Visiting and prospective Rotarians are always welcome. We hope to see you there! 

Club Information

Service Above Self

We meet In Person
Tuesdays at 12:00 PM
River Club
12400 N Ville Du Parc Dr,
Mequon, WI 53092
United States of America
Home Page Stories
Congratulations to our most recent Student of the Month, Hailey Case.  We honored her during our March 5th meeting at the River Club.  Both of Hailey’s parents, Michelle and Mark Case of Mequon, attended with her.  Hailey was selected for her commitment to serving her community and school through the Rotary Interact Club at Homestead High School and various volunteer opportunities at Rotary Park, the Mequon Nature Preserve and the Ozaukee Food Pantry.
 
She has also pursued her passion for art by leading the National Art Honors Society as the activities director and now co-president.  She also enjoys the slopes with Homestead’s Ski & Snowboarding Club.  She is a member of the National Honor Society, GEMS (Girls Exploring Math & Science) and has earned the Merit Award and High Honor Roll all 4 years, to name just a few of her accomplishments.
 
Hailey plans to study engineering this fall and, impressively, has been accepted to all of the schools she applied to and is deciding between University of Wisconsin-Madison, Purdue, and Minnesota.  Hailey, congratulations and thank you for your “Service Above Self”!
 
 
 
 
A very special THANK YOU to Jim Counsellor for arranging a private tour of the VA Campus. We spent time with Dona Drew and Dr. Bret Berger along with other VA dignitaries. The Veterans Affairs committee from the Sunrise Club joined us. It was an extremely informative event.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

PATRICK NETTESHEIM, CO-FOUNDER GUITARS FOR VETS

Patrick is a music teacher, composer and performer.  In college, Patrick excelled in psychology and philosophy.  He considered a career in medicine but chose the path of the artist instead.  Music credits include many films and numerous bands in which he played guitar, bass and piano with styles covering rock, jazz, country, ambient and techno.  In 2007, Patrick co-founded Guitars for Vets (G4V) with his student and friend, Vietnam Era Marine, Dan Van Buskirk.  Since then, G4V has grown to more than 150 chapters throughout the USA.  He is credited with developing the G4V “four-way path” known as PAGE—Patience, Acceptance, Gratitude, Empathy.  The G4V community applies these principles in all aspects of operation as they strive to open “windows of serenity” with our military brothers and sisters that live with the challenges of PTSD.  Patrick continues to compose and perform music in his band, Kharma Shotgun.  His vision for the future is to offer the G4V program to all wounded Veterans throughout the USA and beyond.

 
Annette Meyer is the founder of Annette Meyer Studios and Meyer Music Therapy Services.  Having established these businesses in 2001, both have expanded to service numerous counties in two states, bringing music and all its benefits to both adults and children alike.  Our clients all share the joy of music, and we use this as a means of achieving personalized goals designed around each individuals talents and skills.  
 
Working with a diverse range of clients, we work to cultivate and empower each one, as the key to motivation and success, by introducing possibilities utilizing their own strengths.  Having established small and large group programs, as well as working one-on-one, Annette is able to customize and deliver a positive, goal based experience, which benefits all participants.  
 
This commitment to music as a means of personal expression is the foundation of Annette’s approach and methods.  Music is a positive construct on so many levels, and whether listening, active playing, song writing or collaborating, everyone can experience the benefits on an intimate level.
Join us to honor the first female member of Thiensville-Mequon Rotary Club, and former Mequon Mayor Connie Pukaite on Tuesday, June 4 at North Shore Country Club. 
 

 

The Mequon-Thiensville Community Foundation (MTCF) will hold its annual Pillars of the Community Award Luncheon on Tuesday, June 4th at 11:30 a.m. at North Shore Country Club. This year, the Foundation will honor Mequon resident and former mayor, Connie Pukaite.  “Connie’s passion for people and the environment shines through everything she does – in her past professions, her service to the city of Mequon, and her countless projects that have positively impacted our community and beyond. Connie truly exemplifies what it means to be a Pillar of the Community,” says MTCF President Lori Lorenz.

Connie moved to Mequon in 1966, having been raised on a farm in Massachusetts that was settled by her ancestors in 1725. Those early roots proved to be foundational to her love of woodlands, trees and all-things nature, driving a passion to preserve and maintain natural spaces for future generations to come.

