CURRENTS 
Currents for June 13, 2019
Editor: Bill Secord
 
 
Moorings:

We had a short three days of summer/spring weather this week, but today the drizzle and the chill returned. Despite the forecasts, talk around the table consisted mostly of hiking and camping plans. Phil Rentz recently climbed Mt. Cabot and has only a few more 4,000 footers left before he attempts Mt. Everest. Doctor Ernst is planning to travel past Dixville Notch north of Berlin next week to kayak and camp in Errol, New Hampshire. The conversation led inevitably to tics, how to look for them on your body, and the effects they are having on our upstate moose population. The newest tic-prevention medicine for dogs comes in chewy form, and according to Bruce Bergeron works perfectly. The question arose, “Could a human chew one of these things with the same positive results?” Doctor Ernst refused to give us a prescription.

President Michelle rang the bell at 7:20 in order to allow for us all to have a leisurely breakfast and in-depth conversations. We tried to sing the Welcome Song and pretty much failed. (The speaker today would provide us with the courage to try, try again.) After the pledge, we sang “America the Beautiful” with only a little more success—despite at least fifteen years of practice.


Brags:

  • Sergeant-at-arms Tim Guaraldi complained about being fleeced at a local poker gathering—where, he claimed, club members use never-to-be-seen-elsewhere rules of the game. Tim also bragged about riding ten-straight hours on his new tractor despite his wife’s entreaty that he take a break after the first six. The stump had to come out! It was only because the tractor has a built-in backhoe utility that Tim got himself out of the stump hole.
  • Hank Clarke spent a rainy vacation week at Lake Placid. He came back in time to help serve dinner to 87 people at the Listen Center with two other club members. (Three backed out, their excuses having been diverted to Bruce’s spam folder.)
  • Ernst Oidtmann announced that his son has received tenure at Georgetown University as a history and Asian studies professor.
  • Bruce Bergeron participated in another Watkins Glen instructional session where he helped coach drivers on how to handle extreme handling issues. Bruce’s student was an eighty-year-old Canadian with a $225,000 Mercedes. The student really didn’t know how to drive, but they had fun—and survived.
  • Don MacMeekin celebrated grandchild number five, while his wife awaits news about the “reattachment” of her broken foot.
  • Bill Babineau has sold his thirty-two-unit apartment complex and traded it in for a cabin in Porpoise, Maine—already rented for the summer.
  • Dan Nash, as a member of the Sunapee Area Planning Commission, enjoyed a beautiful sailboat ride on the lake this week as part of his official duties (he claims)..
  • Someone (this editor’s notes failed to record whom) is about to take a trip to Goodyear, Arizona, where the temperature has been reading 107 degrees.

Raffle:

Steve Whitman drew the Four of Diamonds, and Don MacMeekin won Jake’s carwash.


Brew Fest Fundraising:

Steve Whitman placed copies of the new brochure we have printed to use as a recruitment tool for sponsors for the upcoming Brew Fest. The objective is to identify 80 different organizations as sponsors and/or advertisers for the Brew Fest booklet. Several club members visited the annual Beer Fest that was held two weeks ago in the Brattleboro area and learned that 1,500 people had bought $30 tickets for that event. We have a similar potential of a gross intake of $45,000 for our charitable activities. This new brochure can also be used digitally for social media outreach.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
Program:

President Michelle introduced our speaker, George Spencer, the executive editor of the Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. Michelle met George at our club’s booth at the Farmers Market two weeks ago, where he expressed interest in talking to our club about the new book he has authored, Courage 101: True Tales of Grit and Courage.

George began his talk with a definition of “courage”—a word from the French meaning “heart.” It indicates a person’s possession of a “stout heart,” enabling him/her to overcome fear, which is the flipside of courage. George especially likes the definition once given by John Wayne: “Courage is saddling up even if you’re afraid to do so.” The book consists of 101 short narratives about individuals who have shown remarkable courage in their lives.

John Wayne is one of those individuals. Wayne grew up in poverty, got a football scholarship to college but had to leave when he suffered a broken collarbone. He worked as a flunky around the set of a movie studio, where a director spied him and put him in a 1931 film that was a flop. Failed films followed his career throughout the Depression until 1939, when he appeared in “Stagecoach” and became a star.

Another person of courage to appear in George’s book is Brownie Wise, a woman from the American South who in 1950 was working as an assistant catering a birthday party when she knocked a food container off a table filled with glassware and noticed that it remarkably didn’t break. She asked her supervisor about the nature of the container, and he dismissed it as junk that wasn’t going to sold any more. Brownie investigated the origin of the product, found the inventor/manufacturer, and convinced him to take her on as a salesperson—using home gatherings of “housewives” to sell the containers. The inventor’s name was Earl Tupper, and the Tupperware Party was born—to earn both him and Brownie fame and fortune. By 1957 Brownie had 10,000 women working for her. Sandra Bullock is in the process of making a movie of her life.

A local hero who appears in Courage 101 got off to a rocky start when he was caught with a bottle of gin in his college dorm room and was barred from participating in extracurricular activities, which included drawing cartoons for the college newspaper. He slipped in a few unsigned cartoons but spent most of the 1930s drawing newspaper advertisements. In 1936 he tried to get his artwork and poetry published, but twenty-seven different publishers turned him down. After the last rejection he was walking miserably home to tear up his project when he ran into a college friend on the street. It so happened that the friend had just landed a job that morning with a publisher and took Theodor Seuss Geisel that same day to his new boss at the publishing house, which ended up publishing And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street. That title has seen 600,000,000 copies in print.

