Cooper Siner - Rotary of Fort Walton Beach Main Page
Transcription
Cooper Siner - Rotary of Fort Walton Beach Main Page
ROTARY ROSTER Bill Alexson Military Operations Commander Ross Hamilton Education-College Roger Peadro, PHF SM RotY Pastor Jack Yeiser, PHF SM Mortgage Broker Robert Anderson, SM CPA Sallie Hardy, PHF SM Commercial Properties Mary Plummer, PHF SM Real Estate Sales Russ Youngblood, PHF SM Psychologist Jack Arthur, PHF SM Insurance Tom Hayes, PHF SM Financial Services Lyndon Poff, PHF SM RotY Paint & Body Shop Spencer Barnes Insurance Jody Henderson, PHF SM Accounting/Auditing Diane Poff Paint & Body Shop James Bass, SM Funeral Director Mitzi Henley, SM Retail Shopping Center Jan Pooley, (8) PHF SM RotY Department Store Neal Bern Insurance Ken Hinrichs Non-Profit Administration Charlie Potts, PHF SM Jeweler Debbie Bodenstine, PHF SM RotY Economic Development Jeff Hooton, PHF SM Commercial Lending Kathy Pritchard, PHF SM Commercial Banking Board of Directors Ann Boynton Vacation Rental Stephanie Jones Financial Advisor Fred Pryor, PHF SM RotY Utility Service-Gas President: Charles West Joseph Brewster, PHF SM Cable Television Laura Kirby Business Development Dusty Ricketts, SM News Media Vice President and Secretary: Katie Sharon Frank Brutt, PHF SM County Planning Richard Kunkel, PHF SM Education Katie Sharon, SM Commercial Banking Mack Busbee County Government Chuck Landers, PHF SM Certified Public Accountant Eulice Shelley, PHF SM Moving & Storage Tom Butcher Honorary Member Ross LeBlanc, SM Certified Public Accountant Scott Smith, PHF SM Chiropractor Kevin Cagle, SM Office Machines Tony Leonard, PHF SM Retail/Musical Instruments Whitney Smith, SM Attorney Gerry Chalker, (7) PHF SM Pension Administration John Linn, PHF SM Kitchens-Retail Allan Stearns, PHF SM Travel Agent Andy Corbin, PHF SM RotY Electronics manufacturing Ted Litschauer, PHF SM Public Safety Rick Stevens, PHF SM RotY Surge Suppression Systems George Dorris, PHF SM Dentistry David Macdonald, SM PHF Shopping Center Manager Randy Stokes, PHF SM Architecture Jeff Dunford Banker Jamey Mattern, PHF SM Architect Kent Tinsley, SM Commercial Banking J.T. Edwards, PHF SM RotY Landscaping Owner JR McDonald Defense Contractor Herb Tinsley, PHF SM RotY Savings & Loan Management Cliff Ennis Business IT Management Julie McNabb, SM Developmental Disabilities Forrest Townsend, PHF SM RotY Veterinarian Ralph Fallin, (33) PHF SM RotY Dairy Products Joe Meyer, SM Retail/Computers Alex Trum, PHF SM Orthodontist Retired Bob Fowner, PHF SM Association Manager David O. Miller, (12) PHF SM Developmental Disabilities Matt Turpin, SM Certified Public Accountant Tony Gilligan, PHF SM Government Contractor John Morgan, PHF SM Computer Engineer John Vaughan, PHF SM Past Service Ben Gordon Attorney Matthew Morgan, SM Electrical Engineer Aaron Webber, SM Condo Management Ron Grissom, SM Utilities Dan Nelson, PHF SM Restaurant/Fast Food Charles West, PHF SM Investment Broker Haydon Grubbs, PHF SM Education Michele Nicholson, SM Communications Ken Williamson, PHF SM Retired Chad Hamilton, PHF SM Certified Public Accountant Susan Page, SM Professional Counseling Jean Woo, PHF SM Dentist READER The Rotary Club of Fort Walton Beach Aug. 19, 2015 www.fortwaltonrotary.org Presidential Citation Award Winner for 20 Years Issue 2,865 Treasurer: Ron Grissom Past President: Debbie Bodenstine Committee Chairs Membership: Laura Kirby and Andy Corbin PHF: Paul Harris Fellows SM: PH Sustaining Members RotY: FWB Rotarian of the Year FWB Club Past President Other Club Past President Members in blue are recognized as having perfect attendance as of the end of the previous year Members in yellow are on a leave of absence Service Projects: Kevin Cagle and J.T. Edwards Rotary Foundation: Joe Brewster Public Relations: Dusty Ricketts and Jean Woo Club Administration: Mack Busbee Youth Service: Ross Hamilton Don’t forget that you can make up missed meetings at neighboring clubs. They include: Crestview: 12 p.m. Wednesday at Ryan’s Destin: 7:15 a.m. Tuesday at Rutherford’s at Regatta Bay DeFuniak Springs: 12 p.m. Wednesday at McLain’s Family Steakhouse Mid-Bay: 7 a.m. Wednesday at Bluewater Bay Golf Club Navarre: 12 p.m. Thursday