Author: Fred Atchison

  • Taking a Stand Against Human Trafficking


    Topeka Rotarian Patty Mellard brought home a sobering message about the devastating reality of human trafficking in Kansas communities. Mellard is a 33 year Rotarian and a past President of the Topeka South Club. Currently she is also a member of the Rotary Club of Community Action Against Human Trafficking. Human trafficking is the act of exploiting another for personal gain, with an astounding 300,000 cases of sexual human trafficking occurring in the United States each year. The average age of the exploited is 12-14 and those individuals have an average life span of seven years without intervention. Relatives or partners make up 48% of the abusers and 20% of the male population are buyers. In the state of Kansas purchasing sex is only a misdemeanor. Incarcerated women are particularly vulnerable. Mellard described grants awarded the Community Action Club that assist, train and mentor that population. She thanked Lawrence Central Rotary for contributing to the purchase of winter care kits to support their work.

    Mellard has held numerous District responsibilities and is a successful Rotary grant writer. She is partially retired from her business Key Staffing and Employment Solutions. She enjoys fishing, gardening and her 14 grand kids.

  • International Development Through The Outreach Program

    Issac McNary, in full kilt regalia, spoke about his work with The Outreach Program. McNary, a resident of El Dorado, is a Rotary member and past club President. He also serves as Assistant District Governor for Rotary District 5680. McNary made his first humanitarian work trip to Nicaragua when he was in high school. He has worked on projects in Central America, South America, Africa and the United States. In 2009 he began organizing food packaging events to aid people in crisis situations around the globe. Presently, The Outreach Program is working in rural Tanzania to improve access to food, medicine and education. McNary’s expertise is in setting up small solar powered water purification systems. McNary speaks to many groups seeking support for the work in Tanzania. McNary is very proud of his Scott/Irish heritage and makes fancy soaps to raise money to fight polio, all in his spare time.

  • Untold Stories from Oak Hill

    Jeanne Klein, Professor Emerita, Kansas University, has been working on a project to find information about untold stories of black citizens buried in Oak Hill Cemetery. This historic Lawrence cemetery was established in 1865 and became the resting place for a number of people who were killed in the 1863 raid on the city by William Quantrill. So many notable figures were buried at Oak Hill that William Allen White referred to it as the “Arlington of Kansas.” Oak Hill was integrated by 1868 and many notable black citizens were buried there, including the minister Gabriel Gray, Charles and Mary Langston, the grandparents of Langston Hughes, and a number of veterans of the 79th and 83rd U.S. Colored Troops. However, a number of graves of other black citizens have damaged markers or no markers at all. Fortunately, burial records do exist and Klein is using them and consulting other historical sources to recreate lost stories. Klein urged people to visit Oak Hill and to support maintenance and restoration efforts.

  • District Governor Shares Rotary Experiences

    Jenalea Randall, District 5710 Governor, shared her Rotary story with Lawrence Central Rotary. Randall is visiting clubs and is a member of the Topeka South Rotary Club and will preside over District activities for 2023-2024. She provided an overview of District 5710 which consists of 1900 members and 41 clubs throughout Eastern Kansas. The District is a vital resource for all things Rotary, including training, grants, and club news. The district emphasizes collaboration and networking to improve the effectiveness of member clubs’ projects and activities. Randall has asked the District to focus on developing a regional mental health task force and also to work on equity projects to empower girls. Randall spoke of her own experience when she lost her husband to an aggressive brain cancer. She credited Rotary friends for helping her get through the experience and cope with the loss. Her enthusiasm, humor and candor were appreciated by all in attendance.

  • A Jewel of a Park

    Duane Peterson and Rod Croucher

    The Rotary Arboretum is a beautiful public park that was created as a result of a collaboration among the three Rotary Clubs in town and the City of Lawrence. Located at 5100 West 27th street, the Arboretum has inviting walking trails, water features, over 300 memorial trees, gardens, benches, a gazebo, a shelter house, barbecue grills and rest rooms. Duane Peterson and Rod Croucher, both Supervisors for the City of Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, provided an update on plans for the popular venue. Perhaps the biggest issue is that the park is running out of room for planting memorial trees. However, there are plans to expand into the adjacent acreage between the Arboretum and the ball diamond complex. The city is also working to get all irrigation for the park off of the city water supply which will reduce maintenance expense. Peterson and Croucher would also like to see a phone app created to complement the memorial trees identity web site. The two supervisors thanked club members for financial and volunteer help for the Arboretum.