banner
Bulletin Editor
Max Bridges
Sponsors
Interested in being a sponsor?
Download the website sponsorship guide
Meeting Responsibilities
Presiding At Meeting
Randolph, Rich
 
Greeter
Tamanaha, Dicksie
 
Pledge Leader
Carlenzoli, Leroy
 
Thought of the Day
Herron, Steve
 
Microphone Usher
Tamanaha, Dicksie
 
Sunshine Committee
Girard, MJ
 
Web Site Editor
Lorenzen, Dave
 
Bulletin Editor
Bridges, Max
 
Bulletin Notes
Shureen, Doug
 
Bulletin Notes
Tamanaha, Dicksie
 
Photographer
Smith, Warren
 
Speakers
Apr 18, 2019
The Importance of Being Prepared
The Importance of Being Prepared
Apr 25, 2019
Trip to Southeast Asia
May 02, 2019
Executive Director, Redwood Gospel Mission
May 09, 2019
Director of Development and Marketing, Humane Society of Sonoma County
May 16, 2019
Executive Director, Museum of Sonoma County
May 23, 2019
Principal and Executive Director, Kid Street Learning Center
View entire list
Upcoming Events
Putin' On The Ritz - Fundraiser
Glaser Center
Apr 27, 2019
1:00 PM – 7:00 PM
 
Birthdays & Anniversaries
Member Birthdays
Steve Amend
April 10
 
Jon Stark
April 11
 
Peter Treleaven
April 12
 
Tom Eakin
April 12
 
Marty Behr
April 17
 
Jim Moir
April 20
 
Dicksie Tamanaha
April 22
 
Doug Shureen
April 23
 
Stacy Drucker-Andress
April 24
 
Ross Jones
April 27
 
Max Bridges
April 28
 
Spouse Birthdays
Marie Treleaven
April 2
 
Joanne Eakin
April 13
 
Jan Johnson
April 14
 
Terry Stark
April 18
 
Anniversaries
Eloise Tweeten
Jack Strange
April 12
 
Jack Strange
Eloise Tweeten
April 12
 
Olin Leasher
Judith Leasher
April 16
 
Join Date
Harry Coffey
April 3, 2008
11 years
 
Olin Leasher
April 7, 2005
14 years
 
Cindy Gillespie
April 8, 2010
9 years
 
Jim Moir
April 13, 2000
19 years
 
Marina Gachet
April 21, 2016
3 years
 
Steve Amend
April 24, 1997
22 years
 
Links
Links
Partners of Santa Rosa Sunrise Rotary
What Are My Make Up Options?
How to Contact the Sunshine Committee
SR Sunrise Facebook Page
Youth Exchange - District 5130
SCARC Meeting Schedule
Rotary International Business Portal
Latest "Rotarian Magazine"
Executives & Directors
President
 
President Elect
 
President Elect Designate
 
Secretary
 
Treasurer
 
Past President
 
Rotary Foundation
 
Service Projects
 
Club Administration
 
Public Relations
 
Grants
 
Russell Hampton
ClubRunner
Stories
The program for April 18th

John Lambert

The Importance of Being Prepared

 

John Lambert is a Senior Vice President and Financial Advisor with Morgan Stanley based in their Santa Rosa office.  John joined Morgan Stanley in January of 2014 as a producing branch manager in their office located at 555 California Street in San Francisco, California.  

Prior to joining Morgan Stanley Mr. Lambert was recruited by Neuberger Berman in New York to grow assets under management and increase visibility in a highly competitive marketplace. Mr. Lambert was promoted to Regional Director in first 18 months where he managed three wealth management offices in the west from their offices in San Francisco.

Before joining Neuberger Berman Mr. Lambert was a principal with KCM Investment Advisors in San Rafael, California.  John managed all sales and marketing strategies resulting in assets under management growing from $480 million to nearly $3.5 billion.

Mr. Lambert began his career in the financial services industry in 1986 following his career in professional sports.  After graduating with honors from the University of Southern California in 1975, John was the first round draft pick of the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA.  He also played for the Kings and Spurs before concluding his basketball career in Venice, Italy.