at Tuscan Grill at Hidden Creek Niceville: 12 p.m. Thursday at Northwest Florida State College Building K South Walton: 7:30 a.m. Thursday at Embassy Suites Sergeant at Arms: Gerry Chalker and Roger Peadro Scholarship, Inc.: Matt Turpin Rotary Reader: Spencer Barnes Executive Secretary: Lorragenia Jackson [email protected] .. Cooper Siner & Paul Bannmueller Cooper Siner Rotary Exchange I am sixteen years old and a sophomore at Choctawhatchee High School. My parents are Mark Siner, owner of Choctaw Engineering, and Ashley Siner, owner of the local Taco Bell restaurants. More importantly, my grandfather is fellow Rotarian Dan Nelson. I am the oldest of three kids. I have two younger sisters. I am involved in many activities in my school and community. I am an avid soccer player and play midfielder the for Choctawhatchee High School soccer team. I am a member of Beta Honors club and Excel club, which is a service club at my school. I also volunteer as a coach for a U-8 soccer team as well as help at Vacation Bible School every summer. My hobbies include sailing and working with computers. I love to spend time out on the water whether it be fishing, tubing, or kayaking. This summer I participated in the Rotary Exchange Program, where I got the exciting opportunity to live in Germany for three weeks. I lived with the Bannmüeller family in Schramberg, Germany which is located in the south west portion of Germany. While there I was able to spend time learning about the German culture and was even able to attend classes at a German High School. My guest is Paul Bannmüeller who has been living with my family for the past couple of weeks. Paul is also 16 years old. He has four siblings and a dog named Findus. His older sister previously participated in the Rotary Exchange Program. Paul’s hobbies are mountain biking and climbing. He is a basketball player and plays for a club team called SG Schramberg. He is very involved with his church and attends a camp organized by his youth group. He is also involved in clubs such as Table Tennis and Hand Ball. Po s t O f f i c e B o x 8 9 2 , F o r t Wa l t o n B e a c h , F L 3 2 5 4 9 THE ROTARY READER THE ROTARY READER UPCOMING SPEAKERS Aug. 26 — Ken Williamson and Katie Sharon Sept. 2 and 9 — TBA Sept. 16 — Dr. George vonHilsheimer, dermatologist TODAY IN HISTORY A conversation with Caryl Stern By Vanessa Glavinskas The Rotarian The six-day-old baby shuddered with convulsions. Her mother, Memunatu, had given birth at home and cut her daughter’s umbilical cord with what she could find – a sharp piece of metal. When the newborn contracted tetanus, Memunatu walked miles to reach a clinic. That’s where Caryl Stern encountered the pair. Stern was on a field visit with UNICEF in Sierra Leone and stayed with Memunatu, trying to comfort her, until the child died. The image of the baby in pain, hypersensitive to light and sound, stayed with Stern as she got off the plane in New York and headed home to her own family. “I realized that the pizza I asked my son to order that night because I didn’t feel like cooking cost more than the vaccine that would have prevented this disease,” she says. “On my most frustrating day, I bring myself back to that moment. That’s why I’m here.” Stern, president and CEO of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF, sits in a corner office adorned with hand-drawn pictures and brightly colored paintings by children she’s met around the world. “Kids are awesome,” she says as she shows off the homemade gallery. “As bad as it is in some places, kids are still kids.” In 2007, she joined the U.S. Fund for UNICEF after almost two decades as a senior official at the AntiDefamation League. In her new role, she learned about UNICEF’s humanitarian work by visiting country after country, sleeping in tents and under bed nets. She wrote a book titled “I Believe in Zero” – something she started saying to rally her team around the possibil-ity of bringing the number preventable child deaths to zero. She says she has seen humanity at its best, but she’s frustrated that most people don’t share her sense of urgency to help children, especially those trapped in conflict zones. “I’m trying to balance my urgency