Thursday, September 23, 2010

World Polio Day



World Polio Day
Sunday, 24 October 2010 is World Polio Day as determined by the UN. Rotarians around the world are planning events in celebration of this day. In San Francisco, approximately 2,000 people are expected to walk the Golden Gate Bridge along with President Ray. A lighting of the Ferry Terminal with END POLIO NOW is planned for the evening.

For the week leading up to this event, The Rotary Foundation will be offering 2 for 1 recognition credit for every contribution of US$100 or more made to polio on-line. The opportunity is open to all Rotarians worldwide for one week.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Congratulations to our 4 Way Test Essay Winners!!

Congratulations to Morgan Gizzi, Jenny Eurich, and Amanda Willison for winning the 2010 Elizabethtown Rotary 4 Way Test Essay Contest!! Below, copied from the website of Rotary District 5320 in southern California, is the ultimate 4 Way Test Essay as written by Herbert J. Taylor - the man who wrote the 4 Way Test.

The 4-Way test of the things we think, say or do

First...Is it the TRUTH?
Second...Is it FAIR to all concerned?
Third...Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIP?
Fourth...Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?

For many decades Rotary clubs and Rotarians around the world have used The 4-Way Test asd an instrument to develop respect and understanding among peoples. It is being used successfully around the world in business, government and schools as an effective measuring stick for conduct. Get in the habit of checking your thoughts, words and deeds against The 4-Way Test...and like the experience of others, it will help you become happier and more successful. Here is the story of The 4-Way Test by its originator.

most1_small1.gifSTORY OF THE 4-WAY TEST
By Herbert J.Taylor (President of R.I. 1954-55 as shown in the above photo at Rotary's Fiftieth Anniversary) See end of story for more information about
Herbert Taylor

Back in 1932 I was assigned, by the Creditors of the Club Aluminum Company, the task of saving the company from being closed out as a bankrupt organization. The company was a distributor of cookware and other household items. We found that the company owed its creditors over $400,000 more than its total assets. It was bankrupt but still alive. At that time we borrowed $6,100 from a Chicago bank to give us a little cash on which to operate.

While we had a good product, our competitors also had fine cookware with well advertised brand names. Our company also had some fine people working for it, but our competitors also had the same. Our competitors were naturally in much stronger financial condition that we were.

With tremendous obstacles and handicaps facing us we felt that we must develop in our organization something which our competitors would not have an equal amount. We decided it should be the character, dependability and service mindedness of our personnel. We determined, first, to be very careful in the selection of our personnel and, secondly, to help them become better men and women as they progressed with our company.

We believed that "In right there is might" and we determined to do our best to always be right. Our industry, as was scores of other industries, had a code of ethics-but it was long, almost impossible to memorize and therefore impractical. We felt that we needed a simple measuring stick of ethics which everyone in the company could memorize. We also believed that the proposed test should not tell our people what they must do, but ask them questions which would make it possible for them to find out whether their proposed plans, policies, statements or actions were right or wrong.

We had looked in available literature for such a short measuring stick of ethics but could not find a satisfactory one. One day in July of 1932, I decided to pray about the matter. That morning I leaned over my desk and asked God to give us a simple guide to help us think, speak and do that which was right. I immediately picked up a white card and wrote out The 4 Way Test of the things we think, say or do as follows:

        1. 1. Is it the truth?
        2. 2. Is it fair to all concerned?
        3. 3. Will it build good will and better friendships?
        4. 4. Will it be beneficial to all concerned?
I placed this little test under the glass top of my desk and determined to try it out for a few days before talking to anyone else in the company about it. I had a very discouraging experience. I almost threw it in to the wastepaper basket the first day when I checked everything that passed over my desk with the first question, "Is it the truth?". I never realized before how far I often was from the truth and how many untruths appeared in our company's literature, letters and advertising.

After about sixty days of faithful constant effort on my part to live up to the The 4-Way Test I was thoroughly sold on its great worth and at the same time greatly humiliated, and at times discouraged, with my own performance as president of the company. I had, however, made sufficient progress in living up to The 4 Way Test to feel qualified to talk to some of my four department heads. One was a Roman Catholic, the second a Christian Scientist, the third an Orthodox Jew and the fourth a Presbyterian.

