Rotary International Theme 2025-2026





THE ROWEL

Rotary Club of Durham
 

Rotary International President:

Francesco Arezzo

Rotary District 5160 Governor:

Joy Alaidarous

Durham Rotary President:

Tom Knowles

_____________

Editor: Phil Price

Publisher:  Jen Liu




 

October 7, 2025



 


Crab Feed 2026

Will be held on
Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026





The Meeting Opening

President Tom Knowles called the meeting to order at the Butte Creek Country Club.

Tom asked Mike Crump to lead the pledge, which he did.

Peggi presented the invocation.

Larry Bradley then led us in singing “Take Me Out to the Ballgame”.


2025                                       Calendar for Durham Rotary


O
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1 2 3 4
5 6 7
Meeting
Karin Lightfood on Polio Plus
(Peggi Koehler)
Board Meeting at 5:00 PM
8 9 10 11
12
13 14
No Meeting
15 16 17 18
19 20 21
Meeting
Club Social at The Commons Social Emporium, 2412 Park Avenue, Chico
(Tom Knowles & Diana Selland)

22 23 24 25
26 27 28
Multi-Club Meeting
hosted by Chico Noon Club at Elks Lodge at 5:30 PM
Dr. Kate Transchel on Rotary's Fight Against Human Trafficking
29 30 31
N
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v
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m
b
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1
2 3
4
Military Minute Museum at 1384 Durham Dayton Hwy, Durham, CA
(Rick Farley)

5
6
7 8
9 10
11
Meeting
Dist. Governor visit at the BCCC
Board Meeting at 5:00 PM
12
13
14
15
16 17 18
No Meeting

19 20 21 22
23 24 25
No Meeting
26 27 28 29
30





FUTURE MEETINGS: Meetings will be at the location noted, at 6:00 pm.

October 21st:  Tom and Diana will present club social at The Commons Social Emporium, 2412 Park Avenue, Chico

October 28th : Elks Lodge Noon.  Multiple Club:  Dr. Kate Transchel  Rotary’s Fight Against Human Traffic.

November 4th: Military Minute Museum hosted by Rick Farley.  Located at 1384 Durham Dayton Hwy, Durham, CA.

November 11th:  The District Governor will visit at the BCCC.  There will be a Board Meeting at 5:00 pm.

Visitors

We had two visitors from the Chico Noon Club.  Karin Lightfoot, who was our program forthe night.

Glen Eaton who was here to talk about upcoming events at Chico Rotary.


Announcements


Glen Eaton, from Chico Rotary first talked about their planned dinner on October 28, 2025 at the Chico Elks Lodge.  They will be presenting Dr. Kate Transchel who will talk about combating human trafficking in our community.  The dinner will begin at 5:30 pm.  The cost will be $30.  It is a multi-club mixer.

 

He then talked about Chico Rotary’s Surf & Turf dinner.  The dinner will be lobster and steak.  It will be on Saturday, November 8th at 5:00 pm.  This year it will be at the Silver Dollar Fairgrounds.  You will need to buy your tickets ahead of time, but he did not have the price.  Scanning the adjacent code should get you to where you can buy tickets.

Other Matters

A letter from Jessica’s daughter:

Good Evening Durham Rotary Club,

I hope you have enjoyed this year's Harvest Festival! I have greatly missed being able to volunteer my time at the Harvest Festival this year. I wanted to take a moment to write to you to thank the club for the generous scholarship. Your support and kindness are much appreciated. I know firsthand how much time and dedication you all have put into raising money to support the scholarships and the community of Durham. 

I truly appreciate all the opportunities I received from the Rotary Club of Durham. I see how the club serves the community, and I hope that in the future, I am able to give back to the community as well, just as you all have done. As I have begun my journey at Cal Poly, I am grateful to be continuing my education in agriculture. Through my experience at Camp Royal, I met a fellow student from Paradise High School who is also attending Cal Poly.It is always enjoyable to see her around campus as I adjust to college life. 

