Only 1 donation date left for our annual ‘Adopt-a-Family’ drive

AdoptNext Thursday (December 14) is the only remaining dinner meeting at which you can drop off your donations at Quigley’s for our annual “Adopt-a-Family” drive to make the holidays bright for a very needy local family.

If you haven’t yet decided what you would like to contribute, simply check the “needs” and “wants”  wish list for the eight children in the family shown below. Items marked in yellow already have been pledged.

You may even want to follow our frequent “kids helping kids” mantra and involve your own kids or grandkids in the shopping experience. We’d especially like to get our newer Rotarians involved in this annual event so you, too, can enjoy the glow that comes with helping the less fortunate.

Interestingly, although the parents of these children did not ask for anything for themselves, several of our SRC members have come up with pledges of gift baskets and shopping cards that will help make the adults’ Christmas a joyful one as well. So, you can always choose to donate something appropriate but not on the list, or even duplicate such things as clothes and toys already pledged.

Thank you for your generosity, and all you do for the community.

(Updated 12/7/17)

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Our Adopt-a-Family shopping list

Adopt

We’ll keep updating this gift list spreadsheet from Circles of Mercy as we get pledges so everyone will know what remains needed. Anything shaded in yellow has been pledged, but duplicates are OK for clothing items.

Note: We had planned to support an additional family via Doors of Hope, but that organization reports its needs are covered. A blessing, in a way, that there are so many generous people in our community at large. So, the Circles of Mercy family is our sole family this year.

(Updated as of 12/01/17)

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Thanksgiving drive deadline extended

Today had been the deadline for dropping off contributions to the “Caring Community Basket Brigade” at the Greenbush YMCA and other venues as part of a Thanksgiving drive for needy families in the area.

However, SRC member Shannon Romanowski, who is coordinating the effort as part of her duties as director of two YMCAs, today posted this note on the SRC Facebook page:

“We are still in need of food donations for our Thanksgiving ‘Basket Brigade.’ Items may be dropped off at the Greenbush Y before next Thursday (November 16). Last year we delivered meals for 166 people. This year the need has grown, so we need your help!”

Here is a copy of the original flyer. It contains a list of what is needed. Please ignore the November 10 deadline.


Basket Brigade flyer 2017


 

You can put fun in a basket for our Holiday Party silent auction

Basket 1
Bloody Mary Kit in a Basket

Here’s a special note for our newer SRC members: Show off your creative side by putting together a themed gift basket for the silent auction we hold each year at our “December Holiday Party.”

This year’s party will again be hosted by Murray and Maggie Forth, on Thursday, December 21,

Over the years we have seen members and families come up with some very imaginative baskets and shared some suggestions on others (see here, here. and here.) Take a look at them for inspiration, or go in your own original design direction. Hint: You’ll note that some of the accompanying photos use substitute containers for the basic baskets themselves.

We usually suggest you can create baskets with starting bid levels of anywhere from $10 to $35. Proceeds of the silent auction all will go directly to the club treasury to help support our many public service initiatives. And, the winning bidders get something fun to take home. A win-win all around.

So, take advantage of the fact you have 50 days and counting until presentation day!

Pasta Basket
A Pasta Dinner Basket
Jar Baskets
Jars Can Substitute for Baskets

 

The origins of Labor Day

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An iconic labor poster from the World War II era.

As we enter the long Labor Day Weekend, here is a brief look at how Labor Day itself became a formal national holiday.

From the U.S. Department of Labor:

“Through the years the nation gave increasing emphasis to Labor Day. The first governmental recognition came through municipal ordinances passed during 1885 and 1886. From these, a movement developed to secure state legislation.

“The first state bill was introduced into the New York State Legislature, but the first to become law was passed by Oregon on February 21, 1887. During the year four more states — New York, Colorado, Massachusetts, and New Jersey — created the Labor Day holiday by legislative enactment.

“By the end of the decade, Connecticut, Nebraska, and Pennsylvania had followed suit. By 1894, 23 other states had adopted the holiday in honor of workers, and on June 28 of that year, Congress passed an act making the first Monday in September of each year a legal holiday in the District of Columbia and the
territories.”

For a more complete look at the history of Labor Day, as well as links to related stories and information, just click here


On this Memorial Day, thank you to our military and their families past and present

Screen Shot 2017-05-27 at 3.52.29 PMBeyond the cookouts, the holiday sales, the family trips, picnics and parades there is a deep and profound reason for Memorial Day.

Although we honor all military personnel, Memorial Day is specifically designated as honoring the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. military. Originally known as Decoration Day, it originated in the years following the Civil War but did not become an official federal holiday until 1971.

The Civil War, which ended in the spring of 1865, obviously claimed more lives than any conflict in U.S. history because all combatants were Americans, and it required the establishment of the country’s first national cemeteries.

By the late 1860s, Americans in various communities had begun holding springtime tributes to these countless fallen soldiers, reciting prayers and decorating their graves with flowers — thus the original name of Decoration Day.

Each year on Memorial Day a national moment of remembrance takes place at 3 p.m. local time. It is unclear exactly where this tradition originated. Numerous communities may have independently initiated the memorial gatherings. Nevertheless, in 1966 the federal government declared Waterloo, New York, the “Official Birthplace of Memorial Day.”

