june n&v hlaa-manhattan

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News & Views June 2009 www.hearingloss-nyc.org E-mail: [email protected] Hearing Loss Association of America exists to open the world of communication to people with hearing loss through information, education, advocacy, and support. Scholarship Awards Program and Reception On Tuesday, June 2, 2009 From left: Winners Aldo Almanzar, Navena Chaitoo, and Jacqueline Drexler. Welcome to the June 2009 issue of the HLAA-Manhattan News & Views! Are you ready for the digital TV transition? Originally planned for February, the final deadline is June 12. If you have any questions, contact the FCC at [email protected]; 888-225-5322 (voice); 888-835-5322 (TTY); or www.dtv.gov . For more on captioning and the transition, visit http://dtv.c-s-d.org . In lieu of this month’s Chapter meeting, on June 2 nd we had a special event: the Scholarship Awards Program and Reception. $1,000 scholarships were presented to three hard-of-hearing high school seniors from NYC and eastern Long Island: Aldo Almanzar, Navena Chaitoo, and Jacqueline Drexler. These students also will be receiving one-year memberships in HLAA. Aldo Rufino Almanzar wears one aid for his moderate to severe/profound hearing loss. He will be attending Rochester Institute of Technology. Navena wears two hearing aids for severe to profound loss. She’ll be attending Fordham University. Jacqueline wears two hearing aids for her severe to profound hearing loss. She will be attending University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. We listened to the winners talk about their backgrounds, hearing loss challenges, and college plans. A reception in the students’ honor followed. As you know by now, the HLAA annual national convention is this month. Many members have registered and are looking forward to several days of workshops, socializing, and fun events in Nashville. Editor’s Corner Elizabeth Stump There will be no more Chapter meetings until September 15. Enjoy your summer!

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June 2009 News & Views: HLAA-Manhattan Chapter newsletter

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Page 1: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

News & Views

June 2009 www.hearingloss-nyc.org E-mail: [email protected]

Hearing Loss Association of America exists to open the world of communication to people with hearing loss

through information, education, advocacy, and support.

Scholarship Awards Program and Reception

On Tuesday, June 2, 2009

From left: Winners Aldo Almanzar, Navena Chaitoo,

and Jacqueline Drexler.

Welcome to the June 2009 issue of

the HLAA-Manhattan News & Views!

Are you ready for the digital TV transition?

Originally planned for February, the final deadline is

June 12. If you have any questions, contact the FCC at

[email protected]; 888-225-5322 (voice); 888-835-5322

(TTY); or www.dtv.gov. For more on captioning and

the transition, visit http://dtv.c-s-d.org.

In lieu of this month’s Chapter meeting, on June 2nd

we had a special event: the Scholarship Awards

Program and Reception. $1,000 scholarships were

presented to three hard-of-hearing high school

seniors from NYC and eastern Long Island: Aldo

Almanzar, Navena Chaitoo, and Jacqueline Drexler.

These students also will be receiving one-year

memberships in HLAA.

Aldo Rufino Almanzar wears one aid for his

moderate to severe/profound hearing loss. He will be

attending Rochester Institute of Technology. Navena

wears two hearing aids for severe to profound loss.

She’ll be attending Fordham University. Jacqueline

wears two hearing aids for her severe to profound

hearing loss. She will be attending University of

North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

We listened to the winners talk about their

backgrounds, hearing loss challenges, and college

plans. A reception in the students’ honor followed.

As you know by now, the HLAA annual national

convention is this month. Many members have

registered and are looking forward to several days of

workshops, socializing, and fun events in Nashville.

Editor’s Corner – Elizabeth Stump

There will be no more Chapter meetings until

September 15.

Enjoy your summer!

Page 2: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

2

A reminder for those of you who are attending: we

should try to be seated together at the Birthday Party

Banquet (6/19) and the Awards Breakfast on Sunday

(6/21). Also, attendees should give their Birthday

Party Banquet vouchers to Joe Gordon or Mary

Fredericks soon after receiving their convention

package upon checking in.

Have a peaceful, enjoyable summer! See you at the

September 15th meeting!

HLAA’s "Purchasing a Hearing Aid: Consumer

Check List," published in the May/June issue of

Hearing Loss Magazine, is now online here:

www.hearingloss.org/learn/hearingaids.asp.

