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Russell Hampton
ClubRunner
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Speakers
Jul 23, 2019
The Opiod Epidemic
Jul 30, 2019
Aug 06, 2019
2019 RI Convention
Aug 13, 2019
Vocational Talks
Aug 20, 2019
Aug 27, 2019
Sep 10, 2019
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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
 

Prayer.

Almighty God, at the apex of this summer season, we turn from leisure and work to engage in this hour of fellowship and to reaffirm our identity as responsible citizens committed to service, and to the practice of that which is true, fair, and beneficial in our relationships.

 

Accept our gratitude for food and sociability enjoyed here today, and for the joy of involvement in this special fellowship.

We pray with grateful hearts and spirits, energized to serve. Amen.

Birthdays And Anniversaries.

Birthdays:

  • Mark Green           July 24
  • Marisa Davidson   July 25
  • Edward Erlich       July 29
  • Steve Orlansky     July 29
Wedding Anniversaries:
  None
Membership Anniversaries:
  Bill McDonald  07 Years, July 24
  Pat Vivier         03 Years, July 26
 
June 16 Program
Steve Hutton , Executive Director, Mississippi Fair Commission, presented an excellent program on the operation and activities of his agency , the Mississippi State Fairgrounds, Coliseum, and Mississippi Trade Mart.

Currently under construction, the new Mississippi Trade Mart at the State Fair Grounds in Jackson is designed to attach to the existing Mississippi Coliseum, expanding the functionality and flexibility of both facilities. The Trade Mart's design allows the three trade halls to be configured to provide a seamless connection to the Coliseum’s arena floor, allowing for larger trade shows and events than currently possible.

 
 
Architect's rendering of New Mississippi Trade Mart
 
 
Stories
Rotary Club of North Jackson Installs 2019-2020 Officers and Directors

 
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Rita Sun Inducted into Rotary Club of North Jackson
Huiming “Rita” Sun was inducted into the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the club's July 16, 2019, meeting by Club President Greg Campbell. She was proposed for membership by Uriel Pineda and sponsored by Past President Don Roberts.

Rita is the owner of Wealth Management LLC and her office is located in the Mississippi Farm Bureau Building on Ridgewood Road in Northeast Jackson. Born and educated in China, she came to Mississippi College in 2008 to study and obtain her Master of Business Administration degree. Rita is a Charted Financial Analyst (CFA®) and a member of The CFA® Society of Mississippi. She is married and lives in Clinton with her husband, Xiao Luo, and their two children, Joshua and Joanna.
 
We welcome Rita to our club.
Lake Okhissa Project
 

North Jackson Rotarian and Architect Jack Allin and businessman and lawyer Wade Creekmore spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson about the Lake Okhissa Project of the Scenic Rivers Development Alliance in Franklin County, Mississippi at the Club’s July 16 meeting. The project features a lodge and 1,000 person conference center on the lake which was built on US Forest Service land.  The spring-fed lake features crystal-clear water. The concept includes the possibility of a golf course in addition to water-based sports. 

 

Mr. Creekmore discussed Meadville and Franklin County where he spent much of his career. He focused on the excellent school system and the town’s Chess Club, the Southwest Mississippi Chess Foundation, that has taught chess to a large number of Franklin County residents and successfully competed in tournaments nationwide winning many club and individual awards.

 

Mr. Allin discussed the Lake Okhissa project in detail. The following is an architect’s rendition of the lodge as seen from Lake Okhissa.

 

The next photo is a rendition of the expected view of the lake as seen from the over the lodge’s swimming pool.

 

We thank Messrs. Creekmore and Allin for their presentation and for their work on behalf of the citizens of Franklin County. They are shown following their presentation with Club President Greg Campbell (left).

 

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Jackson Refill Initative  Representatives Speak to Rotatry Club of North Jackson

“Refill Cafe and The Jackson Refill Initiative”

 

Jeff Good and Jordan Butler spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club's June 24, 2019, meeting about the Jackson Refill Cafe and the Refill Jackson Initiative. Mr. Good is the sponsor and impetus behind the Refill Cafe. Ms. Butler is the organization's V.P. Ed/Training. Ms. Butler described the Refill Jackson Initiative as a "holistic approach to workforce training." The organization's mission is "to empower young adults 18-24 so that they are more confident, better equipped and motivated to enter into, navigate, and stay in the workforce. Refill Cafe is based on Cafe Reconcile, a successful workforce training model developed in New Orleans several years ago and in other cities throughout the United States.

