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October 16 , 2015 Volume 15 Issue 16
The Rotary Club of Sta. Rosa Centro meets at :
El Cielito Inn, Sta. Rosa-Tagaytay Road, Sta. Rosa, Laguna every Friday at 7:00pm.
Club website: www.rcstarosacentro.org
Club e-mail : [email protected]
Rotary Club of Sta. Rosa Centro RI District 3820 Outstanding Club RY 2012-2013
Most Outstanding Club (Silver Level) RY 2013-2014
The CENTROThe CENTRO Official Weekly Bulletin
Awarded Best Club Bulletin RY 2014-2015
WCP Delhi Penelope “Pen” Cuya President
PE Carmela “Mel” Tadeo President Elect
PP Zenaida “Zeny” Dictado Vice President
PP Hazel “Hazel” Ramos Secretary
PP Maryann “MeAnn” Gonzales Treasurer
PP Carolina “Carol” Salvahan Auditor
PP Jacqueline “Jacqui” Victoria Protocol Officer
IPP Arlene “Mayor” Arcillas Ex-Officio
PP Priscilla “ Precy” dela Cruz Executive Secretary
Officers & Directors, Rotary Year 2015-2016
PP Priscilla “ Precy” dela Cruz Club Administration
Rtn Michelle “Michelle” Baldemor Membership
Rtn Gloria “Glo” Bedienes Service Project
PP Teodora “Doray’ Lucero Community Service
PE Carmela “Mel” Tadeo Vocational
Rtn Evelyn “Evs” Laranga Youth
PP Elenita “Leni” Lantin Ma International
PP Joel Liza “Liza” Pineda The Rotary Foundation
IPP Arlene Arcillas Public Image
PP May Grace “Maya” Padiernos Special Projects
PDG Consuelo “Chit” Lijauco Club Trainer
PP Elenita “Leni” Lantin Ma Asst. Club Trainer
Officers
Club Committees
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Page #
Program 4
Invocation 5
Object of Rotary 5
The Four Way Test 6
Centro Hymn 6
President’s Message 7
Rotary Corner 8-9
RI News & Updates 10-11
Centro-in-Focus 12-13
Rotary Historic Moments 14-15
RID 3820 News & Updates 16
Treasurer’s Report 17
Reflections 18
Minutes of the Meeting 19
What’s coming up 20
Next week’s order of Business 21
Roster of Members 22
Attendance 23
Special Observances 23
Mission & Vision 24
Inside this Issue
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October 16, 2015
The Rotary Club of Sta. Rosa Centro
Regular Weekly Meeting
El Cielito Inn
P R O G R A M
October 16, 2015
If any person is unable to fulfill their positions as above please make arrangements with another Rotarian to take your place.
Chairwoman of the Night
Rtn Sheila Santillan
Call to Order WcPres Pen Cuya
Invocation Rtn Glo Bedienes
National Anthem PP Jacqui Victoria
Four-Way Test PP Precy dela Cruz
Object of Rotary Rtn RJ Janolino
Acknowledgment PP Carol Salvahan
Recognition Rtn Michelle Baldemor
Secretary's Report PP Hazel Ramos
Treasurer's Report PP Meann Gonzales
Committee Reports Committee Chairpersons
President's Time WcPres Pen Cuya
Adjournment WcPres Pen Cuya
Centro Hymn
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October 16, 2015 Volume 15 Issue 16 October 16, 2015
Creator and sustainer of all that is or will ever be, accept our
thanks for this day and all its blessings. We ask that you guide
and direct our club, its leaders and our actions. Grant that
each of us may feel our responsibility to Rotary, to our
community, to our country. Amen
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October 16, 2015
♪♫•*Sweet Rotary♪♫•
(The Centro Hymn)
When it began Look all around
I can’t believe it happened So many help is needed
But then I know it’s going strong C’mon, together I know we could
2001 And when we hurt,
That’s when it came to being We can just smile and bear it
Who’d have believed ‘Coz we were born
we’ll grow to be… to serve and be….