Consumers should use it to understand hearing

health care best practices and what to expect when

getting fitted for a hearing aid. Download the list and

take it with you when you purchase your hearing

aid. Also available on the Web site are HLAA policies

on hearing aids, FDA regulations on sales of hearing

aids, and information on hearing assistive technology

and evaluating the performance of a hearing aid.

CHAPTER PLANNING COMMITTEE

Join us on the first Tuesday of each month (except in

July & August) to help plan programs & events.

HLAA Manhattan Chapter Phone Number: (voice)

(212) 769-HEAR (4327)

Barbara Bryan

[email protected]

Barbara Dagen, Newsletter Committee

[email protected]

Mary Fredericks, Secretary

(212) 674-9128 [email protected]

Joe Gordon

[email protected]

Toni Iacolucci, NYC Walk4Hearing Co-chair

[email protected]

Shera Katz, Web Site Coordinator

[email protected]

Anne Pope, Immediate Past President, HLAA Board

of Trustees; NYC Walk4Hearing Co-chair

[email protected]

Ellen Semel

(212) 989-0624 [email protected]

Susan Shapiro, Treasurer

[email protected]

Dana Simon

[email protected]

Elizabeth Stump, Newsletter Editor

[email protected]

Diane Sussman

[email protected]

Advisory Members

Amy McCarthy

Lois O’Neill

Robin Sacharoff

Professional Advisors:

Josh Gendel, Technical Director, Center for Hearing

and Communication (CHC)

Laurie Hanin, PhD, CCC-A Exec. Director, CHC

Joseph Montano, Ed.D., Director, Hearing & Speech,

Weill Cornell Medical College

Help the Chapter Go Green!

Would you like to receive N&V by e-mail only

rather than receive a mailed version to help us cut

down on paper consumption and save money? It

costs about $8 a year to provide one member with

10 issues — that’s more than half of one’s annual

dues. Please notify [email protected] if you’d

like to make this change. The Chapter thanks you!

Reasons to Go Green:

Receive the e-mailed N&V and…

*The links are clickable and take you to the Web

site immediately!

*Color is prettier!

*Font size is adjustable

*You’re saving trees, labor, printing expenses,

and postage!

Page 3: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

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WHAT YOU MISSED IN MAY

Mary Fredericks

Josh Gendel is not only the Technology Director at

the Center for Hearing and Communication

(formerly the League for the Hard of Hearing); he is

also our chapter’s technical professional advisor.

Walk-in demos are available at CHC on Thursdays at

2 pm; they are of a general nature geared toward

professionals such as visiting nurses. It is

recommended that individual appointments be

scheduled for personal advice.

Josh gave us a good basic overview of the types of

ALDs; they are generally classified as: alerting

devices/alarms (tell you that something is happening,

like a door or phone ring) and communication

systems/devices (help you to hear speech, like audio

loops, infrared systems, amplified phones).

He demonstrated a remote doorbell ringer with a

strobe light; this can be installed in several locations

and is battery operated. The transmitter is wireless;

the receiver/flasher must be plugged in. Sonic Alert

systems can be set for doorbells, phone, baby cry,

smoke alarms. Alarm clocks can be loud ringers,

flashing lights and/or vibrating types. (Some people

sleep with their hearing aids on; this is not a good

idea — the ears need to be ‘aired’ at times to avoid

the possibility of infection.) Surveys have shown that

flashing light smoke alarms are not the best way to

wake someone. Try a system connecting with a bed

shaker.

An interesting Q&A session followed. Some

apartment dwellers have difficulty hearing visitors

on the intercom; try asking an expected visitor to call

your apartment from their cell phone to let you know

s/he has arrived. You can also have a customized

intercom installed.

Regarding phones, virtually all wired phones now

are hearing aid compatible — not so with cell phones.

Look for cell phones with M4/T4 ratings for the mic

and the T-coil. Try going to a phone store when it is

not busy; arrange in advance with a friend ready to

read to you from a newspaper when you try different

phones. To reduce interference, it sometimes helps to

hold the cell phone a little distance away from

hearing aids. There are no phones compatible with

zero or extremely poor speech discrimination;

CapTel phones are a very good substitute, even

though there is a slight time delay between the audio

and the visual display.

To contact the Center for Hearing and

Communication: 917-305-7700; [email protected]

For Josh Gendel: [email protected]

ALD Suppliers:

Harris Communications: 1-800-825-6758 (Voice);

www.harriscomm.com/ or [email protected]

(Harris Communications gives HLAA members a

15% discount off selected items.)

