Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Letter from the District Governor




Dear Rotarians,

During this period of Thanksgiving we have so much to be grateful for in our lives and our district.  I have now had the pleasure of visiting 40 of our 41 clubs and I have been awestruck by so many things.  First of all, the commitment, compassion and uniqueness of each of our clubs and their unwavering service as they “do good” in their communities and the world is nothing less than inspiring.  We are blessed to have so many dedicated individuals in our clubs such as Past District Governor Leon Riggs who speaks passionately about the joys of his 50 years as a Rotarian and Gangadar Maddiwar with his many adventures as he travels the far reaches of our world alleviating suffering.  Participating in the auction hosted by the Paris and West Liberty clubs for West Liberty last week was a fantastic example of how our clubs also reach out to each other.  Not to mention that traveling throughout our district when it is decked out in the splendor of fall color is truly a joyful experience.    

I hope the spirit of Thanksgiving is with you as you join friends and families to gather and give thanks.  If you have not had the experience of visiting another club in our district in a while, take the opportunity soon.  You will come back to your own club invigorated with new ideas and with some new friends.

Yours in Peace,

Kathryn Hardman
District Governor


Upcoming events

December:
RC Paris Salvation Army Bell Ringing (holiday season)
RC Paris Coat and Blanket Drive (holiday season)
1 5th Paintsville Kiwanis/Rotary Half Marathon, 10k, 5k and "Sleep In", Paintsville, KY 8 am
3 RC Florence Christmas Concert, Lakeside Christian Church
4 RC Paris Christmas Concert, First Presbyterian Church, 517 Pleasant Street, 7 p.m.
5 RC Paris Paris High School Choir
6 RC Paris Coat and Blanket Drive
8 RC Maysville, Purses for a Purpose purse sale, 2nd and Sutton, Maysville, KY, 9:30 am - 4:00 p.m.

8  RC Campbell County, Christmas in Alexandria
12 RC Paris, Bourbon County High School Choir

15 RC Campbell County Buffet Dinner and Christmas Concert, former Thriftway Store on US 27, 6:30

January
16 Deadline to submit District Governor nomination

February
2  Rotary Leadership Institute, Lexington

March
2 - RC Somerset-Pulaski County International Dinner
21 - 24 Presidents Elect Training (PETS) in Nashville, Tennessee


May
2 RC Paris Run for the Roses

17 - 20, District Conference, London


June
23 -26 International Convention, Lisbon, Portugal

RC Paris hosts Pie and Cake Auction

Paris Rotary Club’s Annual Pie and Cake Auction

Paris Rotary Club’s annual pie and cake auction was held Thursday evening November 1st as a fun way to raise money for the scholarship program.  The evening’s event was well attended with approximately seventy-five Rotarians and their guests in attendance.  Not only did the attendees bring their appetites, (dining on delicious crab legs, fresh shrimp, and oysters), they brought their checkbooks as well.  Close to $5900 was raised as the bidding for the cakes and pies became spirited with the highest auctioned cake bringing over $600.  The event netted out over $2900 for the scholarship program which is an increase of almost a $1000 from the same event last year.  Special guests included District Governor Kathyrn Hardman, and Past District Governor  John Adams, Christie, and of course Charlie.  A special thanks to Rotarians Tom Brannock and Bill T. McConnell for coordinating and conducting this special event.

As a way to continue to serve others, the Paris Rotary Club held a joint meeting with the West Liberty Rotary Club on Saturday, November 10.  The Paris Club brought items collected from members to be auctioned to benefit the Morgan Central Elementary School in West Liberty.




Polio Update

CONSIDER POLIO ERADICATION AN INVESTMENT

OCTOBER ROTARIAN



JOHN HEWKO: Polio eradication is a good investment. Although the global investment in a polio-free world exceeds US$9 billion, an independent study published in the medical journal VACCINE estimates that the net economic benefits to be $45 billion to $50 billion over the next 20 years. Of course, the return on eradicating a disease forever and preventing the suffering of countless children is impossible to calculate.



John Hewko has been the general secretary and CEO of RI and TRF since 2011.



