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This Week's Meeting
April 25, 2024
 
This week's speaker is Sarah Beyer, Treasurer of The Rotary Club 13 Auxiliary. Her topic is "Highlights of How the 95-year-old Auxiliary has Supported the 100-year-old Rotary Youth Camp."
 
Sarah joined "Wives of Rotarians" in 1989 when her husband, Rick Beyer, joined Club 13. Her first assignment on the Wives of Rotarians Board was to Chair the Youth Camp Committee. Since then, she has served in many Auxiliary officer roles, including President (1995-97; 2005-06). During her first term, in 1995, women began to join Rotary and the Wives of Rotarians organization name was changed to "Rotary Club 13 Auxiliary." Sarah has been Auxiliary Treasurer since 2008.
 
After 95 years, with only 28 remaining members, the Auxiliary will dissolve. Remaining assets shall be distributed to the Rotary Club 13 Youth Camp of Kansas City, Missouri, according to Article III, Dissolution, of the Auxiliary By-Laws.
 
Ironically, the 95th anniversary of the Auxiliary coincides with the Centennial of the Camp.  Sarah will share highlights of the instrumental role the Auxiliary has played in supporting the Rotary Youth Camp 
 
Sarah has fulfilled many servant-leadership roles through the years including President of the Missouri Dental Hygienists' Association (1985), Rotary Auxiliary Officer (1992-present), The Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary Treasurer (2023-present), Colonial Presbyterian Church Deacon Board Chairman (2009), and Bible Study Fellowship International Group Leader and Childrens' Leader (1989-present). Sarah has been married to her husband Rick for 54 years. Sarah and Rick have two grown sons, Erik (Venice, FL) and Kent (Lee's Summit, MO).
Last Week's Meeting
April 18, 2024
 
Rotary 13 members and invited guests gathered in The Kill Devil Club at 14th and Main with select individuals participating remotely via Zoom and Facebook Live. President-Elect Tim Tholen brought the assembly to order at 12:13pm with a ding of the bell. The group stood for the Pledge of Allegiance, and Fred Drummond spoke about our debt to others in our lives, about Goethe, and gave thanks for them and for food.
 
Mandy Sheldon introduced one guest: Eddie Crane, who attended at the invitation of Scott Holsman. There were no member anniversaries to announce this week, and thankfully, no members were reported in Sick Bay.
 
President-Elect Tim noted that the door greeters today were the Club 13 ecology committee and expressed his gratitude to them. He went on to share the bowling news. The club team went to Columbia, MO to face their St. Louis counterparts and were soundly defeated. Marc McCarty was victorious in the local league championship.
 
Volunteers are still needed to support Greater Kansas City Day (GKC Day) activities. The May 15th Pep Rally at the Negro Leagues Museum need 2 persons between 4:30pm and 7:30pm. The Monarchs Game on May 16th needs 7 persons starting at 5:45pm. Please see Mandy to sign up. Of course, everyone should attend the game even if they can’t volunteer!
 
P-E Tim added his gratitude to the Rotarians and friends who helped assemble 30 beds in 3 hours at Sleep in Heavenly Peace last weekend.
Upcoming Club 13 activities include:
  • 19-20 April, Rotary District FUNvention at Margaritaville
  • 10 May, Native Plant Sale at Rotary Youth Camp
  • 11 May, Work Day at Rotary Youth Camp
  • 15 May, Pep Rally for GKC Day at Negro Leagues Museum
  • 16 May, Monarchs Opening Day/GKC Day
  • 18 May, Rotary Youth Camp Centennial Open House
At 12:19 pm, Past District Governor and Club 13 President Marc Horner stepped to the lectern to speak on Newborn Support Zambia. A collaboration between Project C.U.R.E and two Rotary districts, the goal is to provide medical supplies and equipment in support of neonatal, pediatric, and maternal care to hospitals in Zambian cities. Project C.U.R.E arranges for the equipment donation, and the Rotary clubs arrange for shipping it between the United States and southern Africa. To date, transit funding sits at approximately $72K of the $110K required.
 
Formerly known as Northern Rhodesia, Namibia emerged in the post-colonial 1960s as an independent nation. PDG Horner noted that its current population of 20 million consists of some 73 distinct ethnic groups or tribes living in a land area slightly larger than the State of Texas. English is Namibia’s official language, but many tongues are spoken there. At present, its neonatal mortality rate hovers between 24 and 27 per thousand births. Newborn Support Zambia aims to reduce that mortality to 12 per thousand, through matching equipment and training to established medical centers. Four hospitals will participate: two in Lusaka, the capital city, and one each in Kasama and Ndola.
 
PDG Horner explained that Rotary District 9210 spans southeast Africa and includes Zambia. Through previous work projects, our own District 6040 has a well-established relationship with District 9210 and a number of its constituent clubs. Funding for Newborn Support Zambia transit principally comes through the Rotary International Foundation, via the mechanism of the host clubs in Zambia applying for grant funding.
 
Questions for Mr. Horner included clarification on the role of Club 13 members (we can earmark gifts to the Rotary International Foundation for this project), the staffing and infrastructure requirements of the participating hospitals (there inspections and thresholds to meet), the role of endemic diseases like cholera and smallpox in the mortality rate (those ailments are a factor), and number of shipping containers involved (4 containers total, each 40 feet long). The targeted shipping date is in July of 2025.
 
