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THE UNLEY ROTARIAN: Meeting 4077 - 14 November 2017 Website: unley.rotaryclub.org.au
Rotary Club of Unley Inc.

District 9520 - Chartered 17 April 1935

President: Heather Kilsby: 0418 892 168
Secretary: Greg McLeod: BH 08 8223 3999   AH 0417 811 838
Address: PO Box 18, Unley SA 5061
Email: unley.secretary@rotaryclub.org.au
Meetings: Tuesdays at 6.00 for 6.30pm
Venue:
Damien on Fisher, 123 Fisher Street, Fullarton SA
President Heather Kilsby
 

Our Last Meeting

Venue:                           Damien on Fisher
 
Guest Speaker:             Annie Rogers
 
Chairman:                     Stephen Bone
 
Visiting Rotarians:        John Holds (Whyalla)
 
Guests:                         Sorel Coward
 
Apologies:                    Sheila Evans, Rhonda Hoare, Heather Kilsby, Mavis Martin, Bob Mills
 
Attendance:                  Members   Guests

President Heather's Announcements

1.  

Guest Speaker: Annie Rogers - Flotilla for Kids

Chairman Stephen

Spots.....
Stephen  
 

The Finale

won the appalling squares
 
The meeting closed. at pm 

Rotary News

Champions of Peace

Rotary Day at the United Nations pushes peace from concept to reality

By Photos by

On the 99th anniversary of the end of World War I, more than 1,200 people gathered in Geneva, Switzerland, for Rotary Day at the United Nations. 

Representing 87 countries, they convened on Saturday, 11 November, at the Palais des Nations, originally the home of the League of Nations, and dedicated themselves to the theme enunciated by Rotary President Ian H. S. Riseley: “Peace: Making a Difference.”

View Slideshow

Rotary International honors six champions of peace at the United Nations on 11 November.

 

“The advancement of international understanding, goodwill, and peace have always been among Rotary’s primary goals,” said Riseley. “It is past time for all of us to recognize the potential of all of our Rotary service to build peace, and approach that service with peacebuilding in mind.”

For the first time in its 13-year history, Rotary Day at the UN was held outside of New York.

Rotary Day culminated Geneva Peace Week, during which John Hewko, general secretary of Rotary International, noted the “close and longstanding ties between Rotary and the UN in (their) mutual pursuit of peace and international understanding.”

Rotary members “can transform a concept like peace to a reality through service,” said Ed Futa, dean of the Rotary Representative Network. “Peace needs to be lived rather than preached.”

As a highlight of Rotary Day, Hewko introduced Rotary’s 2017 People of Action: Champions of Peace award winners. He praised them as “an embodiment of the range and impact of our organization’s work,” and saluted them for providing “a roadmap for what more peaceful, resilient societies look like.”

Rotary honored six individuals, who each made brief remarks. They were:

  1. Alejandro Reyes Lozano, Rotary Club of Bogatá Capital, Colombia: "Part of the generation that grew up with uncertainty and fear,” as he put it, Reyes Lozano played a key role in negotiating an end to the 50-year conflict between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). With a Rotary Global Grant, he’s now leading peacebuilding efforts among women from six Latin American countries.

     

  2. Jean Best, Rotary Club of Kirkcudbright, Scotland, UK: “Without peace within ourselves we will never advance global peace,” said Best, explaining The Peace Project, the program she created to “the future leaders of peace” develop the skills they need to resolve the conflicts in their lives.

     

  3. Safina Rahman, Rotary Club of Dhaka Mahanagar, Bangladesh: “Education is a powerful and transformative vehicle for peace,” said Rahman, a passionate advocate for workers’ rights and workplace safety who also promotes and provides educational and vocational opportunities for girls. 

     

  4. Ann Frisch, Rotary Club of White Bear Lake, Minnesota, USA: Frisch’s Civilian-Based Peace Process introduced the radical concept of “unarmed civilian protection” in war zones around the world. “Sustainable peace,” she said, “requires strong civilian engagement.”

     

  5. Kiran Singh Sirah, Rotary Peace Fellow: The president of the International Storytelling Center in Jonesborough, Tennessee, USA, Sirah uses stories to help encourage peace, nurture empathy, and build a sense of community. “Stories matter—and I believe they matter a lot,” he said.

     

  6. Taylor Cass Talbot, Peace Fellow: Currently based in Portland, Oregon, USA, Cass Talbot partnered with SWaCH, a waste-picker cooperative in India to form Pushing for Peace, which promotes safety, sanitation, and dignity for waste pickers in Pune, India. Her ardent advocacy also manifests an artistic flair: her weighty but whimsical Live Debris project creatively addresses issues of waste and exclusion on a global scale.

     

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Alejandro Reyes Lozano, Rotary Club of Bogatá Capital, Colombia: "Part of the generation that grew up with uncertainty and fear,” as he put it, Reyes Lozano played a key role in negotiating an end to the 50-year conflict between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). With a Rotary Global Grant, he’s now leading peacebuilding efforts among women from six Latin American countries.

