ROTARY CLUB 13 |
| One of the best ways to get involved in Club 13 is through service on the wide variety of Club Committees. There are enough committees doing different things to provide at least one, if not many more than one, opportunity for every Rotarian to share their unique gifts and talents in the service of others, and to match their interests with needs of Club 13. This catalogue is designed to
provide new members of Club 13 a description of the different Committees
that comprise the Club’s service opportunities.
Rotary offers each member the opportunity to pursue service to others through
the “4 Avenues of Service.” These four avenues are: Club Service;
Community Service; International Service; and Vocational Service. Committees
vary widely in their scope and objectives, ranging from the actual implementation
of Club projects, to facilitating meeting arrangements, to supplying volunteers
for the projects of other organizations, to finding guest speakers, to helping
with governance issues such as legal affairs or insurance. |
CLUB 13 AMBASSADORS Rotary is committed to its membership; the Ambassadors Committee is devoted to assisting all members in their desire to stay connected to the Club. The Ambassadors Committee encourages attendance at Club meetings, insures that Rotarians who are ill or hospitalized received cards and visits, and follows up with recent graduates from the Tyrotarian class to promote their continued involvement in Club activities. BOY SCOUTS A service Committee of Club 13, the members of this committee work with the Boy Scout Troop of the DeLano School, all of whom have either physical or intellectual challenges. Committee members are actively involved in a hands-on way, serving as volunteer helpers to professional staff who work with the boys at weekly troop meetings. Rotarians help with troop activities such as camping, crafts, and scouting skills, both at the DeLano School and at the Rotary Youth Camp on scouting trips. ROTARY YOUTH CAMP COMMITTEES The Rotary Youth Camp is a significant ongoing project of Rotary Club 13, and one of the leading service efforts for other clubs in the Kansas City area. Located on the south shore of Lake Jacomo, the 27-acre camp is available year-round for both day and resident camping. It is completely funded by Club 13, and organizations are allowed to bring their campers and staff to the camp at no charge. The camp has the capacity to serve organizations whose “campers” are physically, emotionally, or economically handicapped children. During the summer, Club 13 funds a complete kitchen/dining service, swimming pool management, and supervision services. The Club maintains a resident manager and 2 rangers for the camp year round. Each year, more than 6,000 children spend nearly 20,000 camp days at the Rotary Youth Camp. The Club 13 Committees work closely with the Board of the Rotary Youth Camp, which is an independent Board of Directors specifically for governance of the Youth Camp. YOUTH CAMP COMMITTEE: CAMP GROUNDS The Camp Grounds Committee is responsible for recruiting Club members, family, and friends as volunteers for Camp Work Days, which are dedicated to maintaining and keeping up the grounds of the camp. Volunteers sweep, clean, repair, and provide a variety of other upkeep services on designated days, usually 4 per year, which last from approximately 8:00 AM until 1:00 PM. The Camp Grounds Committee is also responsible, with Camp management and the Camp Maintenance Committee (see below), for the development of an ongoing grounds maintenance and long-range tree replacement program. YOUTH CAMP COMMITTEE: CAMP MAINTENANCE This Committee also supports the Rotary Youth Camp facility by assuming responsibility for the short-term and long-term Camp maintenance needs. This Committee, again with the Camp Board of Directors and Camp staff, review the maintenance needs for the Camp, and plan the Work Day assignments (see CAMP GROUNDS COMMITTEE). Committee members act as team leaders for different areas of maintenance on Work Days and assign work to volunteers. YOUTH CAMP COMMITTEE: CAMP OPERATIONS This Committee supports the Rotary Youth Camp in a direct role with the organizations who utilize the camp for their children and youth. Members of the Camp Operations Committee assist these user organizations by serving as welcoming hosts and liaisons during their camp stay. Members of this Committee also assume responsibility for maintaining relationships and following up with camp users during the winter months, in order to ensure that their needs were met. The Committee also solicits, receives, and considers suggestions for improved facilities, grounds, and services at the Camp. This Committee works closely with the Board of Directors for the Youth Camp, assisting in strategic and tactical planning for upcoming camping seasons. CAMP ENTERPRISE One of the signature events sponsored by Club 13 is Camp Enterprise, a 2-day overnight session held at the Rotary Youth Camp. Each year, more than 100 seniors from local metropolitan high schools participate in