Monitor Miniatures 4/98

Monitor Miniatures 4/98

Monitor Miniatures

4/98

Braille for China Again:

We carried a notice in the February, 1998, issue

which invited readers to consider donating complete Braille materials in good condition

for use by blind people in China who are studying English. Larry Campbell, who asked us to

post that request, reports that the response has been gratifying. He has also had some

questions. He wishes to clarify several matters. First, the materials should be shipped

directly to China, not to Larry. Materials may be mailed "free matter for the

blind" using the same U.S. Postal specifications that you would use in mailing such

materials here. Materials for overseas shipment should be placed in strong, compact

cardboard boxes and should not exceed twelve pounds. Seal boxes with strong, clear tape.

Boxes should be labelled as follows:

1. In the upper left corner place a small label

with the sender's return address.

2. In the upper right corner, where postage is

normally attached, print "FREE MATTER FOR THE BLIND."

3. In the center, using a larger label than the

return-address label, print the full address of the China Braille Press.

4. At the bottom center write "By sea

mail."

Larry tells us that the most welcome materials

are novels, current-event and other popular-interest magazines such as Reader's Digest,

National Geographic, etc., and basic books and periodicals on access technology. Several

groups are already providing Bibles and other religious materials, so general literature

is what is needed.

Materials should be mailed directly to:

Foreign Language Department

China Braille Press

39 Chengnei Street

Lugouqiao

Beijing, China 100072

In Memoriam:

Thelda Borisch, a member of the National

Federation of the Blind of Missouri, recently wrote to report that on Thursday, November

6, 1997, a long-time Federationist, Rhoda Dower, lost her fight against cancer. She was a

charter member of the St. Louis Chapter. She lived a year and seven months after the death

of her husband John Dower, who was also a charter member of the Missouri affiliate. John

and Rhoda provided a lot of support and understanding to Federationists. I met them about

fifteen years ago. They taught me much about the National Federation of the Blind. Many

people will miss Rhoda.

Cook Books and Patterns Wanted:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Since I can no longer read Braille, I am

interested in hearing from anyone who has cook books and knitting patterns on audio tape.

Please contact Rose Dalley, 1 Hubbard Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05602, or call (802)

223-1673.

Instructional Music Tapes Available:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Tapes on piano teaching, theory, and

transcription and accompaniment tapes for instrumental and voice with individual attention

are available. Dictated audio cassette tapes of many types (mostly keyboard) of music

(classical, pops, show tunes, hymns, or old favorites; beginners to advanced) can be

ordered by contacting Jeanine Linster, 409 30-1/4 Road, Grand Junction, Colorado 81504,

(970) 434-8639. No Braille please.

Convention Lunch Link:

Would you like to meet someone new at the NFB

Convention in Dallas? Maybe you are looking for a friendship or a bit of romance. What

better way to get acquainted than over lunch? The NFB of Maryland can help you link up

with that special someone. We'll leave lunch to you.

Don't miss out on the fun. Join the Lunch Link

today. Here's how it works. You answer a series of questions about yourself and the type

of person you are looking for. The questionnaire is available in large print and Braille.

It is quick and easy to do. Then we put your information into our computer, which will

find the best match. We will share your name and state affiliate with that person and vice

versa. Your name may be shared with up to three additional people. The service is

confidential.

Why stand in long lines in Dallas to get your

questionnaire? Request one today by contacting Lynn Mattioli, 817 Park Avenue, Apartment

7, Baltimore, Maryland 21210, or call (410) 625-0076. Be sure to tell us which format you

prefer (large print or Braille). Once you have circled your answers, return it to the

above address with your payment of $5 per submission. (Make checks payable to the NFB of

Maryland.)

You can also get a questionnaire at our table in

the Exhibit Hall on Sunday, July 5, and Monday, July 6. The deadline for joining the Lunch

Link is 5:00 p.m. on Monday. Monday night the computer will do its magic. You must return

to the Exhibit Hall on Tuesday, July 7, to pick up the name of your match (which will be

in a sealed envelope). We will only give you this information in person.

