Page 8 — SUSQUEHANNA TIMES At Hostetter's-- We re Ready For Sp Scott’s — Play — Family — Shady — Picture Fertilizer A Turf Builder A Turf Builder Plus 2 Halts Plus Starter Rohrer’s, Burpee’s gz & Ferry Morse Wheel Barrows Scott Spreaders Ortho - Lawn/Garden/Hous Weed-B-Gon Systemic Insect Foggers Rose & Flower Isotox Chlordane Malathion Diazinon Fishing Equipment “Baseball & Softball A! Equipment Tennis Racquets RAKES, SHOVELS, HOES ALY AND OTHER GARDENING TOOLS Hostetter Hondware, Que. 93 EAST MAIN STREET : 653-1861 MOUNT JOY April 26, 1978 What the blind association does The Lancaster County Association for the Blind will make a public appeal for funds for the first time in its 52-year history, it announced recently. The money will be used to help build a $1.5 million for county blind and partially-sighted people. The present structure at 506 Walnut Street in Lancaster is too small for the scope of the Associa- tion’s activities. The new building will house a workshop, activity and therapy centers, teach- ing areas, an eye clinic to be open five full days a week, a library, pottery room, and other facilities. Below is a story, sent to us by Claire Lombard of Marietta, about how the Association has helped one woman. “Until I started going to the pottery class at the Blind Association five years ago, I had never gone anyplace by myself,’ re- marked Poliy Pennell. ‘Now, I go lots of places HF MEMBER Your Savings Insured to $40 00 24 East Main Street, Mount Joy Equal Credit Opportunity Lender First Federal SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF LANCASTER RAINY DAY MONEY 4% Passhooks day-in, day-out interest PHONE 653-8121 First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Lancaster Next to the Library and do things with them, and Mama doesn’t worry about me. She knows I'll be 0.K.” Polly, who- lives with her mother on West Main Street, Mount Joy, has had seriously impaired vision since her birth in 1918. An attempt to restore her sight was made when she was about twelve years old. She was operated on for the removal of the cataracts she had had since birth, but the operation was not successful. At that time, she was defined as legally blind because her vision was less than 20/200 in her one good eye, and she believed that nothing fur- ther could be done to help her. Then,when she was about 30, she heard of the Lancaster County Associa- tion for the Blind, where she applied for help. ‘‘Miss Paine was the head of it then,”’ she said with her never-failing smile. ‘‘I got my first glasses through them at that time, and that helped me a lot.” The glasses helped, and later her vision was improved even further with additional visits to the eye clinic. The increased activities and expanded programs of the Association in the past six or eight years have opened a broad new door for Polly. From going nowhere alone ever before in her 55 years, she started attending pottery classes shortly after they began in 1972, a weekly event she rarely misses due to the Mount Joy Lions Club who provide transportation for her whenever class is held. Because clay is a medium which can be controlled by touch, it allows the blind and partially sighted to accom- plish creative work on their own, once a few basic techniques are mastered. That’s why pottery was the first of the therapeutic craft classes begun by the Lancaster Association in its program expansion. From its beginning in 1926 until the early 70’s, the Association had con- centrated its efforts on rehabilitation training in basic living skills for the blind and partially sighted, providing them with a means to be financially independent through its sheltered workshop, and presenting a program to educate sighted people about ways to prevent blindness. These are and will remain the basic commitments of the Assoc- iation. However, the Board of Directors; its President, Robert Y. Garrett,Jr.; and Executive Director, Marion Campbell, believe an inno- vative enrichment program could be introduced without sacrifice to its original purpose and are acting on Left, Polly Pennell; right, Kitty Brown. Photo by Pat Abel. that premise. Begun in 1972, the pottery class has been taught since its inception by Mrs. John H. Brown and Mrs. Robert Lombard of Marietta, who are presently assisted by Jess- ica Sheetz of Mount Joy, and Mrs. Richard Neiman of Lancaster. A star pupil, Polly has long since mastered the techniques of managing the clay and turns out an endless variety of earthenware pieces, decorative tiles, candle- holders, bowls, baskets, and, most recently, a large bird-bath. Besides pottery, she enjoys attending the Social Club at the Association. For the past several years, she has attended Beacon Lodge, a summer camp for the blind near Lewistown, which is con- ducted by the Lions Clubs in Pennsylvania. She is looking forward to attend- ing camp again this year. RTL, the radio station announced on the ‘‘birth- day list’’ as she celebrated her 60th birthday April 14. another of Polly’s prime interests. She turns it on early to hear volunteers read the daily papers and listens for news about other members of the RTLfamily. This week her name was announced on the ‘‘birth- day list” as she celebrated her 60th birthday April 14. RTL, or Kadio Talking Library, is a sub-channel of WLAN-FM broadcasting on a closed-circuit to the blind and partially sighted of Lancaster City and County. Polly obtained her special receiver, pre-set to pick up only the RTL signal [or, when it’s not on the air, :WLAN-FM] at the Associa- tion headquarters where they are available to all blind and partially sighted. RTL, which was the first radio station in Penn- sylvania to broadcast to the blind, will greatly expand its operation when the agency moves to its new headquarters building at 244 North Queen Street. As that location will be more than four times larger than the present building, there will be ample space .to help meet the increased demand. Nearly all its burgeoning programs have waiting lists of applicants which cannot now be accepted because of space limitations. An important asset of the new building will be an eye clinic, the first in Pennsyl- vania to be housed in an agency for the blind. Staffed and supervised by local ophthalmologists who have volunteered their services, it will have advanced equipment for vision testing and provide low-vision aids now found only in major cities. It will be open five days a week and will serve private as well as clinic patients. A capital building fund drive is now in progress to raise the $1.5 million necessary to prepare the building for occupancy, the first time in its 52-year history the agency has asked for community sup- port in a capital drive. 9" "TY Ce TS er SS Lemp NO ty wn zz