this educational opportunity. Community volunteers from local businesses serve as workshop facilitators, leading students in experiential learning sessions designed to educate young people in business, entrepreneurship, and the principles of free enterprise. Committee members are responsible for recruiting participants from local schools, identifying and recruiting workshop facilitators, promoting the event, setting up the event, and recruiting Rotary volunteers to serve as group leaders, kitchen helpers, talent show judges, and overnight chaperones. COMMUNITY SERVICE Club 13 both develops opportunities for community service and participates in the service projects of other organizations. The Community Service Committee is the primary gatekeeper for the wide variety of service opportunities within the Kansas City community. Members of this Committee research new ideas for community service projects that have heretofore have had no Club 13 participation. In addition, the Committee is responsible for making recommendations to the Board of Directors of the Club regarding the selection of projects for Club participation. Criteria for selection include the breadth of appeal for Club members, the level of potential for a positive effect in the community, and the feasibility of implementation. Finally, the Community Service Committee often recruits volunteers from Club 13 members, families, and friends to staff the volunteer activities. Representative samples of Club 13 community service projects implemented by the Community Service Committee include:
CONFERENCE AND CONVENTION COMMITTEE Rotary Club 13 is part of a larger, regional group of 50 Rotary Clubs comprising District 6040, and is a member of the largest group of Clubs, Rotary International, which is made up of all Rotary Clubs from all over the globe. There are a variety of both district and international meetings that take place which Club 13 members are encouraged to attend. Most notably, members of this Committee work to promote Club 13 attendance at the yearly District 6040 Conference and the yearly Rotary International Convention that takes place in May or June, held worldwide to stimulate, inspire and inform all Rotarians at the international level. CONSTITUTION and LEGAL AFFAIRS This Committee, under the leadership of a Club 13 Rotarian with legal expertise, reviews and makes recommendations when necessary to the Board of Directors on all matters of a legal nature affecting the Club. This Committee reviews any proposed changes to the Club’s Constitution and to its Bylaws, as well as to policies proposed by the Board with legal implications. The Legal Committee also handles any grievance that a member may have regarding operations or policies of Club 13, including the status of his or her membership. DOWNTOWN COMMITTEE Rotary Club 13 is the premier downtown civic club. As such, Club 13 has an obligation to take part in any major effort to improve the downtown area. Working either separately or with other civic organizations, the Downtown Committee reviews or develops opportunities for civic projects that will positively affect the downtown corridor. ECOLOGY COMMITTEE The Ecology Committee is responsible for planning and implementing a Rotary Club 13 signature event, Ecology Day. Held at the Youth Camp, Ecology Day is an educational experience for elementary school students in the Greater Kansas City metro area, designed to raise their awareness and understanding of ecological issues, ecosystems, natural habitats and the creatures with whom we share our environment. Ecology Day is typically held in the fall. Approximately 200 students in Grades 4, 5, and or 6, their teachers and adult supervisors are invited to attend a session at the camp, which consists of a rotating series of workshops held by local educators and volunteers. Volunteer educators from the Audubon Society, Parks and Recreation, the Environmental Protection Agency, Operation Wildlife, the Kansas City Zoo, the Girl Scouts, and other organizations with an educational program participate, holding 30-45 minute “workshops” through which students rotate. Committee members are responsible for helping Committee Co-Chairs identify schools for participation, identify and recruit presenters, and primarily, participating as volunteer program coordinators for Ecology Day itself. A one-day effort, Rotary volunteers set up the camp for Ecology Day, assist presenters, help teachers move their students from workshop to workshop, set up lunch for the presenters, and facilitate other logistical tasks. This volunteer commitment is from approximately 8:00 AM until 3:00 PM on Ecology Day. ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE One of the many enjoyable aspects of membership in Club 13 is the warm fellowship enjoyed among the membership. Social events are a significant part Club 13’s efforts to foster friendship among Rotarians and their families. The Entertainment Committee plans and executes social events during the year. Notably, the Committee is responsible for planning the following events.