against a complacent world,” she says, noting that donations for programs to help Syrian refugees are lagging. “It’s our job to be the voice of that child sitting in a tent tonight.” Contributing Editor Vanessa Glavinskas talked with Stern at her Manhattan office. THE ROTARIAN: What led you to work at the U.S. Fund for UNICEF? STERN: My entire career has been child-focused. I worked in higher education for 10 years, and then I had an opportunity to start an education project with the Anti-Defamation League. I’m a Holocaust survivor’s kid, so the opportunity was enticing enough that I gave up tenure and went, thinking I’d do it for a year. I ended up staying 18 years. I thought I’d stay there for the rest of my career when a job opened with UNICEF. I grew up in a household where we were taught that if you saved one life, you saved the world. So the opportunity to work for an organization where I could do that seemed phenomenal. Almost three weeks to the day after I got to the U.S. Fund for UNI-CEF, Bill Gates offered our then-CEO a job you don’t turn down. He came into my office and said, “You’re going to hate me, but I’m leaving.” I knew nothing about hu-manitarian aid, though I knew a lot about running a nonprofit. The board made me acting president while they did an international search, and in that year, I learned every-thing I could about the delivery of humanitarian aid. I was fortunate that the board took a leap of faith and gave me the job. TR: What do you remember from those early days in the field? STERN: The first day of a trip to Sierra Leone, I witnessed a baby dying of tetanus. But it wasn’t only the death of the child I remember – it was the hospital, which had nothing. There weren’t beds. The mothers would go outside and cook a meal over a fire and bring it in to feed their children. If they had other children, they’d sleep in the hospital too. Because so much of Sierra Leone has no power and there are oil lamps, many of the kids in the hospital were severely burned, yet there wasn’t even Tylenol or aspirin. Just walking through the hospital was traumatic. I hadn’t seen medical care at that level anywhere else. I’ve since seen it in a lot of places. TR: In an op-ed you wrote for USA Today, you reported that 2014 was the worst year in recent memory for atrocities committed against children. It’s hard to believe that the world broke a record for abusing children. STERN: Growing up as a Holocaust survivor’s kid, the question I would ask repeatedly was, “Why didn’t somebody stop this?” We can’t pretend that we don’t know what’s going on. It’s in the newspapers. It’s on TV, and it’s on the Internet. We know it’s happening, but we choose not to focus on it. We have a match fund for the Syrian refugee crisis, and we’re struggling to meet the match. There are huge funding gaps. I wish I could pack everybody into a bus and drive to a refugee camp, because once you spend an hour there, there’s no way you will let people suffer. On this day in 1909, the first race is held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, now the home of the world’s most famous motor racing competition, the Indianapolis 500. Built on 328 acres of farmland five miles northwest of Indianapolis, Indiana, the speedway was started by local business-men as a testing facility for Indiana’s growing automobile industry. On this day in 1934, Adolf Hitler, already chancellor, is also elected president of Germany in an unprecedented consolidation of power in the short history of the republic. On this day in 1946, William Jefferson Blythe III is born in Hope, Arkansas. His father died in a car accident before he was born, and young Bill later took the last name of his stepfather, Roger Clinton. In 1992, Bill Clinton would be elected as the 42nd president of the United States. TODAY IN LOCAL HISTORY On this day in 1982, the Fort Walton Beach Redevelopment Agency voted unanimously to support a new bridge designed to ease the downtown traffic problem. ROTARIANS WITH BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES Chad Hamilton, birthday, Aug. 17 Andy Corbin, anniversary, Aug. 18 ROTARY’S FOUR-WAY TEST Is it the TRUTH? Is it FAIR to all concerned? Will it build GOODWILL and better FRIENDSHIP? Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned? THE ROTARY READER THE ROTARY READER UPCOMING SPEAKERS Aug. 26 — Ken Williamson and Katie Sharon Sept. 2 and 9 — TBA Sept. 16 — Dr. George vonHilsheimer, dermatologist TODAY IN HISTORY A conversation with Caryl Stern By Vanessa Glavinskas The Rotarian The six-day-old baby shuddered with convulsions. Her mother, Memunatu, had given birth at home and cut her daughter’s umbilical cord with what she could find – a sharp piece of metal. When the newborn contracted tetanus, Memunatu walked miles to reach a clinic. That’s where Caryl Stern encountered the pair. Stern was on a field visit with UNICEF in Sierra Leone and stayed with Memunatu, trying to comfort her, until the child died. The image of the baby in pain, hypersensitive to light and sound, stayed with Stern as she got off the plane in New York and headed home to her own family. “I realized that the pizza I asked my son to order that night because I didn’t feel like cooking cost more than the vaccine that would have prevented this disease,” she says. “On my most frustrating day, I bring myself back to that moment. That’s why I’m here.” Stern, president and CEO of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF, sits in a corner office adorned with hand-drawn pictures and brightly colored paintings by children she’s met around the world. “Kids are awesome,” she says as she shows off the homemade gallery. “As bad as it is in some places, kids are still kids.” In 2007, she joined the U.S. Fund for UNICEF after almost two decades as a senior official at the AntiDefamation League. In her new role, she learned about UNICEF’s humanitarian work by visiting country after country, sleeping in tents and under bed nets. She wrote a book titled “I Believe in Zero” – something she started saying to rally her team around the possibil-ity of bringing the number preventable child deaths to zero. She says she has seen humanity at its best, but she’s frustrated that most people don’t share her sense of urgency to help children, especially those trapped in conflict zones. “I’m trying to balance my urgency against a complacent world,” she says, noting that donations for programs to help Syrian refugees are lagging. “It’s our job to be the voice of that child sitting in a tent tonight.” Contributing Editor Vanessa Glavinskas talked with Stern at her Manhattan office. THE ROTARIAN: What led you to work at the U.S. Fund for UNICEF? STERN: My entire career has been child-focused. I worked in higher education for 10 years, and then I had an opportunity to start an education project with the Anti-Defamation League. I’m a Holocaust survivor’s kid, so the opportunity was enticing enough that I gave up tenure and went, thinking I’d do it for a year. I ended up staying 18 years. I thought I’d stay there for the rest of my career when a job opened with UNICEF. I grew up in a household where we were taught that if you saved one life, you saved the world. So the opportunity to work for an organization where I could do that seemed phenomenal. Almost three weeks to the day after I got to the U.S. Fund for UNI-CEF, Bill Gates offered our then-CEO a job you don’t turn down. He came into my office and said, “You’re going to hate me, but I’m leaving.” I knew nothing about hu-manitarian aid, though I knew a lot about running a nonprofit. The board made me acting president while they did an international search, and in that year, I learned every-thing I could about the delivery of humanitarian aid. I was fortunate that the board took a leap of faith and gave me the job. TR: What do you remember from those early days in the field? STERN: The first day of a trip to Sierra Leone, I witnessed a baby dying of tetanus. But it wasn’t only the death of the child I remember – it was the hospital, which had nothing. There weren’t beds. The mothers would go outside and cook a meal over a fire and bring it in to feed their children. If they had other children, they’d sleep in the hospital too. Because so much of Sierra Leone has no power and there are oil lamps, many of the kids in the hospital were severely burned, yet there wasn’t even Tylenol or aspirin. Just walking through