banner
Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
ClubRunner
Speakers
Feb 22, 2019
Mar 01, 2019
Mar 08, 2019
Mar 15, 2019
Mar 22, 2019
Mar 29, 2019
Apr 05, 2019
Apr 12, 2019
Attacking Maine's Opioid Crisis
View entire list
Executives & Directors
President
 
First Vice President
 
Second Vice President
 
Treasurer
 
Secretary
 
Immediate Past President
 
Sergeant-at-Arms
 
Director Term End 2019
 
Director Term End 2019
 
Director Term End 2020
 
Director Term End 2020
 
Community Service Chair
 
International Service Chair
 
Vocational Service Co-Chair
 
Vocational Service Co-Chair
 
Youth Service Chair
 
Rotary Foundation Chair
 
Club Protection Officer
 
Communications-WJ Bulletin Ed
 
Communications-PR External
 
Constitution/ByLaws Chair
 
Fund Raising Chair
 
Good Cheer Co-Chair
 
Invocation Chair
 
Meeting Day Chair
 
Program Chair
 
Membership Chair
 
Web Administrator
 
Administrative Coordinator
 
New Mainers Initiative
 
Opioid Task Force Co-Chair
 
Opioid Task Force Co-Chair
 
Friday, February 22, 2019
Welcome to the
Rotary Club of Portland, Maine!
Portland Rotary
Service Above Self
We meet Fridays at 12:15 PM
The Clarion Hotel
1230 Congress Street
Portland, ME  04102
United States of America
DistrictSiteIcon District Site
VenueMap Venue Map
Rotary This Week
 
 
 
Portland Rotary
will meet February 22, 2019
at the Clarion Hotel
1230 Congress Street, Portland
*02/22/19 Carol Colton, Portland Area Villages VP of Ops

Carol Colton and her husband lived and worked in Massachusetts for 38 years. After raising their family, moved to Portland 12 years ago and love everything about Portland and Maine. Carol retired 6 years ago from a 35+ year career in insurance as a personal account manager, and loved the opportunity it gave her to interact with, and provide service to, her clients. Coming from a family that was always active in community service (including her Dad, a life long Rotarian), after retiring, she was looking for a way to give back to the community. Hearing about the growing movement for seniors to age in place, and knowing Maine has a large percentage of seniors, Carol was thrilled to be part of the steering committee to develop Portland Area Villages, an initiative to help neighbors age safely and securely in their homes. As a Vice president of Operations and Treasurer, she spreads her passion for this program wherever she can. Carol also serves on the Board of Directors of Back Cove Neighborhood Association and coordinates Shoveling for Seniors in Back Cove.

The mission of Portland Area Villages is to support, educate, and empower seniors in the greater Portland area who wish to remain living in their own homes as long as possible, allowing them to maintain active, social, safe, and independent lives. This will be accomplished with a multi-faceted approach which will include volunteers who will provide services to members, establishing a vetted network of professional providers from which members may draw, providing a comprehensive list of established community services available to members, and enabling social connections and activities for members and volunteers.

02/15/19 Jean Yarbrough, Bowdoin College

Introduced by Bob Martin, our speaker Dr. Jean Yarbrough, Professor of Social Sciences/Government/Legal Studies at Bowdoin College, gave us much to consider and reconsider in the world of politics. Being the month of historical Presidential birthdays, she built her talk primarily around Lincoln’s perspective, but also wove into context Andrew Jackson, Teddy Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson, with quick references to many others. (With 7 pages of note-worthy information, space in our WJ is not long enough to capture the myriad historical twists imparted by Dr. Yarbrough.)   

1. “WE are the progressives. No, you’re not, WE are.”

During a 1913 “Lincoln Day” talk in NYC, Teddy Roosevelt proclaimed that Democrats alone were the true heirs of Lincoln, because he was a forward-thinking progressive who had applied his principals to solve the slavery “issue”. Roosevelt assailed Republicans for being heirs of the men who opposed the Constitution. Jean disagreed, pointing to numerous historical omissions in Roosevelt’s speech. In 1854, Republicans had made the Constitution the critical plank of their Election platform. At the same time, southern Democrats were trying to repeal the 1820 Missouri Compromise - designed to maintain an equal 50/50 split between free states and slave states.  

Jean said Lincoln was one who looked back to move forward, constantly citing the Declaration of Independence (DOI) in his speeches. He maintained that the principles were true, a philosophical statement of what we ought to be. “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.”

2. History is better studied backward, then looking wishfully forward.  

To Lincoln the problems facing the U.S needed to be solved on a philosophic basis, or the union cannot be maintained. If we hold these truths to be self-evident, then how can slavery be tolerated? How can it be argued that a segment of the population does not have rights? The great divide: to tolerate slavery or end it. The DOI proclaimed that all men are created equal, so why didn’t they just end slavery at that point? Thomas Jefferson described it as a battle between moral principles and political necessity. In writing it they way they did, they left the door open for it to be abolished. 

Lincoln’s 1860 speech at Cooper Union argued that Democrats had abandoned the Constitution, and was no longer the party of Thomas Jefferson. He said Republicans were truer to the principals of the DOI. If you want success he said, we need to be steadfast to the DOI. That doesn’t mean a rubber stamp, but it is the best guidepost to keep moving forward, since the future is undetermined. 

For Lincoln, there was nothing more critical than the Constitution’s 13th Amendment, abolishing slavery in 1865. Without this, he knew the War would have been little more than a military conflict. Lincoln stressed that we could not go backwards, we had to make it stick. 3 months later he was assassinated. 

3. “Great minds transcend the time in which they lived.”   

