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major projectS
"The Youth of Rotary LA5"
TO BE ANNOUNCED
PREVIOUS PROJECTS
"Let Music Ring"
Chair: Liz Reno
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Major Project Chair Liz Reno,
Pasadena Pops Maestra Rachael Worby, and LA5
President Janet Lindstrom celebrate the launch
of
"Let Music Ring", presenting a
$150,000 check to the Pasadena
Pops Orchestra for this innovative
music appreciation program at
John Adams Middle School. |
Pasadena Pops Maestra
Rachael Worby, assisted by members of the
Pasadena Pops Orchestra, explains the differences
in string instruments to John Adams Middle
School students. |
LA5 adopts worthy youth-oriented projects that
it supports with a multiple-year commitment, serving
as a leading financial sponsor and offering significant
membership involvement. These projects are typically
selected because the club believes that its participation
could lead to more wide-spread community awareness
and support for a very worthy endeavor. LA5 currently
sponsors these major projects: Rotary Eye Rescue,
Let Music Ring, and Children's Court. Past major
projects have included: The California State Science
Fair, Reading By 9, The Wheelchair Foundation
International, Rotary Trails in Ernest E. Debs
Park, and D.A.R.E.
LA5's newest major project provides music education
and appreciation to 500 students in John Adams
Middle School, and is a joint venture with the
Pasadena Pops Orchestra. Study after study has
proven that music education helps students score
better in all academic areas, especially math
and science. Yet money to offer classes in music
and the arts has become increasingly scarce.
At John Adams, funding for music education was
nonexistent. Nearly all of the 2,400 students
attending this year-round school qualify for public
assistance and come from families that are deemed
well below "the poverty line." The campus
is in a high crime / high-density area located
just south of downtown Los Angeles. In most cases,
this music program will be the first introduction
to classical music and music education that these
students have experienced.
Pasadena Pops Maestra Rachael Worby has created
a special curriculum exposing these 6th, 7th and
8th grade students to the different sections of
the orchestra: strings, woodwinds, brass and percussion.
Professional musicians who are members of the
Pasadena Pops Orchestra join her at the school
to demonstrate sounds and texture with their instruments.
The program is designed to follow the same group
of students throughout their middle school years,
and will offer in-school performances, lectures
in music appreciation, and hands-on training.
The Rotary Club of Los Angeles is supporting this
innovative program with $150,000 in funding, and
anticipates this program will garner support in
other schools leading to the rejuvenation of a
music curriculum in our schools.

Rotary Trails in Ernest E. Debs Park
Co-Chairs: Don Crocker and Carolyn DeVinny
LA5 had a strong desire to embrace an environmental
project. After looking at the opportunities around
us, LA5 adopted Ernest E. Debs Park, located in
Northeast Los Angeles. This park is the site of
the new Audubon Center in Debs Park, the first
urban nature center established by Audubon. Audubon
selected Debs Park because it has an abundance
of wildlife and features walnut woodlands, which
is a rare plant community. Over 50,000 elementary
school children live within a 2-mile radius of
the park.
LA5 is providing $150,000 over a 3-year period
and is bringing in members, volunteers and organizations
with which we have an affiliation, to make improvements
to the park.
Our specific tasks are items that were specified
on the City of Los Angeles Master Plan for the
park, and include trail building, eradication
of non-native / escaped exotic plants, native
plant installation and other tasks to be determined.
Trails will connect an existing public parking
area serving the ball fields and the Native Terraced
Gardens to an upper level picnic area. Another
trail will have benches and a scenic overlook
towards the city.
Trail improvements include trail building and
re-grading where necessary to provide increased
access for strollers and wheelchairs. These trails
will help protect native vegetation and habitat
by encouraging people to use the trails, instead
of forging new ones.
In addition, the club has set aside $5,000 per
year ($15,000) to fund activities and programs
for volunteers in the park. Activities are planned
to build awareness, respect for nature and a sense
of ownership / stewardship to the projects.
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| LA5's Hiking Committee try out
the Rotary Trail in Debs Park |
Nichole Baker and
Pearl Leeka take a break to enjoy the view
in Debs Park |

