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Kingspark News Rotary Club of Kingspark Hong Kong |
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This is the weekly bulletin of the Rotary Club
of Kingspark Hong Kong, District 3450
Club Website: http://www.rotary3450.org/kingspark-hongkong |
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Rotary
Club of Khuree |
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Bulletin Editor : Alexander
Mak
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The Rotary Club of Khuree was chartered in Mongolia on 22 February 2002 as the second Rotary club in Mongolia and the 50th Rotary club in our District, the RI District of Hong Kong, Macau and Mongolia. The last Rotary club chartered in District 3450 was in 1997. |
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By Ho Chi Ming President Raymond is a dentist. My teeth are getting old. I become his regular patient. Unlike his casual manner in Rotary, his clinic is meticulously clean, very tidy and very clean. His nurse is polite with smart appearance. The magazines in the waiting room? Not the popular "cheap"(not cheap in term of price) ones. National Geographic. English version. That means Raymond's patients are highly educated people like me (but I am not rich. Perhaps his other patients are). The attraction of Raymond as a dentist is that he does not jab a needle into my glum to inject pain killers every time I visit him like my previous dentist. And he did not treat one of my teeth today and then requested me to come back next week to deal with my next tooth and so on. He treated all my teeth in one go.Share with you a secret of his private life. I got it by having coffee with him in Starbuck Coffee in the afternoon (join us if you like. Just call me or Raymond). He is always a self-help traveler, never joining a tour group. That is the way he first met his wife, both doing traveling in a foreign land. |
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By John Wan Spring or Vernal Equinox is the time when the equator is in the direct path of the sun, when day and night are of equal length, and the North and South Poles receiving equal light, hence the name equinox. Technically or scientifically, it is a fraction of a second, but since most of us are not so disposed, Spring is now taken to signal a time of rebirth and new beginnings, an awakening of the earth, a time to plant, and so on. In many cultures New Years Day was traditionally in late March. Most of the Roman republic and Medieval Europe celebrated New Years in March. It was not until 1582 and the institution of the Gregorian calendar that 1st January became the date to begin a New Year in the Western world. Many cultures had also marked these festivals and rites by a period of fasting before them. The Babylonians celebrated Akitu at the spring equinox. Germans have Ostara and the Saxons Eostre, their respective Goddess of Fertility, to represent the awakening of the earth. Christians have Lent before they celebrate Easter. There were numerous festivals around the Spring Equinox, including the Festival of Trees, Alban Eilir, Passover, Rites of Eostre, Easter, Ostara, Rites of Spring, Holikadehan, Lent, Buddha's birthday, St.Patrick's Day, and April Fools Day. Some of these are still observed even to this day. Near the Mediterranean, for example, this is a time of sprouting of the summer's crop; and further north, a time for seeding. Their rituals at the Spring Equinox are related primarily to the fertility of the crops and to the balance of the day and night times. Ancient Israelites observed Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread early in each new year while the Jewish people followed the Persian calendar and started each year with the Spring Equinox around 21st March. Scientific pantheism is the belief that the universe and nature are divine. It fuses religion and science, and concern for humans with concern for nature. Albert Einstein is the cosmic pantheist. The Pantheist Calendar lists amongst other dates, Darwin's birthday, Valentine's Day, Galileo, Einstein's birthday, World Environment Day, and the Spring Equinox. It specifies the exact time of the Spring Equinox to the minute. For 2002, it falls on 20th March at 19:16 Greenwich Mean Time. It is interesting but not incomprehensible that the Pantheist Calendar has also listed on it International Women's Day, which was yesterday. It is actually most fitting that Women's Day should fall in Spring which signals fertility and so on. I have a friend from the Mainland who has a clean joke about Women's Day. He said that International Women's Day in the Mainland actually started in conjunction with Labour Day to recognize the contribution of women to the labour force. It was therefore suggested that the word "Labour" should go into the name of the festival. The problem is where to fit the word "Labour" between "International Women's Day." There are different connotations and interpretations in each combination, and the results are not always acceptable to all concerned. So, in the end, they gave up. Why don't you try it yourself with your spouse. For best results, use Chinese. Another significant festival in Spring, not on the Pantheist Calendar though, is Burns Night, in memory of Robert Burns, Scotland's national poet and Bard of all Humanity. Burns was born in January 1759 and lived in the same period as William Blake and George Gordon Byron, better known as Lord Byron. All three are celebrated poets, well known and thoroughly studied by my English Literature friends in those days. Burns was born son of a tenant farmer, but became a poet and exercise-officer, and was better known for his comradelier and womanizing episodes. One wonders whether it was his flair in literature or other activities that had earned him such acclaims. Talking of which I stumbled into a website constructed by women on women and for women. It gives a list of the 12 sexiest men; beginning with remarks such as, "Move over, Brad Pitt." I recognize Russell Crowe, of LA Confidential and Gladiator fame, and more recently, A Beautiful