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This Week's Meeting
October 10, 2024
 
This week's speaker is Kyle Hollins with Lyric's Institution. 
**This Week's Meeting is in Salon D on the 28th Floor**
Kyle Hollins has traveled a road that is all too common to men and women that come from humble beginnings. He went through Homelessness, Drug Sells, and Gang Life which landed him incarcerated for 90 plus months. He is now a seminary student, attributed writer and CEO and founder of the Lyrik’s Institution. Between teaching, public speaking, and using the science of Cognitive Behavioral Modification, he is now able to give back to a community from which he felt he took so much from.
Last Week's Meeting
Oct. 3, 2024
 
President Tim Tholen called the meeting to order and led us in the Pledge of Allegiance.  Lon Lawton provided us with a thoughtful Invocation.
 
Club Anniversaries: Rusty Macy - 22 yrs Oct 3rdDoug Nelson – 23 yrs Oct 4th  
 
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
This week’s Greeters were the Club’s member of the Ecology Committee.
Donna Eddy passed away on September 28th and was the wife of Past President Chuck Eddy, who died in 2019.  Donna was as much a part of Club 13 as Chuck, attending almost all events when Chuck was the entertainment committee chair and President.
 
Marc Horner noted that October is KCRC Foundation month. The KCRC Foundation covers approximately 75% of the camp’s expenses. During October, individuals can become Foundation Fellows with an $800 contribution with the remaining $200 balance being matched!
 
Ted Higgins reminded us a Hits for Haiti, a pickleball tournament at Homestead Country Club on Saturday.
 
David Hanzlick updated the Club on the Regatta’s financial results with Gross receipts of $36,000, which increases to $54,000 when including in-kind receipts.  Congratulations to Tom Woolwine’s committee!
 
UPCOMING EVENTS: BRING A GUEST !
Oct 3rd - Bolte Beer & Brat Bash – still room if you want to attend
Oct 24th - World Polio Day Social at Minsky’s   (Silent Auction)
Nov 9th - District Foundation Dinner
Nov 19th - Project C.U.R.E. -service event  (more details to come)
 
UPCOMING  EVENTS & MEETINGS:
Oct 10th - Kyle Hollins, Lyrik’s Institute
Oct 17th - Evan Verploegh, International Relations Council
Oct 24th - No lunch meeting – 4th Thursday at Minsky’s Pizza
Oct 31st - Tim Caniglia, The Future of the Country Club Plaza
 
 
PRESENTATION:              
Jorge Velez introduced our programmer speaker, Enrique Chi, who was born in Panama and grew up in KC. Enrique Chi became a musical sensation, with awards including the 2017 Latin Grammy and a 2012 N.P.R. Best Song.Enrique works in both languages, Spanish (Panama, his birthplace) and English, combining America rock with Latin music. Very importantly, Enrique believes in Giving Back. Initially he thought he had to wait until he became a big success before he could get involved.  But, he saw video’s of other entertainers, who were not big stars, giving back to their communities. That changed his perspective/timeline.
 
The “Give Back” began with community activation. Enrique put together a single one week music camp for 12 year olds at the Mattie Rhodes Center (cost $20, included lunch for eight hours for six days). Since the kids came in with widely differing levels of musical and instrument skills, the Program went a different way, i.e. Song Writing, which became the Rebel Song Academy (RSA) and Arts as Mentorship. 
 
In response to our youths’ mental health crisis, RSA was rooted in mental health, with an Arts Therapy prospective. For a kid, signing up for Rebel Song Academy is much easier than signing up for mental health therapy.  Song writing gets the participant over to Critical Thinking and Creative Design.
 
As an authentic way to help, the initially modest 1 week program grew into 7  weeklong  programs and then into 12 Rebel Song Academy  in 2024.   The Rebel Song Academy is rooted in mental health and community building. Its curriculum was developed in partnership with Sherri Jacobs (author & licensed therapist) to develop Social & Emotional Learning, Critical Thinking, and  Creative Design.
 