Waterloo, which first celebrated the day on May 5, 1866, was chosen because it hosted an annual community-wide event during which businesses closed and residents decorated the graves of soldiers with flowers and flags.

On May 5, 1868, General John A. Logan, leader of an organization for Northern Civil War veterans, called for a nationwide day of remembrance later that month. “The 30th of May, 1868, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers, or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village and hamlet churchyard in the land,” he proclaimed.

The date of Decoration Day, as he called it, was chosen because it was not the anniversary of any particular battle.

On the first Decoration Day, General James Garfield made a speech at Arlington National Cemetery, and 5,000 participants decorated the graves of the 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers buried there.

Many Northern states held similar commemorative events and reprised the tradition in subsequent years; by 1890 each one had made Decoration Day an official state holiday. Southern states, on the other hand, continued to honor their dead on separate days until after World War I.

Although Memorial Day originally honored only those lost in the Civil War, American involvement in The Great War, later called World War I, made it evolve to commemorate American military personnel who died in all wars.

For decades, Memorial Day continued to be observed on May 30, the date Logan had selected for the first Decoration Day. But, in 1968 Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Act, a controversial decision that moved several major holidays from their traditional or historic dates to Mondays that gave federal — and later on state and local — employees three-day paid weekends. The law went into effect in 1971.

REQUIEM

by Robert Louis Stevenson

Under the wide and starry sky
Dig the grave and let me lie:
Glad did I live and gladly die,
And I laid me down with a will.

This be the verse you ‘grave for me:
Here he lies where he long’d to be;
Home is the sailor, home from the sea,
And the hunter home from the hill.


 

Easter basket drive an overwhelming success, literally

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Executive Director Richard Zazycki of Circles of Mercy surveys some of the treasure trove.

The annual “Easter Baskets for Cate’s Kids” in which the SRC Club is a major player this year outdid all prior efforts.

With the combined efforts of SRC members, Columbia High School students and staff, and Len Leonidas’s Tiger Scouts, plus a few other local groups conducting their own efforts, hundreds of Easter baskets for needy children in the community were created and delivered to the family services organization Circles of Mercy.

According to Richard Zazycki, Circles’ executive director, the outpouring far exceeded his organization’s needs, so the overflow was shared with the Rensselaer Boys & Girls Club and Rensselaer Head Start.

Bill Dowd, SRC’s coordinator of the project, expressed gratitude for the club’s effort.

“The unending generosity of our club members, plus the volunteer work of students and Scouts engaged in a kids-helping-kids effort, have made the basket initiative a huge success again this year.”

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A Circles of Mercy volunteer sorts through the many contributions.
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And, yet more donated baskets.

ShelterBox deploying aid to Madagascar

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Gale-force winds whip palm trees sideways on Madagascar.
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Marker locates Madagascar

A ShelterBox Response Team is deploying to Madagascar after Cyclone Enawo made landfall on the African island nation on Tuesday, with heavy rains and winds up to 170 mph.

At last count, at least five people have died and more than 10,000 people have been left homeless. Both numbers are expected to climb as a result of the Category 4 storm, the strongest cyclone to hit Madagascar in 13 years.

ShelterBox has available its extensive supply of shelter and emergency aid that can be mobilized as soon as response teams have assessed what is most needed.

The gale force winds and heavy rain are expected to cause flash flooding and mudslides throughout the rest of this week. Because most of Madagascar’s roads are dirt and are being washed out, reaching the hardest hit areas of the northeastern part of the island nation will be difficult.

According to the Malagasy Red Cross Society, an estimated 720,000 people have been affected by this intense tropical cyclone. A red alert has been issued for the northeast coastal area, advising residents to abandon houses on water edges, store drinking water, and seek safe shelter as the dangerous weather continues.

Communications in many areas are severed as a result of the storm so the full extent of damage is not yet known.

As ShelterBox is monitoring that developing situation, its emergency response efforts continue in other countries around the world.

• • •

Syria

Since 2012, ShelterBox has helped more than 9,000 families affected by the Syrian refugee crisis with emergency shelter. With the help of distribution partners Hand in Hand for Syria and ReliefAid, ShelterBox continues to deliver winterized ShelterKits to those who have been displaced by the Syrian conflict. In addition to emergency shelter supplies, these kits also include hats, gloves and scarves for adults and children, as well as kerosene heaters to protect against the harsh winter weather conditions. With an estimated 6.3 million people internally displaced in Syria, the need continues

Iraqi Kurdistan

ShelterBox continues its response by providing locally sourced ShelterKits, as well as ShelterBox tents, to families displaced by violence in Iraqi Kurdistan. In just the past few weeks, more than 42,000 people have been displaced.

Cameroon, Niger

Boko Haram terrorist violence in Nigeria has displaced more than 7 million people. ShelterBox continues to provide shelter and critically needed supplies to refugees arriving daily in Cameroon and Niger.

Somaliland, Mozambique

ShelterBox Assesment Teams have deployed to assess developing conditions in the two African nations. Somaliland is in a state of severe drought and warnings of famine have been declared. In Mozambique, Cyclone Dineo has caused severe flooding and thousands of families have been displaced.