2012 POLIO CASES AS OF NOV. 7 = 181

DG Kathryn Hardman visits RC Augusta

DG Kathryn Hardman visited RC Augusta in October. She updated the club on the District's objectives, as well as news from RI. Her remarks were enjoyed by all.



RC Ashland inducts 90th member!




Rotary Club of Ashland inducts its 90th member! President Vincenzo
Fressola, Rotarian and sponsor Erica Myers, new Rotarian Brandi Bayes and
ADG Cheryl Wooten Spriggs.

 

RC Campbell County Holiday Pup Parade


RC Somerset Pulaski Couny sets up memorial scholarship

Somerset-Pulaski County Rotary sets up Somerset Community College scholarship in memory of jack ford; awards inaugural scholarship

The Rotary Club of Somerset-Pulaski County recently funded and named a scholarship at Somerset Community College (SCC) in memory of John “Jack” Ford.

Ford passed away in 2011. He was a former CFO of Lifeline Home Health and worked as a CPA/controller for Somerset Food Service. He was active in the Boy Scouts of America and served as a past district chairman for the Boy Scouts of America. Ford was an Eagle Scout and was named Rotarian of the Year in 2008.

The “Jack Ford Boy Scout Memorial Scholarship” at SCC was set up by the Rotary Club to award a $500 scholarship per semester. The scholarship recipient must be either a current or past member of the Boy Scouts Lake Cumberland District.

The first recipient of the Jack Ford Boy Scout Memorial Scholarship is Michael Crowhurst of Somerset. Crowhurst is a 2012 graduate of Somerset High School. He plans to pursue a career in engineering technology. Crowhurst was active in several clubs and organizations while in high school and was awarded Eagle Scout, Kentucky Colonel and Marine Corps League Good Citizenship Award recognitions in 2011. He is the son of Mike and Carolyn Crowhurst.

The Rotary Club of Somerset-Pulaski County was chartered in 1998. The club is actively involved in various community projects, including an International Dinner, building wheelchair ramps for individuals with disabilities, the Remote Area Medical (RAM) clinic, Access to Careers day at SCC, clean water projects in various countries and the global initiative to eradicate polio. The Somerset-Pulaski County Rotary Club meets Thursday mornings at 7 a.m. at Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital in Conference Room A.

Somerset Community College is a comprehensive two-year institution of higher education. SCC has campuses in Somerset and London, and centers in Clinton, McCreary, Casey, and Russell counties. For admission and program information, visit our website at somerset.kctcs.edu.

 


Above: Somerset-Pulaski Rotary Club President Ben Robertson (left), Diane Ford, wife of the late Jack Ford (second from left) and SCC Director of Advancement Cindy Clouse (right) are pictured with Michael Crowhurst, recipient of the inaugural Jack Ford Boy Scout Memorial Scholarship. Crowhurst, an Eagle Scout, is a pre-engineering student at SCC and is a native of Somerset.

RC Stanford Rotarian Bill Stafford named a Paul Harris Fellow

Rotarian Bill Stafford was named a Paul Harris Fellow by assistant governor Michael Noftsger at the RC Stanford meeting held October 22, 2012.

RC Lexington Rotary Day at the Toyota Bluegrass Miracle League

The Rotary Club of Lexington had Rotary Day at the Toyota Bluegrass Miracle League, Saturday September 22. The Miracle League program in Lexington was made possible with the efforts of the Lexington Rotary Club, YMCA of Central KY and Toyota. The Miracle League is a baseball program for children 5-19 with any type of physical or mental disability. Many volunteers support the league providing, "buddies" for each child, umpires, coaches, announcers and food during the games. September 22, the Kentucky baseball team came out to help buddy with the players and Chick-fil-a provided lunch. "Everybody plays -everybody wins" is the motto of the league and that goes for all involved! The Lexington club is proud to have a long standing relationship and continues to support the league every fall and spring season.
 
KY Head baseball coach Gary Henderson with Rotarian Chris Stevenson,
President of the Board for the Toyota Bluegrass Miracle League.
 
 
 


Rotarian Dave Williams, umpiring
 
Players practicing while Cow looks on
Rotarian Darrell Ishmael, on-field commentator with Rotarian Chris
Stevenson and Exec. Dir. of the Miracle League, Kevin Haury.