Thank you again for your generosity. Wishing you a successful crab feed this year!

Sincerely,

Janelle Thorpe

janellerthorpe@gmail.com

Attendance

There were only 9 members at the meeting.  We need better attendance.  Come to the next meeting!

Recognitions

Steve Plume was 81 years old.  He contributed $10.  He also had the Grinder, which does not protect you for birthdays.  He began the auction by biding $25.  Larry bid $50 on Glenn Pulliam’s behalf.  Steve raised it to $55 on Glenn’s behalf but Jessica was $80 proud of her daughter (see the letter from Jenelle above) and hijacked the grinder.

The Program

Peggi introduced Karin Lightfoot from the Chico Club.  She is an RN among other things, and knows what she is talking about regarding Polio. She talked about Rotary International’s efforts to rid the world of Polio.  At this point it is only in two countries, Afghanistan and Pakistan.  We are down to only 33 cases this year, 4 in Afghanistan and 29 in Pakistan.  We have to continue the effort, until we rid the world of this disease, like we did of smallpox.  If we quit our efforts now, we will be back to 200 cases in a year.

She talked about members joining the PolioPlus Society by committing to donate at least $100 per year.  She passed out a form you could fill out and deliver to her.  If you need a form, her email is:  karin@karinlightfoot.com. Such a donation qualifies for Paul Harris Point recognition.

Next Meeting

Our next meeting, on October 21st, will be a Club Social hosted by Tom and Diana at The Commons Social Emporium, 2412 Park Avenue, Chico

Membership

Bring guests who you think you can interest in becoming a member. We Need More Members! Your dinner and your guest’s dinner will be paid for by the Club.  Also, bring a guest to oneof our occasional social gatherings.

President Tom is asking the members to bring in new members this year.

Go to the following Rotary International web site for information on membership development:  https://my.rotary.org/en/learning-reference/learn-topic/membership .  From this website there is access to membership development and other related information.

The Rotary Foundation Donations

You can make a difference in this world by helping people in need. Your gift can do some great things, from supplying filters that clean people’s drinking water to empowering local entrepreneurs to grow through business development training.

The Rotary Foundation will use your gift to fund the life-changing work of Rotary members who provide sustainable solutions to their communities’ most pressing needs. But we need help from people like you who will take action and give the gift of Rotary to make these projects possible.

When every Rotarian gives every year, no challenge is too great for us to make a difference. The minimum gift to The Rotary Foundation is $25.00.   An annual $100.00 gift is a sustaining member.  Once your donations accumulate to $1,000 you become a Paul Harris Fellow.

If you have any questions, ask Steve Heithecker.

It is possible to learn more about The Rotary Foundation on the Rotary web site. 

Your gift can be made online or by sending Jessica Thorpe a check made out to The Rotary Foundation to Durham Rotary, P.O. Box 383, Durham, California 95958.

Must Be Present to Win Drawing:

President Tom asked Peggi to draw the winner for the night.  Just after commenting that she was sure her name was notin the container, she drew a name, which proved that her name was in the container.  It was her name she drew.  She contributed the winnings back to theclub.

Closing

President Tom then closed the meeting.

 

From District 5160

The District Newsletter has been uploaded to DACdb - to view it there go to the District tab, open the District Bulletin file and lookfor the pdf file named Rotary District 5160 Newsletter. 

From Rotary International’s News and Features Website

The conversation: Jane Goodall

Our lady of the primates wants to save the world and she is counting on our children to do it

Editor's note: Jane Goodall, a renowned chimpanzee researcher and conservationist, died on 1 October 2025. This Q&A was originally published in the March 2009 issue of The Rotarian [now Rotary magazine]. That same year, she delivered a keynote address at the Rotary International Convention in Birmingham, England.