I asked each man whether or not there was anything in the test which was contrary to the doctrines and ideals of his particular faith. All four agreed that truth, justice, friendliness and helpfulness coincided with their religious ideals and if constantly applied in business should result in greater success and progress. These four agreed to use the test in checking proposed plans, policies, statements and advertising of the company. Later all employees were asked to memorize and use the test in their relations with others.

Over the years steady progress was made in reaching the ideals expressed in the The 4-Way Test. From a bankrupt condition in 1932 our company within a twenty year period had paid its debt in full, paid its stockholders over one million dollars in dividends and was worth over two million dollars [Editors note: This was written in about 1952].

Intangible dividends from the use of The 4-Way Test have been even greater than the financial ones. We have enjoyed a constant increase in the goodwill, friendship and confidence of our customers, our competitors and the public... and what is even more valuable... a great improvement in the moral character of our own personnel.

You cannot constantly apply The 4-Way Test to all your relations with others in business without getting into the habit of doing it in your home, social and community life. You thus become a better parent, a better friend and a better citizen.

Editor's note: Herbert Taylor was born April 18, 1893 in Pickford, Michigan. He first became a Rotarian in 1921 in Paulis Valley, Oklahoma and served as president of that club in 1924-1925. In 1927, Herbert Taylor became a member of the Rotary Club of Chicago and held the classification of: Aluminum Cooking Utensils Distributor. He served as President 1939-1940. In 1944-46 he served as a Director of R.I. and Vice president, R.I. 1945-46 and President of Rotary International during the "Golden Anniversary" of Rotary in 1954-55.

Monday, May 10, 2010

A thought from Paul Harris...


Paul Harris... January 1912... "He who pays the price of friendship by doing friendly service knows its value, and he would not barter one little spark of it for a whole constellation of the other. The most permanent friendships are born in service. May Rotary ever be a living protest against the words, "There is little friendship in the world."

Thursday, February 25, 2010

...in the presence of greatness, gratefulness, and grace.

In Memoriam: Dr. John W. Kreider, 1937 - 2010

To All Elizabethtown Rotarians--
the article at this link is a MUST READ! DON'T MISS IT!

http://www.pennlive.com/news/patriotnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1266631805311740.xml&coll=1

Please, for your own sake, read the article highlighted in the link above about the recent Memorial Service for Dr. Kreider whose work with the Jake Gittlen Cancer Research Foundation has impacted the entire world, and probably saved thousands of lives who will never know of his service to them.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


Each of us has had the privilege to cross paths, and perhaps even walk for a while down life's trail with men or women who inspire us to do more, to be better, to think nobly, to act selflessly. Sometimes we may never get to meet the people we hope to emulate, but learn about them from others. So it is with the great men of history, and such is the case with Dr. John W. Kreider.

Those of us who work on the committee to organize the Elizabethtown Rotary Golf Tournament have had occasional contact with the leadership of the Jake Gittlen Cancer Research Foundation. Their dedication to the cause is, without question, more than just a job-- it is a passion which inspires us to want to work harder, think bigger, act smarter and accomplish more each year to support them.

We have all had the opportunity to greet and hear various speakers from the Gittlen Foundation over the years at our club meetings. These have included Warren Gittlen and Dr. Keith Cheng, who have impressed us with their drive and commitment and knowledge about the vital need for proper research into the causes and treatments of a variety of cancers.

Few of us, if any, however, have ever met Dr. Kreider, and now, that possibility is gone. But from knowing and working with Warren Gittlen, we get a glimpse of the man who motivated and still inspires him and Dr. Cheng and many other researchers, doctors and students who knew him.

John Martin, II, summed up very succinctly what many of us have felt:
"Warren's responses and Dr Cheng's remarks [in the article] are why I am so enamored by these men and this cause. When I am with [them] I feel I am truly in the presence of greatness, gratefulness and grace."

