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P. O. Box 10742
State College, 16805

Edition: #376
Editor: Paul Rutter
TODAY'S PROGRAM and ASSIGNMENTS for: May 8, 2008

Program: Prospective Member Meeting
Auction: Bedell
Greeter: Abramson
Note taker
: Whitfield
Thank speaker
: n/a
future assignments

FUTURE PROGRAMS and EVENTS

May 15, 2008 Mary Ann Neal - CVIM / Suicide Prevention
May 22, 2008 Cathy Jennings - Networking Advantage
May 29, 2008 Our Exchange Students End-of-Year Recap
June 5, 2008 Club Assembly / Jody Althouse Classification Talk
June 12, 2008 Ken Hull - Author of "Going Local"
June 19, 2008 Rose Kaufman new President of our club
June 26, 2008 TBA
July 3, 2008 TBA

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LAST WEEK IN REVIEW

Visiting Rotarians: none noted
Make-ups turned in: none
Guests: Jason Slocum was a guest.
50/50: the 6 of clubs was drawn, no damage. There are many cards remaining.
Auction: Ellie Beaver provided a bottle of wine that was won by Teresa Davis with a high bid of $15.

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ANNOUNCEMENTS: (Please send announcements for the newsletter to Paul)

Tunisian GSE Exchange, May 6-12: Rutter, Sepich, Williams

2008 Lederer Park Clean-up: Brad was in charge coordinating this event, and all of us!

2008 Spaghetti Dinner committee: Jim Eberly, Don Bedell, and all of us!

2008 Entertainment Book committee: Jim Eberly, Meg Moose and all of us!

PSU Football Games, Fall 2007: Whitfield x7, Rutter x7, Williams x2, Trudeau x2, Mose, plus 16 non-Rotarians? email Paul

2007-8 Hosts for Highschool International Youth Exchange: Whitfield, Potalivo

Lederer Park Clean-up, April 21: Bedell, Williams, Whitfield, Holmes, and the organizer Cathy Brown. Others? Let me know-Paul

Happy Happy Bucks are funds paid to the club to speak up and tell all why you are happy!Bucks No notes

 

 


An interesting article: The penalties for prostitution in Iran are severe – whipping and even execution. So how does the oldest profession fare in that land? Read on!


  • Committee Sign-ups were passed out by Rose our next president. If you did not sign up for a committee let Rose know soon or she will place you on a committee that you might not care for.
  • The Rotary District Conference is May 9-11.
  • The Rotary International Conference is June 15-18 (more details later).
    Leadership Institute seminars are also available; check the website for the schedule.
  • Spaghetti Dinner Grand Poobah Marshall says to turn in tickets money to him so that he can get a head count on what to prepare. Please turn in spaghettit dinner proceeds.
  • Congratulations to the new Paul Harris Fellows and continuing PHF. New this year was Sue Eberly being named by husband, Rotarian, and PHF Jim Eberly, also Anne Hoag who was named by her husband, Rotarian, and PHF Paul Rutter, also continuing multi-status PHF to Carl Hill, Dick Held, Ed Zeiders, Rainer Domalski, Frank Gatto and others to be named. Several sustaning PHFs were recognized too and can be found on the club's PHF Web page.
  • The German GSE team last year at Paul's camp.The Tunisian GSE team will arrive May 6. There is a welcome dinner at the Nittany Lion Inn during the evening club's meeting. On Wednesday at Paul's camp there will be a cookout / bar-b-q / adult beverage enjoyment. The team will be in attendance at our membership drive meeting on May 8. (But not presenting anything).
  • Doug announced results of the nominating committee. Laurel, Lester, and Cathy will be new board members while Bob Williams will be the second vice president.
  • Mark M mentioned RYLA scholarships being available. RYLA will be held at Juniata College this summer for rising seniors in high school.
  • A pizza party is in the works for some time in April.
  • Carol menioned the 4 way test contest. Nine students are signed up. The speeches will be March 22.
  • Rotary Peace Fellowship applications are available.
  • Roger Dunlap was installed as a new member.
  • Jim announced that coupon book sales are going well. We currently have more than $8K in sold books, and many books are still out. Keep selling!
  • Don announced several upcoming programs, including the top three student speakers for the Four-Way Speech Contest on April 10 and a program about beer on March 13.
  • Laurel indicated that the Box Tops were delivered to the Young Scholars program today, and that we will continue to collect those and Campbell’s labels throughout the rest of the school year.
  • Sell your spaghetti tickets! Spaghetti tickets were handed out. This is another big fundraiser for us so do your best to get them sold. Turn in money from tickets to Marshall Goldstein.
  • The Youth Exchange picnic will be at the VoTech on Feb. 9. Contact Carl, Laurel, or Doug for information.
  • Jody Althouse was installed as a new member and was presented a red badge. She was sponsored by Meg Moose. She is the head of the Friends School.
  • The Diner and Entertainment Books have been distributed. Everyone is expected to sell a MINIMUM of 10 books. "No pressure, but a note to you slackers…Doug Holmes, Carol Walsh, Ed Zeiders have all exceeded that number already." If you need more books please stop in at Moyer Jewelers (Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30, Thur evening until 7. Christmas hours begin on 12/13 when we are open 9:30-8pm Mon-Fri, 9:30-5:30 on Sat. – we also have gift ideas)
  • Congratulations to Tineke Cunning and Marce Pancio of the Sunrise Rotary Club for being selected as teams leaders for the Spring 2009 GSE to the Philippines and the Summer 2009 GSE to Puerto Rico respectively. The Philippines trip is a general GSE and the one to Puerto Rico is a Spanish Language teachers GSE.
  • A Paul Harris Fellowship was presented to Carl Hill's son Wesley who was in from San Diego.
  • There is a new Rotary credit card available
  • Carl Hill received Distinguished Service Award for Youth Exchange work
  • Extra club money is being used this year for a second vocational scholarship of $1500.
  • Point your web browser to: http://www.rotilink.org/eClubs/ click on a club's Website and follow the directions to do make-ups with the e-club. At the end, you print out your make up slip and submit it to current secretary Rainer Domalski.
  • At the Purdue game, we had a turnout of 11, including four Rotarians (Mark Whitfield, his son Nate and Nate's girlfriend; also Paul Rutter; Tineke Cunning from the breakfast club and her husband and Rotarian Jack from the Tyrone Rotary) for the football game as a fundraiser. Rotarians helping over the season included George Trudeau, Paul Rutter, Mark Whitfield, Bob Williams, Hugh Mose, Tammy Miller and Tineke Cunning from Sunrise Rotary, and Bill Bell and Jack Cunning from Tyrone.) Thanks for all your help! We raised over a eleven hundred dollars and had fun!