Jane Goodall takes several deep breaths, then follows with a soprano trill. She’s just demonstrated a chimpanzee’s “panthoot.” Chimps make the sound “when they’re going off to have fun,” she notes. She also concedes that her mimicry demonstrates something about her own sense of humor. But Goodall recognizes her limitations as well. She cannot imitate “all these excited sounds chimps make when they find good food.”

Goodall arrived in Gombe, Tanganyika (now Tanzania), to study chimpanzees in 1960, a time when the terms “ecology” and “environment” were heard only in biology classrooms. She’s credited with discovering previously unknown aspects of chimp behavior: They eat meat, and they display a capacity to use objects such as leaves and sticks “to a greater extent than any other living animal with the exception of man himself.”

Goodall earned a doctorate in ethology, the study of animal behavior, from Cambridge University. “When I’d done that, I could stand up and talk to a scientist in a white coat,” she says. She became known for her appearances in National Geographic and for several books she wrote, including some for children. In the Shadow of Man is her best-selling account of her early chimpanzee studies. She’s made a second career as an advocate foranimals and the environment. In 1977, she founded the Jane Goodall Institute for Wildlife Research, Education, and Conservation. Later, the institutelaunched Roots and Shoots, a program that engages young people from preschool through college in animal welfare and conservation activities.

Goodall travels constantly to promote her causes. On 24 June, she will deliver a keynote address at the RI Convention in Birmingham, England. While in Canada to accept an honorary degree from the University of Toronto, she met with journalist Warren Kalbacker.

Keynote speaker Jane Goodall, founder of the Jane Goodall Institute for Wildlife Research, Education, and Conservation, and United Nations Messenger of Peace, discusses the "Gombe and Beyond" at the 2009 Rotary International Convention in Birmingham, England.

Image credit: Alyce Henson

The Rotarian: You characterize humans as one of the five great apes. How do we fit in?

Jane Goodall: The great apes are determined by the Linnaean system. The human, the chimpanzee, and the bonobo (pygmy chimpanzee) are equidistant from each other. Gorillas and the orangutan are further away. At one point, chimps merged back again, so that’s how close we once were. There was interbreeding.The main difference between chimp and human genomes is the expression of the genes, which apparently can be affected by environment. Genetically, we share98.6 percent of DNA.

TR: You attribute an “explosive development of intellect” to humankind. But you’ve also noted that chimps can challenge us in some ways.

Goodall: Yup. We share similar – perhaps the same – emotions, like happiness, sadness, fear,despair, rage, anger, resentment, frustration, depression. Intellectually, chimpanzees are capable of doing things we used to think only we could do. They have amazing family relations that can last through a lifetime, between mothers and offspring, between brothers and sisters. We don’t usually know who the father is, except through DNA testing.

TR: What can we learn from chimps?

Goodall: The modern Western woman can learn from chimpanzees because they illustrate so well how a good early experience shapes the behavior of an adult. From the earliest days of my chimp studies, child psychologists and psychiatrists picked upon this more than zoologists. They were interested when Flint [Goodall named the chimps in her studies] lost his mother and apparently died of grief. The wisdom among child psychiatrists is that a human infant’s experience in the first two years is crucially important. We can follow chimps more easily because they don’t attempt to hide their behavior or the way they feel.

TR: Can a human male take a lesson from a chimp?

Goodall: Yes. Chimpanzee males can be excellent caregivers to infants. Sometimes it’s a brother, which makes sense, but sometimes it’s an adult male who cares for an orphaned infant. It shows that within the human male there is this parental instinct, if we accept that we’ve inherited a lot of these similar characteristics from a common ancestor.

TR: Does our minuscule DNA difference confer on humans alone the ability to appreciate art, experience awe, or even display a sense of humor?