Connie’s life of service is remarkable, with a mission to make the lives of those around her better than how she found them and to strive for service over self. However, her service to ourcommunity didn’t begin for several years after settling in Mequon. Instead, she immersed herself in work to advocate for those who couldn’t advocate for themselves: elevating the needs of individuals with developmental disabilities; helping draft legislation to establish special education in public schools; and fighting for affordable housing and neighborhood renewal in the Milwaukee Lindsey Heights inner city neighborhood.

Indeed, according to close friend and prior Pillars award recipient, Sandy Custer, “To say that Connie is a pillar of Mequon-Thiensville doesn’t begin to take into account the profound influence she has had beyond our community. To me, Connie is a Pillar of Ozaukee County, the city of Milwaukee, and the state of Wisconsin, all in one.”

Connie’s impact in our own community is indeed immense. She served as Alderman for eight years over three different terms; as Mayor and Chair of the Planning Commission for six years; as President of the Mequon Police and Fire Commission for three years; and held numerous leadership positions for the Sunrise Rotary Club over the past 15 years. In fact, Connie was the first woman elected to a top governmental position in Ozaukee County, and was the first female member of the Thiensville-Mequon Rotary Club when they asked her to join in the mid-1980’s!

During her many years of service, she made an indelible mark throughout the community.  Connie was instrumental in creating the first comprehensive land-use plan for Mequon; developing the Mequon Industrial Park and saving Garvey Woods; constructing the Mequon Police and Fire Station; developing the gateway feature that graces the entryway to the Town Center; and securing the site for the Spur 16 development, just to name a few!  

While mayor, she set the vision for Rotary Park, noting the need for a park large enough to bring the community together to celebrate and recreate – the first park of its kind in Mequon. And on her last day as mayor, the city honored Connie with an 18-acre parcel of land abutting the northern edge of Rotary Park and bearing her name: Pukaite Woods. For the past 16 years, she has been the chief steward of that land, clearing buckthorn, establishing a prairie meadow and oak savannah areas, and maintaining it for all to enjoy.

Joining the Sunrise Rotary Club in 2009 brought together two of Connie’s passions: love for the environment and a desire to serve. As chair of the Environmental Committee she organized the planting of hundreds of native redbud trees throughout the Town Center, tamarack trees along the Riverwalk, and oak trees in Pukaite Woods, providing a bounty of natural beauty throughout the community.

Ask anyone who knows Connie and the praise is effusive. According to Cindy Shaffer, long-time friend and owner of Shaffer Development, “Nearly two decades ago our paths crossed at Mequon Thiensville Sunrise Rotary, and since then, her unwavering dedication to service has left an indelible mark on all who know her. Connie’s commitment to bettering our environment and promoting the common good has been a guiding light for me, both personally and professionally. She embodies the essence of the Rotary motto—service above self—pouring her heart and soul into initiatives that uplift and enrich the lives of those around her. What sets Connie apart is not just her visible contributions, but the countless acts of kindness and generosity that often go unseen. In a world that often seems chaotic and divided, Connie stands as a beacon of hope, reminding us all of the transformative power of compassion and selflessness.”

It shouldn’t come as a surprise then, that for the past dozen years Connie has been tirelessly advocating for the homeless in Ozaukee County and helped to co-found the first homeless shelter, Family Promise of Ozaukee County. Initially her efforts centered around partnering with local churches to provide shelter but soon realized the need was so much more. Fast forward 11 years later, and Family Promise opened its doors in early 2023 – the first free-standing shelter in Ozaukee County – with an emphasis on human dignity and seeking to determine the root cause of homelessness and preventing it in the first place.

Connie lives in Mequon and continues to work on several boards and committees, serving the people and the city that she loves. For Sponsorship Information or to register for this event, please visit our Pillars of the Community event page!

The first meeting of the Thiensville-Mequon Rotary Club was held July 29, 1937, with the charter being officially presented on September 21, 1937. There were 20 original members.