OUR CURRICULUM:  There are 12 modules. Each has a transferable real-world skill and mental health principle intertwined with the musical lesson.  For example, week #1, “Ready, Set, Write!” is a lesson on design thinking, goal setting and anticipating challenges.
The 12 modules are:
1. Ready Set Write 2.  Pick Your Path 3. The Hook  4. Own Your Story 5. Three Chords and the Truth  6. It Takes a Village 7. The Magic 8. Refine Your Sound 9. Add More Color 10. The Release 11. Build Your Audience 12. Showtime
The modules feature:
CREATION: Harness the fundamental creative spark
ALCHEMY: Find the right elements to make the magic
RELEASE:Design an intentional plan to share your creation
EXPERIMENT:Enter the lifelong journey of building authentic audiences
 
OUR IMPACT:   [measurable Brain Scan (ERG) Results]
We partnered with a neurofeedback technician, Tyler Mark, to track the physiological effects of our programming with the following  KEY  FINDINGS:
  •  Reduction in stress brainwaves (high beta) over the temporal lobe.  This amounted to a 68% normalization in the primary “qeeg” marker for anxiety.
  • Averaged a  24% normalization of brain function across all brain regions in every brain frequency.
  • Averaged a  32% normalization in brain function in the frontal lobe
In the video, the Club saw brainwave response Before RSA (Rebel Song Academy) and After RSA.  The brain scans showed fundamental (healthy) changes.   Music’s healthy mechanics releases biologically internally generated dopamine. 
 
THE  LAB:
RSA students record and release their songs in The LAB, our custom-built studio located at the Inter Urban ArtHouse in Overland Park, KS.
-35 original students’ songs written; -RSA students assisted in scoring the music for a film featuring Grammy Award-winning artists, Steve Berlin  and Mireya Ramos, and a nationally recognized podcast, “Inadmissible”.
 
Through the LAB, a work force development project, the kids have created a festival, “CELEBRATE  AMERI’KANA”, a Music & Arts Festival, celebrating the origins, legends, and diverse colors of American music.    The National Endowment for the Arts has granted to us  $135,000 to hire a full time director for one year.  [Really we need for it to a 3 year term for proper “onboarding”.] The Kauffman Foundation has contributed $12,000.
 
The program concluded with our own Rotary Club 13 audience interactive project of creating lyrics to the beat of Bruce Springsteen’s popular song “Dancing in the Dark”. 
 
You can view and listen to Enrique's PowerPoint presentation here.
 
Today’s Quote: “One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.” Bob Marley
  
Tim  Tholen wrapped up the meeting with the Four Way Test.
 
[as an ongoing scrivener’s note: our local Club 13 Rotary organization is comprised of at least three interrelated groups (like a three-legged stool), each with its own separate board, officers & primary focus.  KCRClub 13 comprised of various committees and weekly luncheon meetings with speakers;  KCRCFoundation  primarily focused on financially supporting the Club 13’s Rotary Youth Camp; and the Rotary Youth Camp*, near Lake Jocomo, at 22310 NE Colbern Road, in Lee’s Summit, MO 64086]    (* Rotary’s  oldest continuous ongoing project in the world!)
The Kansas City Rotary Club Foundation Impacts the Community

The Kansas City Rotary Club Foundation contributes to the Camp’s operating budget and assures the future of the Camp.  The Camp has existed for 100 years and through that time, tens of thousands of children with handicaps and disadvantaged youth have experienced fresh air, playing outdoors and experiencing nature at our beautiful Camp.  The Camp staff does a terrific job in managing costs but meeting the yearly budget is a concern.  The Foundation covers shortfalls in the budget and assures the future of the Camp for the children in our community.

Now more than ever, the Foundation needs your support.  Many thanks to the existing Foundation Fellows and Sustaining Members for your past support.  Hopefully, you will give again this year. If you are not a Fellow or a Sustaining Member, please consider contributing now and take advantage of a special “matching” offer until October 31st for new donors.  Contribute $800, an anonymous donor will pay $200, and you’ll be a Fellow!  Begin as a Sustaining Member at “half price,” as the anonymous donor will match $1 for $1 –up to $200! The donation can be by check or made through Pay Pal, credit card, or debit card plus, for Sustaining Members, there is an option that the donation will be made automatically each month.

All contributions to the Kansas City Rotary Club Foundation are tax-deductible as charitable contributions.

If you have questions or want to make a donation, please contact Foundation President Marc Horner at mhorner@aol.com or 816.985.8766 or Foundation Resource Development Chair Sally Bibb at Sallybibb@aol.com or 816,835.2088.

Please make a donation now!

Book Discussion Group
Please join the Rotary Book Discussion Group for the discussion of the book The Midnight Library by Matt Haig. The book discussion will be led by Vivien Jennings and all Rotarians and guests are welcome. The group will meet at J. Wilbur Company.
 