Don't miss out on your link. Join the Lunch Link

today. You have nothing to lose but the problem of wondering whom you will be dining with

in Dallas.

Wall Gardens:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Now everyone can grow vegetables, herbs, and

flowers with a space-saving new gardening technology, the Living Wallgarden. This

containerized system substitutes an artificial growing medium for soil, allowing both

novice and experienced gardeners to garden with ease and independence without the need for

soil preparation or weeding. The Living Wallgarden comes in various sizes, can be used

indoors or outside, and occupies a fraction of the space of traditional growing systems.

The containers come complete with growing medium, fertilizer, and easy-to-follow

instructions. All you supply are the plants. Everyone with an interest in gardening is

invited to visit the Living Wallgarden Web site at http://www.livingwallgardens.com where

you can learn about this new gardening resource. You can also contact Harv Robinson,

Living Wallgarden Company, 9727 Williams Road, Diamond, Ohio 44412, (330) 654-9507.

Vintage Radio Programs:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Audio Treasures produces cassette tapes of great

old radio programs such as "Jack Benny," "The Shadow,"

"Suspense," "Gunsmoke," "Lone Ranger," "X Minus

One," "Lux Radio Theatre," famous news and sports broadcasts, plus other

old favorites. To order a free catalog call toll free, (888) 723-4642. For more

information or to place an order, contact Michael Yale, Audio Treasures, 27 Cann Street,

Huntsville, Ontario, Canada P1H 1K7.

Help Needed in Bangladesh:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Used books; magazines; journals; and materials

and equipment such as Perkins Braillers, cassette recorders, Talking-Book

player/recorders, talking watches and calculators, white canes, spectacles, frames, or any

other used materials for the disabled are requested by the FIMA Institute for Disabled

Society (FIDS). FIDS is a voluntary organization serving the blind, deaf-blind,

partially-sighted, and physically handicapped. Send your donation to FIMA Institute for

Disabled Society, 12, E 5/6, P.O. Box-8104, Mirpur, Dhaka-1216, Bangladesh. If you donate

money, send by postal money order and inform FIDS of the money order number and sending

date.

Fund-raising Idea:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

The Chocolate Experience, Inc., which

manufactures chocolate

Braille greeting cards, has recently done a

Brailled Easter bunny

and Brailled chocolate heart. These items make

great fund-

raisers. For more information on products contact

Judy Geva at

(800) 669-6665. In New York only, call (718)

461-1873. Our e-mail

address is

[email protected]

Fast Track for Tenor from Tuscany:

NFB of Michigan member Sunny Emerson passes along

the following notice she found in The Independent, United Kingdom, May 19, 1997, about an

Italian tenor with truly Federation ideas and, according to her, a spectacular voice. Here

it is:

Andrea Bocelli, the blind Tuscan tenor, was a

complete unknown until recently. Since being discovered by Luciano Pavarotti in 1992,

Bocelli, thirty-eight, has taken master classes with the maestro. He has sung for the Pope

and with Pavarotti, Bryan Adams, and Bryan Ferry. He was born with a visual defect, and at

the age of twelve he lost his sight completely after an accident playing football. Bocelli

is adamant that for him his blindness was in no way a tragedy. "The tragedy is that

people continue to make a fuss out of something which they consider tragic, not I."

He is scheduled to appear on the Rosie O'Donnell Show on March 31. Available CD's are

Romanza and Viaggio Italiano.

Letter from Liverpool:

We recently received the following letter from a

reader in Liverpool. Perhaps someone can help. Here it is:

I have enjoyed reading the Monitor in Braille

sent to me by a friend in the Irish Republic. I would like to read the journal on a

regular basis. I would be happy to swap journals in Braille with any American

Federationist. I am totally blind and work in the tourist industry guiding visitors (many

from the U.S.) around public buildings in my city. I was fascinated by the description of

your July convention, and the journal is full of information. Those interested in swapping

journals should contact Stephen Binns, 7 Trispen Road, Liverpool, L116ND, United Kingdom.