Times change. Politics shift. How can a document written nearly 250 years ago have application to govern today? Professor Yarbrough said this is a frequent proposition of her students. “We need to look forward.” Her response was that thoughts and accomplishments are not necessarily forever locked into the era that it was created. Principles of Aristotle....music from Mozart....are with us today. Great minded people have produced timeless work for the ages, they transcend the time in which they lived. If the principles of the work have truth, they endure.

“Historicism”, is the belief that knowledge is shaped and developed by history, and Lincoln would be in this category, as he drew extensively from the Constitution and DOI. The opposing point of view is that each era is free to establish its own truths, subject to changing cultures, technology, and innovation.

 

 

 

(Photo L-R: President John Curran, Jean Yarbrough, and Bob Martin.)

02/15/19 Bits & Pieces

President John Curran welcomed 46 members and 5 guests to our Friday meeting. The invocation was presented by Juliana L’Heureux. In recognition of the President’s Day weekend and to acknowledge the guest speaker Jean Yarbrough, she read a short excerpt from President George Washington’s 1796 Farewell Speech. We made our Pledge of Allegiance to the American Flag and sang a patriotic song.

President John read the list of Rotarian February birthdays and anniversaries. Congratulations to all!


Rotarian Joe Reagan (photo at right) was invited to present a vocational talk about his work with Easter Seals, where he is the Senior Director of Development. He is one of 12 staff serving several thousand clients in Maine, with a focus of his work being with veterans. He networks with public policy leaders and veterans in helping to support programs that provide the well being of veterans and this often includes ways to meet their non-medical needs that will improve their quality of life. He thanked Tom Ranello for inviting him to learn about Rotary. 


(Photo L-R: President John Curran, Gregg Palmer, PP Laura Young and Elizabeth Sevigny.)

Rotary Youth Services Award (YSA) recipient Elizabeth Sevigny, daughter of Cynthia Sevigny of Portland, was introduced by Deering High School Principal Gregg Palmer. Elizabeth is a senior who has excelled in academics, music, sports and community service. She is President of the Deering High School Key Club. In addition to her academic classes, she is learning to speak Mandarin and studying about France and its culture. Elizabeth thanked the Rotarians for the recognition she received and requested that the $100 donation in her name be given to the Ocean Conservancy. 


Megan Peabody (photo at right) announced the beginning of the second semester Lyseth Elementary School reading program. The sign-up sheets were circulated. Last fall, the reading program was successful and the children who participated were given copies of the books that were read to them by Rotarians and volunteers from the University of Southern Maine School of Law.


President John announced the recognition of PP/DGN Dick Hall, who agreed to complete the District 7780 position of Assistant District Governor for our Club. Due to the unexpected illness of our current Area ADG’s wife, Mr. Anderson needs to devote his time to helping her get well.


PP Loretta Rowe (photo at left) announced the net proceeds from the February 8th Sweetheart Auction was $3,299! Congratulations and many thanks to all who volunteered, donated, bid, and worked for the success of this important club fund raiser.


The weekly raffle drawing was led by Stephanie Joyce (photo at right) and she asked the guest speaker Jean Yarbrough to pull a name/ticket out of the holding vessel; she drew Joe Reagan’s name (photo at right), but the $200 pot will continue to grow, because he did not find the Queen of Hearts.
 

Volunteer Opportunities

Following is a list of our Club's volunteer projects. If you know of other opportunities, please contact Loretta: lrowe@maine.rr.com

 
Project
When
Who to Contact
Preble Street
Resource Center
Soup Kitchen
4th Wednesday ea month
3:30-6:30 pm
Contact Gracie Johnston
Game Night
Long Creek
Youth Center
3rd Tuesday ea month
Mike Fortunato
michaelk.fortunato@gmail.com
or Jim Willey
This Week's Duty Assignments
Invocation:  Tom Talbott
Program Reporter:  Alan Nye
Bits & Pieces Reporter:  Julie L'Heureux
Registration/Greeter:  Brian McDonough
Sell Meal Tickets:  Pstty Erickson
Raffle:  Jerry Angier

Collect Meal Tickets:  Tom Nickerson
Sgt-at-Arms:  Jim Willey
Rotary Meeting Locations

If you would like to mark your calendars,
we are scheduled at the following locations
through
June 2019:

2019
Feb 22 - The Clarion

Mar   1 - The Clarion
Mar   8 - The Clarion
Mar 15 - The Clarion
Mar 22 - The Clarion
Mar 29 - The Clarion

Apr    5 - The Clarion
Apr  12 - TBD
Apr  19 - The Clarion
Apr  26 - TBD

May   3 - TBD
May 10 - The Clarion
May 17 - The Clarion
May 24 - The Clarion
May 31 - The Clarion

Jun   7 - The Clarion
Jun 14 - The Clarion
Jun 21 - The Clarion
Jun 28 - The Clarion

Blue BOLD dates are scheduled Board meeting days.

Any questions, please contact Loretta at: lrowe@maine.rr.com
 

Ongoing Item Donations Needed
The following items are needed on an on-going basis. Please feel free to bring them to a meeting where we will collect and distribute them to the appropriate projects.
 
Crutches4Africa - Crutches, canes, folding walkers and wheelchairs to be shipped to Africa. Contact: Roger Fagan, drrogerfagan@gmail.com
 
Toiletries for the Shelters - Collect those tiny bottles of toiletries you are paying for during your next hotel visit and bring them home for members of our society who find themselves staying at a shelter and in need of personal hygiene products.
 
Time For a Laugh......
GEORGE WASHINGTON: General, President, Visionary, Break Dancer.