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News from your club
Club has first "Virtual" meeting 

The club has entered the new age of video conferencing.

We had our first virtual meeting on Friday morning, John dialled in from Sanfrancisco as you can see from pic below, whereas Steve dialled in from Beerwah, but forgot to tell his computer that it was no longer in NSW, so joined the meeting as it was about to close!
 
Anyway, a great first start and although there is NO MEETING this Good Friday, we will be continuing with video conferencing in the future. Maybe less frequently while we are in lockdown. Keep an eye on your email for invites. 
 
Whats happening with club projects?

Surf Show and Shine Postponed

We really need to get this Kombi to our next Surf Show and Shine !!
 

The Surf Show and Shine has been postponed and is on hold for now, whil ewe wait to get over the virus and Sunshine Coast Council permit community events sometime in the future. All the entrants and vendors and stakeholders have been very understanding and we'll be ready to fire it up again as soon as we have the all clear. 

Solstice Swim 

The swim would normally be in late June, but its anyone's guess what things will look like then. The latest advice is around September things should start to clear and lets hope thats correct. When we have the all clear we'll chat with the great folks at Alex SLSC and see how they are placed and make a decision then. 
 
The great news is that the large buoys from the Mooloolaba Yacht club worked at treat at the "Ladies in Surf" swim and we've been given the OK to use them at the Solstice Swim. 

WorkLife

There's no doubt that employment has taken a battering and JM's been talking to the folks at THRIVE about the possibility of evening sessions at their facility on Aerodrome Road where Rotarians could help those looking for work to improve their chances of getting work though improving their CV's, improving their interview skills, and also help them identify what work skills they have when they lack that all important first job. 
 
We'll fire this program up when the situation has cleared. We're sure that there will be plenty of people looking for work, and just need a hand to know where to look and how to. present themselves to their new employer. 
 

Club Donations

 
Your club has donated $1,000 to the Rotary University of Sunshine Coast Community Fund to sponsor students and $500 to the folks at ROMAC for their fantastic medical / surgical work for the most needy. 
 

Defibrillator donation 

Our Cluster group is donating a defibrillator to the Alex Surf Life Saving Club.
This is an initiative close to several Rotarians heart (pun intended) and a great life saving device. smiley
 
 
 
 
 
 
What one Sunshine Coast man did to eliminate the last world virus

There's this guy on the Sunshine Coast who has been instrumental in defeating a previous global virus - and its not Kevin Rudd

Here's an extract from an ABC Australian Story...

SIR Clem Renouf thinks of himself as an ordinary bloke who, thanks to a life-long liaison with Rotary, got to do an extraordinary thing.

 

As Rotary prepares to mark another anniversary around the world, the former World War II pilot is unshaken in his belief the world is close to eradicating polio.

And the fact this unassuming accountant, who joined up as Nambour Rotary’s foundation secretary 60 years ago, deserves a lot of the credit is one of the Coast’s best little-known facts.

The program will detail how Sir Clem’s campaign has saved untold millions of people from one of the world’s most terrible diseases.

The opportunity came to him in July 1978 when he became only the second Australian to be elected president of Rotary International.

Sir Clem decided it was time for the legion of Rotary clubs around the world to focus less on parochial projects and tackle a big-picture problem that would leave an indelible mark on society.

He had been inspired by the World Health Organisation’s eradication of smallpox and came up with Rotary’s Health, Hunger and Humanity program that would initially see 6.3 million children immunised against polio in the Philippines at a cost of just $760,000.

Another offshoot of the project was providing free tetanus vaccines to 390,000 expectant mothers.

Suddenly Sir Clem realised there was a real power for good in the form of the ready-made Rotary network spanning the globe.

“A lot of people say I spearheaded the eradication of polio campaign, but that’s not right. I just happened to know the right person to talk to,” Sir Clem said.

The “right person” was Rotary district governor Dr John Sever, who was head of infectious diseases at the National Institute of Health in Washington DC.

Sir Clem put the question to him – was there another disease that could be eliminated after small pox?

He pinpointed polio, which was crippling 1000 people every day while an oral vaccine could be given for about 10 cents a dose.

