Golden News
Volume
14 No 30
February 6th, 2001
The
Weekly Bulletin of the Rotary Club of Kowloon Golden Mile
www.rckgm.org
FEBRUARY IS WORLD UNDERSTANDING MONTH
Last Meeting
Guess
what? Back in the usual room again, for old time’s sake! Must be the festive
season’s end. Oh well it was good to see the usual gathering in its rightful
place and well attended. There were 38 Rotarians present and one guest, which is
the beginning of an improvement. We may need to order more peanuts for Rotarian
Elissa. We sat down on time and the formal part of the meeting started at about
12 minutes past one, with loud banging of gong and fortunately no choir practice
i.e. no birthdays. But what do we have this week?
Birthday Boy
Rotarian Dyal – 9th February HBTY,HBTY,HBTDD,HBTY!
Rtn.
Long John Silva then announced that there were no visiting Rotarians, they must
have heard about our singing, followed by Rotarian Carola who invited Rtn.
Patricia to introduce her guest, Ms Jenny Drew from
U.K.
President
Cassidy next announced the Housework project for the elderly in Yau Ma Tei and
called for volunteers to sweep and dust etc.
The
assembled members of our club then showed their joint world community spirit by
quickly approving a donation of HK$50,000 (included later were the contents of
the red or blue boxes on each table which amounted to about HK$3,000) towards
funds for helping the many thousands of victims of the recent devastating
earthquake in India. There was an urgent meeting of the directors afterwards to
decide of the most appropriate and speedy method of getting the funds to where
they were needed.
Our Speaker – Interpersonal Trust In Business
Rtn.
Elissa then introduced Ms Yuet-Ha Mo, M.A., M.B.A., and a Graduate Research
Student from the University of Oxford, Department of Experimental Psychology.
Ms
Mo spoke to us on the subject of Interpersonal Trust in Business, the area she
is currently researching for a doctoral thesis. Her most interesting talk
covered research of the cultural differences between people in the South of
England, Shanghai and Hong Kong in judging whether they
can trust people in their business dealings with
them.
In
our daily lives, it is hard to pin down the underlying factors that make us
trust a person. Perhaps it is about the chemistry with that person, or the
person's charisma or professionalism; or perhaps it is based on pure
intuition. Other scholars, mainly at Management School, have studied
business trust. The presentation broke down the concept of trust into all
possible elements and attitudes from the perspective of social psychology. In
addition Ms Mo wished to share some of her learning about business trust with
us, particularly some qualitative observations of trust attitudes in Shanghai
and Southern England after a number of exploratory interviews with business
owners.
In
the course of her talk Ms Mo spoke about some of the set of expectations that
would be shared by those involved in the exchange where presumably trust
existed. The set included:
·
Honesty
·
Integrity
·
Openness
·
Fairness
·
Reliability
(keeping commitments)
·
Competence
·
Professionalism
(difficult to translate conceptually across
cultures)
·
Reputation
(in field of expertise)
·
The
history of consistently reliable earlier
transactions
·
Existence
of reciprocal obligations
·
Agreement
on the definitions of major terms
·
Perceived/experienced
reliability and honesty
·
Mutual
benefits (Win, Win situations) and
·
Reciprocation
of favours (information, referrals new business
etc)
But
your humble scribe has no doubt left a few out during his attempt not to miss
out on lunch (honesty and openness!).
Although
Ms Mo was not able to offer conclusions at this stage, which she promised to do
in a years time, she was however able to say that her impression is that the
cultural difference in this area appears less profound than might hitherto have
been thought.
There was, as is traditional in KGM a lively session of question including one, which wondered whether the Scots had been omitted for any particular reason. Our speaker of course replied with integrity and honesty that funding and time constraints for the research were the limiting factors.
Rotn
Carola Gave the vote of thanks.
Next
Meeting
Dr
Sylvia Mills – Handling Stress (me after writing the
above!)
On Vocation! With Rotarian Kenneth
Classification - Law Practicing -
Conveyancing
I
am a Charter Member of the Club and a solicitor by profession. Although my main legal practice has been
in banking and commercial, I was designated a membership classification of “law
practice-conveyancing” because another banking lawyer also joined the Club when
it was inaugurated. Now my practice
also extends to liquidation and insurance, as my law firm was one of the two
main law firms appointed to represent the liquidator in the past 10 years in the
winding-up of Bank of Credit and 30Commerce in Hong
Kong.
Throughout
all these years I have thoroughly enjoyed being a member of the Club because of
all the good friends I have made from there, as well as the excellent fellowship
the Club provides.
I
firmly believe in “working hard, playing hard and continuous education”. Law practice in Hong Kong is very
demanding and highly competitive.
Being the senior partner of my law firm, my daily routine includes a lot
of administrative matters, besides the major legal works that require my
personal attention. Very hectic
indeed!
Legal
practice aside, I have in the past 3 years become a keen practitioner in
Ballroom and Latin Dancing (aka Dance Sport in modern term), having an average
of 2 practice sessions each week (to keep myself in good shape) and many
invitations to balls and parties.
Fellow Rotarians, let me tell you something, a man who can dance is such
a rare species that his popularity (among ladies) is beyond one’s
expectation. In addition, I try to
take a holiday break once a month.