From the very beginning the Thiensville-Mequon Rotary Club was alert to community needs and began immediately to support and initiate worthwhile community projects and programs. One of the earliest projects was sponsorship of the Boy Scout Program; and this support still continues in 1993, fifty-six years later. Other early projects were the County Apple Show and Smokey the Fire clown (a school program). During the World War II years, the club was involved with the sale of war bonds, clothing drives, and similar wartime activities. Many more projects have been initiated since those early years; and these are listed elsewhere in this program book. The most recent major project is the City of Mequon Rotary Park, a project officially launched on September 19, 1987, at the fiftieth anniversary ceremonies of the club. Thiensville-Mequon Rotary is working closely with the city of Mequon and initially presented a check for $50,0000.00 toward start up construction, with $30,000.00 in reserve for fundraising activities. Progress has continued in construction and fundraising. Ultimately, over $2,000,000.00 will need to be raised. The Thiensville-Mequon community has always been very supportive of Rotary's fundraising activities which finance numerous worthwhile community projects and programs; and we appreciate that and thank all of our local supporters. It is you who have helped finance the many activities of the Thiensville-Mequon Rotary Club.
 
Membership in T-M Rotary represents a cross section of the business and Professional individuals in the community. Not only are they good friends, but they are united in a common commitment to serve others for the benefit of the community. This commitment to service has been a dynamic force which has made a solid impact upon our activities and community involvement. The T-M Rotary Club is very proud to be an integral part of the community.
 
 
History written in 1993 provided by Shelley Weston
 
Frankie's Gift Shop is hosting a Book Fair on Sunday at Shully's Cuisine and Events. Our own Dr. Bruce Rowe is a featured author at the Fair. Dr. Rowe's book is entitled "Everything Under the Sun: A Family Doctor's Reflections on Life, Love, Loss and Renewed Hope in Medicine." We look forward to seeing you there.
Our speakers on Tuesday, March 19 are Lisamarie Arnold and Jenny Strom, MA, LPC.
 
Jenny Strom, Director, MA, LPC
 
Jenny is a psychotherapist and director of North Shore Center in Mequon. She specializes in working with children, adolescents, young adults, and families by creating a safe context from which change can occur. Jenny is devoted to helping clients navigate their way through difficult life issues, whatever those may be, in order to heal. 

She has worked with clients to make positive and long-lasting changes around issues such as: PTS D, Complex trauma histories, Anxiety, Depression, Mental health and substance abuse, Child sexual abuse, Self-injurious behavior, Family violence/conflict, Grief and loss, as well as emotional, behavioral and relational problems affecting children. 

She is intensively trained by the Linhan Institute in Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) and is a candidate for certification. She also has advanced training in Behavior Activation, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and Exposure and Response Prevention (E/RP). Jenny serves on the board of REDgen and Ozaukee Family Services and cares deeply about their missions and their impact on the community.

 
Lisamarie Arnold is the executive director of REDgen. REDgen School is peer to peer resilience program designed to educate and empower student leaders to raise resiliency within their school community through connection, reflection and conversation. REDgen School uses the Roots of Resilience curriculum building the foundation for all youth to move from surviving into thriving, both in school and in their lives. Students and staff advisors meet weekly to explore the Roots of Resilience. REDgen School uses education and self reflection to inspire change within themselves and the wider school community.

 
Rotarians associate the naming of a Paul Harris Fellow as a tribute to a person who has demonstrated a shared purpose and support for the educational and humanitarian objectives of The Rotary Foundation.
 
The recognition is named after Rotary’s founder, the late Paul Harris, a Chicago lawyer, who started Rotary with three business associates in 1905. A world of goodwill and better understanding comes closer to reality today because Sam Azinger has made a substantial donation to The Rotary Foundation and can be named as a Paul Harris Fellow – PLUS THREE. 
 
Becoming a Paul Harris Fellow is a tremendous accomplishment and honor. So much good begins with these gifts: wells are constructed, children are vaccinated against illness, senior citizens are afforded meals and services, children and adults are educated and given professional opportunities. This work is vital to the children, families, and communities who benefit. Only when people’s basic needs are met, can they pursue the larger elements of human life including conflict resolution, community building, and peace. Paul Harris Fellows, in a very tangible way, provide steppingstones to a more harmonious world.
 
Sam has repeatedly gone above and beyond in “doing good in the world.” Thank you, Sam, for using your time, talent, and treasure to enhance the lives of others. Your generosity means so much to so many. On behalf of the club, we thank you and welcome you to receive your new multiple Paul Harris pin. Please wear this with pride in honor of all the lives that you will reach through your generosity. Sam Azinger continues to put “Service above Self.” 