Hearmore: 1-800-881-4327; www.hearmore.com/

Soundbytes: 1-888-816-8191; www.soundbytes.com/

Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarms:

Kidde: 1-800-880-6788; www.kidde.com/

Tuesday, June 2: Scholarship Reception in lieu of

regular Chapter meeting

Tuesday, June 9: Center for Hearing and

Communication Golf Tournament; for more info. call

(917) 305-7804 or go here:

www.lhh.org/calendar/events/events_golf.html.

Thursday, June 18 – Sunday, June 21: HLAA

Annual Convention in Nashville, Tennessee

A Few Highlights:

Wed., June 17: Registration opens (Noon - 6:00 pm)

Thursday, June 18: Newcomers Orientation (11:00

am – Noon. If you have never been to an HLAA

Convention, you will want to attend!)

Friday, June 19: Birthday Party Banquet

Sunday, June 21: Awards Breakfast (8:30 - 10 am)

*Founder's Day Recognition at the Awards Breakfast.

Thursday, July 23: Center for Hearing and

Communication Cochlear Implant Support Group

50 Broadway, 2nd Floor; 5:30 pm to 7 pm

*For more information, call (917) 305-7751

or e-mail [email protected].

Metropolitan Calendar

Page 4: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

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Advocacy for People with Hearing Loss

The Manhattan Chapter Advocacy Committee has

been on a roll! We’ve already had several successes.

A favorite summer pastime is watching movies.

Thus, we became involved in advocating for

captioning the outdoor summer film festivals

occurring in NYC. Thanks to our efforts, Riverside

Park South agreed to show captioned films in their

free 'Movies Under the Stars' summer film series...for

the first time ever! The six films will be shown

Wednesday evenings from July 8th - August 12th at

dusk (8:30 pm), on Pier 1 at 70th Street & the Hudson

River (www.riversideparkfund.org/calendar). The

order of films: The Age of Innocence; Wall Street;

Dinner at Eight; The Out-of-Towners; Drums Along the

Mohawk; and Sweet Smell of Success.

Shaft (1971), Ocean’s 11 (2001), Sex & The City (2008),

Twilight (2008), and Viewer’s Choice. Vote at

www.7online.com from July 21 to August 21 for one

of the following: Men in Black (1997); Goldfinger

(1965); or Desperately Seeking Susan (1985). The 7th

Annual Central Park Film Festival, sponsored by

Bloomberg L.P., is free and starts at 8 PM (gates open

at 6 PM). To find Rumsey Playfield, enter the Park at

5th Avenue and 69th Street. Rain or shine. (Go to

www.centralparknyc.org/site/Calendar?view=Detail

&id=106781.)

Many thanks to Toni Iacolucci, Elizabeth Stump,

Ruth Bernstein, and Joe Gordon for their help in

making this happen.

Note that there are two more film festivals showing

captioned films (for the first time!) this summer:

RiverFlicks for Grown-Ups (at Pier 54) and

RiverFlicks for Kids (at Pier 46). (For more info., go to

www.hudsonriverpark.org/events.asp.) While this

captioning is not a direct result of our Chapter’s

advocacy efforts like the two festivals mentioned

above, but rather of a person with hearing loss not

affiliated with our Chapter, the situation still

demonstrates that it takes outspoken people to raise

awareness and obtain accommodations for those

with hearing loss.

‚One of the best lessons I've learned in this process

has been the need to ask,‛ said Advocacy Committee

Chair Toni Iacolucci. ‚As people with hearing loss, I

think we're so used to being denied access, it doesn't

occur to us to request it. Also, we often assume

people are insensitive and don't care about the

difficulties we experience. With a positive attitude

and patience in educating people about our

experience, I think they will be more receptive than

we anticipate.‛

To join the Advocacy Committee or ask questions, e-

mail us at: [email protected].

Sports and Hearing Loss

With summer here and greater opportunity for

children, teens, and adults to play sports outdoors,

it’s important to ensure that, despite sweating from

physical activity, one’s hearing aids or cochlear

implant (CI) stays safe and dry.

According to HLAA’s Hearing Loss Magazine

(Nov./Dec. 2008), hearing aids and CIs rely on ear-

level microphones that work only up to about six

feet. For greater distances, personal FM systems will

help, but are only appropriate for non-contact sports

(contact sports include football and soccer) and

sports that don’t require rapid movement and

projectiles (like tennis) — examples where FM

systems can be used are hiking/walking, golf,

bowling, and fishing.