the hospital was traumatic. I hadn’t seen medical care at that level anywhere else. I’ve since seen it in a lot of places. TR: In an op-ed you wrote for USA Today, you reported that 2014 was the worst year in recent memory for atrocities committed against children. It’s hard to believe that the world broke a record for abusing children. STERN: Growing up as a Holocaust survivor’s kid, the question I would ask repeatedly was, “Why didn’t somebody stop this?” We can’t pretend that we don’t know what’s going on. It’s in the newspapers. It’s on TV, and it’s on the Internet. We know it’s happening, but we choose not to focus on it. We have a match fund for the Syrian refugee crisis, and we’re struggling to meet the match. There are huge funding gaps. I wish I could pack everybody into a bus and drive to a refugee camp, because once you spend an hour there, there’s no way you will let people suffer. On this day in 1909, the first race is held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, now the home of the world’s most famous motor racing competition, the Indianapolis 500. Built on 328 acres of farmland five miles northwest of Indianapolis, Indiana, the speedway was started by local business-men as a testing facility for Indiana’s growing automobile industry. On this day in 1934, Adolf Hitler, already chancellor, is also elected president of Germany in an unprecedented consolidation of power in the short history of the republic. On this day in 1946, William Jefferson Blythe III is born in Hope, Arkansas. His father died in a car accident before he was born, and young Bill later took the last name of his stepfather, Roger Clinton. In 1992, Bill Clinton would be elected as the 42nd president of the United States. TODAY IN LOCAL HISTORY On this day in 1982, the Fort Walton Beach Redevelopment Agency voted unanimously to support a new bridge designed to ease the downtown traffic problem. ROTARIANS WITH BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES Chad Hamilton, birthday, Aug. 17 Andy Corbin, anniversary, Aug. 18 ROTARY’S FOUR-WAY TEST Is it the TRUTH? Is it FAIR to all concerned? Will it build GOODWILL and better FRIENDSHIP? Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned? ROTARY ROSTER Bill Alexson Military Operations Commander Ross Hamilton Education-College Roger Peadro, PHF SM RotY Pastor Jack Yeiser, PHF SM Mortgage Broker Robert Anderson, SM CPA Sallie Hardy, PHF SM Commercial Properties Mary Plummer, PHF SM Real Estate Sales Russ Youngblood, PHF SM Psychologist Jack Arthur, PHF SM Insurance Tom Hayes, PHF SM Financial Services Lyndon Poff, PHF SM RotY Paint & Body Shop Spencer Barnes Insurance Jody Henderson, PHF SM Accounting/Auditing Diane Poff Paint & Body Shop James Bass, SM Funeral Director Mitzi Henley, SM Retail Shopping Center Jan Pooley, (8) PHF SM RotY Department Store Neal Bern Insurance Ken Hinrichs Non-Profit Administration Charlie Potts, PHF SM Jeweler Debbie Bodenstine, PHF SM RotY Economic Development Jeff Hooton, PHF SM Commercial Lending Kathy Pritchard, PHF SM Commercial Banking Board of Directors Ann Boynton Vacation Rental Stephanie Jones Financial Advisor Fred Pryor, PHF SM RotY Utility Service-Gas President: Charles West Joseph Brewster, PHF SM Cable Television Laura Kirby Business Development Dusty Ricketts, SM News Media Vice President and Secretary: Katie Sharon Frank Brutt, PHF SM County Planning Richard Kunkel, PHF SM Education Katie Sharon, SM Commercial Banking Mack Busbee County Government Chuck Landers, PHF SM Certified Public Accountant Eulice Shelley, PHF SM Moving & Storage Tom Butcher Honorary Member Ross LeBlanc, SM Certified Public Accountant Scott Smith, PHF SM Chiropractor Kevin Cagle, SM Office Machines Tony Leonard, PHF SM Retail/Musical Instruments Whitney Smith, SM Attorney Gerry Chalker, (7) PHF SM Pension Administration John Linn, PHF SM Kitchens-Retail Allan Stearns, PHF SM Travel Agent Andy Corbin, PHF SM RotY Electronics manufacturing Ted Litschauer, PHF SM Public Safety Rick Stevens, PHF SM RotY Surge Suppression Systems George Dorris, PHF SM Dentistry David Macdonald, SM PHF Shopping Center Manager Randy Stokes, PHF SM Architecture Jeff Dunford Banker Jamey Mattern, PHF SM