 

The six peace honorees joined a stellar panel of speakers and experts in workshops devoted to sustainability and peace, as well as a workshop on education, science, and peace designed by and for young leaders in which Rotaract members from around the world played a prominent role. 

Dr. Michel Zaffran, the director of polio eradication at the World Health Organization, joined Her Excellency Mitsuko Shino, the deputy head of the permanent mission of Japan in Geneva and co-chair for the Polio Partners Group, Global Polio Eradication Initiative, to provide an update on efforts to eradicate polio. They noted the tremendous progress made by Rotary, WHO, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and other partners in eliminating 99 percent of all global incidences of polio. 

Returning the focus to peace, Zaffran sounded a positive note. “This same international relationship (that’s eradicating polio),” he said, “can be used to achieve world peace.”

In his keynote address, Riseley made a similar observation. “The work of polio eradication, has taught us . . . that when you have enough people working together; when you understand the problems and the processes; when you combine and leverage your resources; when you set a plan and set your targets — you can indeed move mountains,” he said. “And the need for action, and cooperation, is greater now than ever before.”

Upcoming Events

Our Club's Christmas Celebration 28 November
 
Carols at the Rotunda   Sunday 17 December
 
Group 6 Breakfast  Wednesday 20 December
 

Our Upcoming Meetings

21 November 2017 at Damien on Fisher at 6 for 6.30pm
Mike Turtur - Tour Down Under  
Chair: Stephen Baker......Set-up, Welcome & Attendance:  V Bonython & R Carnachan  
 
28 November 2017 Christmas Celebrations
 
5 December 2017 at Damien on Fisher at 6 for 6.30pm
AGM, Club Assembly, Committees and Salvos Donations.....anything goes 
Chair: Heather Kilsby.....Set-up, Welcome and Attendance: Jerry Casburn & Judi Corcoran
 
Usual Meeting Venue: Damien on Fisher, 123 Fisher Street, Fullarton SA 5063
Apologies to: Stephen Baker as early as possible by e-mail  sandbbaker@internode.on.net or 0403 687 015
Meeting Chair Enquiries to: Secretary Greg McLeod on 0417 811 838 or email to unley.secretary@rotaryclub.org.au
Venue Set-up/Bar Enquiries to: Bulletin Editor Stephen Baker on 0403 687 015
Attendance Enquiries to: Wendy Andrews by e-mail to wendyjoyandrews@gmail.com or in an emergency on 8377 7830
 

Saturday Thrift Shop Roster

Early Shift: 10.00am to 12.30pm    Late Shift: 12.30pm to 3.30pm 
Week 1: 2 December 2017
Early: David Middleton & Jerry Casburn  |  Late: Robyn Carnachan & Rachel Harding
Week 2: 9 December 2017
Early: Greg McLeod & Chad Leader |  Late: Wendy Andrews & Heather Kilsby)
Week 3: 18 November 2017
Early: Nathan White & Vera Holt |  Late: Pam Trimmer & Ken Haines 
Week 4: 25 November 2017
Early: Stephen Baker & Judi Corcoran |  Late: Sheila Evans & Rhonda Hoare 
Week 5: 
Early: Bob Mullins & David Pisoni  |  Late: Jerry Casburn, Reno Elms
 
Rotarians, who are unable to attend as rostered, please arrange a swap or as a very last resort contact:
Pam Trimmer (T) 8293 2612; (M) 0415 238 333; e-mail: pamela.trimmer@bigpond.com
 

Bunnings Mile End Barbeque

ALL the Bunnings Mile End Barbeque shifts are from 8am to 5pm
Next Date: Monday 20 November
Morning shift: 8.30am – 12.30pm | Afternoon shift: 12.30 – 5pm
 
 

The Tale End 

This is the educational section of the bulletin called

Predictions from the past

"Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons."
Popular Mechanics, forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949
"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."
Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943
"I have traveled the length and breadth of this country and talked with the best people, and I can assure you that data processing is a fad that won't last out the year."
The editor in charge of business books for Prentice Hall, 1957
"But what ... is it good for?"
Engineer at the Advanced Computing Systems Division of IBM, 1968, commenting on the microchip.
"There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home."
Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp., 1977
"This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us."
Western Union internal memo, 1876.
"The wireless music box has no imaginable commercial value. Who would pay for a message sent to nobody in particular?"
David Sarnoff's associates in response to his urgings for investment in the radio in the 1920s.
"The concept is interesting and well-formed, but in order to earn better than a 'C,' the idea must be feasible."
A Yale University management professor in response to Fred Smith's paper proposing reliable overnight delivery service. Smith went on to found Federal Express Corp.
"Who the hell wants to hear actors talk?"  H.M. Warner, Warner Brothers, 1927
 
Now none of us in the Rotary Club of Unley would have made the same mistake with such appallingly bad predictions.............we are a class above!
 
Now this lady makes accurate predictions