*Hands, touching hands Warm, touching warm
*Reaching out, touching me, Reaching out, touching me,
*touching you touching you
*Sweet Rotary *Sweet Rotary
*Sta. Rosa Centro’s good *Sta. Rosa Centro’s good
*I’ve been inclined *We’re going strong
*To believe we’re going strong *We are here for all of you
*And now, I… And now, I…
(Repeat *)
RC Centro’s GREAT!
1. Is it the truth?
2. Is it fair to all
concerned?
3. Will it build
goodwill and
better friendships?
4. Will it be beneficial to all concerned?
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October 16, 2015 Volume 15 Issue 16 October 16, 2015
President’s Message
Dear Centro Ladies,
The time we had during the meeting with our sister club,
RC BMW is one of the experiences I will treasure during
my term. I have learned to appreciate the importance of
the bond between merging of two clubs greatly influ-
enced by one goal. I look forward to more club visits be-
fore other major projects set in next year. In the mean
time, let us give time to encourage and build each other
up through fellowships. After all, we also have the right to
give ourselves a break after a hard day's work don't we?
Expect a few fellowship schedules in our club before the
year ends and I hope we could all get together complete-
ly. I miss the dancing, the laughter, and everything about
all of you.
Congratulations to our beloved Mayor Arlene for a suc-
cessful filing of her candidacy as a representative to the
first district of Laguna. I believe in your pure intention to
serve the public. And the Centro Ladies know you can
make it.
Yours in Rotary,
World Class President
Delphi Penelope “Pen” Cuya
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October 16, 2015
ROTARY CORNER
GOVERNANCE DOCUMENTS
Clubs and districts are guided by the Manual of Procedure, RI Consti-
tution, and RI Bylaws. These documents provide the structure for RI’s
policies and procedures. Every club and district can propose amend-
ments to constitutional documents through the Council of Legislation.
MANUAL OF PROCEDURE
The Manual of Procedure offers a concise version of Rotary’s policies
and procedures. The manual is geared to Rotary club and district
leaders and features information that’s most relevant to their roles. It
is published every three years to reflect adopted legislation and deci-
sions of the RI conventions, the Council on Legislation, the Rotary
International Board of Directors, and the Trustees of The Rotary
Foundation.
The manual covers these key areas:
Structure: Includes policies and procedures for clubs, districts,
zones, Rotary International, and The Rotary Foundation.
Carrying out Rotary's mission: Includes the structure, policies,
and procedures of the programs of RI and the Foundation
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October 16, 2015 Volume 15 Issue 16 October 16, 2015
ROTARY CORNER
Source : www.rotary.org
International Meetings: Includes the RI Convention, Council on
Legislation, and International Assembly
Rotary's constitutional and legal documents
ROTARY’S CONSTITUTIONAL DOCUMENTS
The Rotary International constitutional documents provide club and
districts the foundation for RI’s policies and procedures.
Constitution of Rotary International
Bylaws of Rotary International
Standard Rotary Club Constitution
All clubs admitted to Rotary membership must adopt this constitu-
tion.
Recommended Rotary Club Bylaws
Clubs can tailor their bylaws, as long as their changes align with
Rotary’s constitutional documents and the Rotary Code of Policies.
If you have doubts about your proposed changes, please submit
them to the general secretary for the RI Board to consider.
ROTARY CODE OF POLICIES
The Rotary Code of Policies compiles all of the organization’s gen-
eral and permanent policies. A revised document is available after
each meeting of the RI Board and the Council on Legislation.
The Rotary Foundation Code of Policies is maintained in a separate
document.
