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The Sunrise
Newsletter of the Skaneateles Sunrise Rotary Club
(Organized June 18,
2003) District 7150
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John Kenny Fred
Cholet Deborah
Glisson John
Rooney
RI President (Scotland) District
Governor (DeWitt) Asst.
Dist. Governor (Marcellus) President
UPCOMING EVENTS, INFORMATION AND OTHER ITEMS OF INTEREST
Programs
TODAY – Tea &
Treasures, Mottville Post Office & Emporium
October 22 – Willow Glen Café,
Cindy Eldredge
October 29 – Elderberry Pond, Merby
Lego
November 5 – Breakfast at the Blue
Danube
Suggestions for future
programs are always welcome.
Please forward your ideas to Marion at amkrauter@verizon.net.
Rotary Club hosts Skaneateles Candidate Nights, Oct.
22 & 29
The
Skaneateles Rotary Club will host candidate nights on successive
Thursdays, October 22 and 29 to provide Rotarians with an opportunity to hear
from each of the candidates for town-wide office prior to elections November 3.
Town Board candidates Steve McGlynn (Republican) and Jim Williams (Democrat) and
Supervisor Candidate Terri Roney (Republican) will
address the club October 22. Town
Board Candidates Mary Sennett (Democrat) and Rick Keyes (Republican) and
Supervisor Candidate Steve Datz (Democrat) will
address the board October 29.
After short talks, there will
be time for questions and answers.
& A. If you have a
question you would like the candidates to address, please contact Robin Jowaisas or John Hennessy.
These dates will be Rotary’s opportunity to query prospective
town board members.
– John Hennessy
Hedge
Fund Basics
Despite
much negative publicity in the past year, hedge funds were designed to protect
against market fluctuations.
So
says Evan Dreyfuss, a portfolio manager for Talon Asset Management, with an
office here in Skaneateles.
Contrary
to the media’s depiction of hedge funds over the past year, most hedge funds
goal is to always make more money in the long term with less volatility in the
short term, he said.
Hedge
funds typically are set up to be patient and invest at the right time. The problem over the past several years
was that investors purchased at the wrong time and were highly leveraged
resulting in a major collapse when lenders issued their margin calls in March
of this year.
Historic Moments: Twenty Years of Women in Rotary
Twenty
years after the Council on Legislation’s vote, Rotary has nearly 188,000 female
Rotarians. Women have served in leadership positions as high as the RI Board of
Directors and The Rotary Foundation Board of Trustees.
The
1989 Council on Legislation vote to admit women into Rotary clubs worldwide
remains a watershed moment in the history of Rotary.
“My
fellow delegates, I would like to remind you that the world of 1989 is very
different to the world of 1905. I sincerely believe that Rotary has to adapt
itself to a changing world,” said Frank J. Devlyn, who would go on to become RI
president in 2000-01.
The
vote followed the decades-long efforts of men and women from all over the
Rotary world to allow for the admission of women into Rotary clubs, and several
close votes at previous Council meetings.
The
response to the decision was overwhelming: By 1990, the number of female
Rotarians had skyrocketed to over 20,000.
Following is a timeline of women in Rotary.
1950. An enactment to delete the word male
from the Standard Rotary Club Constitution is proposed by a Rotary club in
India for the Council on Legislation meeting at the 1950 RI Convention.
1964. The Council on Legislation agenda
contains an enactment proposed by a Rotary club in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) to
permit the admission of women into Rotary clubs. Delegates vote that it be
withdrawn. Two other proposals to allow women to be eligible for honorary
membership are also withdrawn.
1972. As more women begin reaching higher
positions in their professions, more clubs begin lobbying for female members. A
U.S. Rotary club proposes admitting women into Rotary at the 1972 Council on
Legislation.
1977. Three separate proposals to admit women
into membership are submitted to the Council on Legislation for consideration
at the 1977 RI Convention. A Brazilian club makes a different proposal to admit
women as honorary members.
The
Rotary Club of Duarte, California, USA, admits women as members in violation of
the RI Constitution and Standard Rotary Club Constitution. Because of this
violation, the club’s membership in Rotary International is terminated in March
1978, only to be reinstated in September 1986.
1980. The RI Board of Directors and Rotary
clubs in India, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States propose an enactment
to remove from the RI and club constitutions and bylaws all references to
members as male persons .