Caitlin Steinberg

Our speaker on Tuesday, March 12 is Caitlin Steinberg.

I am a founder, executive director, and chief historian at Operation Green Faces (OGF), a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and sharing the primary source history of the U.S. Navy UDT and SEALs, specifically from the formation of UDT through the Vietnam War. I have over six years of experience in leading a diverse team of contractors and volunteers, managing fundraising and grant writing, as well as cultivating relationships with key stakeholders and leaders within the Naval Special Operations community.

I am also an award-winning journalist and photographer, with a passion for covering breaking news and documenting stories of resilience and creativity. I received the SPJ James Julian Memorial Award in 2021 for my outstanding reporting, news writing, and podcast production during the 2020 political campaign season. My art pieces and photography have been featured by galleries in San Diego County, the Ansel Adams Gallery in Yosemite National Park, and multiple fine art wedding publications. Additionally, I have produced all of the documentary style oral history content created by Operation Green Faces using Ultra-HD 4k equipment formatted to fit any gallery or exhibit as well as appear in Documentaries and Films.

My mission is to create accessible, imaginative, and intimate experiences for museum visitors, artists, veterans, and students, by merging fine art, mental health services, public education, and oral history. I believe that by celebrating cultural heritage, creative expression, common human experiences, and public history, we can build more resilient communities and foster programs that educate, inspire, and heal.

To close, I am a proud member of the Society of American Archivists, the Oral History Association, and the American Association of State and Local History... I honored to work in this field for the rest of my life.
 
 
 
Our incoming President Tyler Briggs and incoming President-elect Peter Gohsman spent the weekend at Midwest PETS for Presidential training. They got to hang out with President Kyle Camp from the Berlin Wisconsin Rotary Club. Tyler will take his official role as President on Tuesday, June 25, 2024!
 
Our club is the recipient of the ShelterBox HERO Award. 
 
About ShelterBox In 2023, ShelterBox supported more than 325,000 people (approximately 65,000 households). It is our second biggest year, behind the 420,000 supported in 2022, in terms of people reached since ShelterBox began in 2000.
 
We supported thousands of people in Türkiye and Syria after earthquakes devastated the region. In Morocco, where a powerful earthquake had caused widespread damage in the Atlas Mountains, our teams worked with our partner Association Le Grand Atlas, and Rotary District 9010 to distribute emergency shelter aid to around 20 affected communities. 
East Africa has been victim to the worst drought in 40 years, causing millions of people to be displaced. We’ve supported thousands of people in Ethiopia this year providing essential household items, tarpaulins, and ropes for people who have been displaced. We also launched our first project in Somalia since 2011 and have so far been able to provide support for hundreds of people, with additional projects in the pipeline for 2024.
 
As the conflict in Ukraine approaches its third year, we are delivering our sixth project in the country supporting thousands more people with winter clothing, blankets, and stoves. We are continuing to support people affected by conflict in Syria with winterisation projects too, making sure people have thermal clothing, blankets, and tarpaulins to help make temporary shelters waterproof. 
 
In Cameroon, we’ve supported over 100,000 people who have had to flee their homes due to conflict, the climate crisis, and poverty. Our latest project in the country has supported over 63,000 people with shelter.
 
Here are two short videos to watch about ShelterBox:
 
 
 

Posted from the District 6270 website.

As we sit back and ponder the journey we have embarked on in Rotary, we create moments to look back and connect the dots. Well, it is time again to shape the future of Rotary through club and district resolutions. The Council on Resolutions (COR) meets online each Fall to vote on proposed resolutions and urgent enactments. A resolution addresses a concern for the entire Rotary world and not a local or administrative issue. Conversely, an urgent enactment is a change to the constitutional documents, proposed by the RI Board, that the Board has determined cannot wait until the next Council on Legislation.

Delegates from each Rotary district cast votes on proposals presented by clubs, districts, the RI Board, and the general council or Rotary in Great Britain and Ireland Council. Resolutions that receive approval are subsequently reviewed by either the RI Board or The Rotary Foundation Trustees. Swiftly approved enactments alter the constitutional documents and become effective one month following the transmission of the Council on Resolutions report.

