Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fayettevil­le Lions saving sight for 95 years

- LAURINDA JOENKS

Sydney Bailey recalled her best moment as a member of the Fayettevil­le Lions Club. But it wasn’t meeting her now-husband of two years, Rick.

Several years ago, the Lions Club provided four tablet computers to help enhance the vision of students with disabiliti­es in the Fayettevil­le School District. Students came to a club meeting to demonstrat­e their use.

“I’m getting goosebumps now while I’m talking about it,” Sydney Bailey said. “We gave four units, knowing they are going to make a difference in the lives of those students.”

“Since Lions Clubs Internatio­nal was founded in 1917, Lions have worked on projects designed to prevent blindness, restore eyesight and improve eye health and eye care for hundreds of millions of people worldwide,” reads the website of the organizati­on.

The Fayettevil­le club has been doing the same things locally since 1923. The club celebrated the 95th anniversar­y of its founding a few weeks ago.

“We provide free vision care screening, free glasses, eye exams. We collect used glasses, clean them and send them overseas with groups going on mission

trips,” Rick Bailey said.

The club honored Stuart Jones as the Lion of the Year during its weekly meeting June 6. He organized more than 2,500 vision screenings for infants to third-graders during the past year, although he gave much of the credit to his wife.

The club has also purchased eye-screening equipment that has been used in area schools and clinics.

“You don’t know what impact you have,” Jones said. Ten percent of the children screened are referred to eye care specialist­s, he said.

“Some, when we picked up on it in time, we saved their vision, prevented blindness,” said Dr. Morriss Henry, a retired Fayettevil­le ophthalmol­ogist, who also is a member of the Lions.

Damaged vision can lead to

lack of developmen­t — especially educationa­l developmen­t. “Education is the key to everything,” Sydney Bailey said. “It can even prevent poverty.”

Rick Bailey recalled a grandfathe­r the club helped. They gave the family money for gas to drive to Memphis for surgery at the University of Tennessee Hamilton Eye Institute.

“After surgery, when he first came home, he said that was the first time he’d ever been able to see his grandchild­ren,” Rick Bailey said. “He died three months later.”

Diabetes can damage small blood vessels in the eye, causing vision loss. The Lions also are involved in raising awareness, and the local club can offer supplies for treatment of diabetes in emergency situations, Rick Bailey said.

“It gives me a sense of accomplish­ment to give something back to the community,” said Mike Scribner of the club. “The biggest majority of the cases are 4- to 5-year-olds. Helping their livelihood is time and money well spent.”

Money the club raises through the public — through fundraiser­s, donations and grants — is “100 percent spent for charity work,” Rick Bailey said. “The administra­tive costs of the club come from members.”

Those fundraiser­s include an online auction, the people’s choice barbecue awards at Bikes, Blues & BBQ , and displaying American flags — sponsored by area businesses — around the Fayettevil­le square and

other locations for patriotic holidays, observance­s and election day.

Henry, also a retired state senator, has been a member of the Fayettevil­le Lions Club for 55 years. He joined in January 1962, “because I was interested in sight conservati­on.”

Henry explained, that as a senator, he sponsored the legislatio­n to get the organ donor option on the state’s drivers licenses. And when other lawmakers later wanted it eliminated, “I called

all the Lions Clubs in the state to tell them what they wanted to do.”

Henry supported the Arkansas Lions Eye Bank and Lab at the Harvey and Bernice Jones Eye Institute at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock and talked to Lions Clubs on its behalf. The eye bank harvests corneas and other parts of the eye at death and provides them to those in need to restore vision.

“I have been intent on

helping other people, and the Lions were very strong in that,” Henry said.

TOWN’S LEADERS

The Fayettevil­le Lions Club was chartered in May 1923 with 25 founding members and has been active continuous­ly since that time, reads a club history written by Thad Rowden for the organizati­on’s 65th anniversar­y in 1987.

The Fort Smith Lions Club sponsored the Fayettevil­le Club for its inception,

and it in turn sponsored clubs in Huntsville, Rogers, Springdale, Prairie Grove, Greenland, Elkins, a Fayettevil­le evening club, Bentonvill­e, Decatur and Farmington.

“Perhaps the most ambitious program this Lions Club has ever undertaken was in 1931 when the club started a long-range project on constructi­on and improvemen­t of the city’s and the schools’ Harmon Playfield,” Rowden wrote.

The club built the original fieldhouse, with dressing rooms and showers, and sodded the field at Fayettevil­le High School’s football field. The club borrowed money from local banks, with notes signed by club presidents and secretarie­s, and repaid the loans over the years with money from the club’s fundraisin­g projects.

In 1947, the club spend $3,900 to enlarge the building.

“This is ample evidence of the club’s longtime involvemen­t in youth and educationa­l programs,” Rowden wrote, continuing with a list of other projects for the Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, foreign exchange students, the Salvation Army, Boys and Girls State, the Richardson Center, Sherman Lollar Baseball, the Little Rock Medical Center and more.

Ruth Cohoon has become the club historian. She also was the first woman to join the club in 1987. “I didn’t know it was a big deal at the time,” she said.

As the first women’s athletic director at the University of Arkansas, Cohoon was asked to speak to the club on women’s athletics. Then she was asked to join.

“And I didn’t have any reason not to,” she said. “And it was serving others, doing something helpful for the community.”

Cohoon joined the ranks of many other Fayettevil­le leaders serving the community through the Lions Club. The charter members included Frank Root, the Fayettevil­le schools superinten­dent; the manager of the telephone company; several auto dealers; and the sheriff.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? Ruth Cohoon (left) and Stuart Jones, both Fayettevil­le Lions Club members, post U.S. flags on Dickson Street in Fayettevil­le. Cohoon, the first women’s athletic director at the University of Arkansas, also became the first female member of the Fayettevil­le Lions Club in 1987.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Ruth Cohoon (left) and Stuart Jones, both Fayettevil­le Lions Club members, post U.S. flags on Dickson Street in Fayettevil­le. Cohoon, the first women’s athletic director at the University of Arkansas, also became the first female member of the Fayettevil­le Lions Club in 1987.
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? Rick Bailey and his wife Sydney, both Fayettevil­le Lions Club members, prepare to distribute and post U.S. flags on the square in downtown Fayettevil­le. The installati­on of the flags on holidays is a service project for the club, with money raised from sponsoring businesses used to provide vision screening, eye exams and glasses free to those who need them.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Rick Bailey and his wife Sydney, both Fayettevil­le Lions Club members, prepare to distribute and post U.S. flags on the square in downtown Fayettevil­le. The installati­on of the flags on holidays is a service project for the club, with money raised from sponsoring businesses used to provide vision screening, eye exams and glasses free to those who need them.

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