FIRESIDE A “signature event” for Club 13 is the series of Fireside meetings. There are at least one or two Fireside events a year. A Fireside meeting is a small group meeting hosted by and held at the home of a Club 13 member, who opens their home to between 8 and 10 Rotarians for a “fireside chat.” Held in the evening, the host Rotarian provides snacks and beverages, and members congregate to share fellowship and/or to discuss topics relevant to the Rotary experience. Another version of Fireside is the breakfast Fireside, where a small group of Rotarians sign up for a meeting in a community venue – usually a restaurant – for a small group breakfast. Finally, another version of Fireside takes place at the business of a Rotarian, who serves as luncheon host at his/her place of business to a small group of Club 13 Rotarians, who gather there to learn more about the business of that particular Rotarian. Fireside meetings take place at 6 or 8 locations on the same evening, morning, or lunch, and substitute for the regular Thursday luncheon meeting. The Fireside Committee is responsible for organizing the Fireside meetings, recruiting Fireside hosts, and assigning members to various locations.
GREATER KANSAS CITY DAY This event is one of the signature fundraising events for Rotary Club 13. Each spring, on Royals Baseball opening day, the Kansas City Star donates special edition newspapers that Rotarians sell on street corners to raise money for the Camp. Rotary keeps a significant share of the proceeds and all the money raised goes to fund the Youth Camp. Committee members are responsible for scheduling and coordinating the logistics for this large project, including recruitment of volunteers to sell papers. GREETING/MEETING ARRANGEMENTS Club 13 is a large club – certainly the largest in the Kansas City area, and one of the largest in the country. In order to maintain a sense of close fellowship, the Greeters are the group appointed to greet each person attending a Rotary meeting. The Committee Chair assigns specific meeting dates to each member of the Committee, and ensures that at least three Tyrotarians are included in each Greeter’s receiving line. Approximately 4 or 5 Greeters await the arrival of Rotarians and greet them as they enter the dining room. This Committee also coordinates, with the Executive Director, the arrangements for weekly luncheon meetings, including setting up the badge table and reception desk, placing banners and flags in the appropriate place, helping place handouts on the luncheon tables, etc. HISTORY COMMITTEE Club 13 is one of the oldest clubs in the history of Rotary. As its number signifies, our Club was the thirteenth Club founded as Rotary was becoming a national organization. The History Committee acts as the institutional memory of Rotary Club 13. The Committee tries to preserve, display, promote, and share the Club’s history from 1910 until the present day. The Club Historian is responsible for contributing, when appropriate, to a column in the Buzz Saw, Club 13’s newsletter, highlighting an interesting piece of the Club’s history. Club 13 has an illustrious past with many significant ties to Kansas City history and has had many a notable member, including H. Roe Bartle, former FBI Director Clarence Kelly, Harry S. Truman, and Senator Kit Bond. INSURANCE COMMITTEE Under the leadership of a professional in the insurance field, the Insurance Committee as necessary reviews and updates the necessary coverage for both the Club and the Youth Camp. The Committee’s responsibilities include securing quotes, conducting cost analyses, recommending policy changes to the Board of Directors, identifying appropriate carriers, and other related tasks. INTERNATIONAL SERVICE COMMITTEE One of Rotary’s four avenues of service is international service. Club 13 is one of 31,314 Rotary clubs in 166 countries worldwide, and being part of the international family of Rotary is a critical part of the Club’s mission. The International Service Committee is the primary Committee of Club 13 that interfaces with a variety of international service and fellowship opportunities. The committee is responsible for making arrangements for Rotary hosts for international visitors, and for hosting metro area AFS students at weekly luncheon meetings. In addition, committee members work closely with District 6040’s committees on the Group Study Exchange program and the Friendship Exchange program. The Group Study Exchange, hosted on a District level, sponsors visiting teams of Rotarians to other countries, where Rotarians meet, talk, and live with host Rotarians in order to learn about other countries and serve as ambassadors of goodwill. The Friendship Exchange has similar objectives, but may be conducted on a club-to-club basis; Rotarians travel to a host country to live with Rotarians in a local community, and later the hospitality is reversed when the foreign Rotarians visit in Kansas City. In addition, the International Service Committee develops and promotes Club 13’s sponsorship of international service projects in other countries. Club 13 has had an ongoing relationship with a small community in the Ukraine, a project in which Club 13 has recruited volunteers to travel to the Ukraine to help build a community center. INTERNATIONAL YOUTH EXCHANGE Again, in keeping with Club 13’s focus on international service, the International Youth Exchange program sponsors the child, grandchild, or other young relative of high-school age of a Rotarian to visit a host family in another country for 3 weeks. Once