Water-resistant and waterproof hearing aids and CIs

may be a good option if one is in the swimming pool.

For sweating in general, use an absorbent sweat

band, placed above the hearing device. Other

products include the Hearing Aid Sweat Band

(www.hearingaidsweatband.com) and latex covers

called Super Seals (www.justbekuz.com).

Our second advocacy success

is that the Central Park

Conservancy will show

captioned films at their

festival, also for the first time!

It runs for five nights in a row,

from Aug. 18-22. The films are:

Post-activity, remove your device

and thoroughly dry it with an

absorbent cloth. Also place the

device in a dehumidification

system. Some use chemical

desiccants like silica gel, while

others create and circulate heat to

remove moisture. An example is

www.dryandstore.com.

Page 5: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

5

Lastly, the article warns against using both helmets

and your hearing device. One should certainly use a

helmet in certain sports like biking, football, or

skiing, but carving out spaces in the helmet’s

padding to accommodate hearing aids or CIs is not

wise — chances are you still won’t hear well and you

won’t be able to trust the safety of the helmet if

you’ve modified it. It’s smarter to instead take off

your devices and store them in a safe container while

playing.

Report from the Hearing Conservation Seminar

I attended the Hearing Conservation Seminar

sponsored by Aearo Technologies, a 3M Company.

The conference, free of charge, took place in the

Pfizer Building on E. 42nd St. on Thursday, April 16.

Free samples of a large array of earplugs were

provided and many types of earmuffs were on

display. It was a full-day session, but I only attended

the morning session, which was moderated by Dr.

Elliot H. Berger, M.S. He is Aearo’s Senior Scientist,

Auditory Research, and ‚is responsible for research

in hearing protection, hearing conservation, and the

effects of noise on hearing.‛ Dr. Berger gave a lively,

enjoyable, and informative presentation.

Most of the people in the audience were people

involved with occupational hearing conservation

who worked in companies where the employees

were required or encouraged to wear protection

because of harmful noise levels. Ways to encourage

the use of hearing protection were discussed.

Dr. Berger compared the relative simplicity of

wearing eyeglasses to the complexity and cost of

wearing hearing aids. Unlike hearing aids, eyeglasses

don’t need batteries. If you walk into a shower with

your eyeglasses, it doesn’t create a problem. But

doing the same with your hearing aids can spell

disaster. Eyeglasses may cost $300.00 while hearing

aids can cost $3,000. You have an occlusion effect

with a hearing aid and wax build-up which you

don’t with eyeglasses. Dr. Berger likened hearing loss

to macular degeneration.

Dr. Berger spoke about the proper use of earmuffs

and earplugs. Here are some tips that will ensure

good protection:

*The headband should be placed on the head from

front to back and hair has to be pushed away from

under the cushions. Adjust the headband so the

cushions exert even pressure around the ears.

*The whole ear has to be placed inside the hollow

space inside the earmuff. There should be no spaces

between the earmuff and the head.

*Earplugs should be placed in the ear canal after

pulling the ear outward and upward with the

opposite hand so that one has good access to the

canal. Earplugs should be placed to get a snug fit.

*For very loud noises, the best protection can be

achieved by using earplugs plus an ear muff.

When I asked Dr. Berger about hearing protection for

people who wear hearing aids, he said that if a

person had an in the canal hearing aid they could use

earmuffs. As to shutting off your hearing aids, he

didn’t think that was effective as there is a vent in the

hearing aid through which noise can pass. As to

users of hearing aid types other than those in the ear

canal, Dr. Berger said it would be best to consult with

one’s audiologist.

—Susan Immergut

*Visit www.turnittotheleft.com for the American

Academy of Audiology’s public awareness campaign

about the dangers of noise-induced hearing loss.

Here are some hearing protection products made

especially for kids’ tiny ears.

For noisy surroundings:

*‚BabyBlues‛ ER-20 High Fidelity Earplugs preserve

sound quality but reduce output by 20 dB.

www.etymotic.com/ephp/er20.aspx

*Peltor Junior Earmuffs come in several different

colors; they fit on infants 3 months and older.

http://earplugstore.stores.yahoo.net/ejuearmu.html

*Mack’s SafeSound Jr. soft foam earplugs, for kids

age 7 and older: www.macksearplugs.com.

