Service projects abound
TONY DODERO
My mom and dad asked me awhile back why my generation doesn’t get
involved in service or social clubs.
It’s puzzling to them, because their generation -- they grew up in
the 1950s -- were so active in them.
I didn’t really have a good answer for them then, nor do I now,
and after talking with Roger McGonegal this week, I realize that
there really is no good excuse.
McGonegal is a past president of the Newport-Balboa Rotary Club,
and I’ve gotten to know him over the last couple years, especially
with the Rotary’s involvement in Reading by 9 and getting books to
some of the less affluent schools on the Westside of Costa Mesa.
Recently, he mentioned to me that the parent organization, Rotary
International, was celebrating its 100th birthday.
The exact date of its founding was Feb. 23, 1905 in Chicago and
is, according to Roger’s literature, “the world’s first and one of
the largest nonprofit service organizations.”
Here are some of the things that Rotary has accomplished in its
100 years:
“Rotary in 1985 launched Polio Plus and spearheaded efforts with
the World Health Organization, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, and UNICEF to immunize the children of the world against
polio; and polio cases have dropped by 99% since 1988, and the world
stands on the threshold of eradicating the disease; and Rotary is the
world’s largest privately funded source of international scholarships
and promotes international understanding through scholarships,
exchange programs, and humanitarian grants.”
Locally, the Newport-Balboa Rotary Club has been around for 65
years, and McGonegal even shared that the president of the club back
in 1947 was one Judge Robert Gardner.
In those 65 years, the local Rotary Club has, among other things,
given kids seedlings on Arbor Day to help them learn about
environmental matters; has sponsored along with the city an annual
All-City Youth Track and Field Meet; has helped in the establishment
of the city’s Sister City program with Okazaki and Aichi, Japan; and
has given 25,000 books to the aforementioned kids on the Westside.
When I asked McGonegal what the Rotary Club means to him, he told
me of a recent bus trip he and his wife and other Rotarians took to
the town of Caborca in the state of Sonora, Mexico.
They traveled by bus for 12 hours then slogged through the unpaved
streets of the town to hand out polio vaccine to some 400 children.
“That’s a side of Rotary that stays with you forever -- being able
to see that you are helping people to be better physically or keep
them from becoming incapacitated,” McGonegal said. “We try to make a
difference in many ways and many places. As you are doing that, there
are instances when a switch is turned on. Rather than being a member
of a Rotary club, you become a Rotarian.”
McGonegal, who has been in Rotary since 1977 and part of the local
chapter for 10 years, says there are about 50 clubs in Orange County
alone, and each of them takes on about 10 unique projects a year.
“That’s 400 to 500 projects,” he said.
Along with the Newport-Balboa Rotary there are two local spinoffs,
the Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary and the Newport-Irvine Rotary.
McGonegal said the Costa Mesa Rotary recently became defunct, and
he and others are trying to get that restarted.
Those interested in Rotary should contact McGonegal by phone at
(949) 721-8511 or by e-mail at [email protected].
*
Some of you may remember the good folks of Operation Gratitude,
led by Joy Wynkoop, Laura Dietz and Elizabeth Hau, who spearheaded
the charge to get toys and gifts for the families of Marines deployed
to Iraq over the holidays.
Well here’s an update from Dietz:
“Operation Gratitude wants to thank so many members of the Daily
Pilot readership for the response to our food and toy drive in
December,” she wrote. “Hundreds of toys and food items were received
at the 17th Street office and made their way to Camp Pendleton and
Twentynine Palms. We raised some $6,000 in cash donations of which we
are aware. (The Armed Services YMCA is currently tabulating donations
from Newport Beach.)
“The response from recipients of gifts has ranged from ‘disbelief
that anyone outside their immediate families would care’ to a
longtime Marine mother of five who broke down in tears when she saw
the bags of gifts. Two injured Marines I met at Camp Pendleton were
so appreciative of all the donations. After all, they were just doing
their jobs.”
Dietz and the Operation Gratitude folks are trying to get other
cities involved in the efforts, and indeed they have one big event
planned this weekend.
Watch for Sunday’s Daily Pilot to see what they have in store for
yet another family at Camp Pendleton.
To get involved with Operation Gratitude just e-mail them at
operationgratitude @adelphial.net.
*
While on the subject of birthdays and gratitude I have to take
just one second to wish a special sixth birthday to my oldest
daughter, Danielle. I’m forever grateful for how she’s changed my
life.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He may be reached at (714) 966-4608
or by e-mail at tony.dodero @latimes.com.
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