeholders in the country, the Center has documented and mapped over 70,000 conflict events in Syria (including clashes, aerial bombardments, artillery shelling, etc.), the changing relations between thousands of armed groups, movements of internally displaced people, and humanitarian conditions. Analyzed together, this information allows The Carter Center to provide mediators and humanitarian responders with up-to-date, detailed analysis on developments throughout Syria. Additionally, the Center maintains a near real-time, auto-updating map of areas of control throughout Syria. All of this information is analyzed and is shared directly with mediators and humanitarian organizations through a software tool. Chris joined The Carter Center in 2012 as an intern and then graduate assistant in the Conflict Resolution Program. During that time, he developed what is now the Syria Conflict Mapping project, and he joined the program to formalize and expand the project in December 2012. He primarily works on Syria-related initiatives, but occasionally assists with other peace program activities. Chris is a dual U.S.-U.K. citizen but has spent the majority of his life abroad, growing up in Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and Kuwait before coming to the United States at the outset of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Since that time, McNaboe has lived in several countries while pursuing his undergraduate and graduate degrees. Prior to coming to the Center, he worked as a mediator and interpreter in the Superior Court of California and with community-building projects with Palestinian and Lebanese youth in Lebanon. Chris holds two bachelor's degrees in politics and language studies (linguistics and Spanish), as well as a master's degree in international policy studies with a concentration in conflict resolution from the Monterey Institute of International Studies. He speaks English, Spanish, and Arabic. |
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Improv in Business
Nov. 04, 2016
On Friday we will be regaled by Jacqueline Kabat a Comedian/Humorist/Comedy Performer/ Writer/Producer/Director, and Comedy Improv teacher. She has been involved in all aspects of stand-up comedy, comedy improvisation, and sketch writing since 1997. She has studied, written for and performed with Second City's Ann Bowen and studied with Saturday Night Live's Amy Poehler while with the Upright Citizens Brigades. She worked with Sex in the City's Mario Cantone while warming up studio audiences at ABC Studios. Jacqueline has MC'd and done stand-up comedy at popular New York clubs like Gotham Comedy Club and Caroline's on Broadway. She teaches comedy improv at Fortune 500 corporations, medical centers, human potential centers, and high-end destinations spas around the country and Mexico. She works with children at schools, camps, and other youth programs and teaches them comedy improv as a healing tool to combat the bullying epidemic. She also does one on one sessions to show people how to use comedy improv tools to get them back into the authentic flow of their lives. Jacqueline has a degree in Journalism from the University of Georgia which included a semester abroad in Florence studying Art History. She recently moved to a 3 acre ranch in Aromas on the stunning Central Coast after 17 years in New York City and Brooklyn. Currently she is offering comedy improv workshops at her ranch and sharing this little piece of heaven with other artists, teachers, and corporations who want to offer workshops and have a place to collaborate with the philosophers, the visionaries, the artists, and anyone who wants to improve the human condition. Jacqueline's passion is building and being part of creative, compassionate, and conscious communities. Her philosophy is: Creativity + Nature + A Supportive Authentic Community = Magic. |
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Nov. 05, 2016 8:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
We are going to have a pretty hike along beaches and bluffs between Fitzgerald Marine Reserve and Pillar Point Harbor.
It's Low Tide Hike in Fitzgerald Marine Reserve. We did a coastal hike a few months ago and the attendees really enjoyed it. Unlike the last hike, this trail is pretty flat. So join us and enjoy the coastal hike. Since it's a distance we'll meet at the Safeway parking lot in Sharon Heights in Menlo Park for carpool at 8:30 am.
