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Russell Hampton
ClubRunner
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Speakers
Sep 03, 2019
Century Club & Sanderson Farms Championship
Sep 17, 2019
Oct 01, 2019
mMississippi Toughest Kids Foundation
Oct 08, 2019
HFH MS Capital Area
Oct 15, 2019
Medical Marijuana
Oct 22, 2019
No speaker
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Bulletin Editor
Bill Osborne
Executives & Directors
President
 
Vice President
 
Treasurer
 
Secretary
 
Director - Foundation
 
Director - Membership
 
Immediate Past President
 
Director - Public Relations
 
Executive Secretary
 
Eternal God, we bow humbly before you in acknowledgement of your goodness to us in so many ways. We are awed by the mystery of your Being, by all that is supernatural and spiritual. But we are impressed, as well. by your relevant presence revealed to us in the course of daily life. When we are tempted to rely on our own knowledge, ability and wisdom, prod us to trust the sufficiency of your grace and the credibility of your promises.

We thank you for the food prepared for us, for the fellowship we anticipate around these tables, and for the awareness of our continual blessings. Amen.

Club Announcements:

1. Please remember to sign up for and to bring your donation for the Walton School supplies drive to our September 3 meeting.

2. Please note that there will not be a regular noon meeting on October 22. Instead, we will meet noonish on Thursday, October 24 at the St. Dominic facility on the I55 North Frontage Road to participate in the Rotary Inter-national World Polio Day event. Box lunches will be served. The building is between Lakeland and Eastover Dr. There will be more details later. 

3. The Rotary Club of North Jackson Blood Drive will be Tuesday, November 12. Please be alert for details.

Birthdays And Anniversaries.

Birthdays:

  • Stanley Simpson    September 07
  • Uriel Pineda       September 09
Wedding Anniversaries:
  • Clinton & Lois Smith       September 07
Membership Anniversaries:
  • None
August 27, 2019, Meeting - Hinds County Assistant District Attorney Speaks to Rotary Club of North Jackson

Jamie McBride, Assistant District Attorney for Hinds County spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club’s August 27, 2019 meeting. Mr. McBride has worked in District Attorney’s offices for over 17 years in  Rankin, Hinds, and Madison counties. He is a native of New Jersey and a graduate of Mississippi College School of Law. He is one of 10 Assistant District Attorneys in the office of the Hinds County District Attorney. Per their website, “Our job is to prosecute cases and assist in bringing justice for the victims and put away the "Worst of the Worst".

 

Mr. McBride discussed the organization and activities of the District Attorney’s office and the challenges that it faces. The key challenge he cited was the high number of homicides in Hinds County. He cited that most of them are gun-related and they involve adolescent or recently post-adolescent males. He said that the county had 89 homicides in 2018 and that we are ahead of that rate in 2019. He discussed and described the Grand Jury system and how youth offenders are handled in the court system.

 

We thank Mr. McBride for his presentation and for his service to the citizens of Hinds County. He (center)  is shown in the following photo with Club President Greg Campbell (left) and Club Member Larry Anderson (right) who introduced him.

Stories
100 Black Men President Speaks to Rotary Club of North Jackson
 

Former Jackson, Mississippi  Mayor Harvey Johnson, Jr. President of the 100 Black Men of Jackson, spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club's August 20, 2019, meeting. Mayor Johnson informed members and guests about the 100 Black Men of Jackson that provides long-term mentor relationships for multiple stages of life to area youth that expand the possibilities of what can be achieved. 

 

Club members provide expanded educational experiences and advocacy in the areas that significantly affect the community and addresses systemic issues and bridges opportunity gaps for African American youth. Mentoring begins in the third grade and  continues through high school. The objective is to prepare the youth for life shills, be it work, community college, trade school or 4-year college. 

 

The Jackson chapter was formed in 1990 and has 80 members. There are 10,000 members of the 100 Black Men of America in 100 chapters. At the 33-rd annual conference of the 100 Black Men of America June 12-16, 2019, in Las Vegas, NV, the Jackson Chapter was recognized as the Medium Chapter of the year. This is the fourth time that the Jackson Chapter has received this award.

 

100 Black Men mentors youth in five areas: Social Skills, Education, Healthy Roles, Economic Empowerment, and Leadership Development. The organization works with 9 Jackson Public Schools: Barr, Galloway & Walton Elementary schools, Hardy, Powell, and Brinkley Middle Schools, and  Provine, Jim Hill, and Lanier High Schools.

 

We thank Mayor Johnson for his service to our City, in particular for his service to the youth of Jackson, and for his presentation to our club. He (second from left) is shown in the following photo with North Jackson Club President Greg Campbell (left), 100 Black Men of Jackson Executive Director John Hardy (second from right), and Rotary Club of North Jackson Director Larry Anderson  (right) who introduced Mayor Johnson.

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New Members Make Vocational Talks
 

Three new members of the Rotary Club of North Jackson made vocational talks at the Club’s August 13, 2029, meeting. Those members are as follow:

  • Rita Sun, a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA)

  • Suzy Tubb, a Certified Public Accountant (CPA)

  • Collier Graham, Attorney at Law

 

Ms. Sun is a native of China, as is her husband. She came to the US to pursue her Master of Business Administration (MBA) at Mississippi College. Her husband is also a native of China who came to further his education at Mississippi College. Ms. Sun owns her own financial advisory service, Wealth Management, LLC in Clinton.