The fourth person who George referenced in his talk to the club was Julianne Koepcke, a teenage girl from Peru who was traveling in a plane that blew up over the Amazon jungle. She landed intact in the jungle still strapped into her passenger seat. Shoeless and wearing only a white minidress, she followed a stream (advice once given to her by her father) while dodging piranhas and alligators to a lonely hut that was serendipitously noticed by a passing boat. Her explanation: “I didn’t give up.”

George’s further example of courage was the story of Harold Russell, who was a meat cutter in a grocery store before joining the Army and becoming an explosives instructor at Fort Benning. An accident blew off both his hands. He appeared in an Army training film exhibiting the use of the hooks that now served as his hands. The movie director William Wyler saw Harold in the Army film and cast him in the film Best Years of Our Lives with Fredric March and Dana Andrews. Harold won an Oscar for his roles in both films and ended up serving three terms as national commander of AMVETS.

George’s final example of courage was Viktor Frankl, an Austrian physician in the 1930s. Frankl had obtained permission to leave Austria (and thereby escape Hitler’s campaign to exterminate the Jews), but because his wife and parents were not able to leave Austria with him, he chose to stay. He and his family were sent to concentration camps. Only Frankl survived. While in the concentration camps, Frankl became fascinated with the question why some people lived and some people died (just gave up). The result of Frankl’s experiences was the book Man’s Search for Meaning, which has seen 20,000,000 copies in print. His message is that the purpose of life is the search for meaning.

George summed up his litany of courageous people with the thought that “nobody can take what’s between your ears away from you.” In taking on the chore of writing Courage 101, he told himself that he would write 101 stories in 100 days. The product of his labors can be obtained through Amazon, and you can find excepts from the book at this link: https://365courage.blogspot.com.

 

Farmers Market Booth
Every Thursday in Colburn Park
We have a booth at the Farmers Market from now until Brew Fest.  It will be an opportunity for us to showcase Rotary in Lebanon and to promote the Brew Fest.  Farmers Markets are on Thursdays from 4:00 p.m. to approx. 7 p.m.  Two to three Rotarians are needed each market.  See Don MacMeekin to Sign Up.
 
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The Rotary Club of Lebanon’s Annual Changeover Dinner Meeting
Thursday, June 27th, at 5:00 p.m.
The Courtyard Marriott, 10 Morgan Drive, Lebanon.
 
We hope to see all club members and spouses to celebrate the end of the Rotary year and acknowledge the wonderful leadership of out-going presidents Michelle and Steve. Enjoy the company of your club-members and an Italian feast while we honor our outgoing presidents and welcome the incoming.
 
Cost is $30/person and a cash bar will be available.
 
RSVP no later than June 15th to LISSMOONEY@GMAIL.COM
 
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First-Grade Readers
 
We received the following letter from the first grade students in Mr. Wetmore's class.

Brew Fest
August 24, 2019
 
Posters and tickets for Brew Fest are available.  See Marion or Suellen if you have places you can hang them.
 
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Prepare for the next Friendship Exchange

Rotary Friendship Exchange—Team from Calgary, Alberta, Canada

An easy way to experience the internationality of Rotary

Two Requests:

 

  1. Would you willing to host two members of our Friendship Exchange Team in October? They are coming from Calgary, Alberta Canada. They will be with us from October 14 through 19. The Randolph Rotary Club will be transferring them to us at some point on the 14th, and we will be taking most team members to Dartmouth Coach at the end of their stay. We don't have a set schedule yet, but we would be asking you to provide breakfast most mornings and some dinners. There will be some group meal too. It would be helpful if you could get them to central meeting points on sightseeing days, but we can come up with other plans if needed.
  2. Drivers needed for sightseeing days (October 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18). You can drive one day or multiple days.

If you can participate in this adventure, please let Steve Whitman or Marilyn Bedell know.

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Save the dates
Listen Dinners 2019 - August 13, October 8, and December 10.
 

 
 
 
Upcoming Events
Rotary Club of Lebanon's Club Meeting
Aug 01, 2019
 
Rotary Club of Lebanon's Club Meeting
Aug 08, 2019
 
Listen Community Dinner
Listen Center
Aug 13, 2019
3:00 PM – 6:00 PM
 
Rotary Club of Lebanon's Club Meeting
Aug 15, 2019
 
Rotary Club of Lebanon, NH - Board Meeting
Whitman Building - Level 2
Aug 20, 2019 5:30 PM
 
Rotary Club of Lebanon's Club Meeting
Aug 22, 2019
 
Brew Fest 2019
Colburn Park
Aug 24, 2019
 
Rotary Club of Lebanon's Club Meeting
Aug 29, 2019
 
Rotary Club of Lebanon's Club Meeting
Sep 05, 2019
 
Rotary Club of Lebanon's Club Meeting
Sep 12, 2019
 
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Charities Board Treasurer
 
Web Master
 
Youth Service
 
Sergeant at Arms
 
Molica Fund
 
Service Projects
 
Rotary Foundation Chair
 
Russell Hampton
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Lebanon
Service Above Self
1st and 3rd of every month on Thursday at 12 Noon; 2nd and 4th Thursday at 7 AM...5th Thursday, Check Home Page
Harvest Hill (behind Alice Peck Day Hospital)
10 Alice Peck Day Drive (Dwinell Room)
Lebanon, NH  03766
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(603) 448-0126
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