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October 16, 2015
ROTARY INTERNATIONAL
News & Updates
Source : www.rotary.org Source : www.rotary.org
ROTARY AND SHELTERBOX SUPPORT SYRIAN
REFUGEES
In Syria, where a civil war has been raging since 2011, more
than 6,000 people flee the country every day. As of Septem-
ber, more than 4.1 million people have become refugees, and
7.6 million more have been internally displaced.
“The plight of Syria’s refugees is a litmus test for the world's
compassion,” says Rotary International General Secretary John
Hewko. “Rotary members worldwide are profoundly disheart-
ened by the refugee crisis now unfolding in Syria and other
parts of the world,” which the United Nations has described as
the worst in decades.
A refugee family from Syria seeks shelter in cramped conditions on the
Greek island of Lesbos.
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ROTARY INTERNATIONAL
News & Updates
“Rotary is following the situation closely,” Hewko says. “We know our members have an inherent desire to act, to re-lieve the suffering and uncertainty that displaced individuals and families are facing. We call on you to respond as Rotar-ians have for more than 100 years: to use your professional skills and acumen, leverage your connections to other lead-ers, and mobilize your local communities to provide the necessary resources and funding to address the humanitari-an crisis.”
Rotary members can donate to the disaster relief efforts of our project partner ShelterBox. The organization has sup-ported the Syrian relief effort for nearly four years and is working with other agencies to continue distributing relief materials. ShelterBox is also working with communities in Greece to provide aid and supplies to displaced people passing through the region.
Rachel Harvey, a member of a ShelterBox response team that recently returned from Greece, says Syrian refugees are making dangerous crossings to the shores of Greece.
As many as 2,000 people arrive daily on Lesbos’ northern beaches, says Harvey, referring to a Greek island in the Ae-gean Sea off the Turkish coast. The trip from Turkey to Greece usually takes about an hour and a half. “The flimsy rubber dinghies are invariably overcrowded, and the majori-ty of passengers can’t swim,” she says.
Harvey adds: "The experience is terrifying. Another trauma added to the layers that many of the displaced have accu-mulated through war in Syria or South Sudan, insecurity in Afghanistan or Pakistan. One man told me: 'It was a night-mare. I don’t know how we got through that trip,' ” she says.
Says Hewko: “We appreciate our clubs and members for their support, helping the millions of displaced people find shelter and rebuild their lives and communities. Every refu-gee is in our hearts and minds.”
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October 16, 2015
Centro In-Focus
COASTAL CLEAN-UP Bgy. Baclaran
October 10, 2015
The Department of Education , Boy Scout of the Philippines, LGU’s , Medical Society also
participated. An activity that promotes awareness on the ecological services of the
Laguna de Bay.
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Centro-In-Focus
"The laws of man must follow the
laws of nature"
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Rotary Historic Moments
Source : www.rotary.org
On 29 September 1979, Rotarians
and delegates of the Philippine
Ministry of Health looked on as vol-
unteers administered drops of the
lifesaving Sabin polio vaccine to
children in the Manila barrio of
Guadalupe Viejo.
When James L. Bomar Jr., then RI
president, put the first drops of
vaccine into a child's mouth, he
ceremonially launched the Philip-
pine poliomyelitis immunization effort, and Rotary's first
Health, Hunger and Humanity (3-H) Grant project was under-
way. Bomar joined Enrique M. Garcia, the country's minister
of health, in signing the contract committing Rotary Interna-
tional and the government of the Philippines to a joint multi-
year effort to immunize about six million children against polio
at a cost of about US$760,000.
Roots Of Rotary's Polio Efforts
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Rotary Historic Moments
In a 1993 interview, Bomar reminisced about the trip. He re-
called how the brother of one of the children he had immunized
tugged on his pant leg to get his attention, and said, "Thank
you, thank you, Rotary."
The success of this project set the stage for Rotary's top priority
to rid the world of polio. As a result of Rotary's efforts, more
than 2.5 billion children have received the oral polio vaccine.