P-E Tim thanked Mr. Horner for his continued service and his interest in the work of Zambian Rotary Clubs. Ending announcements recapped upcoming Club 13 lunch meetings and special events. He then shared the following with the group:
 
“Rotary International’s masterpiece is The Rotary Foundation. It transforms our dreams into splendid realities... it is the most generous expression of Rotarian generosity—a generosity that not only brings benefits but also brings help and cooperation to solve the problems that affect mankind.” –Paulo Costa, RI President, 1990-91
 
At 12:57, the 4-Way Test closed the session, followed by the bell.
Thank You!
A big thank you to the members who volunteered at the Sleep in Heavenly Peace Bed Build event on Saturday. Thanks to a District grant and matching donation from the Venture Fund, we made 30 beds in three hours!
Greater Kansas City Day
Volunteers Need for KC Day Event
We have several ways that you can help with Greater Kansas City Day. We need at least 10 volunteers at both events. Please note that when you sign up to Volunteer for KC Day events, you will need to log into ClubRunner. When you get to the event page, go to the Member Login link at the top right and use your ClubRunner log in information.
 
GKC Day Game- click here to sign up. You will still be able to watch the game!
Gates open at 6pm
5:45-7:00/7:30? 
We need 7 more volunteers!
 
This is to pass out hats for the hat giveaway. The first 1500 fans get a Rotary Youth Camp hat. We may also want to have a table with a couple of people during the game. Promote our club, etc.
Native Plant Sale
The Rotary Youth Camp is excited to host a native plant sale on Friday, May 10 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m! The camp is located at 22310 NE Colbern Rd, Lee's Summit, MO 64086.
Native plants beautify landscapes and help support songbirds, pollinators, and other cherished wildlife. At the sale you may purchase native wildflowers, grasses, shrubs, trees, vines, sedges, and seed directly from growers such as:
Music and light refreshments will be available. Walking tours of the camp, it's history and facilities as well as the surrounding ecology will be led by the Kansas City Rotary Club.
Stroll through the sale and purchase plants or, if you prefer, pre-order plants directly from the vendor and they will have your order waiting when you arrive! Place your pre-order directly with the grower and let them know you'll pick it up at the Rotary Youth Camp sale.
 
A wealth of information, resources for planning your garden, design templates, and other best management practices can be found on the Grow Native! website.
 
(photo by Kiley Friedrich, Monarch Joint Venture)
Work Day
Click here to sign up for Work Day
We meet Thursdays at Noon
The Kill Devil Club
14 & Main
Kansas City, MO 
 
 @rotaryclub13
 
 @rotary13
 
 @rotaryclub13
Upcoming Events
Bagel Run
Apr. 27, 2024
 
Bagel Run
May 04, 2024
 
Book Discussion Group
J Wilbur Co
May 06, 2024
6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
 
Native Plant Sale at the Rotary Youth Camp
Rotary Youth Camp
May 10, 2024
4:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
 
Bagel Run
May 11, 2024
 
Work Day at the Rotary Youth Camp
Rotary Youth Camp
May 11, 2024
8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
 
Greater KC Day Pep Rally
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum
May 15, 2024
5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
 
Greater Kansas City Day
May 16, 2024
 
Greater KC Day Monarchs Game (Ticket sign up)
Legends Field
May 16, 2024
6:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
 
Bagel Run
May 18, 2024
 
View entire list
Speakers
Apr 25, 2024
History of Women at the Rotary Youth Camp
May 02, 2024
The On-going Crisis in Haiti
May 09, 2024
"The State and Future of Scouting Here and Across America"
May 16, 2024
View entire list

Greater Kansas City Day
Sponsors
Golden Glove Sponsor
Parkville Rotary Club
Stinson LLP
 
Grand Slam Sponsor
Jan Armstrong
The Bubb Team ReeceNichols - The Village
 
Home Run Sponsor
Tony Andresen
Leawood Rotary Club
 
All Star Sponsor
Bob & Sally Bibb
William Kort
Peter & Lois Ho
 
Patron Sponsor
Richard Atlas

Bowling News
by Tim Tholen
 
Hello and happy Monday 13!
 
The league met for the penultimate night of bowling for the year last week. The night started with the top three teams all within 2 1/2 games of each other! At the end of the night, the team of Tim Tholen, Shaun Cussen, and Dennis McKeehan prevailed, and we’re awarded the second half winner. That means the roll off next Wednesday will be against Chris and Curtis Grimsley and Mark McCarty. We depart on Tuesday for Columbia to go off in St. Louis.
 
200 games:
Will Patrick-200
 
Splits and Spares:
Neil Barnett-6/7/10
Joey Grimsley-6/7
 
Have a great week everybody!

Rotary Youth Camp Update
By Laurie Mozley
 
The Rotary Youth Camp needs your voice!
We will be recoding the scripts for the QR code map of the camp and the informational boards for the Centennial Celebration on Sunday, April 21 in the afternoon at the Rotary Youth Camp.  If you would like to lend your voice to this project contact Laurie at the camp.
OR 816-524-0923
 
   
Several weeks in the summer were dedicated to Safety Patrol Camp. The KCMO school district held one for boys and one for girls.  The other 19 area school districts were invited to send students to either an additional boys or girls session held at the Rotary Youth Camp.

Sponsors