1983-86. In a lawsuit filed by the Duarte club
in 1983, the California Superior Court rules in favor of Rotary International,
upholding gender-based qualification for membership in California Rotary clubs.
In 1986, the California Court of Appeals reverses the lower court’s decision,
preventing the enforcement of the provision in California. The California
Supreme Court refuses to hear the case, and it is appealed to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
1987. On 4 May, the U.S. Supreme Court rules
that Rotary clubs may not exclude women from membership on the basis of gender.
Rotary issues a policy statement that any Rotary club in the United States can
admit qualified women into membership. The Board “encourages all clubs in the
U.S. to give fair and equal consideration to candidates for membership without
regard to gender.”
The
Rotary Club of Marin Sunrise, California (formerly Larkspur Landing), is
chartered on 28 May. It becomes the first club after the U.S. Supreme Court
ruling to have women as charter members. Sylvia Whitlock, of the Rotary Club of
Duarte, California, becomes the first female Rotary club president.
1988. In November, the RI Board of Directors
issues a policy statement recognizing the right of Rotary clubs in Canada to
admit female members based on a Canadian law similar to that upheld by the U.S.
Supreme Court.
1989. At its
first meeting after the 1987 U.S. Supreme Court decision, the Council on
Legislation votes to eliminate the requirement in the RI Constitution that
membership in Rotary clubs be limited to men. Women are welcomed into Rotary
clubs around the world.
1990. As of June, there are about 20,200
female Rotarians worldwide
1995. In July, eight women become district
governors, the first elected to this role.
2005. Carolyn E.
Jones begins her term as the first woman appointed as trustee of The Rotary
Foundation, serving from 2005 to 2009.
2007. In July, 63 women begin terms as
district governors. Women are members of 25,227 clubs around the world. There
are 177,859 female Rotarians.
2008. Catherine Noyer-Riveau begins her term
as the first woman elected to the RI Board of Directors. She will continue
to serve through June 2010.
2009. There are 187,967 female Rotarians
worldwide. Sixty-three serve as district governors.
By Susan Hanf and Donna Polydoros
Rotary International News -- 1 October 2009
Club
Business &
Dates
to Remember
Call to Order; Pledge of Allegiance & Invocation
lIntroduction
of Guests/Visitarians
lHappy
Dollars & Fines
District Major Events
October 31 – Annual State Street
Halloween Party
November 7 – RLI, Canandaigua
Old Business
Committee Reports
lClub Administration
President
– John
Rooney
Treasurer
– Toni Feldmann
Secretary
– John Paddock
l
Service Projects
Food Pantry
– Daryle Pickering
Sea Scouts
– John Paddock
Programs
– Krauter/Beckwith
Early Act
– Tom Seeley
Fire Equipment
–
Service Committee
– Mark Shafer
lWinterfest
& Craft Fair – Seeley/Krauter
lMembership (& Retention)
– Beckwith/Feldmann
lFoundation/Community
Recognition
lSocial
Chair –
lSergeant
at Arms – Daryle Pickering
New Business/Program
q Tea
& Treasures/Mottville Emporium
Evening
Club Programs
October 15 – Marvin Drugar, SU Faculty member
October 22 – Candidate Night
October 29 – Candidate Night
November 5 – Onondaga County Exec
Joannie Mahoney
Officers
& Directors
Officers
President – John Rooney
President-Elect –
Past President – Thomas W. Seeley
Treasurer – Toni Feldman
Sergeant-at-Arms –
Daryle Pickering
Secretary – John Paddock
Committee Chairs
Club Service – Mark Schafer
Food Pantry – Daryle Pickering
Membership – Beckwith/Feldmann
Program Chair – Marion
Krauter
Rotary Foundation –
Social Chair –
Youth Exchange/RYLA – John Paddock
Members
Sidney
Beckwith, Robert Brown, Toni Feldmann, Paul Frickey, Maggie Gilson (visitor),
Marion Krauter, John Paddock, Daryle Pickering, John Rooney, Thomas Seeley,
Mark Schafer, Paul Torrisi, Rhett Weiss
Exchange Students
TBA
Our District
Website: http://www.rotary7150.org/
Rotary
International: http://www.rotary.org/
RYLA http://www.rotaryryla.com/
Skaneateles Rotary: http://www.skaneatelesrotary.org/
e-club http://www.rotaryeclubny1.com
Thomas W. Seeley 685-2311 Fax:
685-2460 tws@mlsattorneys.com