We cannot walk with Dr. Kreider, but by following the leadership of those who have, we, too, can be motivated and inspired by his legacy. Now, more than any time in the past 5 years, I am ready to roll up my sleeves and work harder than ever to make our tournaments successful this year, and I hope you will all join in this work.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Rotary's Younger Generation

Prez Joe shared this link, and it is worth sharing with everyone!

Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel Online Edition- article on Rotary

It helped to answer the burning question:

WHY WOULD YOUNG PEOPLE FIND ROTARY MEMBERSHIP VALUABLE TO THEM?

Become a leader
Become engaged civically
Credibility in the community
Stature in the community
strengthening your network
worthwhile conversation with the "thought leaders" in the community
Live interaction with mentor-like relationships


That's a good start! Read the article and see what YOU can glean from it!

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

WHY SEND A SHELTERBOX TO HAITI?


Rotarians are quick to respond to disasters, within 24 hours of the earthquake in Haiti the officers of the Elizabethtown Rotary Club were in discussion as to how to be the most effective from such a distance. The decision was unanimous. "Without a doubt, let's send a ShelterBox...no, let's send TWO!"

So, what's in a ShelterBox?
Look here: SHELTERBOXUSA
And watch this video on CNN.
And what is ShelterBox's relationship to Rotary, besides bearing
its emblem on the top and side of every box created?

And why is ShelterBox so special?

This report of quick relief action in Haiti through Rotary's partnership with ShelterBox, was excerpted from ROTARY INTERNATIONAL:

A ShelterBox response team of two U.S. Rotarians and one from the United Kingdom has already mobilized and delivered 1,700 containers of supplies to the affected areas. Another 1,600 will be dispatched from the U.K. to Port-au-Prince. Also, more than 100 Aquaboxes are being delivered to Haiti to provide safe water.

Claude Surena, a member of the Rotary Club of Petion-Ville and president of the Haitian Medical Asscociation, is sheltering more than 100 people in his damaged home in Port-au-Prince. He is also leading the efforts of the 17 Haitian Rotary clubs to ensure that the ShelterBox containers will be deployed effectively to the thousands left homeless.

CNN is following the path of a ShelterBox from its origin point in England until it arrives at a family or facility in Haiti

There are other ways to help provide for long-term relief through Rotary. One is through the Foundation by contributing to a donor advised fund. You can read more about that here to see if it is right for you:
HAITI RELIEF: DONOR ADVISED FUND

It is impossible to look at the television each night and not want to be there, to reach out, to lend a helping hand, to comfort the injured and console the grieving people of this small, greatly impoverished, but strong-hearted nation. So give of yourself whatever you can.. both in dollars and in prayers.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Austria is January's Featured Country

In the International spirit that is Rotary, each Etown Rotary board meeting this year will feature a different country by way of a wine tasting. According to the French proverb, " In water one sees one's own face; But in wine one beholds the heart of another." Our meeting on Tuesday will highlight Austria.
Rotary has been established for a great many years in Austria. Austria traditionally was the border between East and West. It was therefore not unexpected that after the collapse of Communism, Austria should play a major role in establishing, encouraging, and support for Rotary which was establishing itself in the countries adjacent to it or in close proximity to it.

Both District 1910 & 1920 are heavily involved in Rotary in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Hungary, and Croatia.

Our January tasting will be Wolfgang Gru-Vee (Gruner Veltliner) . Vinted at Wolfgang's award-winning wine estates on the shores of the Neusiedlersee in the heart of Austria's Burgenland province, Vienna Gruner-Veltliner (or "Gru-Vee") Wine is a perfect example of Austria's best-loved white wine varietal. Neither sweet nor exceedingly dry, Gruner Veltliner wines are by far Austria's most popular whites; as a result, nearly all of the grape's annual yield is consumed domestically in Austria. The shoreline of middle Europe's only steppe lake provides an ideal climate for Wolfgang's cultivation of these powerful wines.

Vienna is made with only the finest hand-selected grapes from a single Holle ("warm weather") vineyard. The wine is aged for six months in new oak barrels to achieve the famous taste upon which Wolfgang has built its reputation.