Kiddie Corner

Page 6: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

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For iPods/MP3s/gaming devices:

*LoudEnough are volume-limiting earbuds for kids

ages 6 and older. They come in several colors and

limit sound output by 20 dB: www.loudenough.com.

*EarSaver Volume Limiter is plugged between the

music and your earphones: http://earplugstore.stores.yahoo.net/earsavolifor.html

*Custom Earmolds are another option you can get

from most earmold companies. While more pricey,

they provide the best seal possible for tiny ears.

For more information on protecting your child’s

hearing, go to www.noisyplanet.nidcd.nih.gov.

National HLAA News

*HLAA will adopt hearing loss statistics from the

National Center for Health Statistics, which is 36

million. The number previously used was 31 million.

Of the 5 objectives for hearing created by the

Department of Health and Human Services for the

year 2010 — decreased number of office visits for

otitis media in kids and teens; increased newborn

screening; increased use of hearing aids by adults;

increased adult hearing examinations; increased use

of ear protection and decreased noise-induced

hearing loss — the objectives met are decreased visits

for otitis media and increased hearing screenings.

The 2020 objectives being written now will include

many of these current objectives not yet met.

*The HLAA membership brochure is being revised

to further highlight chapters, and the Q&A brochure

that many chapters use for health fairs is being

divided into two Q&A brochures: one on the

emotional aspects of hearing loss for people who are

new to it, and a second one on forms of hearing

assistive technology.

Correction:

There was a small error in May’s ‚Ask the Expert!‛

response from Dr. Paul E. Hammerschlag. The

second paragraph on page 4 should have begun: ‚If

the auditory nerve is anatomically intact after

acoustic neuroma surgery, sometimes a cochlear

implant can be used. If the auditory nerve is not

intact, then a brainstem implant might be used in

exceptional circumstances (i.e., if the patient is

bilaterally deaf). …‛

WALK4HEARING: Save the Date!

Our second annual NYC Walk4Hearing will take

place on Sunday, October 18, in Riverside Park.

Last year we had a great beginning. Five hundred

people walked. We were toddlers and seniors and

every age in between. We were people with hearing

loss and people without. We were consumers,

educators, ENTs, and audiologists. We were families,

friends, and colleagues. We worked together to say

loud and clear that hearing loss is an important

health issue with serious challenges, not a minor (and

laughable) inconvenience. We walked together to say

this is what hearing loss looks like. It was a

wonderful day, and we had a wonderful time. Watch

the video on www.hearingloss.org to see us in action.

But our walk is more than fun. It is the most

important thing each of us can do to eliminate the

stigma of hearing loss. If youngsters with hearing

loss are able to fulfill their potential, if people in the

workforce are to be considered for their talent and

not dismissed for their disability, if older people are

ever to live free of demeaning jokes, we need to

change the way people think about hearing loss. To

make that happen, we must keep working together to

tell the public our story. This year we want to double

the number of walkers and double our impact.

What can you do to help? Become a sponsor or help

us find a sponsor. Just send us a note at

[email protected] and we will see that you

get the forms. You can also organize your own team

by going to www.walk4hearing.org, clicking on the

NYC walk, and following the prompts. Or you can

join an existing team. Or you can be a volunteer on

Walk day. Anyone on the Planning Committee will

be glad to talk with you about being part of the Walk.

We want to grow every year until there is a great

river of people flowing farther than the eye can see.

Come join us. All of us who were there last year can

tell you that there is nothing like being part of the

Walk4Hearing.

Page 7: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

7

OPEN-CAPTIONED THEATER - Find captioned theater listings nationwide on www.c2net.org

Theater Access Project (TAP) captions Broadway and Off-Broadway productions each month. Tickets are

discounted. For listings & application www.tdf.org/tap or 212-221-1103, 212-719-45377 (TTY)

*Upcoming OPEN-CAPTIONED Shows: [Must register/order with TAP for tickets]

Desire Under the Elms (6/7, 3 PM); Twelfth Night (7/6, 8 PM); The Bacchae (8/30, 8 PM)

OPEN-CAPTIONED MOVIES –

For updated listings, go to www.insightcinema.org/links.html or www.regalcinemas.com/movies/open_cap.html

REGAL BATTERY PARK STADIUM 11,102 N. End Avenue–Vesey & West Streets (212) 945-4370.

REGAL–UA KAUFMAN STUDIOS CINEMA 14, 35th Ave. & 38th St., Long Island City (718) 786-1722.

REGAL–UA SHEEPSHEAD BAY-BROOKLYN, Knapp St & Harkness Ave (718) 615-1053.