 

Ms. Tubb is a native of Brandon, MS. She received her degree in Accountancy and her Masters in Taxation from the University of Mississippi and is a CPA with GranthamPoole in Ridgeland.

 

Mr. Graham, is a native of Meridian, MS, and is a graduate of Vanderbilt University and the University of Mississippi School of Law.  He is an attorney and shareholder with Wise Carter Child & Carraway.in Jackson.

 

We welcome these three new members to our club,  thank them for their service to the citizens of Mississippi, and for their presentations to our Club. They are shown in the following photo after their talks. From the left are Ms. Sun, Ms. Tubb, & Mr. Graham.

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Paul Harris Fellow Recognition
 

North Jackson Rotarians Stephen Stenmark and Bill Osborne were recognized as Paul Harris Fellows at the Rotary Club of North Jackson’s July 30, 2019, meeting. Judy Lyons, Club Foundation Director presented the awards.

 

The Paul Harris Fellow award recognizes Rotarians who have contributed, or have contributed in their name, $1,000 to the Rotary Foundation. Rotary created the Paul Harris award in 1957 to recognize people who made significant financial contributions to Rotary. The first Paul Harris awards in 1957 were for 1946 gifts to Rotary. In 2006, the one-millionth Paul Harris Fellow was recognized.

 

Rotarians Osborne (left) and Stenmark (center) are shown holding their Paul Harris Certificates with Rotarian Lyons in the following photo. We congratulate them for achieving this distinction.  

 

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Art for All-Mississippi

 

Tom Harmon, Executive Director of Art for All- Mississippi spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club’s July 30, 2019, meeting. Mr. Harmon, who is retired from the U.S. Army, discussed the history, mission, and activities of Art for All-Mississippi. The Mission of Art for All - Mississippi is to provide art opportunities for persons with disabilities. The organization was founded by Jean Kennedy Smith as a program of the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC in Starkville, MS as Very Special Arts. Over time the name evolved to VSA Arts and ultimately to its current name Art for All - Mississippi. The mission remains unchanged. The organization has an art studio in the Mississippi Arts Center at the corner of Lamar and Pascagoula in downtown Jackson. This studio provides opportunities for persons with disabilities to develop their art skills. He introduced some of their clients on a first name basis and showed and distributed some of their work. Mr. Harmon also discussed that Art for All is developing a new program with the Flowood YMCA to expand their activities to Rankin County and a Community Art Group in Vicksburg to support persons with disabilities and the elderly. Each of these new programs will provide a studio and a gallery for the clients’ work He emphasized that Art for All fits the mission of the YMCA and that the new Vicksburg center will provide marketing opportunities with river cruise tourists.

 

We thank Mr. Harmon for his work on behalf of the elderly and the disabled in the art field. He (right) is shown in the following photo with Chuck Galey (left) who is an Artist in Residence at the Jackson Art Studio and with Rotarian Larry Anderson who introduced Mr. Harmon and the program.

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 This week’s Rotary Foundation Thought is about Volunteer Service Grants

Rotarian Dr. Charles Erickson traveled from Nebraska, USA to Zambia in order to provide medical care at an orphanage. Sponsored by Rotary clubs in both countries, Dr. Erickson performed hemoglobin determinations on 30 orphans. Nutritional counseling
was provided to patients at the local clinic and at general health education sessions. During his month-long stay, Erickson initiated a malaria control program, battling the number one health problem in the area. Through mutual collaboration, the host and international sponsoring clubs have formed a solid partnership and hope to implement many more projects together in the future. How do I determine how much to give now? – Every Rotarian, Every Year!

Posted August 26

How Rotary changed my career

Thineskumar Asokokumara

Thineskumar Asokokumara

By Thineskumar Asokokumara, past president of the Rotary Club of Subang, Malaysia

  In June, my company held interviews to fill an opening for manager of our Kuala Lumpur support center. We are a company of over 2,000 employees listed on NASDAQ and worth multi-millions of dollars. The interview was no small thing. A panel of four including our senior vice president judged the candidates. I would not have even considered applying if it were not for Rotary.

Going in, I was a considerable underdog. Several people who applied were my seniors in experience and tenure with the company. Some of them had been working at our company since day one. I was no match for them.

I initially decided to apply for the position just to make my presence known in the organization and to gain exposure and experience. Little did I know that my involvement in Rotary would make me a real contender.

During the interview, in addition to talking about my educational background and technical skills, I shared the many ways I have been involved with my Rotary club and the experience that I have gained. I explained how I have grown both personally and professionally. The leadership qualities Rotary has instilled in me have made me a better person both at work and at home. I was able to speak with confidence as I pitched my ideas to the panel about how I would lead the team toward achieving the goals and targets management has set.

Rotary’s reputation itself added credibility to my presentation, and the panel was impressed. They rated my presentation the best and called it fabulous. Although I walked in an underdog, I walked out a proud Rotarian, convinced of the many ways Rotary has made me a better person.

I am now manager of my organization’s support office in Kuala Lumpur. This would not have been possible without Rotary, which has made me the person I am today. Rotary continues to teach me valuable lessons as I grow my personal and professional skills.

This is my #RotaryStory. What’s yours?