  • Previous Week's Speaker:

     

    Note taker:

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    Rotary Birthdays this month:

    Bonnie Abramson, May 1; Jana King, May 2; Carol Walsh, May 19;
    Lester Cutter, May 19;
    Linda Friedman, May 20; Don Bedell, May 21;
    Hugh Mose, May 28;
    Mark Whitfield, May 31

    (if I missed yours please email me and let the club secretary know too)

    Etc.

     M  A  K  E  -  U  P  S

    Reminders on makeup's:
    All makeup's are good for credit toward meetings missed 14 days before or 14 days after the makeup. Makeup's made at other Rotary Club meetings also get a dues credit. Makeup's at service projects get attendance credit only. All makeup cards should be turned into the club secretary promptly. To find out where you can makeup, check the RI Club Directory, or District Web site.

    NEIGHBORING CLUBS- check out the web site listing or one of the E-clubs all over the world
    MEMBERS- check out the web site listing
    COMMITTEE CHAIRS- check out the web site listing

    - TOP -

    DATE
    AUCTION
    GREETER
    MEETING NOTES
    THANK SPEAKER
    May 15
    Brooks
    Althouse
    Williams
    Brytczuk
    May 22
    Brown
    Bacastow
    Zeiders
    Christian
    May 29
    Brytczuk
    Beaver
    Abramson
    Davis
    June 5
    Christian
    Bedell
    Althouse
    n/a
    June 12
    Coble
    Brooks
    Bacastow
    Dayananda
    June 19
    Davis
    Brown
    Beaver
    Eberly
    June 26
    Dayananda
    Brytczuk
    Bedell
    Fetter


    today | future | previous | announcements | speaker | birthday | etc. | assignments

    “If we only listen to those whom we already see eye to eye, we will never create better understanding, a concept that is at the core of Rotary.”
    -Martin G Molony, District 1160 Governor, Dublin Central, Ireland
    in The Rotarian, January 2006

    "Of the things we think, say or do:

    Is it the TRUTH?

    Is it FAIR to all concerned?

    Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?

    Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?"

     


    district 7350; club 24095
    State College Downtown Rotary; P.O. Box 10742; State College, PA 16805- 0742
    Paul Rutter-Club Webmaster & Freelance Web Design 814-867-5001

    Contact club webmaster & newsletter editor: Paul Rutter


    How To Spot Persian Prostitute Streetwalkers in chadors.
    from the Slate


    QomQom, Iran

    Tehran's former police chief Reza Zarei attempted suicide in prison yesterday, a month after being arrested for consorting with six naked women in a brothel. In the aftermath of the scandal, the Times, the Associated Press, and the BBC all reported that prostitutes are becoming more visible on Iranian streets. Given the Islamic dress code, how do Persian prostitutes signal their trade?

    Location, location, location. In the 1970s, Bostonians looking for a proverbial good time went to the "Combat Zone" and New Yorkers flocked to 42nd Street; in contemporary Iran, the holy city of Qom is known (unofficially) as a place of "both pilgrimage and pleasure." There, prostitutes wearing veils and even chadors mill about temples or sit together in public courtyards where men can inspect them. Sometimes a male go-between offers "introductions," at which point the prostitutes pull aside their headgear so the potential client can get a glimpse, but the whole process is fairly subtle. For an outsider, it's difficult to pick a street girl out of a crowd.

    Qom may have become a prostitution hot spot due to the abundance of shrines. Young female runaways with no shelter come to the city knowing they can take refuge at holy sites by sleeping in rooms intended for pilgrims. They have no way of making a living, so after awhile they get involved with the sex trade. The city's young theological students and transient tourists form the main clientele.

    Of course, Qom isn't the only place in Iran where prostitutes walk the streets. Back in 2002, the Iranian newspaper Entekhab estimated that there were nearly 85,000 prostitutes in Tehran alone. In that city, and especially in nearby suburbs, there are neighborhoods where heavily made-up prostitutes in traditional garb stand idly at traffic circles. Prospective customers drive by slowly to check out the human wares, then make a deal. The visual difference between an ordinary citizen wearing makeup who happens to be standing alone and an actual prostitute is, again, quite subtle. Apparently, mistakes are not uncommon.

    The penalties for prostitution are severe—ranging from whipping to execution. But there's a loophole in Islamic law called sigheh, or temporary marriage. According to Shiite interpretation, a man and a woman may enter an impermanent partnership with a preset expiration date. There's no legally required minimum duration (a day, a week, anything goes) and no need for official witnesses—unless the woman is a virgin, in which case she needs the consent of her legal guardian. An Iranian who's wary of arrest can simply escort a prostitute to a registry, obtain a temporary contract from a Muslim cleric, and then legally satisfy his sexual needs.

    Do you have anything to share? Email me (Paul) and chances are it will find its way here.