Kentucky baseball team with Miracle League team


 


 



DG Kathryn Hardman visits RC Stanford

DG Kathryn Hardman visited RC Stanford on November 12, 2012.







Polio's End Game

POLIO'S END GAME

OCTOBER 2012 ROTARIAN


Question: What might cause you to change strategy?

Thomas R. Friedman: The basic strategy is to provide multiple doses of effective vaccines to large numbers of children, with efforts guided by precise virologic surveillance. Refinements in that strategy have occurred during the last decade when it was clear that many more doses of vaccine were needed in some areas, or that some at risk groups were being missed. All of the partners in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative are open to innovative suggestions for getting the job done faster. Continuous innovation - such as bivalent vaccine and vial monitors that change colors if the cold chain has been broken - is an integral part of the strategy to get over the finish line.

* Tom Friedman is the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and administrator of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.

 
WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER 14, 2012

TOTAL CASES 2011: 650

TOTAL CASES 2012: 187

AFGHANISTAN 2012 27 CASES

NIGERIA 2012: 101 CASES

PAKISTAN 2012: 54 CASES

 
PS: Remember Certification is our ultimate goal. Thanks for all of your efforts over the years on behalf of Polio Eradication and Certification.


John Salyers

Polio Chair D6740

Call for District Governor Nominations

 
November 1, 2013

The purpose of this correspondence to make the formal invitation to District 6740 Rotary Clubs to suggest one of its Rotary club members for consideration by the District Nominating Committee for Selection of the Nominee-Designate for the office District Governor for Rotary Program Year 2015-16. The deadline for submission of the suggestion by Governor-Nominee Data form (see below) is January 16, 2013.

To suggest a member for consideration by the Nominating Committee a club must:

1. Adopt a Resolution of the Rotary Club which suggests one of its eligible members to the District Nominating Committee for consideration to be the committee’s designate nominee. Clubs may nominate only one of its own club members. The Resolution must be made at a regular club meeting and the Club Secretary should witness the adoption of the resolution.

A "suggested” motion by a club member (other than the Rotarian to be suggested): "Madame or Mister President (or other person presiding), I rise at this club meeting to make the motion for a Resolution of the Rotary Club of __name of club___ to suggest the District Nominating Committee to consider our fellow member ____name of member__ for selection as District Governor Nominee Designate for the Rotary Year 2015-16." Then the presiding officer should ask and take a "Second to the Motion” by another club member, and then a vote of the members.

2. The Suggested Member must then complete Pages 1-3 the "Governor-Nominee Data Form” including the photo request and spouse/partner information request. (Note: The form is available digitally and can be completed via word processing which is highly recommended. If you are reading the invitation via e-mail it should be attached. If you are reading hardcopy or if the form is not attached then please e-mail me at mkhardman@aol.com)

3. The Suggested Member must then read and faithfully execute "the Candidate’s Statement” on the top of page 4 of the Governor Nominee Data Form.

4. The Club Secretary then faithfully executes the "Club’s Statement of Candidate’s Qualifications” middle of page 4 of the of the Governor Nominee Data Form. In doing so the club’s secretary certifies the following: 1. The suggested member is a club member in good standing, 2. That the suggested member has been suggested by resolution of the club, 3. That the suggested member meets the Qualification of Membership and the membership information is accurate. (Note: the club secretary does not have to send a copy of a written resolution with the Governor-Nominee Data Form - the execution of the "Club Statement of Candidates Qualification is sufficient.)

5. Send the form to DG Kathryn Hardman via e-mail: mkhardman@aol.com (please call me at (606) 309-4761 to confirm receipt) or USPS: Kathryn Hardman, 90 Bennett Circle, London, KY 40741 (again, please call confirm receipt.)

The forgoing steps are a summary of Rotary International Bylaw 13.020.4.

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 Eligibility Requirements for District Governor

To be eligible for the position of District Governor, a Rotarian must:

(1) Be a member in good standing of a functioning Rotary Club in the District;

(2) Have served as President of a Club for a full term, or as President of a charter club from the date of the charter until June 30th, for a period of at least six months;

(3) Demonstrate the knowledge of and the ability to fulfill the duties outlined in the RI Bylaws, Section 15.090 (a summary is found below); and

(4) Have completed seven years of membership at the time of taking office.

