eyeglasses News Archive

19-Oct-2007

 

  • Midtown of old is long gone; it's time to look ahead (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)
    There's no place for nostalgia on the way to a new downtown.


  • Regional briefs (The Rockingham News)
    HAMPSTEAD -? Sara Care Adult Day Services, 201 Route 111 (in the mini-mall at the corner of Route 121) is hosting a harvest social on Saturday, Oct. 27 from 7 to 10 p.m. There will be hors d'oeuvres, entertainment, raffles and door prizes.


  • Lions Club recycles for sight (Farmington Press)
    The Farmington Lions Club is asking people to look through dresser drawers and closets for used eyeglasses and donate them to the Lions Recycle For Sight program.


  • A surreal look at love and metamorphosis (with frog) (San Jose Mercury News)
    Haruki Murakami maps the fault lines of love, fear and loss in "After the Quake." Identity shifts underfoot as comic-book heroes battle huge Kafkaesque insects just below the surface of reality in modern Japan.


  • Lions Club's 'visionary' collection drive is a success (Crookston Daily Times)
    Even though Lions World Sight Day came and went last week, Lions Club member Wayne Swanson says that citizens with used eyeglasses collecting dust around the house can still donate them to a good cause.


  • Program at Rutgers-Newark tackles Alzheimer's questions (The Star-Ledger)
    There are times 64-year-old Roberta Thompson of Roselle has searched furiously for her eyeglasses, only to discover they were perched on her nose. Carrie Alston, 90, of Orange is noticing it is harder for her to recall instructions or lists.


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