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Jun 22, 2015
 
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Laura Lisicki
May 21
 
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May 27
 
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May 30
 
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Debbie Locke-Daniels
May 21, 2012
3 years
 
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May 21, 2012
3 years
 
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May 18, 2015
Representative David Rutledge

State Representative David E. Rutledge is serving his third term for House District 54, which includes the City of Ypsilanti, along with Superior and Ypsilanti Townships. He is currently the Minority Vice Chair of the Military and Veterans Affairs Committee, and serves on the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and Local Government Committee.

He is the president of Alpha Environmental Services Inc. and has also served on the Washtenaw County Road Commission, the Washtenaw Community College Board of Trustees, the State Boundary Commission and the Ann Arbor Community Foundation. He earned a bachelor¹s degree in political science from Tennessee State University.

Rutledge and his wife, Geraldine Simmons Rutledge, have two children, Marcus and Felicia, and two grandchildren, Kelton and Darius.

Stories
Thousands of women across Rotary deserve recognition on International Women's Day, March 8, and while it isn't possible to highlight them all, we chose to profile several of them. These are women who work tirelessly on behalf of others, and whose efforts touch lives across the world, often in remote and inhospitable places. With projects focused on child and maternal healtheconomic development, and other humanitarian concerns, these women are proof of Rotary's diversity and global reach.
 
This year marks 30 years since Rotary launched PolioPlus, its campaign to rid the world of polio. Beginning on Rotary's anniversary, 23 February, Rotary members worldwide will be holding events to celebrate three decades of polio eradication progress.

Since 1985 Rotary and its partners have helped reduce the number of cases from 350,000 annually to fewer than 400 in 2014, and they remain committed until the disease is eradicated. Rotary has contributed more than $1.3 billion and countless volunteer hours to protect more than 2 billion children worldwide. In addition, Rotary's advocacy efforts have played a role in decisions by donor governments to contribute over $10 billion to the effort.

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