Goodall: Chimps have a sense of humor: So you’re trailing a vine around a tree and your little brother is following, and every time he’s going to grab it, you jerk it forward. After a bit, he starts to cry, and you start to laugh. That’s very funny for them. At that level, we’re the same. And I’ve seen chimps around one waterfall, which drops 80 feet and over millions of years it’s worn a groove in solid rock. There’s always wind, and ferns are waving, and the water lands on rock so it makes this roaring sound. And as they approach, the chimpanzees –the males mostly – their hair is bristling, they’re swaying foot to foot, climbing up the vines, pushing into the spray, hurling big rocks as they stamp along the waterbed. Then they sit and watch. What is it? What is this strange stuff always coming and going? If they could talk about this feeling, which must be equivalent to awe and wonder, I think it would turn into an animistic worship of the elements.

TR: You experienced a certain amount of fear in your early days in Africa.

Goodall: I wasn’t afraid of snakes or brushing against poisonous plants. I’d become afraid of leopards. Hearing a hunting leopard was scary. I just put a blanket over my head, and I thought, I’ll be all right. And I was. The real problem in those early days in Africa – why I didn’t relax in the forest – was that I was so desperate to find out things about the chimps before the money ran out. We only had money for six months, and the chimps ran away and ran away.

Jane Goodall studies the behavior of a chimpanzee in Tanzania in February 1987.

Image credit: Penelope Breese via Getty Images

TR: In your first book, In the Shadow of Man, you wrote movingly of chimps suffering from polio. Eradication of the disease is Rotary’s major initiative.

Goodall: I know it well. Polio was endemic in Tanzania. And in parts of Central Africa,it’s very difficult because you can’t get to the people there. The countries are in turmoil, and there’s no good infrastructure.

TR: Some years ago, you made a decision to forgo scientific work for animal and environmental advocacy. Was it a tough call?

Goodall: It was a decision I had to make. Looking back, what an egoist I must have been tothink I could make a difference. I went to this big conference in 1986. All the chimp researchers were there, along with people who had information about the-treatment of chimps in labs. It was so shocking. It was a lovely life out there in the field at Gombe – collecting information, analyzing it, and writing books. Then, suddenly, I knew I couldn’t be a scientist anymore.

TR: The Jewish scholar Abraham Joshua Heschel has described prophets as “troublesome people.” Do you accept that as part of your job description?

Goodall: Yes. You have to make people a bit uncomfortable first. But it’s my job to give them hope. A lot of people don’t know what to do [for the environment]. Do simple things. The grocery store is three blocks away. Make a choice to walk therewith your own bag instead of taking their plastic. Try to get familiar with products that are made in an environmentally ethical way. Don’t buy water in abottle that comes from 2,000 miles away. I drink tap water everywhere, and if the tap water is bad, filter it. Switch off your computer. Turn off all theseappliances we leave burning away. There’s so much you can do.

TR: Does the great wealth gap between the developed countries and emerging nations make it tougher to instill environmental awareness among less well-off populations?

Goodall: One of the factors contributing to environmental destruction is poverty. You have to cut trees down to try to grow food to feed yourself and your family, but soon the soil becomes overused. You know it’s going to create desert, but whatcan you do if you’re very poor? Politicians want to sell the forest and minerals for big money. That’s where the rot comes in. Even a responsible company will open up the forest with roads, and that lets the hunters go in. Then you get the bush meat trade. The urban elite will pay for elephants down to birds and bats.

TR: What happens to the people who live there?

Goodall: Around Gombe, where the environment is destroyed, that means the chimps aren’t there.But the people in that situation are also struggling to survive, which is why we started TACARE (Lake Tanganyika Catchment Reforestation and Education), a community-based conservation project. Our Tanzanian team – not white people – went into the villages, sat down in the traditional Tanzanian way, exchanged news about friends and family, then asked how they could help. Did the people care about conservation? No. They cared about health and education for their children. So that’s how we began. After a bit, we could help with farming methods to restore the overused soil without chemical fertilizer. Within two  years it was productive again. Then came water systems, sanitation, micro credit for groups of women, family planning, HIV/AIDS education, information about women’s and children’s rights. And the last piece of this puzzle: conservation. They’re now agreeing to put 10 to 20 percent of village land into forest protection and restoration. These forest patches are in a contiguous line so that the Gombe chimps finally have a way out of their closed-in patch of forest.

