eyeglasses News Archive

01-May-2008

 

  • Camden Lions see globally with eyeglass campaign (Camden Herald)
    CAMDEN ? The Camden Lions Club had a first-hand look, recently, at how their organization?s eyeglasses recycling program benefits people in need in other countries, and it has been proposed that the Club help fund eye-care programs in a community in Columbia for one year.


  • Crafty crew sews and smiles at WARMC (Mohave Valley Daily News)
    BULLHEAD CITY - Reginia Huth, 88, adjusts her eyeglasses, folds over the fabric and pulls the needle through. A sewing kit with colorful bobby pins and thread sits on the table in front of her, next to a few more hot pads she's finishing up.


  • People open wallets, hearts for fire victims (New London Day)
    Norwich - Picking up the pieces of lives shattered by fire takes everything from thousands of dollars in cash to new personal records to a


  • State donates glasses to area Lions Clubs (Lake County Journals)
    Eyeglasses forgotten at airports across the state now will improve the vision of people around the world.


  • Health experts step up debate over safety of plastics (Dothan Eagle)
    WASHINGTON ? When people say plastics are everywhere, they really mean everywhere: in the containers that hold your food; in the pipes that carry your water; in the bottles you use to feed your infant; in windows frames, shower curtains and raincoats; in eyeglasses and safety helmets; in phones or keyboards.


  • Wellsburg Lions elimination dinner to be held Saturday (The Steubenville Herald-Star)
    WELLSBURG ? The Wellsburg Lions Club will hold its 13th-annual elimination drawing and dinner Saturday at the Wellsburg Elks Lodge on Charles Street.


  • Health Experts Step Up Debate Over Safety Of Plastics (The Morning News)
    WASHINGTON - When people say plastics are everywhere, they really mean everywhere: in the containers that hold your food; in the pipes that carry your water; in the bottles you use to feed your infant; in window frames, shower curtains and raincoats; in eyeglasses and safety helmets; in phones or keyboards. They're in clothing; they're in toys; they're in bandages, lipstick and nail polish.


  • Jobless adults give teens a run for money (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
    Freda Howell looked a bit out of place on the job-fair floor, a put-together 51-year-old in suit and pearls amid a gaggle of teenagers wearing backpacks and hoping to earn some summer cash.


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