Chairs: Marc Leeka and Les Atchley
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| A
group of LA5 members prepare wheelchairs for
distribution in Baja. Clockwise from the bottom
are President Janet Lindstrom, Pearl Leeks,
Laura Thompson, Project Chairs Marc Leeka
and Les Atchley. |
Les
Atchley helps a girl from Mexico into her
new wheelchair. |
A
young man in Honduras celebrates his mobility
with w few friends. These all-terrain wheelchairs
are designed for use on unpaved paths, with
tires similar to mountain bikes. |
The Wheelchair Foundation is dedicated to providing
mobility to every child, teen and adult lacking
mobility, but unable to afford a wheelchair. In
July of 2001, Richard King, President of Rotary
international (2001-2002) invited Wheelchair Foundation
founder Kenneth E. Behring to make a presentation
to the Board of Directors of Rotary International,
during which King proposed a worldwide strategic
alliance with the Wheelchair Foundation. Behring
stated that the Wheelchair Foundation would match
any contribution made by Rotarians, reducing the
normal $150 cost to deliver a wheelchair from
$150 per chair to only $75. RI's Board unanimously
approved the alliance, and later that year LA5
adopted the Wheelchair Foundation as a new Major
Project.
During year 1 of our 3-year commitment, any member
of the Rotary Club of Los Angeles who contributed
$100 or more to the LA5 Community Service Fund
had a wheelchair donated in their name. The result
was a $72,000 donation to the Wheelchair Foundation
in 2002, which was used to purchase and deliver
960 wheelchairs, including 240 chairs that were
delivered to the Convalescent Aid Society in Pasadena,
CA. The rest of the chairs went to recipients
in other countries, including Angola, Uzbekistan,
Turkey and elsewhere. LA5 member Marc Leeka and
wife Pearl traveled to Angola to personally deliver
the first container of wheelchairs.
In the second and third year of support, Project
Chair Marc Leeka made presentations to every Rotary
Club in District 5280, garnering widespread matching
support. By the time year three was coming to
a close, 5,360 wheelchairs valued at over $804,000
were sent to these countries:
Afghanistan
Angola
Armenia
Croatia
Ecuador
El Salvador
Haiti
India
Iran
Israel
Lebanon
Madagascar
Mexico
Mozambique
Poland
Uganda
Ukraine
United States
If you would like support this worthy endeavor,
visit the Wheelchair Foundation's web site at:
www.wheelchairfoundation.org
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Project Chair Susan
Kromka checks the2003 display of Christine
Haas, who won Junior Category Project of the
Year in 2002. |
>>Click
Here to view California State Science Fair Movie
The California State Science Fair is a competition
for students in grades 6-12 who have earned the
chance to participate by winning awards in their
local science fair. Beginning in 2001, on the
50th Anniversary of the fair, LA5 began a 3-year
commitment of over $150,000 to this annual event
held at the California Science Center.
LA5 worked with the Trustees of the California
Science Center, the Muses of the California State
Science Center, the Science Fair judges and Science
Center staff. The goals accomplished included:
improving the experience of participating students
during the fair
increasing fair awareness to our members, other
Rotary Clubs in Southern California and the local
business community increasing the value of new
student awards and recognition · volunteer support
and information

This highly recognized literacy
program was developed by the Los Angeles Times
and designed to help local children achieve grade-level
reading skills by 9 years of age. Literacy is
currently one of the most important social issues
in our community. LA5 adopted Reading By 9 in
2000, with a 3-year commitment to the program
of over $150,000. LA5 was instrumental in garnering
wide-spread community support, including that
of Goodwill Industries, The Salvation Army and
other non-profits, education professionals, and
book publisher Scholastic, Inc., which agreed
to match book-for-book each new book ordered.
Reading By 9 is currently widely supported and
recognized for putting millions or recreational
reading books into grade K-3 classrooms to encourage
literacy.
D.A.R.E.
The first major project that LA5
adopted was D.A.R.E. (Drug Awareness Resistance
Education) to teach school-aged children how to
resist the dangers of drug and alcohol abuse.
This program is now widely used and respected
worldwide.
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