Summary of the District Governor’s Duties

A summary of Governor’s duties includes strengthening existing Rotary Clubs, organizing new Clubs and promoting membership growth, issuing a monthly letter to each Club President and Secretary in the District, supporting the Rotary Foundation in service as a District and RI spokesperson, when appropriate, hold the District Conference and other District meetings, and insure the District nominations and elections are conducted according to the RI Constitution and Bylaws. The Governor is also responsible for visiting all the clubs in the District.

Before taking office on July 1, 2015, the candidate must be willing to participate in the District’s activities, plan for his or her year of service, select a site for the District Conference, set District goals, and conduct District training meetings (including District Training Team Seminar, PETS and the District Assembly). The District Governor Elect must attend Zone GETS training (fall) and the International Assembly (mid January).

Summary of the District 6740 Governor Nomination

Process and "No Campaigning” Guidelines

District 6740 follows RI's "Nomination Committee" format or plan for selecting its District Governor. The clubs "suggest" candidates to the Nomination Committee and the suggestion is accomplished by a completed Governor-Nominee Data Form. All Governor Nominee Data forms are due to the District Governor Kathryn Hardman on January 16th 2013. Those persons selected by the clubs shall be interview by the Nominating Committee on February 2, 2013 in Lexington, Kentucky and on that date the Nominating Committee will select a single Nominee Designate. The Nominee Designate will then be announced and published on February 4, 2013 by email to all clubs. Those suggested by a club, but not selected by the committee may submit their names within 14 days of the publish date as a "Challenge Candidate” If there are no challenge candidates, the committee’s nominee-designate is presumed to be the district’s selected Nominee for District Governor 2015-16. The formal nomination by election of the District Governor 2014-15 shall be at the District Conference May 17-19, 2013. The District Governor Nominee is then formally elected at the 2014 International Convention and then assumes the role and title of District Governor-Elect taking office as District Governor on July 1, 2015.

 
Please be aware that Rotary International and the District have guidelines against "lobbying” "canvassing” and "campaigning” for Rotary Offices. Before taking any action beyond suggesting a candidate or completing the Governor-Nominee Data Form, please review the guidelines.

Closing

If you need additional information, do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you for your time and attention to this invitation. Strong leadership of our District is vital to our success in serving others.

Yours in Rotary Service,

Kathryn Hardman
District Governor
Email: mkhardman@aol.com
HPhone: 606-878-2263
OPhone: 606-878-9134

Editor's Note: Please contact Kathryn for a copy of the form if needed. It would not format properly in this template.

Monday, October 22, 2012

District Governor's Letter to the District



Dear Fellow Rotarians:

With the changing of the leaves, October also brings Vocational Service Month.  This is an opportunity to spotlight Rotarians and Rotary projects that serve others through their vocation. 

How are you using your professional skills to serve others?  Perhaps you have mentored a young person to help them succeed in your vocation or taught other club members about your own vocation through a program for a club meeting or participated in a club net-working event to introduce non-Rotarians to Rotary.  These are just a few examples of how we can pursue the Avenue of Vocational Service. 

The opportunity to use our professional skills and expertise to serve our communities and our clubs combined with our emphasis on high ethical standards is a hallmark of Rotary.

Peace through Service,

Kathryn Hardman

District Governor

District Governor Visit Schedule

10/23/12
Mt. Sterling
12 noon
Jerry’s Restaurant
10/25/12
Carlisle
6:30 p.m.
Garrett’s Restaurant
10/29/12
Ashland
12 noon
The Elk’s Lodge
10/30/12
Fleming County
12 noon
Fleming County Hospital
11/8/12
11/13/12
West Liberty
Maysville
12 noon
11:45 am
The Tea Room
Rotary Club House, Rotary Park
11/15/12
Lexington
12 noon
Fasig-Tipton

Upcoming events

November
1 RC Paris Seafood Dinner and Cake/Pie Auction, 1833 S. Main Street, Paris, 6 p.m.