Since Rotary launched its PolioPlus campaign in 1985, the num-
ber of polio cases worldwide has dropped 99 percent, and the
virus remains endemic in only threecountries -- Afghanistan, Ni-
geria, and Pakistan.
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RI DISTRICT 3820
News & Updates
DISTRICT 3820
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Treasurer’s Report
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October 16, 2015
"Love is mightier than hate. Give it one half the advertising
that hate has had and there will be no more war".
Paul P. Harris
Reflections
"There is no growth unaccompanied by growing
pains,.. peace is a universal fact which can only
be realized in the fullness of the days...the
ultimate achievement of spirit will b e at the end
of a long and painfuI process." - Christmas
Message, THE ROTARIAN, December 1917
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October 16, 2015 Volume 15 Issue 16 October 16, 2015
Attendance:
Gov Chit WCP Pen AG Liza Sec Hazel
PP Precy Dir. Cecile I. Attendance on October 24
1. WCP Pen 6. Cecile
2. Hazel 7. Shiela 3. Gov Chit 8. Gloria
4. Precy 9. Doray 5. Liza 10. Roselle (to be confirmed)
II. Assignments: meal stub printing - Liza ; ID printing - Hazel
registration sheet - Liza ; token - Carol Gov Chit
tarp - Jackie ; laptop - Cecile Precy background of Invo - Cecile ; program/bulletin - Cecile
giveaways - Pen Hazel ; booth - Doray II. Committee
Registration - Liza, Hazel, Doray, and membership team
Sgt-at-Arms - Gloria PR team Technical - Roselle or Sheena
Food - Shiela Hazel Program/bulletin - Cecille Gov Chit
III. Centro uniform- maong jeans, white t-shirt, black blazer, pearl necklace and boots?
* Discounted rate of Php800-membership team PR team
* Free registration for speaker IV. Food taste will be schedule by Precy, Shiela and
Cecile next week V. Seminar expenses:
tarp - 3k ; projector rental - 2k ;registration materials -
2k token - 9k ; program/bulletin - 3k ; toilet paper - P200
VI. PR/Membership Seminar committee meeting ended at 9:30pm
Minutes taken by : PP Precy
Minutes of the Meeting
MINUTES of the PR/Membership
Seminar Committee Meeting
October 7, 2015
Figaro ATC
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October 16, 2015
What’s coming up?
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October 16, 2015 Volume 15 Issue 16 October 16, 2015
Next Week’s Order of Business
The Rotary Club of Sta. Rosa Centro
Regular Weekly Meeting
El Cielito Inn
P R O G R A M
October 23, 2015
Chairwoman of the Night :
PP Jacqui Victoria
Call to Order WcPres Pen Cuya
Invocation Rtn Sheila Santillan
National Anthem PP Che Lu
Four-Way Test PP Precy dela Cruz
Object of Rotary Rtn RJ Janolino
Acknowledgment PP Carol Salvahan
Recognition PP Doray Lucero
Secretary's Report PP Hazel Ramos
Treasurer's Report PP Meann Gonzales
Committee Reports Committee Chairpersons
President's Time WcPres Pen Cuya
Adjournment WcPres Pen Cuya
Centro Hymn
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October 16, 2015
Roster of Members
Name Rotary
ID Classification Birth date
Date Admitted
Roselle Animo IT Professional 11-Jun
Arlene Arcillas 8275828 City Representative 31-Jul 1/7/2011
Michelle Baldemor 8879856 Retail 1-May 4/28/2014
Gloria Bedienes 8612318 Trading 14-Apr 12/31/2012
Pinky Belizario 8879854
Human Resources Man-
agement 24-Jan 4/28/2014
Delphi Penelope Cuya 8275831 Healthcare 12-Feb 1/7/2011
Priscila De la Cruz 5333454 Leasing 24-Aug 4/1/2001
