Drive for Better Vision

Help the Georgia Lions Lighthouse Foundation Serve over 7500 People in Need

You can play hooky, play a round of golf and do the right thing at the same time. Our mission at the Lighthouse Foundation is to provide eye exams, glasses and even surgeries to Georgians who can’t afford that care.* All you have to do is come out and tee it up, or be a tournament sponsor. Join us for a day of competitions, prizes and food while you contribute to the Lions who make it possible for thousands of Georgians to see and hear better.

Where:
The Golf Club at Bradshaw Farm 3030 Bradshaw Club Drive Woodstock, GA 30188

When:
October 18, 2010 9am Shotgun Start
Buffet lunch, awards and prizes!
Get Involved – Make a Difference

  • Play a round of golf : $75 includes everything!
  • Be a Hole Sponsor: $250 per hole for your company name and logo.
  • Be a Tournament Sponsor: $500 to have your name and logo on everything!
  • Give us some swag: Donate whatever you can in gifts and doorprizes.

We plan to raise $5000 or more for the Georgia Lions Lighthouse Foundation.

Please call one of the following tour organizers and lend your support:
Scott Rogers – Tournament Chair: 678-886-6800
Blake Ivey: 770-855-8670
Mike Rapp : 404-455-6714
Steve Brett : 404-210-3437
David Gallagher: 678-360-5023

* Georgians who are uninsured, underinsured, and fall 200% below the Federal Poverty Guideline.

Download the flyer to email everyone you know!

Jimmy Carter Dedicates Statue

Oak Brook, Illinois, January 27, 2009 – Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter will dedicate the “Gift of Sight” statue on Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at Lions Clubs International headquarters, 300 W. 22nd St., Oak Brook.

The statue symbolizes Lions Clubs International Foundation’s (LCIF) ongoing collaborative efforts to combat preventable blindness and is a gift to Lions from The Carter Center.

The bronze statue depicts a child leading a man blinded by river blindness. For hundreds of years, a child leading a blind elder has been the fate of families stricken with river blindness, or onchocerciasis, in Africa and Latin America.

The dedication of the statue is part of a two-day symposium at Lions Clubs International headquarters where leading sight and health organizations from around the world will gather to discuss positive youth development and blindness prevention. A Lions club member, President Carter has long joined Lions in their fight to save and restore sight.

“Rosalynn and I have seen the devastating effects that blinding diseases have on individuals and their families. The Carter Center and Lions Clubs International Foundation, along with other vital partners, are working to preserve the vision of millions of people in Africa and the Americas,” said Carter Center Founder President Carter. “Thanks to these coordinated efforts, river blindness is nearly eliminated from the Western Hemisphere.”

LCIF recently completed a three-year global fundraising campaign, raising $203 million to continue and expand LCIF’s SightFirst program worldwide. Fifty million will fund projects to combat emerging threats to sight in the U.S. and other developed countries, such as conditions related to diabetes, low vision and glaucoma. More than $100 million will support programs that control and eliminate the major causes of blindness, such as river blindness, cataract and trachoma. The remaining $50+ million will fund support new research initiatives and rehabilitation.

LCIF has a long history of partnering with The Carter Center and Merck & Co, Inc. to fight river blindness. Through these joint efforts, experts predict river blindness will be eliminated in Latin America by the year 2012.

“It is a great honor to have former President Jimmy Carter dedicate this symbolic statue,” said Lions Clubs International President, Albert Brandel. “This partnership program is preventing and eliminating blindness around the world, and Lions are proud to take a hands-on approach.”

Currently river blindness is prevalent in Latin America and Africa and is transmitted by the bite of a black fly. The disease is often blinding but can be treated through medication. Merck has donated 600 million doses of this medicine through its MECTIZAN Donation Program to LCIF and other partners, and LCIF has awarded more than $30 million to The Carter Center for river blindness and other eye disease control programs through the Lions-Carter Center SightFirst Initiative. Lions play a vital local role in the programs, helping educate people on the diseases, distributing the drug and providing for eye health training and equipment.

“We are very proud to be a part of this global partnership effort to help eliminate river blindness,” said Dr. Vlad Hogenhuis, Senior Vice President of Neuroscience and Ophthalmics at Merck & Co., Inc. “Merck is committed to vision care and improving the lives of patients around the world through research, development and delivery of breakthrough medications.”

Partnerships with leading NGOs and corporations play a key role in enabling Lions to promote and expand the global humanitarian effort to combat preventable blindness.

The statue was commissioned by The Carter Center Board Chair, John Moores. The sculptor, R.T. “Skip” Wallen, internationally recognized sculptor and printmaker from Juneau, Alaska volunteered his time to produce the original bronze study. Other life-size castings of the “Gift of Sight” statue are located at The Carter Center in Atlanta and Merck & Co, Inc. Headquarters in Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, as well as four additional locations worldwide.

www.lionsclubs.org www.lcif.org