again, the hospitality is exchanged when the young person of the foreign country travels to Kansas City to stay with a local family. This program provides students with excellent opportunities to see another part of the world and experience new customs, languages, traditions, and families quite different from their own. Committee members coordinate this Youth Exchange Program, identifying candidates and facilitating the process. INVOCATION COMMITTEE A traditional part of every Club 13 luncheon meeting is the invocation. The Invocation Committee is responsible for identifying volunteers, a different Rotarian each week, to lead the group in an invocation at the beginning of the meeting. Invocations are usually quite short, and are not limited to any traditional form of prayer. Members often read an inspirational message, lead a prayer from their own particular denomination or religious tradition, or simply share an uplifting story or anecdote. LITERACY KANSAS CITY Club 13 has an ongoing relationship with a local Kansas City area non-profit, Literacy Kansas City. Literacy Kansas City’s mission is to eradicate adult illiteracy in the local Kansas City area; approximately 250,000 adults in our community are functionally illiterate, meaning that they read at levels expected for an elementary student. Illiteracy affects our families, our workplaces, our economy, and our health. Many employers have surprisingly high rates of illiteracy in their workforces, often at relatively high positions in the organization. Rotary Club 13 assists Literacy Kansas City in their mission by sponsoring a spelling team for the group’s signature fundraising event, the annual Corporate Spelling Bee. Approximately 20 local businesses – among them Hallmark, Sprint, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, The Kansas City Public Library, Aquila, and others – sponsor a team that competes in a true Spelling Bee. The event raises about $50,000+ for Literacy. The Committee is responsible for promoting the event among our members, finding spellers for the Rotary-sponsored team, and hosting events with Literacy Kansas City to promote interest in its mission.
MEMBERSHIP CLASSIFICATION AND QUALIFICATION The Membership “C & Q” Committee, as it is known in Club 13, is responsible for recommending qualified candidates for membership in Club 13. In order to accomplish this task, the Committee carefully reviews each prospective member’s application for membership, including evaluation of the business and personal ethics of the prospect. The Membership Committee checks with sponsors for prospective members to ensure that the sponsorship is appropriate and legitimate, and that the prospective member is a suitable candidate for membership in the Club. C&Q also determines possible conflicts with present members, and checks for overlap in business representation or classification. In addition, the C&Q Committee is responsible for determining the legitimacy of classifications for new member proposals. Each new member that joins any Rotary Club has a classification according to his or her profession or business. The C&Q Committee works hard to find the right way to describe the work or profession of each new member, so that we continue to have a wide variety of professions, businesses, and vocations represented in the Club. MEMBERSHIP DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE This Committee is one of the strongest marketing and recruitment arms of the Club. Responsible for spearheading the efforts to bring in new members, the Membership Development Committee helps maintain a strong Club membership by continually reviewing the unfilled classifications for members, follows up on all new member prospects, and raises awareness among existing members for the continued need to recruit new Club 13 Rotarians. The Committee often plans and develops special membership drives or new member recruitment campaigns which can be fun and exciting contests among the membership to see who can bring in the most new members.
MEMORIAL COMMITTEE Each year in May, the Club honors members who have passed away in the preceding year with a luncheon meeting devoted to memorializing these members. Traditionally held at the Youth Camp, the Memorial Committee plans the luncheon meeting to honor their memories. Often, family members of the deceased Rotarian are in attendance. The Committee is responsible for planning and conducting the meeting, and for finding volunteers who are willing to share their personal recollections and memorial remarks about the Rotarians being honored. MUSIC COMMITTEE Like the invocation, singing is a hallmark of any Club 13 meeting. Once a month, we sing the Birthday Song to Rotarians celebrating a birthday during that month. Each meeting, a Rotarian leads the singing for that meeting, which always includes a patriotic song or a song suitable to occasions that might be relevant to the timeframe of the meeting (for example, we often sing “Take Me Out to the Ball Park”) on Royals Opening Day, in which Club 13 participates in a special way (see Greater Kansas City Day). The Music Committee also often enlists Club singers (regardless of actual talent) to sing Christmas carols during the holiday season, and does in fact recruit those with singing talent for special events. A notable example of the latter is the singing of foreign national anthems, should the speaker be from another country; a Rotarian sang the Slovakian National Anthem, in Slovakian, to honor the US Ambassador from Slovakia who was a guest speaker.