So, why is this information important? This presents a chance for you to influence the global operations of Rotary. Clubs and districts can propose resolutions for review at the upcoming COR next Fall, with a submission deadline of June 30.

Curious about the resolutions deliberated upon last fall? You can access them online at https://my.rotary.org/en/council/cor/vote. These results will be available on the page until the commencement of the next COR.

For further inquiries, feel free to reach out to PDG Rick Debe, who currently serves as our district's representative.

February 2024
The Guatemala Medical Resource Partnership (GMRP) is a project of the Thiensville-Mequon Rotary Clubs, started in 2005 by Doug Hansen, formerly of Washington Island, WI and his Rotary Club members. January of 2024 was the 20th year of our work there. The mission serves the rural population around Oliveros, Guatemala, an extremely poor area in the southeastern part of Guatemala, near the Pacific Ocean and the border with El Salvador. Each year around 600-800 people registered for care at our 4 1/2-day clinic. Our clinic is often the only medical care they receive during the year.
Doug and his wife Pam had gone to Guatemala to visit their son Brian, who was in the Peace Corps there. They were so very touched by the people’s poverty, that they came home determined to do something about it. It took Doug and his Rotary Club members a whole year of research, and the finding of Enrique Gandara (Kico), the Guatemalan Rotary member working in Madison WI who was key in putting the plans together to bring their hopes to fruition. It is his ranch the team stays at. And his workers who help set up the clinic and feed us. His contacts help us get through customs down there with minimal hassle, and he arranges the in-country transportation and protection we have.
After the first mission, a team of T-M Rotarians went back to Oliveros and updated and rewired the school electrical system. Another team went back and hooked up a water tower to the existing well that now serves a large part of the area. The water is chlorinated and fluoridated, providing safe drinking water and improving dental health. Water does not go to individual homes, but is within walking distance for people to fill jugs.
Currently, every January, a team of about 40 people, consisting of medical providers, dentists, dental assistants, interpreters, optometrists, nurses and general volunteers-who all personally pay over $1,300 each for their own airfare, bus transportation in Guatemala, and room and board-travel to Guatemala. At times we have a nutritionist to help with education. We did not sent a team in 2021-2023 due to Covid problems, but supported our Continuing Care program.
The clinic is held in a local elementary school which doesn’t hold classes for the week we are there. Our examining tables, dental chairs and other equipment are stored in a donated semi-trailer.
Trying to make this a partnership, local parents and teens help us haul the equipment into the school to set up, and also to put it all away. Local volunteers help with registration and escorting patients to the right areas. Other volunteers are a Guatemalan psychologist who generally joins us, and at times a Guatemalan ob/gyn and his assistant are with us for 2 days. We’ve also had Guatemalan dentists join us as well. Students of English help serve as interpreters.
In 2014, we began our Continuing Care program. For several years we had been looking for a way to serve people who needed various surgeries and care after we left, --for cataracts, hernias, orthopedic problems, cancer, etc. This part of our program has been truly life-changing for the patients involved! We have continued to provide this through covid years.
In 2014 we found Floridalma Quintanilla (Flory), a Guatemalan woman who works at a hospital for the poor in Antigua and knows her way around the medical system in the country. Since then, she has organized our approximately 145 yearly follow-up patients and their care, shepherding them through the bus ride to the hospital, 3 hours away from their town, and through all the necessary trips and tests that lead to surgery.
The operations are provided free of charge by teams of rotating international surgeons, we pay the hospital surgical fee.
Flory is a genius at getting other services donated or at a reduced price—ambulance rides to the hospital by the local fire department, prosthetic devices for our amputees by another mission, half price fees from the hospital, free chemo treatments for a needy mother, wheel chairs and much more. She also asks patients to help pay for part of their tests and treatment, as she feels they are able.
Still, we need to pay her salary ($400 a month), hospital fees, doctor consults, lab tests, MRIs, CT scans, X-rays, prescriptions, Covid tests and transportation for the patients. We often have to pay for dental work, since some teeth are so badly infected that there would be a risk to do surgery without repairing them.
Our budget is about $15,000 for the week-long clinic and $50,000 or more for the Continuing Care program.
We are always looking for medical personnel, dentists, optometrists and interpreters to join our team.
Please visit our web site http://gmrp.org to get a better idea of our project -- to view a short video, see photos of the mission, read short articles about the people served, and see quotes from our team members. You may also donate online or send checks to T-M Rotary-GMRP, PO Box 182, Washington Island, WI 544246
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Congratulations to President Jenne Hohn, recipient of her first Paul Harris Award. The presentation of a Paul Harris Fellow recognition is The Rotary Foundation’s way of expressing its appreciation for a substantial contribution to its humanitarian and educational programs. The recognition is named after Rotary’s founder, the late Paul Harris, a Chicago lawyer, who started Rotary with three business associates in 1905. A world of goodwill and better understanding comes closer to reality today because Jenne has made a substantial gift to The Rotary Foundation and a Paul Harris Fellow recognition may be presented. In being named a Paul Harris Fellow, she joins a remarkable company of people throughout the world, all recognized for their commitment to Service Above Self to benefit local and international communities. We congratulate you Jenne, and thank you for your commitment to Rotary’s common goals of world understanding and peace.
 
