ISSUE NO. 30
FEBRUARY 23, 2001
OUR 80th YEAR
http://RotaryClubofSantaMonica.org
CAMP
JOSEPHO AND ROTARY
We’ll meet this Friday at a Boy Scout camp that
might have closed and been sold off long ago, were it not for our club. For 91
years Rotary has been an energetic backer of Scouting nationwide and in local
communities, as our clubs helped organize and support Scout councils across
America. In Santa Monica, every Scout Executive since the council was born in
1922 has been a member of this club.
Anatol Josepho was an immigrant from Siberia who
invented self-photographic booths that sprouted in amusement parks. In 1941 he
bought Rustic Canyon, built a home for his family there, and gave another 100
acres for a Scout camp. He was a personal friend of the Scout Executive at the
time, F. R. “Bob” Hill (who was to become our club president in 1946). For
many weekends in 1941 Rotarians and other Santa Monicans worked in the canyon
to build a big lodge-auditorium, workshop, ranger’s house, and swimming
pool. There was a large contingent from Douglas Aircraft, which also gave
corporate help.
In 1944 our club helped again. Both the Scouts and
YMCA were hard-pressed to offer camping opportunities during wartime. Rotary
pledged financing to Camp Josepho and to the Y camp at Big Bear.
In 1978 a fire ran through the canyon. It razed all
the camp structures except the lodge. Our club president Dick Redman (who
owned a transfer company) asked Bill Hunt (insurance man who was active in
Scouting and Rotary) to see whether our club might help the camp get into
operation again.
Hunt suggested that the club pay for a new poolside
changing house. The club raised $17,000 for this purpose. But municipal
authorities vetoed the plan. “No wooden structures,” they ruled.
“Everything must be fireproof.” A fireproof poolhouse would cost a quarter
million dollars or more. No such sum was in sight. For years nothing happened.
The swimming pool, unused, fell in on itself. Fewer troops used the camp.
“That seventeen thousand burned a hole in my
brain,” Hunt recalled. I knew Charles C. Shoemaker’s widow wanted to give
away a bunch of money she didn’t need. She gave four hundred thousand
dollars for a fine new pool and poolhouse. But even this wasn’t enough.
Nothing got built.”
In the next few years Hunt found 35 members of our
club who wrote checks for $1,000 apiece. Meanwhile, Mrs. Shoemaker’s gift
was earning interest. With other donations Hunt elicited outside the club, a
sufficient sum was finally available. During 1985 (when Hunt was our
president) construction started. The pool and changing room (costing a total
$650,000) were dedicated in 1993. More troops began camping at Josepho.
So when we meet for lunch there Friday, we can feel somewhat fatherly toward what we see.
FINES FOR AN UNBORN CHILD, PAPER FISH, ETC.
Congratulation,
Joe Gonzales, on your impressive fishing trip. It’s wondrous how the
Elks Magazine can enhance a photo to insert an imaginary fish. Thanks for the
$150 ($100 for the picture and $50 for the paper fish).
Paul
Gaulke was
fined $50 for naming a wrong Dan in the Rota-Monica announcement. The right
speaker was Dan Parke. Paul tried, but failed to shift the blame elsewhere.
Consider the fine as a thank-you note from the club, Paul, as Dan Parke
recommended one should always do when concluding business.
Sue
Dawson spoke
at USC regarding the joys of starting a new business. She must have done well
since our in-house professor, Bill Crookston, acknowledged approval. A
bargain at $50.
Our
illustrious alumni of USC were fined $25 each for their basketball team losing
as usual to UCLA. They can think of it as making friends on this side of town.
Steve
Lehne,
second son of our president, was fined in advance for a new baby, due in June.
Word came through that a mother’s love prevailed as Kay Lehne (a Rotarian in
the Westside Sunrise club) agreed to pay the $50 fine. Congratulations to all
the Lehnes.
--
Lionel Ruhman
WHAT’S IN STORE FOR FRIDAY NOONS
March
2nd:
Jill Stewart of New Times on “The latest on Playa Vista”.
March
9th:
Jeff Goodman on “Success on the Far Side of Failure”.
March
16th:
Past Presidents’ Day, Judge Edward Rafeedie presiding.
March
23rd:
Skits by members regarding Rotary, mental health, and the Internet.
Robert Segal, director.
March
30th:
Bob Brown, former Angels' president, on “Professional Baseball
Management”.
April
6th:
Prize-winning students read essays on the Four-Way Test.
April
13th:
DARK. Good Friday.
NOT ALL ROTARIANS AGREE
(Excerpts
from “The Rotarian” for February)
“I
was dismayed to see the photograph of the 2000-2001 RI Board of Directors. Not
one woman amongst all those men! It’s past the time for female Rotarians to
take on leadership roles at the international level …”
--
page 6
“It
was with great disappointment to read in the August and November issues that my
beloved Rotary has entered into the nefarious business of eliminating poor
people through family planning programs …
“So-called
family planning fails the 4-Way Test. I implore Rotary International to return
to helping and healing the poor.”
--
pages 6-7
“South
Miami, Florida, became the first city to pass an ordinance requiring gunlocks on
firearms stored where minors might gain access to them. The Rotary Club voted to
donate $1,000 to promote a gunlock giveaway. Most of the money was used to
purchase banners …
“There
was disagreement from Rotarians within the district who support the National
Rifle Association, which has filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of the
ordinance. These Rotarians labeled the club’s position as ‘inappropriate’,
‘misguided’ and ‘political’.”
--
page 48
CAN YOU FILL IN THE BLANKS?
(Quoted
from “The Rotarian” – February issue)
“A
mutant species of _____________, responsible for killing marine life throughout
the Mediterranean, has invaded the seas off the coast of California.
--
page 8
“Near
San Antonio, Texas, you can witness the spectacle of millions of Mexican
_____________ emerging at dusk from the Old Tunnel, an abandoned train
tunnel.”
--
page 23
“A
California woman reports that a chapter on how to safely retreat from a
_____________ prevented tragedy while she was hiking.”
--
page 30
“_____________
recruit children as young as 11, supply them with a gun and set them on a life
of looting, plundering and killing.”
--
page 6