Dr. Betsy Zaborowski

Honored:

It was recently announced that Dr. Betsy

Zaborowski, a long-time leader in the NFB's Human Services Division and now a member of

the staff at the National Center for the Blind, has been selected as one of Maryland's Top

100 Women for 1998. The reception will take place at the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall on

March 25, 1998 at 5:00 p.m. The honor comes as recognition of her many professional and

civic accomplishments. The award program is sponsored by the Daily Record, Baltimore's

most influential business publication.

Elected:

The St. Louis Chapter of the NFB of Missouri

recently elected the following new officers: Kerry Smith, President; John Ford, Vice

President; Susan Ford, Secretary; Delores Watson, Treasurer; Rhonda Dycus, Corresponding

Secretary; and Thelda Borisch, Board Member-at-Large.

Perkins Brailler Repairs Available:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

The Selective Doctor, Inc., is a repair service

for all IBM typewriters and Perkins Braille Writers. Located in Baltimore, the service has

done work for the Maryland School for the Blind and a number of other organizations in

Maryland. They accept Perkins Braillers sent to them from around the country. They

advertise top quality service at yesterday's prices. They also request a phone call before

shipment of Braillers and ask that equipment be insured in the mail. For more information

contact the Selective Doctor, Inc., P.O. Box 28432, Baltimore, Maryland 21234, or call

(410) 668-1143.

Soundman Now Available:

President Maurer writes: The National Federation

of the Blind is now distributing the Soundman, a tape recorder with AM/FM radio,

television bands, and The Weather Channel. The Soundman sells for $165. It is also

available from the Myna Corporation, 239 Western Avenue, Building A2I, Essex,

Massachusetts, 01929-1102, or telephone 508-768-9000.

I like to keep a tape recorder in my bedroom. For

some time now I have been looking for a television receiver that I could also keep there.

However, I didn't want several machines. I was hoping to find a single unit that would

give me both a tape recorder and the audio bands of a television. I hoped that I would be

able not only to listen to library books and other recordings, but to record some of the

material broadcast on television and radio. Consequently, when the Soundman became

available, I decided to try it. As I said earlier, the Soundman also brought me the

Weather Channel, a part of broadcasting that I had missed.

One evening, as I was scanning the dial with the

Soundman, I came upon a familiar voice. It did not sound like a public broadcast. Rather

it seemed much more like a private phone call. As I listened, it became clear to me that I

was hearing a telephone conversation between my thirteen-year-old son David Maurer and a

girl. I invited David to step around to my room. When he arrived, I asked him if he was on

the phone, and he said that he was using the portable. I invited him to say something into

the phone, and his voice came out of the radio. The Soundman was picking up the broadcast

from our portable phone. David and I were both astonished.

I have used the Soundman myself for several weeks

now. It is about a foot long, about eight inches high, and about three inches thick. It

can be operated on house current or on batteries. I prefer to operate it on batteries,

because I can carry it with me wherever I am in the house or, for that matter, anywhere

else.

I don't know whether the Soundman will pick up

your children's conversations or not. But I do think it is a good machine and that you

should know about it.

Cassette Religious Magazine Available:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

The Circle of Love is a monthly Christian

ninety-minute tape magazine, which features songs, poetry, Bible games, testimonies,

helpful information, Scripture memorization, pen pals, and many other features. Yearly

subscriptions are $20 to keep the magazine and $15 to receive it on a read-and-return

basis. For a free sample, write Circle of Love, 1002 Johnson Street, Pasadena, Texas

77506-4618, or call toll-free (800) 555-9205, enter mailbox 5384, and press the star key.

Be sure to speak clearly and spell any unusual street and city names.

Audio Business Digest Service:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Newstrack Executive Tape Service is the

Listener's Digest of business information. For over seventeen years executives, business

owners, investors, entrepreneurs, and other professionals have listened to this business

tool. In every issue Newstrack editors review over 100 top business publications and

special sources. They select the best sixteen articles on management, sales, marketing,

finance, business strategy, and much more. Since no one has the time to read every

important business article, Newstrack is a time-saving source in this age of information

overload.