TR: You’ve marveled at the resilience of nature despite humans’ abuse of the environment.

Goodall: We’ve bashed nature for years. But I’m amazed at the resilience of the planet. My favorite story is about a quarry that had been used by a cement company near the coast of Kenya. In the early ’70s, the guy who owned the company wass uddenly horrified to fly over and see this huge scar. He hired a Swiss horticulturist, who found a tiny little plant growing. He got more of those,and they began to grow and their needles fell. Then he found a millipede, which was eating the needles and turning them into soil. So he got more of those.Water began coming back. There are hippos there. They’ve used half the quarry for sustainable farming, and they’ve even got a fish farm there.

TR: You’ve used the adjective “thorny” in speaking about issues involving people andenvironmental action.

Goodall: Life is not black and white. You have to help children understand that. The easy thing, if you’ve got children involved, is to have them save money and buy a piece of rain forest somewhere. But if you want to protect a piece of prairie on your own doorstep, the people who want to buy it have faces you know – maybe it’s the face of your best friend’s father. You very quickly learn it isn’t easy. There are people who want jobs, who want a business to come in that might destroy the environment. You might hurt somebody else who’s making a living farther down the river.

TR: Do you see the current economic crisis harming the environmental movement?

Goodall: It will hurt people like organic farmers because it does cost more to buy organic food. In England it already has. On the other hand, horrible large-scale developments are being put on hold, and that buys a little more time for environmentalists to band together to protect the areas.

TR: Environmental and wildlife charities always adopt cute animals – chimps, baby seals, polar bears – as their fundraising mascots. Is there an ugly species whose contribution to the environment we should acknowledge?

Goodall: Probably these centipedes we have at Gombe. They can grow to something like 9 inches ora foot. They’re very flat. They have a very poisonous bite. If you’re allergic, they could kill you. They could probably kill a child. I once had one crawl up my leg. Fortunately, it climbed down. I just don’t like them. But these centipedes are very good at making compost. They have a job to do, and they do it very well.

Every single day we make an impact on the world, and we have a choice as to what kind of impact we’re going to make.

TR: Do you feel there is a disposition to idealism and volunteerism, which can be nurtured in very young children?

Goodall: Give me a child up until age seven, and I’ll have him for life. It’s really true that people do get so much of who they are from those early years. There are three aspects of Roots and Shoots: animal, people, environment. There are always some children who are passionate about one aspect or another. They can choose which area they want to get involved in. But then they’re peripherally involved in the other projects. That’s why it’s working so well. They’re learning to live in peace and harmony with each other and the environment.

TR: You receive many more invitations to speak than you can possibly accept. Why didyou agree to address Rotary’s 100th annual convention?

Goodall: I’ve talked to Rotarians in South Africa and in different parts of Europe. We had aboard chair of the Jane Goodall Institute in Tanzania who is a Rotarian. They do good things. I shall emphasize something Rotarians probably know: Every single day we make an impact on the world, and we have a choice as to what kind of impact we’re going to make. We have desperately harmed this planet, and at some point we shall reach the point of no return. It’s not too late, but it’s going to require all of us to make an effort.

TR: Might there be synergies between your initiatives and those of Rotary?

Goodall: I’ve talked about having Rotarians’ kids be part of Roots and Shoots. If that’s something that could come out of this meeting, that would be fantastic, because the Rotarian mission is the same as ours. Well … we probably care more about animals.

TR: Your National Geographic appearances once led you to be described as that magazine’s “cover girl.” Did you save those covers?

Goodall: (Laughs.) I used to loathe it. Now I think it’s funny. I suppose I have the covers somewhere.

Warren Kalbacker is a journalist based in New York City.

 

{Note that the proceeding may not be the complete article.  See the complete articleon Rotary International’s web page.}

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