REAR-WINDOW CAPTIONED MOVIES - For listings go to www.FOMDI.com. Ask for a special window

when buying your ticket. The window reflects the text that’s shown on the rear of the theater.

AMC Empire on 42nd Street. (212) 398-2597, call Tues. afternoon for next week’s schedule.

Clearview Chelsea Cinemas, 260 W. 23rd St., Auditorium 4, 212-691-5519 www.clearviewcinemas.com/tripod.shtml

The Bronx: AMC Cinema Bay Plaza, 718-320-1659.

MMUUSSEEUUMMSS WWIITTHH CCAAPPTTIIOONNEEDD EEVVEENNTTSS && AASSSSIISSTTIIVVEE DDEEVVIICCEESS --

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Ave. 212-879-5500 Ext. 3561 (V), 212-570-3828 (TTY)

Real-Time Captioning of lectures upon request – This service requires at least three weeks notice.

Gallery Talk with ALDs (meet at gallery talk station, Great Hall)

The Museum of Modern Art, 1 East 53rd St., Access Programs 212-708-9864, 212-247-1230 (TTY)

ALDs are available for lectures, gallery talks, & Family Programs. Infrared is available in Titus Theaters.

Access to the Arts in New York City

New CapTel Phone

Coming soon: the new CapTel 800i

Phone! It will work with high-

speed Internet and a telephone

line. The phone can be used with a

headset or a neckloop.

Go here for more information:

www.sprintrelay.com/doc/Sprint_

CapTel800i_flyer_04_03_09.pdf

For Sprint CapTel customer

service: 888-269-7477 (voice) or

800-482-2424 (TTY)

Housing Info. Videos

The U.S. Department of

Housing and Urban

Development has produced

videos for YouTube and

Facebook designed to

educate deaf and hard-of-

hearing consumers about

their fair housing rights,

housing counseling services,

and loan programs. For

more information, go to

www.hud.gov/news/index.

Mention of suppliers or devices in this newsletter does not mean HLAA-Manhattan endorsement,

nor does exclusion suggest disapproval.

Find Support Online!

We’re on Facebook! Receive alerts

and connect with other members

(www.facebook.com).

Here's the link to our message board

on Meetup.com:

www.meetup.com/Hearing-Loss-

Association-of-America-Manhattan-

Chapter/messages/boards/.

Page 8: June N&V HLAA-Manhattan

8

c/o Barbara Dagen,

141 E. 33rd St. (3B)

New York, NY 10016

FIRST CLASS MAIL (DATED MATERIAL)

Please check your address label for the date of your last dues payment and, if you are a National member, there will be

an “NM” after the date. Report any discrepancies to Mary Fredericks. Thanks!

Manhattan Chapter Annual Membership Application

Please complete and return this form, with your

chapter dues of $15 (payable to HLAA-Manhattan)

for the period September 1, 2008, to August 31, 2009

Send to: Mary Fredericks

520 East 20th

St. (8E)

New York, NY 10009

NAME (please print)_____________________

ADDRESS/APT_____________________________

CITY/STATE/ZIP________________________

PHONE (Home or Work?)_________________

E-MAIL ADDRESS_______________________

SEND A NEWSLETTER BY E-MAIL YES NO

MEMBER OF HLAA NATIONAL? YES NO

HOW DID YOU HEAR ABOUT US?

________________________

ADDITIONAL DONATION_$_______________

TOTAL ENCLOSED_$____________________

HLAA Membership Application

Please complete and return this form, with your dues

payment of $35 for a one-year membership

(including subscription to Hearing Loss Magazine)

To: HLAA Membership, 7910 Woodmont Ave.

Suite 1200, Bethesda, MD 20814.

NAME (please print)

ADDRESS/APT_____________________________

____________

CITY/STATE/ZIP________________________

PHONE (Home or Work)__________________

E-MAIL ADDRESS_______________________

ARE YOU NOW A MEMBER OF HLAA

NATIONAL? YES NO

(receiving Hearing Loss Magazine)?______

IF YES, I.D. No.________________

ADDITIONAL DONATION_$_______________

TOTAL ENCLOSED_$____________________

HLAA is a volunteer association of hard of hearing people, their relatives and friends. It is a nonprofit, non-sectarian

educational organization devoted to the welfare and interests of those who cannot hear well.

Your contribution is tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. We are a 501(c)(3) organization.