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TENNESSEE'S FIRST BREAKFAST ROTARY CLUB
The Oak Ridge Breakfast Rotary Club was organized in April 1980 with the assistance of Red Williams, a member of Oak Ridge Rotary Club who was serving District 6780 as Governor.
ORBRC was officially chartered at a meeting at the Elk’s Club on the evening of June 27, 1980, as the state’s first breakfast Rotary club.
Those who have served the club as president are:
The Council of Presidents – COPs – was organized during the 2007-2008 club year by then-president Karen Bridgeman. The group, which counts 20 past presidents (including Jerry Young, who served as president of the Stowe-Munro Rotary Club before joining ORBRC) and the current president and president-elect among its members, supports the club as needed and requested by the current board of directors and oversees awards, recognitions, and special projects.
In 1986, Clyde Hopkins was named the club’s first “Man of the Year.” The honor was changed to “Rotarian of the Year” in 1991 when the award went to the club’s first woman member (and in 1995, its first woman president), Wanda Craven.
Nominations come from club members and the criteria are many. The most important may be that the choice be recognized with nods of agreement at the annual meeting. This truly is an award that is earned by service and recognized by club members as significant.
The honoree:
Cathy Toth was honored at the 2009 annual meeting as the 2008-2009 Rotarian of the Year, nominated by a five club members who cited her work as leader of the Youth Services Committee and her support in establishing the Robertsville Middle School YouthAct Club.
Winners over the years include:
ORBRC presents an annual award to honor an individual who exemplifies Rotary's motto, "Service Above Self."
Wilbur "Dub" Shults established the award to honor those who have performed exceptional and sacrificial service to others or to the community over an extended period of time. The award has been presented nine times since 2000. Members of the club are not eligible for the award.
In the context of this award, "service" designates personal effort of a volunteer nature that is not a component of an individual's occupation. The award carries with it a $1,000 contribution to the effort or charity designated by the winner.
Diantha Paré was selected as the 2008 recipient of the award for her tireless work in the Oak Ridge community.
In 2003, she was recognized as a Community Hero, and she helped found and still tends the Memorial Garden at the Unitarian Universalist Church. Her love of nature has made her a long-time board member of the UT Arboretum Society.
"Indeed, Diantha Paré is a gardener working throughout the community, planting the seeds of justice and tending them with the water of compassion," Emily Jernigan and Jake Morrill wrote in their nomination. "Her vision and her care are abundantly evident in all of her days."
Along with a plaque, ORBRC awarded Paré $1000 to donate to her designated charities. She has chosen to divide the funds between Healthy Start and the Sallie McCaskill Scholarship Fund.
Previous winners of the award include:
To download a copy of the guidelines for the Club's Service Above Self awards,
Click here for an article published in The Oak Ridger about Hugh and Lucy Parker, the first winners of ORBRC's Service Above Self award.
CHILDREN OF THE WORLD SCULPTURE
One of the projects that most visibly connects ORBRC to the community is the "Children of the World" sculpture on the corner of Oak Ridge Turnpike and South Tulane Avenue.
Eric Anthony Nuchols (1961-2007) was the sculptor who created “Children of the World,” a gift to the City of Oak Ridge from Oak Ridge Breakfast Rotary Club. . According to his obituary in The Oak Ridger on July 30, 2007, “Mr. Nuchols worked for many years with Pathway Bellows, which became Senior Flextronics Pathway. He was part of a specialty welding team, which took him to many different countries around the world.
“He was a local artist who received tremendous recognition throughout East Tennessee for his works of art using the medium of stainless steel and heat and spent months heating, cooling, pounding and rolling a sheet of stainless steel into a dramatic art work of religious art.”
He was a 1980 graduate of Oak Ridge High School and served with the U.S. Army, 82nd Airborne Division, spending time in the U.S. and in Italy.
The sculpture was conceived and created in the mid-1990s when Wanda Craven was president of ORBRC. Wanda, who served the club with distinction in each of the four avenues of service, had a special interest in children and the children of the world, involving the club in service to an orphanage in Russia, among other projects.
Wanda also started our Christmas Angels project (which serves Willow Brook Elementary School students and their siblings who might otherwise face a bleak holiday) and the Mystery Dinners (which place trusting Rotarians on a bus and delivers them to a surprise location for a wonderful evening out), and remains an honorary member of our club.
ORBRC originally met at the Ridge Inn, a motel on Illinois Avenue. As membership grew, it moved to the Holiday Inn, then to the Nancy Stanley Room at the YWCA, then to the Community Room at Oak Ridge Mall (1998). On November 2, 2005, the club moved to the Wildcat Den in the historic Midtown Community Center on the corner of Oak Ridge Turnpike and Robertsville Road.
We began meeting at The Event Center at The Flatwater Grill, the conference center formerly known as Inspiration Point, at 100 Peninsula Drive, just off Melton Lake Drive on Oak Ridge’s east end, on March 7, 2007.
Meetings begin promptly at 7:30 with a song, a prayer, and the Pledge of Allegiance. After club business and a program, the meeting adjourns at 8:15 a.m.
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