
                Niles Rotarians showed up in a big way both with financial                donations toward the number of wheelchairs being delivered                as well as physically to deliver the wheelchairs in person                to those we care about in Monterrey, Mexico. Many of our                own Niles Rotarians took the trip to personally see the                delivery take place. Audrey Kearns, our International                Service Chair, led the effort for the Niles Rotarians.                Mike Kearns had a big hand in this too – although he can’t                claim being a Niles Rotarian…just teasing a bit Mike.                Audrey had this to share about her experience:
This experience was a                  real life changer for me! After all the years donating                  to international projects and hearing/reading about                  other Rotarian’s experience with hands on projects, it’s                  just not the same as actually being there and                  participating myself. We traveled to a college sports                  auditorium, where 350 boxes of wheelchairs were waiting                  for us. We had Rotarians from District 5170, 5160, 5730                  including 5 clubs from Monterrey, Mexico as well and a                  group of foreign exchange students, the Red Cross and                  local paramedics. We assembled the wheelchairs and gave                  them to children, teenagers and adults. Families came                  with the loved ones and the happiness and gratitude of                  everyone was overwhelming. It was very humbling. This is                  an experience that everyone should have at least once in                  their lives and once experienced they will never forget                  it. (Audrey Kearns)
                
Thank you Audrey for sharing your thoughts with us. It’s wonderful to see what good work is being done by Niles Rotarians locally and internationally! Great work!!
Access our photo album of the event. (You may want to consider getting some memorabilia from this beautiful trip).
Niles Park Clean-Up a Success! 04.02.16
Thank you Niles Rotarians for showing up and putting two feet on the ground to clean up the Niles Park. It was so clean afterwards, we literally could not find any garbage in the park! What a wonderful job for you wonderful volunteers! It was a beautiful sunshine filled day with smiles and helping hands! Terri, you did a great job again organizing this event – big thank you! To see more of the photos from the day Click Here.District 5170 Assembly – Great Training
The District 5170 Training Assembly was held on Thursday, March 24, 2016
Keynote Speaker was Frederick Marx, an internationally acclaimed, Oscar and Emmy nominated director/writer with 35 years in the film business. He was named a Chicago Tribune Artist of the Year for 1994, a 1995 Guggenheim Fellow, and a recipient of a Robert F. Kennedy Special Achievement Award. His film HOOP DREAMS played in hundreds of theatres nationwide after winning the Audience Award at the Sundance Film Festival and was the first documentary ever chosen to close the New York Film Festival. This event was District 5170’s annual training for all club presidents-elect, presidents-nominee, club officers and committee chairs along with new and experienced Rotarians. We had some great workshops that prepare your club leaders for next year; learned best practices from other clubs; and introduced Red Badgers and newer Rotarians to the world of Rotary. This was a great evening of inspiration, training, fellowship and fun! Event location: India Community Center, 525 Los Coches Road, Milpitas, CA. Event Chair: Angus Cochran.
March 2016 Pinion
In this Issue
- On Track with President Lisa
 - Paso Robles Wine Trip
 - Remembering Don Amsbaugh
 - New Member Kimberly MacFarlane
 Don Amsbaugh – In Remembrance…
Long time dedicated Niles Rotarian Don Amsbaugh passed away on February 12, 2016. He was 91 years of age, and had been a member of Niles Rotary since 1961. Don was club president on 1969-70, and he boasted of his fifty years of perfect attendance.
During Don’s presidential year, District 517 came into being, breaking out of District 516. The major fundraiser for the club during Don’s year was the annual pancake breakfast (it showed a profit of $1,370 – considering the cost of living then and now, that is a very tidy profit!). The breakfast profit was donated to the City of Fremont to finance a youth fishing pier at Lake Elizabeth – Niles Rotary has revisited that pier since then to move and refurbish it. (It needs it again in 2016!). Other community projects funded then included the YMCA, Boy’s Club, Boy Scouts, high school scholarships, and a two-year project to fund the flag pole, benches, and landscaping at the then new City Government Building. Lunches cost $3.00, and the population of Fremont reached 100,000.
Don and his late wife Babs were our club historians for many years. They served on the History Committee to write the Second Twenty-Five Years history book, and they collected the annual club history years from each club president as they left office. Much of our club history, as reflected in a year-by-year accounting on our website, comes from Don and Babs’ work. Don also served as our Rotary International Foundation chairman, and presented Paul Harris Fellows to many club members over the years.
As a polio survivor with post-polio syndrome, Don was our local inspiration for Rotary’s End Polio Now campaign. Here is a photo of Don showing we are “this close” to finishing the battle against Polio.
Don was quite involved in the community, having served on the board of Washington Township Hospital, Washington Hospital Foundation, Ohlone College Foundation, and serving in his professional organizations. Don was a key figure in the growth and development of Washington Hospital.
Among Don’s hobbies were planes and wine. He flew a Citabria airplane and a sailplane, and was famous for his aerobatics. Don’s demotion was held in the “Bucket of Blood Saloon,” a trendy establishment where the wine was stored in Erlenmeyer flasks and served through intravenous tubing. He also told great jokes, and was the winner of the first annual Niles Rotary Bad Joke Contest.
Don loved Niles Rotary, and will be missed.