December
RC Paris Salvation Army Bell Ringing (holiday season)
RC Paris Coat and Blanket Drive (holiday season)
1  5th Paintsville Kiwanis/Rotary Half Marathon, 10k, 5k and "Sleep In", Paintsville, KY 8 am
4 RC Paris Christmas Concert, Paris Presbyterian Church,7 p.m.
5  RC Paris Paris High School Choir
6 RC Paris Coat and Blanket Drive
8 RC Maysville, Purses for a Purpose purse sale, 2nd and Sutton, Maysville, KY, 9:30 am - 4:00 p.m.
12  RC Paris, Bourbon County High School Choir




March
2 - RC Somerset-Pulaski County International Dinner
21 - 24 Presidents Elect Training (PETS) in Nashville, Tennessee


May
2 RC Paris Run for the Roses


June
23 -26 International Convention, Lisbon, Portugal

RC Georgetown honors Bruce Gordon as Rotarian of the Year

 
President Nancy Walker with Bruce Gordon, Secretary, as he receives the club's  Rotarian of the Year Award


 

DG visits and club events

RC Whitesburg's President Joe DePriest welcomes DG Kathryn on August 14



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President Howard Roberts of RC Pikeville, DG Kathryn, and AG Seema Sachdeeva at the official visit on August 15.

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President David Hellmich of the RC Lexington Sunrise gave DG Kathryn Hardman the honor of assisting in the induction of four new members during the official visit on August 28. New members Michael Quillen, Kirsten Kegley, DG Gridley and Seth Lawless were joined by their sponsoring members Keith Key, Donna Sloan and Dale Torok. The membership drive was assisted by a successful after-hours social event hosted by the club earlier in the month.
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President Chris Jobes accepts an award on behalf of
RC Louisa for membership development.
 


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At the Heart of America Zone Institute in Huntsville, Al October 4-7, 2012 District Governor Kathryn Hardman and John enjoyed an evening with Rotary International President Sakuji Tanaka.

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DG Kathryn, Youth Exchange host parent Harry Chestnut and Youth Exchange student Guilherme Messon Messari (Brazil) were invited to ring the World Peace Bell following the multi-club meeting of Florence, Kenton, Covington and Campbell in Covington on September 18.

 




 

Rotary To Commit $75 Million to End Polio


NEWS RELEASE


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:  Wayne Hearn at (847) 866-3386

                        wayne.hearn@rotary.org

 


Rotary to commit $75 million to end polio

 

Funding announcement to come during special UN General Assembly session to rally support for global eradication of crippling childhood disease

 

 

EVANSTON, Ill. (Sept. 27, 2012) — Rotary International plans to contribute US $75 million over three years to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative as part of a worldwide effort to close a $945 million funding gap that threatens to derail the 24 year-old global health effort, even as new polio cases are at an all-time low.

 

Rotary, which already has contributed $1.2 billion to stop this crippling childhood disease, will announce its new funding commitment in New York City on Sept. 27 during a special side-event on polio eradication convened by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon during the 67th Session of the UN General Assembly.

 

Secretary-General Ban, who has made polio eradication a top priority of his second term, is expected to issue a strong call urging UN member states to ramp up their support for the polio eradication initiative, launched in 1988 by Rotary, the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The partnership now includes the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the United Nations Foundation.

 

The New York event will include  two panel sessions which will include remarks by Wilf Wilkinson, chair of The Rotary Foundation; Bill Gates, co-chair of the Gates Foundation; and top leaders and heads of state from the remaining polio-endemic countries and key donor countries.  The wild poliovirus is now endemic only to Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Nigeria, although other countries remain at risk for re-established cases imported from the endemics.

 

“It is imperative that governments step up and honor their commitments to polio eradication if we are to achieve our goal of a polio-free world,” said Wilkinson. “We are at a true tipping point, with success never closer than it is right now. We must seize the advantage by acting immediately, or risk breaking our pledge to the world’s children.”

 

The urgency at the UN follows action taken in May by the World Health Assembly, which declared polio eradication to be a “programmatic emergency for global public health.” Although new polio cases are at an all-time low – fewer than 140 worldwide so far this year – the $945 million shortfall has already affected several scheduled immunization activities in polio-affected countries and could derail the entire program unless the gap is bridged. If eradication fails and polio rebounds, up to 200,000 children a year could be paralyzed.