When: 8:30 am at the Safeway parking for carpool; or 9:15 am if you want to drive there by yourself
Where: 200 Nevada Avenue, Moss Beach, CA 94038 Parking area is visible in Google Maps if you zoom in sufficiently. It's a 5-mile hike. Directions: From CA-92 West, turn right onto Main Street and drive for 0.3 miles. Turn right onto CA-1 (Cabrillo Hwy) and drive for 5.9 miles. Turn left onto Vermont Ave and drive for 0.2 miles. Vermont Ave turns slightly right and becomes Lake Street. In 0.2 miles, there is a parking lot for Fitzgerald Marine Reserve. Lunch fellowship will follow the hike. |
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Nov. 10, 2016 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Web access: https://zoom.us/j/582651401 |
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Virtual Human Interaction Lab
Nov. 11, 2016
Worn out by your current reality? Do we have a program for you on Friday! Virtual Reality has begun to permeate our everyday lives, and will continue to do so as the consumer VR industry grows. But what are the implications of engaging in virtual reality media and how do they compare to our traditional media experiences? Stanford's Virtual Human Interaction Lab has striven to answer these questions and more for the past 13 years. At VHIL, they study the ways in which VR changes how we think and behave and how VR experiences are different from other types of media like television, film, video games, etc. Most of their research focuses on encouraging prosocial behavior, empathy, environmental behavior, and, in general, things that produce a positive impact on individuals or the world at large. Shawnee Baughman will give a brief synopsis of what VR is and how the technology has evolved; then she will delve into some of VHIL's specific research regarding empathy and environmentalism before introducing one of VHIL's researchers, Fernanda Herrera, who will speak about an opportunity for audience members to sign up to participate in one of their studies. After the meeting is adjourned, Shawnee and Fernanda will have some VR demos setup nearby for anyone to try. |
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Nov. 12, 2016 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
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New Member Talks
Nov. 18, 2016
Join us on Friday to learn more about two of our newest members. This time around we will hear from members Vijay Subramaniam and Lily Chiu. Vijay has been a Rotarian before as a member of the Rotary Club of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada in District 7080. He has a Bachelor's degree from the University of Madras. He ran a family business and was chief in-charge there for 10 years. He is now the cofounder and executive director of Kumaran Systems of Redwood City, an international software integration system company in partnerships with the likes of Oracle. Lily was born and grew up in Beijing, capital of mainland China. She got her Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Finance at Wuhan University. She worked as an investment consultant in Hong Kong, and account manager in a subsidiary of TD Ameritrade. She and her hardware chip designer husband moved to Palo Alto in 2008 and have two children. She is currently a full time mom and a community volunteer.
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Genomics and Personalized Medicine
Dec. 02, 2016
Join us on Friday to hear Michael Snyder discuss genomics and personalized medicine. Michael is the Stanford Ascherman Professor and Chair of Genetics and the Director of the Center of Genomics and Personalized Medicine. He is a leader in the field of functional genomics and proteomics, and one of the major participants of the ENCODE project, the follow up to the Human Genome Project which aims to identify all functional elements in the human genome. His laboratory study was the first to perform a large-scale functional genomics project in any organism, and has developed many technologies in genomics and proteomics. These technologies have been used for characterizing genomes, proteomes and regulatory networks. Seminal findings from the Snyder laboratory include the discovery that much more of the human genome is transcribed and contains regulatory information than was previously appreciated. He has also combined different state-of–the-art “omics” technologies to perform the first longitudinal detailed integrative personal omics profile (iPOP) of person and used this to assess disease risk and monitor disease states for personalized medicine. He is a cofounder of several biotechnology companies, including Protometrix (now part of Life Technologies), Affomix (now part of Illumina), Excelix, and Personalis, and he presently serves on the board of a number of companies. |
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Dec. 03, 2016 8:45 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
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Dec. 07, 2016 4:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
4:30pm-5pm volunteers arrive to set up craft table 7pm-9pm open to all patients (Palo Alto & Menlo Park campuses, and Outpatient Veterans) |
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Dec. 08, 2016 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
In person Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati 650 Page Mill Road Palo Alto, CA 94301
Via Web Video Conference: Join URL: https://zoom.us/j/107705744 ​ |
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Centro Community Partners
Dec. 09, 2016
Join us on Friday to welcome Arturo Noriega, the Founder and Executive Director of Centro Community Partners in Oakland. CPC fosters socioeconomic change by providing business advisory services and leadership programs to rising, yet underserved, entrepreneurs who want to launch or grow their businesses and create jobs in their communities. Over 80% of Centro’s entrepreneurs are women and low-income individuals CPC works primarily with women and minorities who are gifted with an entrepreneurial mind and have skills or experience in a trade, craft, manufacturing or professional service, or simply have a unique idea for a small business. They also strive to work with ever more social entrepreneurs. Despite their talent and genius, more often than not, their entrepreneurs lack access to the proper business training and commercial credit, and face enormous social challenges in the labor market. Their goal is to provide them with the resources to understand how a successful business works, help them build their credit and access to capital so that as small business owners, they are empowered to join other leaders bringing equity and social justice to their communities. CPC has a multi-faceted approach. Their Basic Entrepreneurship Program was designed for individuals primarily on the idea stage of their business and who have not been exposed yet to any business education. Their Advanced Entrepreneurship Program was purposefully created for those who have completed a basic entrepreneurship program or similar training, have a portfolio of products or services, and want help developing a business model they can act upon. They also train graduate business students to become business advisors and professional coaches. In 2014 they launched in English the first mobile app that writes a basic business plan for you. Today, their app also helps entrepreneurs assess their creditworthiness and determine which micro lenders best suit their needs. It has also been translated to Spanish, Portuguese and Russian. Further, CPC provides customized consulting services to other organizations working in the micro-finance and entrepreneurship development space. They work with these organizations to come up with solutions to systemic challenges. Arturo has more than 20 years of work experience as a management consultant, specializing in economic development, strategy, governance, risk management, finance, and organizational change management. He also had a stint as a winemaker at White Rock Vineyards, Ridge Vineyards, Franciscan Vineyards, and Matanzas Creek Winery. He has earned an MBA in Strategic Management and Leadership from Peter F. Drucker School of Management at Claremont Graduate University and a BA in Economics as well as a concentration in Finance from Haas School of Business of U.C Berkeley.