NEW MEMBER ORIENTATION COMMITTEE Committee members are the presenters for the orientation session. PHOTOGRAPHY COMMITTEE Led by the Club photographer, all that membership in this committee requires is a camera and a willingness to take pictures at Club events. Photographers – amateur and professional alike – are responsible for taking photos of Club award and member recognition ceremonies, speakers, and Club activities and events. These photos are published in the Buzz Saw and archived for Club historical records, as well as possible publication in national RI (Rotary International) publications. PROGRAM COMMITTEE This Committee has the responsibility for the guest speaker at each luncheon meeting. Club 13 is known in Kansas City as having one of “the best podiums” in town. The program committee consistently delivers a series of luncheon speakers that are interesting, informative, educational, relevant, and dynamic. The Program Committee organizes the year-long series of speakers around a variety of themes, bringing both relevance and variety to the podium; themes include contemporary social, educational, scientific and political issues. Authors, religious leaders, sports figures, educators, non-profit leaders, business leaders, politicians, foreign diplomats, and a host of other kinds of speakers grace the podium of Club 13. The Program Committee takes advantage of visiting dignitaries and other potential speakers, coordinating with the Civic Council and the tourism bureau to take advantage of opportunities to enlist potential speakers. In addition, the Committee is responsible for planning and implementing special events from the podium, such as the program designed around the Business Executive of the Year, the fundraising for Literacy Kansas City, visits by District and National Rotary leadership, and other project-related events of the Club. They also assist other committees in program planning, if appropriate.
PROJECT YOUTH ENDOWMENT This project is a major fundraising effort conducted by Club 13 to raise money for the Rotary Youth Camp and the Kansas City Rotary Foundation, the non-profit organization that supports the Youth Camp. Committee members are responsible for raising awareness about the Foundation and any special projects it might have, planning special fundraising campaigns for particular needs (for example, the new dining hall) and ongoing fundraising for general ongoing needs, identifying potential funding sources, contacting and educating potential donors, and communicating progress on fundraising to the Club 13 Board of Directors and the membership. PUBLIC RELATIONS COMMITTEE Another marketing and communications arm of Club 13, the Public Relations Committee is responsible for obtaining coverage in local media for Club 13 special events, projects, and important speakers. Committee members assist in preparing press releases, contacting local media, preparing information for media to use in potential coverage, and in soliciting information from Club members about ongoing projects and initiatives that might be of interest community-wide. PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE As it is in any organization, communication is key in Club 13. With a membership of over 400, the Club needs a variety of communication tools to keep our membership informed, updated, and involved. The Publications Committee is responsible for helping to publish the weekly newsletter, The Buzz Saw, a tool that is published and distributed mostly on-line but also in hard-copy. This publication covers items of interest about members, promotes upcoming programs and committee meetings, and covers each week’s meeting and special events. The Committee also assists the Executive Director in publishing the annual Club 13 membership roster, and any other special publications. The Committee also works with the Executive Director to publish the weekly table handout, Life @ Rotary, which updates members on current events and serves as the primary venue for announcements. RECREATIONAL FELLOWSHIP COMMITTEE Fellowship is a critical part of Club 13’s mission, and recreation and sports are good ways to build friendships and fellowships. This Committee plans and promotes recreational activities, hobbies and sports among the Club membership, including: • The Spring Golf
Classic. A member/member or member/guest tournament, this event
is held each Spring at a local golf club.
The afternoon golf round is followed by a cookout or barbeque.
ROTARY INTERNATIONAL (RI) FOUNDATION Rotary is an international organization. Rotary Clubs are found in 166 countries, comprising 530 Districts, 31,314 Clubs, and 1,220543 members. There are more than 825,000 Rotarians who have made donations of $1,000 or more to the Rotary International Foundation; these Rotarians are designated as Paul Harris Fellows, in honor of Paul Harris, the Founder of Rotary. In addition, there are more than 53,000 Rotary International Foundation Benefactors, individual Rotarians who have recognized the RI Foundation’s Permanent Fund (an ongoing endowment) with a gift of $1,000 from their estates or in a direct gift. The RI Foundation was established in 1918; the very first gift of $26.50 establishing the Foundation was from the Rotary Club of Kansas City, Missouri. The RI Foundation has grown through gifts, Paul Harris Fellowships, and planned giving to a fund that receives contributions of more than $65 Million each year. The RI Foundation supports Rotary’s worldwide projects such as Polio Plus, the Rotary World Peace Scholarships, Group Study Exchanges, Ambassadorial Scholarships, and a host of other global initiatives that support Rotary’s worldwide mission. Club 13’s RI Foundation Committee is responsible for publicizing the availability of RI Foundation Ambassadorial Scholarships, a program designed to further international understanding and friendly relationships among people of different countries. It also arranges for interviews and recommendations for Scholarship candidates. It promotes the Rotary World Peace Scholarship program. Finally, the Committee is responsible for promoting the Paul Harris Fellows program, recruiting Rotarians to become Paul Harris Fellows through their donation of $1,000 to the RI Foundation.