 
Our speaker on March 5 is James Marshall. James founded Spectrum Investment Advisors located in Mequon, WI in 1995—he currently resides as the chairmen, ambassador, and partner. He has dedicated much of his free time to his community, as James is the Chairman of Mequon/Thiensville Chamber of Commerce Past Presidents, and the current President of OED—Ozaukee County Economic Development. James has a deep appreciation for Warren Buffett’s success and moral code—as he has applied much of Buffett’s advice to his own life. Having lived through the Korean, Vietnam, and Cold War, James has witnessed the valor that the U.S. military men and women hold. He is a proud American who acknowledges the amount of bravery that backs every U.S. citizen’s success. 
 
After four years, James and his son Jonathan along with Katy Pavon finished the book, The American Tailwind. They launched the book in November 2023 with a 2-day book launch at Foxtown Station in Mequon, inviting the community to celebrate the history of the American resilience. The book launch theme was veteran focused with a “Berkshire Hathaway Conference” flare. Spectrum sold dilly bars for local veteran organizations, toasted with coca cola, passed out poppys from the American Legion, with the grandson of General George Patton (Pat Waters) as the special guest speaker during the program.
 
This year kicked off The American Tailwind Media Tour, including a January 2024 appearance on WTMJ’s, the Morning Blend show!
 
March 2024
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Links
 
Speakers
Annette Meyer - CEO
Apr 02, 2024 12:00 PM
Annette Meyer Studio
Patrick Nettesheim-Co Founder
Apr 09, 2024 12:00 PM
Guitars for Vets
Stars & Stripes Honor Flight
Apr 16, 2024 12:00 PM
Amy Luft/Special Activity
Dr. Matt Joynt
Apr 23, 2024 12:00 PM
MTSD Annual Update
Jenne Hohn
Apr 30, 2024 12:00 PM
Business Meeting
Dr. Shekar Kurpad, MD. PhD
May 07, 2024 12:00 PM
Wisconsin Institute of NeuroScience
Omar Shaikh
May 14, 2024 12:00 PM
Dining & Development of Milwaukee
Jenne Hohn
May 21, 2024
Business Meeting
No Meeting
May 28, 2024 12:00 PM
No Meeting
Jun 04, 2024 12:00 PM
Pillars of the Community Award Luncheon Honoring Connie Pukaite
Jeramey Janeene
Jun 18, 2024 12:00 PM
Urban Milwaukee
Changing of the Guard
Jun 25, 2024 5:00 PM
Changing of the Guard
Meeting Responsibilities
If you cannot fulfill your responsibility, please make arrangements for someone else to take your place.
Prayer/Inspiration
March 26th
Holtz, Rob
 
April 2nd
Witte-Dycus, Nancy
 
April 9th
Rosing, John
 
Greeter
March 26th
Wirth, John
 
April 2nd
Azinger, Samuel
 
April 9th
Cavitt, Lori
 
Pledge
March 26th
Counsellor, James
 
April 2nd
Zlotocha, William
 
April 9th
Hunzinger, Nicholas
 
Club Executives & Directors
President
Vice President
President Elect
President Elect Nominee
Past President
Executive Secretary / Director
Secretary
Treasurer
Club Service
Community Service
International Service
Vocational Service
Public Relations
The Rotary Foundation
Director, Veteran's Affairs

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