 

 

Polio cases have plummeted by more than 99 percent since 1988, when the disease infected about 350,000 children a year. Fewer than 700 new cases were reported in 2011. Rotary and its partners have reached more than 2.5 billion children with the oral polio vaccine, preventing more than five million cases of paralysis and hundreds of thousands of pediatric deaths.

 

Rotary’s chief responsibilities in the initiative are fundraising and advocacy, a role of increasing importance as the end game draws near. In early September, Rotary launched a new, interactive website -- endpolionow.org – intended to educate, activate and inspire visitors to actively support the polio eradication effort. Visitors are encouraged to sign a petition calling for world leaders to commit additional resources to close the funding gap. The e-signatures will be presented to Secretary-General Ban in New York. Site visitors can also estimate the potential dollar value they can generate by sharing the polio eradication message through social media platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter.

 

Earlier this year, Rotary raised $228 million in new money for polio eradication in response to a $355 million challenge grant from the Gates Foundation, which promptly contributed an additional $50 million in recognition of Rotary’s commitment.

 

Rotary is a global humanitarian organization with more than 1.2 million members in 34,000 Rotary clubs in over 200 countries and geographical areas. Rotary members are men and women who are business, professional and community leaders with a shared commitment to make the world a better place through humanitarian service. To access broadcast quality video footage and still images of Rotary members immunizing children against polio available go to: Media Center.

 

 

RC Georgetown mourns loss of Rotarian Rod Guerdan


RC Georgetown sadly sends on the news of the passing of Rod Guerdan, a long time member and Paul Harris Fellow. Rotarian Guerdan passed away in his Georgetown home on August 14, 2012 and will be missed. The Club and the District offer condolences to his family, friends and fellow Rotarians.

RC Bluegrass Richmond volunteers at the Teen Center

For the fall school year, our club members have signed up to volunteer at the Teen Center, which has an after school program for junior high and high school teens. Each individual will bring their expertise /hobbies/etc to the group. We are very excited about this service  project and it has encouraged each member to be involved. We will have 1 or 2 members there each week during the fall school year.

New Interact Club in Boone County

Local Students Establish New Rotary Club

An enthusiastic group of Northern Kentucky teens met September 18th at the Schebin branch of the Boone County Library for the inaugural meeting of the new Interact Club of Boone County.  It is a community-based organization which provides leadership opportunities to all youth ages 12 – 18 who live in any of the communities in Northern Kentucky, not only Boone County.   Rotary District Governor Kathryn Hardman joined with Florence Rotary President Bradley Shipe as well as local Rotarians for the official ceremony. 

Governor Hardman presented “Peace Through Service” pins to each of the new Interact members in turn as she challenged the members to continue to grow in service to the community. Brad Shipe presented Inga Almquist with the official Rotary bell and gavel to mark the beginning of her term as Interact Club President.

The Interact Club of Boone County is the first Interact Club to be sponsored by the Florence Rotary Club. Rotarians Barbara Rahn and Sharon Almquist worked diligently throughout the summer to prepare the students and consult with Rotary on the formation of the Interact Club. Both Barb and Sharon will continue to act as advisors and liaison between Florence Rotary and the Interact Club of Boone County.

Interact is Rotary International’s service club for young people ages 12 to 18. Interact clubs are sponsored by individual Rotary clubs, which provide support and guidance, but they are self-governing and self-supporting.

Club membership varies greatly. Clubs can be single gender or mixed, large or small. They can draw from the student body of a single school or from two or more schools in the same community.  
Each year, Interact clubs complete at least two community service projects, one of which furthers international understanding and goodwill. Through these efforts, Interactors develop a network of friendships with local and overseas clubs and learn the importance of

• Developing leadership skills and personal integrity
• Demonstrating helpfulness and respect for others
• Understanding the value of individual responsibility and hard work
• Advancing international understanding and goodwill

As one of the most significant and fastest-growing programs of Rotary service, with more than 10,700 clubs in 109 countries and geographical areas, Interact has become a worldwide phenomenon. Almost 200,000 young people are involved in Interact.