Newstrack is available on both audio tape and CD.

You have a choice of two versions: the small business issue is produced once a month at a

cost of $149 per year on audio cassette; the regular full subscription is produced twice a

month and costs $299 per year on cassette. We also offer the transcripts of each article

available by e-mail, on 3.5-inch disk, or in hard copy.

To order call toll-free (800) 334-5771. Mention

this notice and receive a 15 percent discount off the regular subscription price. Our

subscriptions come with a money-back guarantee. If you are dissatisfied at any time for

any reason, just call and we'll promptly refund the unused portion of your subscription.

So start letting us at Newstrack do your business reading for you today.

Jerry Watkins Dies:

Jeriel R. Watkins, superintendent of the New

Mexico School for the Blind from 1973 until his retirement in 1996, died Tuesday, February

10, 1998. He had suffered a brain aneurism two days earlier. Watkins was one of the

defendants in a lawsuit brought by fifteen former students who maintained that they had

been abused in various ways while students at the New Mexico School for the Visually

Impaired. (See the October, 1996, issue of the Braille Monitor.) The case was recently

settled.

Elected:

The Austin Chapter of the National Federation of

the Blind of Texas elected the following officers at its January, 1998, meeting: Zena

Pearcy, President; Mary Ward, First Vice President;

Wanda Hamm, Second Vice President; Norma Gonzales

Baker, Secretary; and Margaret Craig, Treasurer. The new Board Members are Mike Waddles

and Jim Portillo.

OSB Alumni Reunion:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

The Oklahoma School for the Blind alumni reunion

will be

held May 8, 9, and 10, 1998. A newsletter with

registration form

was sent out the last week in February. If you

are an alum and

have moved or are not on the mailing list, please

send your name

and address to Carolyn Patocka, Oklahoma School

for the Blind,

3300 Gibson Street, Muskogee, Oklahoma 74403,

(918) 682-6641,

fax: (918) 682-1651, e-mail: [email protected]

Braille Teaching Aid:

We recently learned about a Braille instructional

tool that could be helpful in teaching Braille to children:

Produced by Dancing Dots, Tack-tiles are small

rectangular blocks which show Braille symbols as large raised dots and also show the

corresponding print symbol for that Braille character. The blocks snap on to a board much

like Lego toys. There are sets for English, Spanish, math, and music Braille. Each set

contains 320 Tack-tiles, three large boards, and four smaller boards for students. Each

set costs $269 plus shipping.

More from the Braille through Remote Learning

Project:

The following notice was recently passed along to

us. Braille Monitor readers will remember that Robert Gotwals, who originally sent the

note, has been working to develop an Internet course to teach Braille to students and

would-be instructors.

This is what he says about a new project:

As a part of the Braille through Remote Learning

(BRL) Project, the Shodor Education Foundation, Inc., will be providing some basic

instruction in music Braille on the Web. We expect this course, "Specialized

Codes," to be available free of charge by early summer. The course will also include

Nemeth code, computer Braille codes, etc. This course is the third in a series of

novice-to-expert Braille courses being offered over the Net.

As the course instructor and Braillist, I have a

special interest in music. I am very active in choral music; play the cello, guitar, and

hammered dulcimer; and am currently taking piano lessons and a music theory course at

Duke. Therefore I am extremely excited about the Specialized Codes course. I'm also a

computational chemist in my real job and am thus eager to develop and offer the

instruction in Braille mathematics and other technical codes.

For more information visit

http://www.shodor.org/braille We welcome kids and especially parents of blind kids who

need any type of Braille instruction.

Writing Guides Available:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Sturdy black pocket check-writing guides are now

available with spaces for date, payee, numeric and written amount, plus signature and memo

fields. Standard-size checks are held in place for easy writing, and the guides are

durable. Cost is $4 each.

Also available are sturdy black credit-card-size

signature guides that fit either on a key chain or in your wallet. The template matches

the signature line on a standard-size check. The guide is also convenient for signing

credit card slips in a store check-out line. Cost is $1.50 each. If both items are

purchased, the cost is $5.