 

Refill Cafe is primarily funded by a grant from the Kellogg Foundation, but it is accepting donations from other sources. According to its website, "Refill Cafe will be a vibrant restaurant establishment that will be open to the general public for weekday lunch. Refill Café will also provide on the job training opportunities for all Refill Jackson Initiative’s participants. 

 

“Together, Refill Café and the Refill Jackson Initiative will strive to:

  • Serve delicious, healthy food in an intentionally designed space;
  • Revitalize a community gathering place that welcomes everyone;
  • Train and provide avenues of opportunity to our young neighbors and fellow residents of Jackson”

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Refill Cafe plans to open in September 2019 in the Space on the Jackson State Parkway formerly occupied by the Koinonia Coffee House. The building is in the process of being totally remodeled with a new kitchen, refurbished dining space and a covered deck. 

We thank Ms. Butler and the management team for their work in Jackson and for their commitment to their mission. The following photo shows the architect's vision of what their new facility will look like:

 

 

The Jackson Refill Initiative management team is shown in the following photograph with Club President Anna Powers. Shown from the left are as  follow Jeff Good, Marshall Wade , Emily Stanfield, Amber Parker, Sharna Shields, Anna Powers, Jordan Butler, Betsy Smith.

 


 
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Get2College Rep. Speaks to Rotarians

Stephen Brown, Assistant Director of Outreach for Get2College Mississippi spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club’s June 18, 2019, meeting.  The motto of the organizations is “We help you plan, prepare, And pay for college and it’s free. The following is taken from their website, but it is the message that Mr. Brown delivered to our Club.

 

Get2College is the flagship program of the Woodward Hines Educational Foundation. The Woodward Hines Education Foundation (WHEF) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization working to help Mississippi students plan and pay for college. We are committed to helping more Mississippians obtain post-secondary credentials, college certifications, and degrees that lead to meaningful employment. The foundation’s flagship program, Get2College, has centers in Jackson, Ocean Springs, and Southaven that reach more than 45,000 Mississippi students annually, providing individual counseling on college admission and financial aid. WHEF also supports grants focused on increasing college access and success that ultimately lead to meaningful employment.

 

How Get2College is funded

WHEF and its founders have a long history of service to the students of Mississippi. WHEF’s founders helped start Mississippi Higher Education Assistance Corporation (MHEAC) in 1980 as a nonprofit funder of low cost education loans for Mississippians. In 1995, the founders elected to expand their mission to focus on higher education access for Mississippians through the creation of Education Services Foundation (ESF). Both MHEAC and ESF were restructured to allow MHEAC to liquidate its student loan portfolio over time and to transfer its fund balances to ESF—today, known as the Woodward Hines Education Foundation.

Our mission and strategy to help more Mississippi students have expanded and improved over time, but we remain focused on elevating Mississippi to a higher degree through programs and priorities that support educational access and success.

WHEF Mission

Our mission is to help more Mississippians obtain post-secondary credentials, college certificates, and degrees that lead to meaningful employment.

WHEF Vision

We envision a Mississippi where all people can secure the training and education beyond high school that will allow them to enhance their quality of life, strengthen their communities, and contribute to a vibrant and prosperous future for our state.

In addition to discussing the role, mission, and vision of Get2College, Mr. Brown described the programs that Get 2 College offers. The organization focuses on Setting Students up for Success. Get2College is committed to understanding the strategies that help underserved students (low income, first generation, and students of color) in Mississippi get to college and be successful there.  We want to know what works. Our process is a continuous cycle of learning, testing and then sharing the data that tell us what is working.

We thank Mr. Brown for his informative and enthusiastic presentation to our Club. He is shown in the following photo with Club Treasurer Uriel Pineda, who introduced him.


 
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 This week’s Rotary Foundation Thought is the August 2019 President's Message from 2019-2020 RI President Mark Daniel Maloney.

Dear fellow Rotarians,

During 2019-2020, I am encouraging Rotarians and Rotaractors to grow Rotary. We must grow our service, we must grow the impact of our projects, but, most importantly, we must grow our
membership so that we can achieve more.

Let us try a new approach to member-ship, one that is more organized and strategic. I am asking every club to form an active membership committee consisting of people of different backgrounds who will look methodically
at the leadership of the community.