Mind, and Jet Li the martial arts champion. I do not recognize any name of Rotarians on the list! Crowe of course has been making news these days for being too "passionate" in making his point when the producer of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts edited out his recitation from the Irish poet Patrick Kavanagh as part of his acceptance speech for the Best Actor Award in A Beautiful Mind. Before I leave you, I cannot resist sharing with you a joke on women, and it is clean. Here it goes - "One day, three men were out having a relaxing day fishing, when suddenly they caught a mermaid. They hauled the mermaid up in a net, whereupon she promised that if the three men set her free, she would grant each of them a wish in return. The first man did not believe it, so he said, "Alright, if you can really grant wishes, then double my IQ." The mermaid said, "Done," and suddenly, the first man began to flawlessly recite Shakespeare and analyze it with extreme insight. The second man was so amazed; he looked at the mermaid and said, "Triple my IQ." The mermaid said, "Done," and the second man started to recite solutions to mathematical problems that had been stumping all of the scientists in various fields from physics to chemistry and so on. The third man was so enthralled with the changes in his friends; he said to the mermaid, "Quintuple my IQ." The mermaid looked at him and said, "You know, I normally don't try to change people's minds when they make a wish, but I really wish you'd reconsider." The man responded, "Nope, I want you to increase my IQ times five, and if you don't do it, I won't set you free." "Please," said the mermaid "You don't know what you're asking, it'll change your entire view on the universe. Won't you ask for something else, a million dollars, anything?" But no matter what the mermaid said, the third man insisted on having his IQ increased by five times its usual power. So the mermaid finally relented and said, "Done." The third man became a woman." I hope you had a happy International Women's Day and I would talk to you again later. |
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With the charter of the Rotary Club of Paris Agora, the French capital is now in the forefront of a process aimed at developing new models for clubs to meet the challenges of the 21st century.The club is one of more than 190 New Model Rotary Clubs participating in an RI Board-approved pilot project authorized by the 2001 Council on Legislation to develop clubs that will be more attractive to younger professional and business leaders, and increase the effectiveness of clubs and future potential for membership growth and extension. "The creation of a new model Rotary club has many positive aspects for our district," said District 1660 Governor-nominee Lucien Moreau. "If we follow this pilot program guideline, we can expect a new dynamic leadership, membership growth and motivation, and a more attractive public image of Rotary."Drawn from various professions and businesses, the 25 members of the Rotary Club of Paris Agora include nine women, five former Rotaractors, and an ex-Lions club member. The club is different from a traditional Rotary club in many respects. Because attendance is calculated based on participation in projects, as well as committee and board meetings, members meet only twice in a month. A member can make up by attending a Rotary or Rotaract club meeting or a district or RI event. With a younger average age (33),the Agora club Rotarians pay only regular dues (no admission fee) that are lower than those in other Paris Rotary clubs. Also, the club aims to replace regular club committees with smaller project teams, and will hold some board meetings online."We are creating a club which allows young executives who facedifficulties in getting together in Paris to be Rotarians and to organize projects," said charter president Cyril Noirtin, a past Rotaract representative for RI Zone 11. |
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News Flash Assistant Governor Johnny Fan is Chairman of a District Committee established to organize and promote a Rotary Show which seeks to promote Rotary image in the District. The show will be broadcast on TVB Jade on Sunday, 19th May 2002, from 10:30 to 11:30p.m. The tentative title of the show is "Walking Along with Rotary." It will be a documentary rather than a variety show and will comprise three sections; namely, Rotary worldwide and its background; Rotary in Hong Kong, Macau and Mongolia, including the services and projects; and the Hepititis B Project in China. The projects and services in the District will be featured under four categories, namely, educational, youth, environmental and medical. All clubs in the district have been encouraged to contribute materials to the programme based on the projects they have been involved. A committee comprising senior Rotarians and PDGs would look into the programme contents. All materials are to be submitted in video format to AG Johnny Fan as soon as possible. Johnny Fan will also answer all inquiries on the project. |
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By Ho Chi Ming Question : What is the sum of 1 and 1? Mathematician : The sum is 2. Statistician : The sum ranges between 1.999999 to 2.000001. Accountant : What answer do you want? Lawyer : I need to take instructions from my client. Philosopher : There is no such thing as true answer. |
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(1) 28 March 2002, Thursday - Board Meeting, 6:30pm to 7:30pm, at Chinese Club before regular dinner meeting. (2) 16 to 17 March 2002 - District Conference at Kowloon ShangriLa Hotel. (3) 4 May 2002 - Our Club's annual ball. (4) June 2002 - RI Convention in Barcelona, Spain. |
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President |
Raymond
Sin Tom Hui Anwer Islam Peter Lo Michael Eyles Thomas Chan Ho Chi Ming Amy Chow Stephen Lin Sunny So Jane Fung Patrick Wong Alice Chau David Cheung |
Bulletin
Editor : Alexander Mak
Bulletin Publisher : Terence Leung
Club Webmaster : John Wan
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