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Dec. 10, 2016 6:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
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Dec. 16, 2016
This week’s meeting will reprise last year’s successful holiday gift exchange program. Once again it will allow us the perfect opportunity for the practical application of our beloved 4-Way-Test. It is essential for this to work that each of us brings a wrapped gift to the meeting. It can be something new that costs under $10, or something gently used (commonly known as a white elephant) that you may already have at home. Rules of the game will be explained at the meeting with all the brevity that MC Rob Jack can muster, but everyone who arrives with a wrapped gift will leave with an unwrapped new treasure. Come join the festivities certain to be filled with fun and fellowship. |
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Jan. 06, 2017
We may not be your father's rotary club, but we still adhere to some, although not many, of the organizational institutions of a rotary club. That's just good governance! This Friday is the semiannual Club Assembly! For new members, just think "fun times." As a preliminary matter, we will vote for the president-elect-nominee (i.e., the selfless talent that is at the helm of the club for the 2018-2019 Rotary year). This will be your opportunity to show support for the super talented Uwe Bergmann. The rest of the meeting we cover club business. The main focus of this year's Club Assembly will be to discuss the annual gala and auction format and changes. As most of you know, the annual gala and auction is our only fundraiser of the year and the money we raise will fund the avenues of service during Mike Teutschel's year - and we all want Mike to have a successful year. We will also have a pitch from the Community Service and Youth Service committees. If you're not on a committee yet, we hope to inspire you to join one of these worthy committees. The hallmark of Rotary is the opportunity to provide service to the community (both locally and internationally). Great service opportunities gives you the opportunity to get to know your fellow Rotarians better ... and is good for your health.
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Jan. 07, 2017 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
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Jan. 12, 2017 6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
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The Cold War Museum
Jan. 20, 2017
NOTE: We will be at the Westin, next door to our usual meeting spot, for this meeting Join us on Friday for what should be a fascinating talk from Francis Gary Powers Jr. Gary is the Founder and Chairman Emeritus of The Cold War Museum, located at Vint Hill, Virginia, 45 minutes west of Washington, D.C. He will highlight the Cold War, his father Gary Powers, and the U-2 Incident. He founded the museum in 1996 to honor Cold War veterans, preserve Cold War history, and educate future generations about this time period. As Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee for the Cold War Theme Study, he works with the National Park Service and leading Cold War experts to identify historic Cold War sites for commemorating, interpreting, and preservation. Because of his efforts to establish The Cold War Museum, the Junior Chamber of Commerce selected him as one of the “Ten Outstanding Young Americans” for 2002. Gary lectures internationally and appears regularly on the History, Discovery, and A&E Channels. Gary was born June 5, 1965, in Burbank, California, the son of Francis Gary and Claudia “Sue” Powers. Gary holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Philosophy from California State University, Los Angeles, and a Master Degree in Public Administration/Certification in Non-profit Management from George Mason University (GMU), Fairfax, Virginia. Recently, he consulted for a Steven Spielberg Cold War thriller, Bridge of Spies, about James Donovan who brokered the 1962 spy exchange between Rudolph Abel and U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers, Sr. Gary is a member of the James River Rotary Club, is married, and has one son. |
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Jan. 21, 2017 4:15 p.m. - 7:15 p.m.