“I had no idea where that simple question would lead us – others would build on it, none more so than John Severs whose commitment to the goal of eradication has not wavered for more than 30 years,” Sir Clem said.

He was not backwards in coming forwards when it came to seeking funding.

“I would see someone smoking and say to them ‘instead of ruining your health why not give that money to the Rotary polio eradication and help save 15 lives?’.”

The final blow against polio is now tantalisingly close with Pakistan, Afghanistan, India and Nigeria the only places where people can be crippled by the easily preventable disease.

“I used to say it would be eradicated in the next few years, but it gets harder the closer you get,” Sir Clem said.

“But I intend to die in a polio-free world.”

His eternal optimism comes from the support of people like US philanthropists Bill Gates and Ted Turner, who have poured millions into the campaign.

Sir Clem has been to India and other polio hotspots and helped give the oral doses, which WHO officials were not interested in when he and Rotary first offered to help.

“I guess they didn’t really think a non-government organisation should get involved, but they didn’t have our network,” he says.

“After they saw the effectiveness of our campaign in Central and South America, they came to us and asked us to work with them.”

Sir Clem said one story that hasn’t left him was the time his Rotary International successor was giving a dose to a girl when a boy crippled by polio said “thanks Rotary – that is my sister”.

“I couldn’t help thinking why we couldn’t have started sooner to spare victims like that boy.

“None of this could happen if people did not get together around tables at Rotary meetings.”

“I used to say it would be eradicated in the next few years, but it gets harder the closer you get. But I intend to die in a polio-free world.”

Clem's story and the support from John Severs gives us great confidence that the eradication of the COVID 19 Corona virus is just a matter of time, with folk lik eClem and John and Nayyar around. (see separate Virus Hunter blog)

Classic Novel tells the story of Polio virus impact 

Looking for something to read in Lockdown?

You could do a lot worse than read the great American novelists Phillip Roths Nemesis where he explored the effect of a 1944 polio epidemic on a closely knit, family-oriented Newark Jewish community of Weequahic neighborhood. The children in the novel are threatened with maiming, paralysis, lifelong disability, and death. The novel is semi factual, very moving and a classic.

"Do yourself a favour" (Molly M) and read this...... its brilliant.  

Modern day Virus Hunter

The Corona Virus will end with people like Nayyar

Ever wondered how the Corona virus will end? What have we learnt from a previous global virus?

Here's how one amazing person and her team receiving support from the Rotary Global Polio Project to eliminate this virus....

Dr. Ujala Nayyar dreams, both figuratively and literally, about a world that is free from polio. Nayyar, the World Health Organization's surveillance officer in Pakistan’s Punjab province, says she often imagines the outcome of her work in her sleep.

In her waking life, she leads a team of health workers who crisscross Punjab to hunt down every potential incidence of poliovirus, testing sewage and investigating any reports of paralysis that might be polio. Pakistan is one of just two countries that continue to report cases of polio caused by the wild virus. 

In addition to the challenges of polio surveillance, Nayyar faces substantial gender-related barriers that, at times, hinder her team's ability to count cases and take environmental samples. From households to security checkpoints, she encounters resistance from men. But her tactic is to push past the barriers with a balance of sensitivity and assertiveness.  

"I'm not very polite," Nayyar said with a chuckle during an interview at Rotary's World Polio Day last year in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. "We don't have time to be stopped. Ending polio is urgent and time-sensitive."

Women are critical in the fight against polio, Nayyar says. About 56 percent of frontline workers in Pakistan are women. More than 70 percent of mothers in Pakistan prefer to have women vaccinate their children. 

That hasn't stopped families from slamming doors in health workers' faces, though. When polio is detected in a community, teams have to make repeated visits to each home to ensure that every child is protected by the vaccine. Multiple vaccinations add to the skepticism and anger that some parents express. It's an attitude that Nayyar and other health workers deal with daily. 

"You can't react negatively in those situations. It's important to listen. Our female workers are the best at that," says Nayyar. 

With polio on the verge of eradication, surveillance activities, which, Nayyar calls the "back of polio eradication", have never been more important. 