John has also held positions in a number of other business ventures including commercial real estate, finance, tax appeal, non-profits and e-commerce industries. Mr. Lambert has also worked with several television networks including ABC, ESPN, USA, Prime Ticket and Raycom where he provided color analysis for a variety of live sporting events.

John and his wife, Lauren, have recently moved to Healdsburg and are looking forward to making new friends and contributing to the enhancement of the local community.

 

 

The Program From April 11th

Robert Stephens; Geek Extraordinaire!

 
 
Our Speaker for Thursday, April 11th was Robert Stephens, the founder of The Geek Squad.  Robert founded the Geek Squad in 1994, joined forces with Best Buy in 2002, and built the company into the largest tech support company in the world.  Robert described this amazing story in a humorous and anecdote-filled manner.  Robert is an original thinker.  He is laser focused on marketing, service and innovation. 
 
The iconic Geek Squad logo is a great example of his marketing skills.  It has a simple antique scheme, like an old metal sign.  The idea of having Geek Squad computer repair employees wear black pants, a white shirt and a tie was also geared towards showing reliability, straightforwardness, and a geek-like attention to computers.  In other words, true geeks don’t care what they are wearing; they put on the easiest, most general ‘outfit’ and concentrate on fixing your computer! 
 
When his business grew enough to need cars, he bought French Simca 7’s and painted them black and white!  As he said, French cars have 7 ashtrays and no seat belts.  Later, he had to fight with the CHP over his efforts to paint his vehicles with the CHP cruiser scheme!  Robert is now looking for new investments and enterprises in northern California.  He believes that with the upcoming crop of public offerings in the Bay Area, Sonoma County is going to be the place of choice for hundreds of newly minted millionaires.  In other words, Sonoma County is the place to be.  We agree!  Thank you, Robert for the entertaining and thoughtful presentation.
 
 
Photo of the Week

Photo of the Week

On a regular basis, our resident photo pro Warren Smith, as well as Club Public Relations-Image Director Jack Strange, submit pictures of what is going on at the weekly meetings. You can always find the most recent pictures at the websites photo journal called "Meeting Sighting" Please note that all the meeting photos for the entire Rotary year are at this location with the most recent on the last page.

Thanks for all the great pictures Warren! Link to Meeting Sightings. The most recent are on the last page!

Additional photos may be found on the SR Sunrise Facebook Page.
 
 
PRESIDENT'S PEN

President's Pen

Now wait just a darn minute!!

Past President, and BTW good friend Don "Flo" Floriani agreed to grab the gavel for me last week so I could do a stint at my grandson's school in SoCal.I didn't ask him to steal my schtick:  Two pen's in hand. glasses off, AND pointing to no hearing aid!!  I don't get any respect Rodney!

All kidding aside, being able to trust the good of the club in Don's seasoned hands is another measure of Sunrise strength and sustaining Goodwill and Funship.

Thank You Flo!

I couldn't help but notice how the trained eye of Charter President Warren Smith caught Past President Dave Lorenzen and Past District Governor Del Raby peering at one of their tech devices.

The expressions are curious, yet Del on the right appears more convinced of success than Dave.    Let's ask them if this was before or after hearing from Geek Squad founder Stephen Roberts?

Have you used your Club Runner app lately?

Looking forward to seeing you again Thursday!!

Rich

News From "The Rotarian"

OUR CLUBS

‘Small But Feisty’

Rotary Club of Chicagoland Lithuanians (Westmont), Illinois

When Tony Merfeld became an American citizen in 2007, the judge congratulated him and said, “You’re a citizen now, but you don’t need to forget where you came from.”

Chicagoland Lithuanians (Westmont) Rotarians Vytenis Kirvelaitis, from left, Austeja Sruoga, Saulius Janusonis Beckler, Silvija Basijokaite, and Linas Kliarskis at the Lithuanian World Center in Lemont, Illinois.

Photo by Frank Ishman

Those words stayed with him, and a few years later Merfeld found a way to expand his network in his adopted country while staying connected to his native Lithuania — by joining the Rotary Club of Chicagoland Lithuanians (Westmont). “This club is something I cherish,” he says.

