Bob Dylan is doing a summer tour of minor league baseball parks (a pretty cool concept in itself) and will play New Britain (CT) Stadium, home of the Minnesota Twins' Rock Cats, on Tuesday August 29. But the REAL news is that Lou Ann Barton ("one of the finest purveyors of raw, unadulterated roadhouse blues from the female gender that you'll ever hear."-AMG) will be appearing with Jimmy Vaughan, brother of Stevie Ray and co-founder of the Fabulous Thunderbirds! Also on the tour are Junior Brown and Elana James & The Continental Two. We are thinking of getting a group together to go. Tickets are available at $49.50 general admission. Go to bobdylan.com to purchase. Date is August 29th. As date gets closer we will talk about going as a group. |
A little peek into our social, administrative and fundraising activities.
Friday, July 21, 2006
I wanna be Bob Dylan....
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Nice article in the R-J about Rotary member...
Plantsville Pharmacy has had success despite emergence of chains
By Rachel K. Raczka, Record-Journal staff
SOUTHINGTON — In the age of the chain pharmacy, it is a true rarity. Plantsville Pharmacy, appropriately situated among the village’s many antique shops, is marking its 60th year of continuous ownership by the same family. Pharmacist James Potrepka calls it “a quiet celebration.” The store, previously named Hallahan’s Pharmacy, was purchased by siblings Frank, Bernadine and Chester Potrepka Sr. in April 1946 and renamed Plantsville Pharmacy. “It’s an icon. When you mention Plantsville you think of the pharmacy. It has been the one place everyone gathers around,” said Art Secondo, president of the Greater Southington Chamber of Commerce. The building has functioned as a pharmacy under different names since the 1800s. Today, Plantsville Pharmacy is run by cousins and pharmacists Chester and James Potrepka, both of Southington.
“It’s an unofficial historic landmark,” said Chester Potrepka, who began working for his father in 1980, after graduating from the University of Connecticut Pharmacy School in 1977. Creaky wooden floors and antique light fixtures are the first things one notices setting foot in the pharmacy. The racks of candy have handwritten price tags. Shelves of medications and rustic wooden filing cabinets with phone numbers written on aging Post-it notes line the backroom, in obvious contrast to the atmosphere of the CVS or Walgreens up the road. “The fixtures may look antique, but we have up-to-date computer filing systems,” Chester Potrepka said. The pharmacy uses a QS1 Pharmacy System that continuously updates itself.
“We’re very satisfied,” James Potrepka said of the computer system. The store’s timework appearance, however, is deliberate. “It’s a village atmosphere and historically pharmacies have always looked like this,” he said. James Potrepka also graduated from UConn Pharmacy School in 1970 and abandoned his original plans to be a veterinarian to work in the family business. “I am very happy with my decision,” he said.
Competing with chain pharmacies that offer services such as drive-through prescription pickup and 24-hour service does not intimidate Plantsville Pharmacy. “What’s kept it here is the loyalty of the customers,” Chester Potrepka said. “We’re a hometown business, basically run by your neighbors.” Secondo said the reason for its longevity is the personalized service that only a familyowned pharmacy provides. Customers also like the idea of patronizing the same establishment where their parents shopped. “While many things in the world have changed, chain pharmacies have come and gone in the town, but Plantsville Pharmacy is still there,” he said.
Both pharmacists said they would not consider another job with a commercial pharmacy. “I enjoy working with the community. I love this community and I love the people in this town,” James Potrepka said. “Customers feel safer getting something from someone who cares,” said Chester Potrepka’s daughter, Jessica Potrepka, 20, a clerk at the pharmacy. “They get to know the pharmacists and form a bond.”
rraczka@record-journal.com 203.235.1661
By Rachel K. Raczka, Record-Journal staff
SOUTHINGTON — In the age of the chain pharmacy, it is a true rarity. Plantsville Pharmacy, appropriately situated among the village’s many antique shops, is marking its 60th year of continuous ownership by the same family. Pharmacist James Potrepka calls it “a quiet celebration.” The store, previously named Hallahan’s Pharmacy, was purchased by siblings Frank, Bernadine and Chester Potrepka Sr. in April 1946 and renamed Plantsville Pharmacy. “It’s an icon. When you mention Plantsville you think of the pharmacy. It has been the one place everyone gathers around,” said Art Secondo, president of the Greater Southington Chamber of Commerce. The building has functioned as a pharmacy under different names since the 1800s. Today, Plantsville Pharmacy is run by cousins and pharmacists Chester and James Potrepka, both of Southington.