ROTARACT COMMITTEE ROTARACT is the name given to clubs on college campuses that are sponsored by Rotary for the purpose of promoting responsible citizenship and leadership potential in clubs of young men and women aged 18 to 30. Each club is require to complete at least two major service projects each year, one to serve the community and the other to provide international understanding. A Rotaract Club can only exist when continuously sponsored, guided, and counseled by a Rotary Club. Rotary Club 13 sponsors the Rotaract Club at University of Missouri, Kansas City. Members of the Club 13 Rotaract Committee mentor the members of the Rotaract Club at UMKC, guide them in planning their service activities, and engage them appropriately in the events and meetings of Club 13. SHOES FOR ORPHAN SOULS, A Project of District 6040 District 6040 sponsors a district-wide project to collect pairs of new shoes for children in orphanages throughout the world. Club 13 members are asked to buy at least one, if not more, pair of new shoes for children – infants through teenagers – who are living in orphanages in other countries. This Committee publicizes the shoe drive, arranges to collect the shoes and store them, and transports them to the District meeting where all districts contribute their shoes which are then shipped to the orphanages. In the past 4 years when Club 13 has participated, District 6040 has collected and shipped tens of thousands of pairs of shoes to orphanages in eastern bloc countries and to orphanages in Central America. TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE A Rotary Club on the cutting edge of everything Rotary, Club 13’s Technology Committee is responsible, in coordination with the Executive Director and staff, for designing, developing, and maintaining the Club website and for developing technology-driven systems and processes that facilitate the fulfillment of the Club’s mission. TYROTARIAN COMMITTEE The word “Tyrotarian” refers to a new Rotary Club member who is fulfilling their requirements for full membership in the Club. Club 13 has a specific way that Tyrotarians become familiar with and involved in Club activities. Beginning with New Member Orientation, Tyrotarians begin their term of initiation into Club 13. Tyrotarians, or “Tyros”, have a red ribbon attached to their badge until they have completed a number of activities that are worth “Tyro points.” When Tyros have completed the requisite 100 points by participating in events, committees, etc., they may remove the red ribbon from their badge. The Tyrotarian Committee is responsible, in conjunction with the Mentoring Committee and the New Member Orientation Committee, for planning the events for Tyrotarian participation, and for assisting the Executive Director and staff in monitoring Tyrotarian participation and accumulation of Tyro points. In addition, the Tyrotarian Committee plans, schedules, and hosts a number of social events throughout the year specifically designed to engage Tyros, help them meet the Board of Directors and other Rotarians, and feel at home within the Club. VOCATIONAL SERVICE COMMITTEE The Vocational Service
Committee is one of the primary groups in the Club that help us
fulfill our avenue of service in the vocational
area. The Committee develops or identifies projects for Club 13 participation
that will promote high ethical standards in all business and occupations.
The Committee is responsible for promoting vocational awareness and
provide career development opportunities for upcoming generations
of young men and women. Finally, one of the signature programs and
awards of Club 13 is the “Business Executive of the Year.” Members
of the Vocational Service Committee solicit nominations from the
membership for the Business Executive of the Year – a local
business leader from any field or segment of the business world who
has exemplified the 4-Way Test and made significant contributions
to this community through the success of the organization. The Committee
sends out the nomination forms, receives them, reviews the nominations,
makes a selection, and in conjunction with the Program Committee,
plans the luncheon program where the nominee is honored and presents
the luncheon address. |
|
|
|
This
page was last updated on March 09, 2006
|
|
Copyright
2004 Rotary Club 13, Kansas City, MO
For more information regarding this website please contact the Webmaster |