I left for Beijing in last November, India in December and New York in
January 2001. For the rest of the
year, my plans so far are a gourmet trip to Shunde (PRC) and spa trip to Macau
in February and March respectively, to Chengsha (Chairman Mao’s birth-place) for
Easter in April, probably to Peking again in May, definitely to Texas for
the RI Convention in June and to Inner Mongolia in July/August, to
London/Edinburgh in September and Shanghai in early November (for the hairy
crabs). That explains why my Club
attendance is on occasions less than
satisfactory.
As
for continuous education, after getting 2 Master of Laws degrees in 1997 and
1998, I am now working hard on the final thesis for my Doctorate from Peking
University, hopefully to be on time for the award of degree in summer this
year.
Indeed,
life is very busy, wonderful and full of good fun.
The Rotary
Foundation
The
following is a synopsis of a report from PDG Dipo on the final results of our
District’s contribution to the Rotary Foundation during the last Rotary Year
(1999-000).
“District
3450 Goal and Contribution History 1999 -
2000
Annual
Giving Goal
$140,000
Attainment 198%
Annual
Giving Contributions
$277,031
Annual
Giving Per Capita
$161.25
Total
Contributions
$519,612
District
Designated Fund
(Share
credit available
For
2002-3) $178,822
Zones
4(B), 6(B) and 7(B) i.e. (26 Districts)
Comparison
Top
5 Districts for Annual
Giving
per Capita:
1st: 3450
$161.25
2nd: 3500
$128.12
3rd: 3490
$126.36
4th: 3520
$
96.73
5th: 3460
$
83.97
Top
5 Districts for Total Contributions
1st: 3450
$519,692
2nd: 3510
$449,100
3rd: 3460
$345,380
4th: 3520
$337,125
5th: 3490 $301,03
As
you can see due to your excellent efforts, our District came first for both
Annual Giving per capita and for Total Contributions. All this would not have
been possible generosity of all Rotarians during the year.”
PDG
Dipo has asked that his heartfelt gratitude be conveyed to all members of
Kowloon Golden Mile for their help in achieving our goals, in addition to his
encouragement to continue to give during this present Rotary Year.
KGM
Web Site
From the Webmaster
Hi
folks. It's been a while since I last annoyed you, so allow me to update you on
a few matters:
1)
E-mail
Distribution Lists
- Members are reminded that the KGM E-mail Distribution Lists may only be used
for official KGM business. They are NOT to be used for the promotion of personal
and/or commercial interests, associations or
organisations.
2)
Web
Site Additions
- Since your Webmaster doesn't have a life, particularly while his beloved wife
is still gallivanting about in Manila, giving her VISA card an
unneeded workout <sigh>, I have used the last 7 lonely nights to
make a number of additions to our web site:
a)
If you click on the "?"
at the very top right-hand corner of the main page, you will find that we now
offer a translation
of our web page into Spanish, French, German, Italian and Portuguese.
Although I have added a disclaimer that the translations may not be perfect,
certain cruel members of our club, who I recruited as "testers", are still
laughing. Damned foreigners! OK, so the translations are bloody awful, but it
was a choice of creating this new feature or watching re-runs of "Bay
watch"
I
originally also offered a translation into Chinese, however it was apparently
such a poor translation, PP Robin Ching threatened to beat me over the
head with his abacus if I didn't remove it. These violent PP's are starting
to worry me!
b)
If you click on "Humour"
at the top of the page, then click on "KGM
Dancers",
you will see our dancers gyrating to a song from the Bee Gees. WARNING:
The dancers are not wearing any clothing - parental guidance is
advised!
3)
Virtual
Postcards
- As advised in an earlier message, KGM now has it's own "Virtual
Post Office".
Just click on "Post Office" at the top of web page. However the exciting news is
that you can now also send a copy
of the KGM Banner Postcard
to friends, family, business associates or other Rotarians around the
world.
When
you click on the "Virtual Post Office", you will see a button called
"Specials". If you click on this, the very first card on the left is the
KGM Banner Postcard. Just click on it, select from the various options, add your
personal message and bingo-bango !
By
the way, our web site statistics reveal that 82% of our visitors are from
overseas, 93% of them use Internet Explorer and we are getting between 10 to 25
"hits" every day. Not too shabby for a little ol' Rotary Club in Little China
!!
Also, did you know that our web site is now comprised of 180
pages of information?
That's
all for now folks. As usual, if you have any suggestions on how we can improve
our web site, you know where to find me.
The Phantom
Dreadful Puns of the
Weak
A
neutron goes into a bar and asks the bartender, "How much for a beer?" The
bartender replies, "for you, no charge."
A
three-legged dog walked into a saloon in the Old West. He sidled up to the bar
and announced: "I'm looking for the man who shot my
paw..."
Two
boll weevils grew up in South Carolina. One went to Hollywood and became a
famous actor. The other stayed behind in the cotton fields and never amounted to
much. He became known as the lesser of two weevils.
Two
fishermen sitting in a kayak were chilly, so they lit a fire in the craft. It
sank; proving once and for all that you can't have your kayak and heat it,
too.
Brain Teaser
Amoebae
Troubles…
Every
minute the cellular creature splits in two halves, each one immediately growing
to the same size as the parent, In 60 minutes the multitude of amoebae
completely fill their container. To the nearest minute, how much time was needed
to half-fill the container?
Presidential
Quotation
“Maturity
begins to grow when you can sense your concern for others outweighing you
concern for yourself.”
John
Macnaughton
URCHIN