“It’s an unofficial historic landmark,” said Chester Potrepka, who began working for his father in 1980, after graduating from the University of Connecticut Pharmacy School in 1977. Creaky wooden floors and antique light fixtures are the first things one notices setting foot in the pharmacy. The racks of candy have handwritten price tags. Shelves of medications and rustic wooden filing cabinets with phone numbers written on aging Post-it notes line the backroom, in obvious contrast to the atmosphere of the CVS or Walgreens up the road. “The fixtures may look antique, but we have up-to-date computer filing systems,” Chester Potrepka said. The pharmacy uses a QS1 Pharmacy System that continuously updates itself.
“We’re very satisfied,” James Potrepka said of the computer system. The store’s timework appearance, however, is deliberate. “It’s a village atmosphere and historically pharmacies have always looked like this,” he said. James Potrepka also graduated from UConn Pharmacy School in 1970 and abandoned his original plans to be a veterinarian to work in the family business. “I am very happy with my decision,” he said.
Competing with chain pharmacies that offer services such as drive-through prescription pickup and 24-hour service does not intimidate Plantsville Pharmacy. “What’s kept it here is the loyalty of the customers,” Chester Potrepka said. “We’re a hometown business, basically run by your neighbors.” Secondo said the reason for its longevity is the personalized service that only a familyowned pharmacy provides. Customers also like the idea of patronizing the same establishment where their parents shopped. “While many things in the world have changed, chain pharmacies have come and gone in the town, but Plantsville Pharmacy is still there,” he said.
Both pharmacists said they would not consider another job with a commercial pharmacy. “I enjoy working with the community. I love this community and I love the people in this town,” James Potrepka said. “Customers feel safer getting something from someone who cares,” said Chester Potrepka’s daughter, Jessica Potrepka, 20, a clerk at the pharmacy. “They get to know the pharmacists and form a bond.”
rraczka@record-journal.com 203.235.1661
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
Thank You!!!!
Thank you, everyone who participated in this event, for supporting the Southington Rotary Club projects for another year.
Golf foursomes pictures
Golf pictures
Dinner pictures
Golf awards
Golf foursomes pictures
Golf pictures
Dinner pictures
Golf awards
Monday, July 10, 2006
Thomson Scholar announced by Rotary (Record-Journal)
Senior Aaron Laviana, of Notre Dame University, has been selected the 2006 Southington Rotary William S. Thomson Scholar and will be honored at the annual William S. Thomson Golf Scramble Dinner Aqua Turf Club on Wednesday, July 12. The Thomson scholarships are for post-secondary (graduate or undergraduate) students who as seniors, were recipients of Southington Rotary Club scholarships.
Aaron Alan Laviana, a 2003 Southington High School graduate, will receive a $3,000 scholarship. Aaron is a senior at the University of Notre Dame double majoring in biology and economics with a 3.77 grade point average. He plans to attend medical school with the aspiration of becoming a doctor specializing in oncology. Aaron has interned at the UConn Health Center conducting colon cancer research as part of their graduate school fellowship program. He has had previous research experience at Yale University conducting skin cancer research.
“Part of the reason being a doctor appeals to me also deals with the field’s dualistic nature of combining intellectualism and humanism. Studying genomes to explain the fundamental principles of cancer is one thing: being able to apply this and deal with the delicate side of helping an individual is quite another. In a sense, being a doctor is exploring the artistic side of science, and my experiences of working in clinics have only reinforced this point. Through interacting with numerous cancer patients, some grasping for their last breaths of air and others indistinguishable from your average healthy teenager, I have learned the need to care for all aspects of a patient’s health. By attending medical school I hope to further learn how to meet the concerns of the patients and treat them according to their individual needs.”
Aaron Alan Laviana, a 2003 Southington High School graduate, will receive a $3,000 scholarship. Aaron is a senior at the University of Notre Dame double majoring in biology and economics with a 3.77 grade point average. He plans to attend medical school with the aspiration of becoming a doctor specializing in oncology. Aaron has interned at the UConn Health Center conducting colon cancer research as part of their graduate school fellowship program. He has had previous research experience at Yale University conducting skin cancer research.
“Part of the reason being a doctor appeals to me also deals with the field’s dualistic nature of combining intellectualism and humanism. Studying genomes to explain the fundamental principles of cancer is one thing: being able to apply this and deal with the delicate side of helping an individual is quite another. In a sense, being a doctor is exploring the artistic side of science, and my experiences of working in clinics have only reinforced this point. Through interacting with numerous cancer patients, some grasping for their last breaths of air and others indistinguishable from your average healthy teenager, I have learned the need to care for all aspects of a patient’s health. By attending medical school I hope to further learn how to meet the concerns of the patients and treat them according to their individual needs.”
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