Join us at the Movies! Popcorn and snacks provided by PAUR. Just show-up and buy your ticket (maybe bring tissues). About LION: Based on the incredible true story of a young Indian boy who gets separated from his mother and ends up adopted and raised by an Australian couple. As an adult, Saroo (played by Dev Patel from Slumdog Millionaire) goes in search of his mother. |
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Palo Alto University
Jan. 27, 2017
Join us on Friday as we welcome Dr. Maureen O’Connor as our guest speaker. Maureen is the President of our local hidden gem, Palo Alto University. Palo Alto University (PAU) is a private, nonprofit educational institution, founded in 1975 as the Pacific Graduate School of Psychology (PGSP). PGSP re-incorporated as Palo Alto University in August 2009. PAU is dedicated to education with an emphasis in the behavioral and social sciences; to promoting future innovators and leaders for the benefit of society; to generating knowledge through research and scholarship of the highest level; and to providing services to the community informed by science and scholarship. PAU also maintains several international collaborations, supporting local, clinical practicum training in China and Latin America for students who participate in PAU's online M.A. in Counseling program. The University is also in collaborative partnerships with many community organizations, including Stanford School of Medicine, the Department of Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto Medical Center, and other mental health care organizations. The Gronowski Center, a University affiliated organization, delivers low-cost mental health services while also providing valuable, supervised training to PAU graduate students. In addition, PAU sponsors several academic centers devoted to child mental health, evidence-based care for LGBTQ clients, excellence in diversity and community care, and internet-based global healthcare. Looking to the future, PAU is developing programs to assist genocide survivors in Rwanda. Prior to becoming President at PAU in August, 2016, Maureen served at the City University of New York in New York City for 18 years. She was the 2014 recipient of the New York State Psychological Association's Margaret Floy Washburn Mentoring award. At her nomination Maureen commented “I am honored and excited to have been selected as the next President of Palo Alto University. Its commitment to diversity and its strategic focus on education anchored in psychology puts it in a unique and excellent position to make a difference in our students’ lives, in Silicon Valley, and beyond.” Maureen completed a dual degree program in Psychology, Law, and Policy at the University of Arizona, earning both her Ph.D. and J.D. She is a member of the bar in Arizona and Washington, D.C., and clerked for the Honorable Patricia Wald, then Chief Judge of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. She has held numerous governance positions in the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, including as President. She served as Chair of the Psychology Department at John Jay College from 2002 – 2008, during which time she hired close to 30 faculty and built a leading program in law and psychology. Since 2008 she has directed the Doctoral Program in Psychology at the City University of New York’s Graduate Center. Through intensive strategic planning, she has supported the development of exciting programs in Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience, Basic and Applied Social Psychology, Critical Psychology, and Health Psychology and Clinical Science, among others, and has overseen the accreditation processes for three clinical training programs. Her research and teaching interests are in the intersection of psychology, gender, and law, and, in the use of scientific information and expert testimony in the legal system, particularly focused on gendered components of that process. |
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Rotary Scholars Past and Present
Feb. 03, 2017
This week we will be lucky enough to hear from two Rotary Global Scholars, our current inbound scholar Fabio Campos and an update from Megumi Yoshinaga who we had the pleasure of hearing from as last year’s scholar. Since the funding overhaul at the Rotary Foundation around how they bestow scholarships, what we used to call Ambassadorial Scholars are now funded through Global Grants. Fabio has dedicated more than half of his life to Education. At age 18, Fabio cofounded Curso Invest, a community prep-course for underprivileged students in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. For 19 years, Fabio managed and taught Literature as a volunteer at Invest. The initiative won the "Makes a Difference" national award granted by O Globo newspaper in 2012. Following more than a decade in marketing communications departments in major international companies, Fabio took on the challenge of cofounding and directing Ensina!, Brazil’s branch of Teach for All. At Rio’s municipal government, Fabio directed the Schools of Tomorrow, a program for over 100.000 students and 155 schools spread throughout Rio’s most violent favelas. Finally, Fabio was the Education Director at Oi Futuro, Oi Telecom’s social responsibility institute, where he managed public-private educational programs that mixed creativity, arts and technology. Fabio holds an MBA from Coppead, a bachelors degree in Social Communication from Rio de Janeiro’s Federal University (UFRJ), and a GCL specialization from Georgetown University. He is interested in Literature classics, comic books, videogames, open source interactive objects, video making, photography, anthropology and backpacking. Megumi has finished her year as a graduate student in East Asian Studies at Stanford. During her time she was able to translate Chiang Kia-Shek’s 1927 handwritten diary in the Hoover Institution Archives. She was also an academic tutor in philosophy. In the summer she was a business intern at Google and since August has been an associate intern at GGV Capital. She wants to call her return talk “Fake it till I make it”. As we learned last year, she was honored as the University Student of the Year in Japan for producing the first-ever Muslim fashion show to raise awareness and help refugees in Syria. Megumi was also the youngest Youth Leader of Japan in the APEC CEO Summit in 2013 and G20 Summit in 2012. She has a love of language speaking her native Japanese along with varying degrees of French, Arabic, Latin, Chinese, English, and sign language. She likes traveling, playing golf and enjoys a well done Japanese tea ceremony. |
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Feb. 04, 2017 9:00 a.m. - 12:01 p.m.
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