TUESday, june 24, 2025

Rotary International asks us to Serve to Change Lives through its Focus Areas

January is Vocational Service Month

This month Rotary International asks us to Serve to Change Lives through Rotary FellowshipExplore the possibilities with us at our meeting Wednesday at noon at Wick Park or virtually via Zoom. 

http://www.youngstownrotaryevent.com

The  Zoom ID is: 3567145262

ROTARY THIS WEEK

This week’s program will feature Scott Schulick, who will provide updates on the Rotary Council on Legislation as well as a recap of the 2025 Rotary International Convention. Don’t miss this chance to hear about the decisions shaping Rotary’s future.

A quick reminder: the deadline to support Operation Warm is September 15. Your donations help provide new coats for children in need as we head into the colder months.

Looking ahead, our next Beerfest Committee meeting will be held on Tuesday, September 9, 2025, at the Jewish Community Center Boardroom. There is also a digital meeting option available. All members are welcome and encouraged to attend—your participation helps strengthen our impact!

This week’s menu: Chicken Piccata, Rice Pilaf, Vegetable Fall Salad, Vegetarian Option

See you Wednesday at Wick Park.

Rotary Last Week

It may be called Ohio Nonviolence Week, but it’s a Youngstown Initiative.

Penny Wells, direction of Mahoning Valley Sojourn to the Past, and Barbara Brothers encouraged members to participate during 2025 Ohio Nonviolence Week. It will begin Oct 5 with a parade that will step off at 3 p.m. at Wick Avenue and Wood Street, followed by a rally at the Youngstown Foundation Amphitheater. Daily events will continue through Oct. 11, with the YWCA, Jewish Community Center, Public Library, and Unitarian Universalist Church of Youngstown among the hosts.

Sojourn to the Past is a national program that promotes nonviolence, compassion, civic responsibility, and other lessons of the Civil Rights Movement. Students travel to historic sites and hear first-hand accounts from civil rights leaders. Local high school students have participated since 2007. Chaney High School students started Nonviolence Week in 2009, and it has grown from a school endeavor to a community-wide event.

Wells, students, and community leaders will be our guests on Oct. 8, when the club will install a peace pole in Wick Park, then have lunch together in the pavilion. 

RCY’s Peace Committee also encourages Rotarians to volunteer at the annual Peace Race in downtown Youngstown, beginning on the morning of Oct. 12.

In other news, film plastic recycling has resumed. Bring your contributions to any regular Wednesday lunch meeting. Thank you, Irisa Green, for agreeing to transport our club’s haul to the bins at the Poland Giant Eagle.

PARTY WITH PRESIDENT GEORGE

End Polio Now Game

Every summer, the End Polio Now Campaign at the Cleveland Guardians game brings together Rotarians in Districts 6630, 6600 and our own 6650 for a night of fun and fundraising toward eradicating polio worldwide. This year, the event will be on Friday, Aug. 15, when the Guardians host the Atlanta Braves. First pitch will be at 7:10 p.m. For information about ticket options and more, click here: End Polio Now Campaign at the Guardians Game | District 6630

RSVP FOR STEAK FRY

Aug. 20 is the deadline to register for RCY’s annual Steak Fry mixer from 5:30 to 10 p.m. at Scott Schulick’s home, 2304 Fifth Ave., Youngstown, 44504. Steaks, grilled salmon, and Beyond Burgers will be the entree options, and the Rotary bar will be open. Register online here: 2025 Annual Club Steak Fry for Members and Guests | Rotary Club of Youngstown Ohio USA

SAVE THE DATE

Rising Tides presentation by Daniel Longo, engineering program manager at Youngstown Business Incubator, noon Sept. 17, Wick Park Pavilion

RCY Evening Meeting, 5:30 p.m. Sept. 24, Wick Park Pavilion (no noon meeting)

Rotary Peace Pole dedication, noon Oct. 8, Wick Park

Pints for Polio Event with District 6650 Governor Kimberly Weiss, Oct. 23, Penguin City.

 

 

Honing In on Honeybees

As research into declining bee populations continue, scientists have used a technique called DNA metabarcoding to figure out exactly which plants honeybees were visiting. Every plant has a unique DNA “barcode” in its pollen and nectar. By sequencing DNA from stored pollen (beebread) and honey, researchers could identify which flowers were being used — even if the flowers themselves weren’t directly observed.

The DNA results showed that bees favored only a fraction of the available plants, often leaning toward certain key species. Many of these preferences can be traced to plants with a long evolutionary history in the region, meaning bees are effectively “programmed” by adaptation to seek them out. So although honeybees often use the same plant genera for both nectar and pollen overall, in individual hives less than half of the plants were used for both simultaneously. 

This highlights the importance of protecting native plant diversity, since it directly supports pollinator health. In contrast, introduced or ornamental plants may not always meet bees’ nutritional needs, even if they look attractive to us.

The science journal Nature reported these findings. Read the full study here: \https://rdcu.be/eCVRf

Read more...

THIS WEEK IN ROTARY HISTORY

June 25, 1956: Rotary Club of Youngstown began three years of discussion and debate on the future of the Rotary Home for Crippled Children, at 420 Werner Street.  Issues included mounting repair and overhead costs, underutilization due to the success of the Polio vaccines and other prevention programs, and an offer from Youngstown Hospital Association to purchase both houses on Werner Street. The Club approved the hospital's offer on June 12, 1959, for the sum of $24,700.

NEW MEMBER NOTICE

 

Charlotte Crouch-Basinger

 

Donor Relations Specialist

 

YSU Foundation

 

Classification: Non-Profit Organization


Crouch-Basinger earned a Bachelor of General Studies degree at Youngstown State University. She and her husband, Derek, live in Girard. She is a member of Fowler Community Church and enjoys exercise, hiking, photography, fishing, and hunting.

 

CAUSE FOR CELEBRATION

 
 
Birthdays:
 
Linda Kostka 6/24
 
Peter Herman 6/27
 
Brendan Considine 6/28
 
 
 
Anniversaries:
 
Shirley Shields 6/25
11 years
 
Aimee Fifarek 6/27
​​​​​​​7 years
 
 
 
 
 
NEWS EDITOR
Debora Flora
 
 
Photos by Debora Flora and George Nelson
 
Bulletin Editor
Brendan Considine
Bulletin Editor
Brendan Considine
Make Rotary's public image a priority! Contact pr@rotary.org
Club Information

Welcome to Youngstown Rotary

Service Above Self

Wednesdays at 12:00 PM
Wick Park Pavilion
260 Park Avenue
Youngstown, OH 44504
United States of America
Phone:
(330) 743-8630
Connect through Zoom: http://www.youngstownrotaryevent.com/
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