Jennifer Dee 8773225 Pediatrician 20-Mar 11/18/2013
Ma. Geralyn Dee 8574451 Interior Design 9-Dec 11/1/2012
Herra Thessa Diaz 9244236
Engineer/
Businesswoman 27-Jun 4/1/2015
Zenaida Dictado 6416676 Pallet Manufacturing 14-Sep 10/7/2005
Ma. Cecilia Gabatan 8612321 Real Estate Broker 27-Oct 12/1/2012
Mary Ann Gonzales 5333525
Real Estate Developer/
Cooperative 20-Mar 3/28/2001
Donghee Kim Doctor
Sarminda Knoll Housewife 20-Jul
Evelyn Laranga 8465660 Education 25-Jul 12/26/2011
Consuelo Lijauco 5333445 Magazine Editing 15-May 3/28/2001
Cheryl Lu 5333496 Pest Control Services 17-Apr 3/28/2001
Teodora Lucero 8045358 Midwife 18-Sep 7/1/2009
Elenita Ma 6261683 Dentist 10-Jan 11/5/2004
May Grace Padiernos 5984127 Furniture Retail 6-May 6/30/2003
Joel Liza Pineda 7019336
Human Resource Pro-
vider 30-Mar 12/31/2008
Hazel Ramos 6165816 Money Lending 1-Jul 6/30/2004
Aurelyn Salandanan 8773229 Obstetrics-Gynecologist 11/18/2013
Carolina Salvahan 5333457
Window Fashion Con-
tractor 4-Jul 3/28/2001
Shiela Santillan 8574457 Restaurateur 2-Apr 11/1/2012
Carmela Tadeo 8415873 Logistics 24-Dec 8/1/2011
Jacqueline Victoria 6556182 Watch Services 7-Nov 9/1/2006
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October 16, 2015 Volume 15 Issue 16 October 16, 2015
Attendance Report
Period : Oct 9 to Oct
16, 2015
Total Membership 28
Members Present 10
Meetings Made-up 8
Leave 3
Senior 2
Total Attendance 23
Attendance Percentage 82%
Rotary Club of Sta. Rosa Centro
RID 3820 Club ID No. 55177
Make Up Card
We had the pleasure of having you as
our guest/visiting Rotarian
_________________________________
Name
_________________________________
Rotary Club
During our club meeting today
_________________________________
Date
_________________________________
Secretary Hazel Ramos
Special Observances
July 2015 Start of Rotary Year 2015-2016
August 2015 Membership & Extension Month
September 2015 Area of Focus: Basic Education and Literacy
October 2015
Area of Focus: Economic and Community
Development
November 2015 The Rotary Foundation Month
December 2015 Area of Focus: Disease Prevention and Treatment
January 2016 Vocational Service Month
February 2016
Area of Focus: Peace and Conflict Prevention/
Resolution
March 2015 Area of Focus: Water and Sanitation
April 2015 Area of Focus: Maternal and Child Health
May 2015 Youth Services Month
June 2015 Rotary Fellowships Month
Attendance
VISION
The Rotary Club of Sta. Rosa Centro is the place to be for
professionals to nourish a culture of service while fostering
lasting friendships and causing their own development,
growth, and empowerment.
MISSION
The Rotary Club of Sta. Rosa Centro is committed to:
The care of WOMEN and CHILDREN, pioneering in programs
that address their needs
The care and preservation of the ENVIRONMENT, providing
clean and healthy surroundings for children to grow up
in.
The spread of LITERACY, specifically for women and children.
Mission and Vision
The CENTRO is published weekly
as the official weekly program bulle-
tin of the Rotary Club of Santa Rosa
Centro, Rotary International District
3820, Club ID No. 55177. We are
accepting contributions to the weekly
club bulletin. Please submit your
articles from Saturday to Wednesday
at Email: [email protected].
All contributions submitted later than
the deadline will be included in the
next week’s issue. Only those arti-
cles submitted on or before the
deadline will be included in the
week’s issue. Cover photo from : http://
www.intuitivecounselingblog.com/