Date: Monday, October 14, 2024, 6:30 PM
Location: J. Wilbur Company
3242 Roanoke
Kansas City, MO 64111
 
Nora’s life has been going from bad to worse.  Then at the stroke of midnight on her last day on earth, she finds herself transported to The Midnight Library, where each book contains an alternate life: a possible world in which she made different choices.  She is given what seems like the ultimate opportunity: a chance to undo her regrets and try out each of the other lives she might have lived.  But things aren’t always what she imagined they’d be, and soon her choices place the library and herself in extreme danger.  Before time runs out, she must answer the ultimate question: With infinite choices, what is the best way to live?
World Polio Day

We meet Thursdays at Noon

Crowne Plaza KC
1301 Wyandotte
Kansas City, MO 
 
 @rotaryclub13
 
 @rotaryclub13
Upcoming Events
Rotary Book Discussion Group
J. Wilbur Co.
Oct. 14, 2024
6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
 
Rotary Bowling League
Ward Pkwy Lanes
Oct. 16, 2024 4:30 p.m.
 
Bagel Run
Oct. 19, 2024
 
Rotary Bowling League
Ward Pkwy lanes
Oct. 23, 2024 4:30 p.m.
 
World Polio Day Social at Minksy's
Minsky's Pizza
Oct. 24, 2024
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
 
Bagel Run
Oct. 26, 2024
 
Rotary Bowling League
Ward Pkwy Lanes
Oct. 30, 2024 4:30 p.m.
 
District Foundation Dinner
Argosy Casino
Nov. 09, 2024
6:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
 
View entire list
Speakers
Oct 17, 2024
Oct 24, 2024
4th Thursday at Minsky's
Oct 31, 2024
The Future of the Country Club Plaza
Nov 07, 2024
Making a Better Kansas City Through Sports
View entire list

Bowling News
By Tim Tholen
 
Happy Monday, Rotary 13!
 
The bowling league met up again last Wednesday, people are really starting to get into the groove. We had a visit from our own Henrik Andersen subbing in, good to see him bowl again.
 
Splits:
Tim Tholen-2/4/10
Peter Ho-4/7/10
 
200 games: 
Matt Ho-204
Will Patrick-235, 219
Tim Tholen-207
John Lawrence-234
 
Have a great week everybody!!

Donna Darlene Eddy, age 72, of Kansas City, Missouri passed away on Saturday, September 28, 2024.
Donna Darlene Eddy was born November 30, 1951 in Kansas City, Missouri to parents Don and Dorothy Perry. She had one older brother, Doug, whom she adored. She graduated from Southwest High School just a few blocks from her family’s home at 72nd & Belleview. It was in that home where many cherished memories were made. She learned to drive a stick shift up the narrow drive in their Volkswagon Bug, she celebrated birthdays and holidays there, and she met and fell in love with Charles Allen Eddy there. They were married shortly after she graduated high school in 1969 and they moved into their home at 109th and Wornall. This house would be the location for many barbecues and pool parties. The home was decorated with many Disney collectibles and lighthouses. Their beloved poodle Jo Jo ran and played in the yard and they lived there happily for over 50 years.

Sadly, her brother Doug was killed in the line of duty with the Kansas City Police Department in 1978. This event would have lasting effects on her, and it tightened her bond with Chuck even more. She and Chuck were inseparable. They literally did everything together. You cannot mention one without the other. She worked as office manager and receptionist in his Chiropractic office as well as acting as his right hand in all of Chuck’s endeavors. He was the face of the operation and she operated behind the scenes to manage their busy lifestyle. Whether it was the KCMO police department, the City Council, Cleveland Chiropractic College, the Rotary Club, or the Ararat Shrine, she was well known and active in all of those circles. She loved being a “roadie” for the Chuck Eddy Band! She even learned to play the bagpipes so that she could march with the St. Andrew’s Pipes and Drums.

She was strong willed and not shy about sharing her opinions. Her voice was one that had to be heard. She loved her family and friends. When she lost her soul mate and life partner when Chuck passed away in 2019, she lost part of herself. She touched many people’s lives and she left a lasting impression. May she rest in peace, finally reunited with her brother, mother and father and husband. She loved them all dearly and they were surely waiting for her with open arms.


Youth Camp Update
Laurie Mozley, Camp Superintendent
 
The Rotary Youth Camp received this card in the mail.  Thank you to Mike and Beth Gehring with Midwest Brachial Plexus for letting the President know of our milestone achievement! 
Centennial Memory
Many Eagle Scouts have chosen the Rotary Youth Camp as the beneficiary of their projects.  Here is a picture of the project completed this past weekend and a 1980 BuzzSaw article about another project.  If you use the QR code, you can hear about other Eagle Scout and Gold Award projects at the camp.

 
 
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