Chartered in 2008, the 26-member club is the only Lithuanian-speaking Rotary club outside that small country on the Baltic Sea. Saulius Janusonis Beckler founded the club after arriving in Chicago in 2004 from the town of Panevėžys, where he had been a Rotarian. He missed the social and community service aspects of Rotary, so he started a club for Lithuanian-Americans. “I wanted to bring more Lithuanians into Rotary,” he says. “This club is a way for us to both preserve our identity and be valuable members of society.”

Its Thursday night meetings usually happen at Parkers’, an upscale American-fare restaurant in the western suburbs of Chicago. Parts of the meeting will feel familiar to any visiting Rotarian — members recite The Four-Way Test (in Lithuanian), and the club president calls on committee chairs to give updates. But the rest is more like a lively brainstorming session, with members preferring to work collectively to determine the club’s direction. “Sometimes we have to stop and remind ourselves that we have committees for a reason,” says club member Linas Klimavicius. Occasionally, the Rotarians switch to English for the benefit of an invited speaker or guest, but they conduct most of the meeting in Lithuanian. After the week’s business is complete, the rest of the gathering is social.

“Our club is small but feisty,” says Klimavicius, an international trade consultant who joined seven years ago. The members’ can-do spirit helped them bring in more than $100,000 in one day through their annual September golf outing and dinner, which raises money to help critically ill children in Lithuania.

It all started when Janusonis Beckler encouraged club members to take up golf, a game that was foreign to those who’d lived under Soviet rule. “When I came here, it was my dream to learn how to play,” he says. “I’m an insurance broker, and other companies’ reps would invite me to golf. Once we started the Rotary club, I said, ‘Let’s start golfing. We’ll spread the game in the Lithuanian community. Then we can do a golf outing, which is a good way to raise money.’ My club accepted that idea. We took several lessons, and now a lot of people play golf. Some are playing better than me!”

The club also raises money for a local shelter for victims of domestic violence, partnering with a club in a neighboring suburb. “Our goal is not just to do projects to support Lithuania; we want to support the communities where we live too,” says club member Silvija Basijokaite. 

Klimavicius attributes the club’s fund-raising success to a willingness to “just go for it.” But the Rotarians also enjoy the benefit of location: Chicago is home to the highest concentration of Lithuanians outside Lithuania itself, so when the club holds an event, it can tap into a large network. Club members also have ties to the Lithuanian consulate in Chicago and often play host when Lithuanian dignitaries and celebrities visit the city. This has given the club an impressive contact list that includes European basketball player Rimantas Kaukėnas and Dainius Zubrus, who spent 10 years playing in the National Hockey League.

Members range in age from their 30s to their 50s, and the club has almost the same number of men and women. All but three members were born in Lithuania — and those three are the children of immigrants who arrived in the United States as refugees after World War II.

Lithuanians immigrated to the United States in three waves, explains Janusonis Beckler. The first wave came in the early 1900s, when people arrived in search of work and a better life. The second consisted mostly of refugees who left when the Soviet Union annexed the three Baltic countries of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania after World War II. The Soviet regime targeted scholars, artists, engineers, and people connected with government in an effort to impose communist rule and culture; many were sent to their deaths in Siberia. The third wave came after Lithuania regained its independence in 1991.

Fear of losing their language and culture shaped a generation of Americans born to Lithuanian refugees. “I was raised to preserve the culture in case Lithuania never became free,” says Rima Ziuraitis, a new club member. Ziuraitis, who is in her 30s and was born in the United States, carries on this tradition by serving as president of the U.S. Lithuanian Youth Association. In her spare time, she interviews World War II refugees for an educational film she’s producing on Lithuania’s history.

Though its members are proud of their heritage, Janusonis Beckler says he thinks of the club as an American Rotary club. “This club unites us in culture, in language, and in values,” he says. It also has paralleled many members’ lives: “We are and will stay Lithuanians, but the longer we live here, we become Americans and want to support our communities here too.”

— Vanessa Glavinskas

• Read more stories from The Rotarian

 
 
Rotary Club of Santa Rosa Sunrise - Founded June 30, 1986