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Page 20 <strong>Franklin</strong> Local Town Pages www.localtownpages.com <strong>July</strong> <strong>2017</strong><br />

<strong>Franklin</strong> Rotary Club Treats<br />

Local Seniors to Pasta Supper<br />

By J.D. O’Gara<br />

Over 100 seniors from <strong>Franklin</strong><br />

attended a delicious pasta<br />

supper at Central Park Terrace<br />

on the beautiful summer night<br />

of June 15th. The event was<br />

the 26th Annual Pasta Supper<br />

provided by the <strong>Franklin</strong> Rotary<br />

Club. Rotarian John R. Padula, a<br />

Licensed & Insured<br />

Singer Tony Dale entertained <strong>Franklin</strong> seniors at the pasta supper.<br />

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of 13 children and a Rotarian<br />

since 1961, began the tradition,<br />

which draws a crowd each year.<br />

“The young kids can take care<br />

of themselves, and the middle<br />

people, but the seniors, they need<br />

help, and it’s good to entertain<br />

them and feed them,” says Padula.<br />

“It’s a free meal and entertainment<br />

every year.”<br />

Entertainment was provided<br />

by Tony Dale, with Diane Padula<br />

O’Neill. The Rotarians were<br />

aided by young people from both<br />

the Bellingham National Honor<br />

Society as well as the Rotaract, a<br />

Junior Rotary Club in <strong>Franklin</strong><br />

founded in November of 2016<br />

that is made up of Dean College<br />

students aged 17-22 and advised<br />

by Carlos Aguillera.<br />

The <strong>Franklin</strong> Rotary Club is<br />

one of the oldest Rotary Clubs<br />

in the country, in existence since<br />

1929, according to Dr. Bill Koplin,<br />

member. The original Rotary<br />

Club formed in Chicago in<br />

1905 as a way for professionals<br />

to network and give back to the<br />

community. The organization<br />

now boasts 1.2 million members<br />

in 35,000 clubs in nearly every<br />

country in the world. According<br />

to the international website,<br />

www.rotary.org, the six areas of<br />

focus for the Rotary Club is promoting<br />

peace, fighting disease,<br />

providing clean water, sanitation<br />

and hygiene, saving mothers and<br />

children, supporting education<br />

and growing local economies.<br />

“Our goal is to spread world<br />

peace through understanding<br />

and education,” says <strong>Franklin</strong><br />

Rotarian Dan Gentile. He notes<br />

that the international group has<br />

spent over $1 billion in efforts to<br />

end polio throughout the world,<br />

Rotarian John Padula, (maker of delicious meatballs), began the<br />

<strong>Franklin</strong> Rotary Club’s dinner for local seniors 26 years ago.<br />

beginning in 1979 with vaccinations<br />

for 6 million children in<br />

the Philippines. Those efforts<br />

have almost come to fruition,<br />

with polio endemic in only three<br />

countries.<br />

Locally, the group supports<br />

students through scholarships,<br />

the <strong>Franklin</strong> Food Pantry and<br />

other local causes. In fact, the<br />

group has provided memorial<br />

benches for the <strong>Franklin</strong> Town<br />

Common, street signs named<br />

for fallen soldier and support<br />

for the <strong>Franklin</strong> Senior Center.<br />

The motto of the organization is<br />

“Service above Self.”<br />

The annual pasta supper is<br />

another way the Rotary Club<br />

gives back to residents.<br />

“We put notices out to seniors<br />

in the area, and they come,”<br />

says Gentile. When asked why<br />

he participates each year in the<br />

effort, Gentile adds, “A little old<br />

lady came up to me one year<br />

and said, ‘I had such a wonderful<br />

time. Thank you! I get my hair<br />

done once a year for this.’ That’s<br />

the reason I keep doing it.” The<br />

Rotary Club, he says, is “a way to<br />

give back to the community and<br />

give back to the world.”<br />

The <strong>Franklin</strong> Rotary Club<br />

meets on Thursday evenings, at<br />

6 p.m., at the 3 Restaurant, 461<br />

West Central Street (Rte. 140),<br />

<strong>Franklin</strong>. Interested prospective<br />

members are welcome.<br />

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Making local seniors happy is a family affair as well as a <strong>Franklin</strong> Rotary Club endeavor. Shown, from left,<br />

Tony Dale, John R. Padula, Diane Padula O’Neill, and Maryellen Padula.

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