Architect Kent Tinsley, SM Commercial Banking J.T. Edwards, PHF SM RotY Landscaping Owner JR McDonald Defense Contractor Herb Tinsley, PHF SM RotY Savings & Loan Management Cliff Ennis Business IT Management Julie McNabb, SM Developmental Disabilities Forrest Townsend, PHF SM RotY Veterinarian Ralph Fallin, (33) PHF SM RotY Dairy Products Joe Meyer, SM Retail/Computers Alex Trum, PHF SM Orthodontist Retired Bob Fowner, PHF SM Association Manager David O. Miller, (12) PHF SM Developmental Disabilities Matt Turpin, SM Certified Public Accountant Tony Gilligan, PHF SM Government Contractor John Morgan, PHF SM Computer Engineer John Vaughan, PHF SM Past Service Ben Gordon Attorney Matthew Morgan, SM Electrical Engineer Aaron Webber, SM Condo Management Ron Grissom, SM Utilities Dan Nelson, PHF SM Restaurant/Fast Food Charles West, PHF SM Investment Broker Haydon Grubbs, PHF SM Education Michele Nicholson, SM Communications Ken Williamson, PHF SM Retired Chad Hamilton, PHF SM Certified Public Accountant Susan Page, SM Professional Counseling Jean Woo, PHF SM Dentist READER The Rotary Club of Fort Walton Beach Aug. 19, 2015 www.fortwaltonrotary.org Presidential Citation Award Winner for 20 Years Issue 2,865 Treasurer: Ron Grissom Past President: Debbie Bodenstine Committee Chairs Membership: Laura Kirby and Andy Corbin PHF: Paul Harris Fellows SM: PH Sustaining Members RotY: FWB Rotarian of the Year FWB Club Past President Other Club Past President Members in blue are recognized as having perfect attendance as of the end of the previous year Members in yellow are on a leave of absence Service Projects: Kevin Cagle and J.T. Edwards Rotary Foundation: Joe Brewster Public Relations: Dusty Ricketts and Jean Woo Club Administration: Mack Busbee Youth Service: Ross Hamilton Don’t forget that you can make up missed meetings at neighboring clubs. They include: Crestview: 12 p.m. Wednesday at Ryan’s Destin: 7:15 a.m. Tuesday at Rutherford’s at Regatta Bay DeFuniak Springs: 12 p.m. Wednesday at McLain’s Family Steakhouse Mid-Bay: 7 a.m. Wednesday at Bluewater Bay Golf Club Navarre: 12 p.m. Thursday at Tuscan Grill at Hidden Creek Niceville: 12 p.m. Thursday at Northwest Florida State College Building K South Walton: 7:30 a.m. Thursday at Embassy Suites Sergeant at Arms: Gerry Chalker and Roger Peadro Scholarship, Inc.: Matt Turpin Rotary Reader: Spencer Barnes Executive Secretary: Lorragenia Jackson [email protected] Cooper Siner Rotary Exchange I am sixteen years old and a sophomore at Choctawhatchee High School. My parents are Mark Siner, owner of Choctaw Engineering, and Ashley Siner, owner of the local Taco Bell restaurants. More importantly, my grandfather is fellow Rotarian Dan Nelson. I am the oldest of three kids. I have two younger sisters. I am involved in many activities in my school and community. I am an avid soccer player and play midfielder the for Choctawhatchee High School soccer team. I am a member of Beta Honors club and Excel club, which is a service club at my school. I also volunteer as a coach for a U-8 soccer team as well as help at Vacation Bible School every summer. My hobbies include sailing and working with computers. I love to spend time out on the water whether it be fishing, tubing, or kayaking. This summer I participated in the Rotary Exchange Program, where I got the exciting opportunity to live in Germany for three weeks. I lived with the Bannmüeller family in Schramberg, Germany which is located in the south west portion of Germany. While there I was able to spend time learning about the German culture and was even able to attend classes at a German High School. My guest is Paul Bannmüeller who has been living with my family for the past couple of weeks. Paul is also 16 years old. He has four siblings and a dog named Findus. His older sister previously participated in the Rotary Exchange Program. Paul’s hobbies are mountain biking and climbing. He is a basketball player and plays for a club team called SG Schramberg. He is very involved with his church and attends a camp organized by his youth group. He is also involved in clubs such as Table Tennis and Hand Ball. Po s t O f f i c e B o x 8 9 2 , F o r t Wa l t o n B e a c h , F L 3 2 5 4 9