Send your order with a check or money order plus

a self-addressed stamped envelope to the Rev. George Gray, 1002 Johnson Street, Pasadena,

Texas 77506-4618.

For Sale:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Type 'n Speak for sale, less than one year old,

used only two or three times, includes manual and cables, asking $1,200 or best offer.

Contact Ruth King at 112 North Lakewood Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland, 21224, or (410)

732-5331.

Catalog of Braille Books Available:

The Louis Braille Center's 1998 catalog of

Braille books features eighteen new titles, including My Life for the Poor by Mother

Teresa, $18; You Come Too, poems by Robert Frost, $12; and The Velveteen Rabbit, by

Margery Williams, $18. For a free catalog in Braille or print, contact Louis Braille

Center, 320 Dayton Street, Suite 125, Edmonds, Washington 98020-3590, phone:

(425) 776-4042, fax: (425) 778-2384, or e-mail:

[email protected]

Religious Materials Available:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

Outreach with the Blind and Deaf/Blind offers

Bibles and other materials in Braille as well as a lending library. To find out about

their services, contact Floyd Rhoads, Outreach with the Blind and Deaf/Blind, Deaf/Blind

Evangelism, 4143 Edmondson, Indianapolis, Indiana 46226-5016 or call (317) 549-3433.

New Braille Music Notation Software Available:

Connie Leblond, President of the National

Federation of the Blind of Maine, has asked us to carry the following announcement:

Perspectives, total accessibility specialist, is

pleased to announce the distribution of Concerto-Braille. This software enables blind and

visually impaired users to transcribe Braille music. Features include the production of

unlimited Braille pages; free updates; free Lime notator; and current NIFF compatibility:

MIDI Scan, Lime, and Encore 5.0. It transcribes melodic lines, lyrics, and piano

accompaniment.

For more information on Perspectives' products

and services, visit our Web site at: ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/perspectives or

telephone (207) 772-7305 to request a product and service guide on computer diskette, in

print, or in Braille.

For Sale:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

I have a Kurzweil Personal Reader model 35 for

sale. It has manuals in Braille, on computer disk, and on cassette. It also has a SCSI

card and cables. It is in good condition. Asking $2,500 or best offer. Contact Brenda

Pride at (850) 455-3994.

Elected:

We recently received notice from the Greater

Seattle Chapter of the NFB of Washington that its new officers are Noel Nightingale,

President; Rita Szantay, First Vice President; Mark Noble, Second Vice President; Renee

West, Secretary; Gary Deeter, Treasurer; and Bennett Prows and Stephanie Yates, Board

Members.

Ann Morris Enterprises 1998 Catalogues Available:

We have been asked to carry the following

announcement:

If you have not received your 1998, Volume 12,

catalog, it

is time to phone Ann Morris Enterprises, Inc.,

and request your

copy in large print, cassette, or computer disk.

We have over 175

new items including an indoor/outdoor talking

thermometer,

talking count-down timer, no-flame lighter, new

Aiwa and Sony

modified recorders, and much more. Call (800)

454-3175 today or

e-mail: [email protected]

BANA Elects 1998 Officers:

The Braille Authority of North America (BANA) met

in Atlanta, Georgia, on December 8 and 9, 1997. It elected the following new officers:

Delores Ferrara-Godzieba, Chairperson;

Betty Niceley, Vice Chairperson; Phyllis Campana,

Secretary; and Charlotte Begley, Treasurer. BANA will conduct its spring meeting in

Washington, D.C., on April 27 and 28.

Elected:

On December 20, 1997, the Central Florida Chapter

of the NFB of Florida elected new officers. They are Jerry Heichelbeck, President; Sherri

Brun, Vice President; Marilyn Baldwin, Secretary; and Ruth Heichelbeck, Treasurer.

New Division:

We are pleased to report that at its Christmas

banquet on December 6, 1997, the NFB of Mississippi created Mississippi NAPUB, a division

of the National Association to Promote the Use of Braille. The officers of the new

division are Prentice Horton, President; Ella Reed, First Vice President; Gwen Stocks,

Second Vice President; James Beard, Secretary; James Prince, Treasurer; and Rhonda White

and Octivia Cotten, Board Members.