Your club’s membership committee will then apply Rotary’s classification system — designed to ensure that the range of professions in your community is well
represented — to identify potential leaders with the skill, the talent, and the character that will strengthen your club. If your club’s membership committee is
unsure how to proceed, look to the club membership committee checklist on Rotary.org for clearly defined
steps to organizing its work.

How else will we connect to grow Rotary? We will also form new types of clubs — either independent clubs
or satellite clubs — with different meeting experiences and engaging service opportunities, not just where there is no Rotary, but also where Rotary is already thriving. No Rotary club in the world can possibly serve all segments
of its community. Therefore, we must organize new clubs to engage the community leaders who cannot
connect with our existing clubs.

Growing Rotary is all about taking the connections that make our organization unique in the world and strengthening and multiplying them. Let us commit ourselves to growing Rotary and to welcoming the next diverse generation of women and men as Rotary Connects the World.

MARK DANIEL MALONEY
President, Rotary International
I am asking every club to form an
active membership committee.

What’s all the buzz about bees?

Posted on 

German Rotaractors build hotels for wild bees as part of the BeeAlive project.

By Henrik Thiele, a member of the Rotaract Club of Paderborn, Germany, and president of the Rotaract Germany Committee 

Recently, Rotaract clubs throughout Germany were looking for a signature project and decided to concentrate on the environment. After watching a Swiss documentary on bees, “More than honey,” one Rotaractor became passionate about focusing our attention on protecting these little superheroes. Did you know, for instance, that wild bees are responsible for pollinating more than 80 percent of our crops and wild plants? We can’t survive without them.

Most of the dangers to bees are man-made. Climate change, monotonous agricultural landscapes, and pesticides are just a few of the many reasons why our little yellow friends are dying in ever-increasing numbers.

With the project, “BeeAlive” German Rotaractors began to support wild bees by building bee hotels, educating people about the threat to the bee population, and sowing wildflower meadows. All German Rotaract clubs participated, starting with the most northern club of Flensburg, which visited a beekeeper with their sponsor Rotary club. The southern-most Rotaract club in Germany, Kempten Allgäu, planted a meadow of more than 32,000 square feet for bees to pollinate.

The Bundessozialaktion (BuSo) project, as it is called in German, is divided into three parts:

Inform

All the Rotaract clubs in Germany worked together to educate the population about bee mortality and the associated conse-quences for our environment, organizing theme days and informational events. We found many opportunities to coope-rate with beekeepers’ associations and nature conservation associations. Efforts ranged from the Rotaract Club of Berlin organizing an online presentation that was promoted across the country, by Dr. Kaspar Bienefeld, a renowned scientist and professor in the field of insects and bees at the Humboldt University of Berlin, to the Rotaract Club of Rheda Wiedenbrück holding a local fair.

Fundraising

Many of the projects are costly. Therefore, fundraising is an integral part of our efforts. The Rotaract Club of Duisburg-Niederrhein organized a Bee-Pong tournament, raising over $1,000 and the Rotaract Club of Paderborn hosted a Pub Quiz on the topic of bees. Clubs also got creative by selling homemade products, from beeswax chapsticks by the Bad Wörishofen-Mindelheim Club to bee-hotels (Herne-Wanne Eickel). There are also many organizations that do great work with our fundraising, like the NaBu; the German Nature and Biodiversity Conservation Union, or the local beekeepers' associations.

Hands-on

By building bee hotels and diversifying local beds, we make room for wildflowers and create a better environment for insects. Over 100,000 square feet of meadows were planted by clubs in District 1841 and by the Rotaract clubs of Lemgo-Lippe and AC Landshut-Trausnitz. In many of these, Rotaractors, Rotarians, family, and friends joined together.

Building a few thousand hotels, we were already able to surpass our goal of 500. The reason is simple. All you need for a hotel is a wooden frame for the outside, hardwood with holes drilled into it, and hollowed out bamboo for the inside. The best part is that you can put up a plaque reading “Made by Rotary/Rotaract” and you have the perfect ambassador for Rotary in your local community.

All in all, we hope to make the world a better place by raising awareness of this important issue and working to solve the problem in our local communities. But this is not an issue that can be solved locally. It is a global problem and we need to make a global impact. Join us in our efforts.

Post your actions under the hashtag #beealive and contact us at: soziales@rotaract.de.

:)