A few reminders from today's meeting!
 
  • Work bee to put the school furniture together on February 13th
  • Tri-Club Cross-Country Ski day and Potluck dinner at Otway on February 28th
  • Alpine Ski day at Purden on March 5th
  • Nechako Rotary Club Pub Night at the Legion on February 12th at 5:30pm
  • Yellowhead Rotary Club Taste of India on February 20th - tickets are $100.00 and Dolly bought a table
  • PG Chamber of Commerce Top 40 Under 40 on February 4th at 5:00pm at UNBC
  • ​Looking for a Vice-President and Chair of the Foundation committee in lieu of William Osei's absence
Julianne's Update: Next week she will be attending ski races in Jasper through her school. Last week she went curling - she said it reminds her of Canadian bowling!
 
Special Thanks and Congratulations go to:
Dolly and Executive for organizing our Charter Night
Lloyd and Gordon - who are two of our original Charter Members! Gord has been our Sgt at Arms for that entire period!
 
Rotary History
More than 60 years ago, in the midst of the Great Depression, a Rotarian in the United States devised a simple, four-part ethical guideline that helped him rescue a beleaguered business. The statement and the principles it embodied also helped many others find their own ethical compass. Soon embraced and popularized by Rotary International, The Four-Way Test today stands as one of the organization’s hallmarks. - See more at: http://portal.clubrunner.ca/7708/Stories/history-of-the-four-way-test#sthash.jPZOUmQR.dpuf
More than 60 years ago, in the midst of the Great Depression, a Rotarian in the United States devised a simple, four-part ethical guideline that helped him rescue a beleaguered business. The statement and the principles it embodied also helped many others find their own ethical compass. Soon embraced and popularized by Rotary International, The Four-Way Test today stands as one of the organization’s hallmarks. - See more at: http://portal.clubrunner.ca/7708/Stories/history-of-the-four-way-test#sthash.jPZOUmQR.dpuf
More than 60 years ago, in the midst of the Great Depression, a Rotarian in the United States devised a simple, four-part ethical guideline that helped him rescue a beleaguered business. The statement and the principles it embodied also helped many others find their own ethical compass. Soon embraced and popularized by Rotary International, The Four-Way Test today stands as one of the organization’s hallmarks. For more information, see John Berthelot's entire article here.