Sharing Rotary
Description: page 55 In: Rotary Club of Manila. The Rotary Balita No. 724 to 748Summary: Rotarian W. Eric Stinton, governor of district 28, in writing to his clubs about extension possibilities, pointed out: "Every living thing must grow and reproduce its kind. It is the law of life. It is also the law of Rotary. The only alternative is stagnation, incrustation and ultimate interment. Rotary has a rare quality of giving away. The more you give away the more you have. The more you have the more you share. Organizing new clubs is a method of sharing." The admission of one new Rotary club does not increase appreciably the total number of clubs that make up Rotary International. But, steady day-by-day increases keep pushing the total clubs to a new high, providing more and more business and professional men of good will an opportunity to share Rotary.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Serials | ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA | RCM-000018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | RCM-000018 |
The Rotary Balita no. 740 (February 25, 1954)
Rotarian W. Eric Stinton, governor of district 28, in writing to his clubs about extension possibilities, pointed out: "Every living thing must grow and reproduce its kind. It is the law of life. It is also the law of Rotary. The only alternative is stagnation, incrustation and ultimate interment. Rotary has a rare quality of giving away. The more you give away the more you have. The more you have the more you share. Organizing new clubs is a method of sharing." The admission of one new Rotary club does not increase appreciably the total number of clubs that make up Rotary International. But, steady day-by-day increases keep pushing the total clubs to a new high, providing more and more business and professional men of good will an opportunity to share Rotary.
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