Business Opportunity:

Jim Blacksten, who is helping to organize a new

chapter in the NFB of California, has asked us to carry the following announcement:

Would you like to join an exciting business which

is selling new Leading-Edge computer products to blind people and to advertise and sell

catalogs with some imported products? If you are a member of the international community,

a woman with an interest in business, a college student, or someone who would like to be a

distributor and make some extra money, this is the perfect opportunity for you. I am

seeking to build a working relationship with a blind person having an interest in the

international market and interested in a possible future partnership involving work and

some financial investment. Whether you're interested in selling products or helping

develop catalogs and promotional materials, I'd like to talk with you. To find out how you

can become involved, call Jim Blacksten of Blacksten and Associates, Import Export, at

(650) 347-7533.

A Raffle:

The Diabetes Action Network of the National

Federation of the Blind provides support and information to thousands of people. Because

operating this valuable network and publishing the Voice of the Diabetic cost money, we

must generate funds to help cover these expenses. Our Diabetes Action Network has elected

to conduct a raffle.

The grand prize will be $500! The winning ticket

will be drawn and the winner's name announced on July 9 at the banquet held during the

annual convention of the National Federation of the Blind.

Raffle tickets cost $1 each, or a book of six may

be purchased for $5. Tickets may be purchased from state representatives of our Diabetes

Action Network or by contacting the Voice Editorial Office, 811 Cherry Street, Suite 309,

Columbia, Missouri 65201, telephone: (573) 875-8911. Anyone interested in selling tickets

should also contact the Voice Editorial Office. Tickets are available now. Names of those

who sell fifty tickets or more will be announced in the Voice.

Please make checks payable to the National

Federation of the Blind. Money and sold raffle ticket stubs must be mailed to the Voice

office no later than June 10, 1998, or they can be personally delivered to Ed Bryant at

this year's NFB convention in Dallas.

This raffle is open to anyone age eighteen or

older, and the holder of the lucky raffle ticket need not be present to win. Each ticket

sold is a donation, helping keep our Diabetes Action Network moving forward.

New Chapter:

NFB of California President Jim Willows recently

wrote to say that on a rainy El Nino day, February 21, 1998, some forty Federationists and

Federationists-to-be met to reestablish our San Francisco Chapter. This newest chapter of

the NFB of California will carry on the great work of our late colleague, Lawrence (Muzzy)

Marcelino in the city and Federation he loved. Officers elected are Jim Blacksten,

President; David Chittendon, Vice President; Helen Dodge, Secretary; Shannon Dillon,

Treasurer; and Adam Linn, Board Member. The NFB of California looks forward to great

things from the NFB of San Francisco.

Elected:

Elizabeth Campbell writes to say:

I am pleased to announce that the following

officers were elected to serve one-year terms in the Fort Worth chapter of the National

Federation of the Blind of Texas: President, Elizabeth Campbell; Vice President, Gabriel

Valentin; Secretary, Geneva Teagarden; Treasurer, Linda Fitzgerald; and Board Member, John

Jones. We look forward to an exciting year of planning projects and seeing our chapter

grow.

Playing Cards Available:

The Black Hawk County Chapter of the NFB of Iowa

is now selling Braille and large-print playing cards. Each card has National Federation of

the Blind and the organization's logo printed on the back. The cost of a deck is $6 plus

$.50 for shipping and handling. Checks should be made payable to Black Hawk County, NFBI

and should be mailed to Loren Wakefield, 722 Denver Street #2, Waterloo, Iowa 50702-2944.

Resigning:

We recently learned that at its February 13,

1998, meeting, the American Council of the Blind's Board of Directors accepted the

resignation of long-time ACB Executive Director Oral Miller, effective in September.

NFB PLEDGE

I pledge to participate actively in the effort of

the National Federation of the Blind to achieve equality, opportunity, and security for

the blind; to support the policies and programs of the Federation; and to abide by its

constitution.

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