Nayyar calls on Rotary for the everyday things that she and her team needs to do their job, everything from the vaccine, to bus tickets, train tickets, umbrella's, accommodation, clothing, basic essentials, educational equipment, everything that these amazing women need to do their job. "I ask Rotary and its there" says Nayyar.

Elvis the security dog 

Elvis on Duty protecting the valuable Vino Collapso 

While most of us lock away our valuables, clearly Elvis, Dave Woodrow's dog understands what is important to Dave and Cherie. Here he is on duty protecting the all important seniors recreational drugs.smiley
 
Youth Programs

Youth Programs

 
The Rotary Youth Programs have been hard hit by the lockdowns, but we have heard from the National Youth Science Forum, and they are offering 600 places Australia wide in 2021. 
 
Our club has a great history of sending senior school students of on this program, which really is a "life changing" event for those that are successfully selected. So as soon as we're able we'll be seeking expressions of interest from our affiliated schools. 
 
Also Rotary Youth Leadership has been cancelled for 2020, but stay tuned for more information. 
 
Likewise International Rotary Youth Exchange Program has been thrown into disarray with the travel restrictions, so its also a "wait and see" for the moment. 
Scientists of the future
The speakers on Friday were the young students that the club sponsored to go on the Conoco Phillips Science Experience. 
 
 
Its always great to hear from the younger generation, but the talks and enthusiasm from Oscar, Emily and Isabella are just amazing. It was obvious that they had made the most of the opportunity to mix with the University and scientists and in some cases this has helped them decide what branch of STEM (pun intended) the students have decided to pursue, which is just fantastic.
 
 
Oscar is interested in robotics and electro mechanics.
 
Footnote to scientists of the future story
 
 
A few years ago Peter Darnell was approached by a student from one of the high schools where the club had been running our worklife program to help the students transition to work. This lad stopped Peter to say thank you for Peters talk to his class and it helped him become "more professional". I mention this because we had another situation of people influencing others perhaps without realising it. 
 
In this case it was our very own David Woodrow. David's ears picked up when the students who went on the Conoco Phillips Science experience mentioned Professor Brendon Jones, an academic at UQ, who was a great inspiration to them. "I taught Brendon physics when I was science master at St Peter's College". said Dave.....so there you are, obviously Brendon was so taken by Dave's physics teaching enthusiasm that he went to from a high school student to science Professorship. 
 
The moral of these stories is that you never know what effect you're having on others...so take every opportunity to make sure you're impact is a positive one. 
Rotary - what can we do for you?

New Theme " Rotary Opening Opportunities" and breakfast talk from Peter Morley - who knew?

 

Coincidentally there was a strong link between Peter Morley's talk to the club on Friday about, helping people with their "passion" or what drives then, and the Rotary theme for 2020 "Rotary Opening Opportunities"

 

 

Rotary International President-elect Holger Knaack is encouraging Rotarians to seize the many opportunities Rotary offers to enrich their lives and the communities they serve.

Watch the theme address at www.rotary.org

Knaack, a member of the Rotary Club of Herzogtum Lauenburg-Mölln, Germany, revealed the 2020-21 presidential theme, Rotary Opens Opportunities, to incoming district governors at the Rotary International Assembly in San Diego, California, USA, on 20 January.

Rotary isn’t just a club for people to join, but rather “an invitation to endless opportunities,” said Knaack, who becomes president on 1 July. He emphasized that Rotary creates pathways for members to improve their lives and the lives of those they help through service projects.

“We believe that our acts of service, big and small, create opportunities for people who need our help,” Knaack said. He added that Rotary creates leadership opportunities and gives members the chance to travel the world to put their service ideas into action and make lifelong connections. “Everything we do opens another opportunity for someone, somewhere,” said Knaack.

 

Upcoming Events
Alex Rotary "Solstice" Swim
Jun 27, 2021
6:00 AM – 2:00 PM
 
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Club Information

Our Meeting Details

Fridays at 6:45 AM
Alex Surf Life Saving Club
Alex Beach
Alexandra Headland , QLD 4557
Australia
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Staying in touch 

 If anyone wants instructions on how to put the club app onto their phone, please contact John Malloy on 0447300753.
 
 
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