How NAC Has Learned to Help

Like Pinocchio, the National

Accreditation Council began life as a puppet. Unlike NAC, however, Pinocchio eventually

became an independent, living being. You will remember that Pinocchio's nose grew longer

each time he told a lie. Here Peggy Elliott points out a related phenomenon which occurs

whenever NAC makes its claims of excellence and usefulness.

(Photo adapted from an illustration by Richard Floethe)

How NAC Has Learned to Help the

Blind

by Peggy Elliott

On the Nature of Mental Discipline

On the Nature of Mental

Discipline and Sonnets

by Kenneth Jernigan

President Maurer (left) and Dr. Jernigan (right) shake

hands at the NCSAB reception.

Recently in North Carolina, when I was undergoing

cancer treatment and having a restless night, I put together a piece for the Monitor that

I have been intending to do for more than thirty years. I doubt that I will ever write

such an article again, but at least for once here goes.

From time to time I am asked what technique I use

National Task Force on Employment

National Task Force on Employment

of Adults with Disabilities

From the Editor: We recently received the

following notice which could conceivably affect employment opportunities for blind people

in coming years. Here is the text:

THE WHITE HOUSE, Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release, March 13, 1998

EXECUTIVE ORDER

Increasing Employment of Adults with Disabilities

By the authority vested in me as President by the

EEOC Charges Filed

Debbie and Stuart Prost

EEOC Charges Filed Against

Virginia's So-called

Disability Rights Agency

by Charles Brown

From the Editor: Charlie Brown is the

President of the National Federation of the Blind of Virginia and a Member of the NFB

Board of Directors. The following report is reprinted from the Winter, 1998, issue of the

NFB Vigilant, a publication of the NFB of Virginia. Stuart Prost is a long-time member of

Music Education Network

Introducing Music Education

Network for the Visually Impaired

by Richard Taesch

From the Editor: In general education circles

in recent years, people have become increasingly aware of the importance of music

education to the entire child, particularly with respect to developing skills in

mathematics and logic. This discovery or rediscovery has obvious implications for blind

youngsters as well. (See the article "Music Education: Not Just a Frill" in the

The Hollow Nature of Political Correctness

Noel Nightingale

The Hollow Nature of Political

Correctness

by Noel Nightingale

From the Editor: Noel Nightingale is a Member

of the Board of Directors of the National Association of Blind Lawyers and First Vice

President of the NFB of Washington. She is an attorney in the Environmental Practice Group

in the law firm of Heller, Ehrman, White, & McAuliffe in Seattle. This is what she

says:

There are several problems with the late

Dots Plus

Dr. John Gardner

DotsPlus

by John A. Gardner

From the Editor: John Gardner is professor

and director of the Science Access Project, Department of Physics, Oregon State

University. In mid-November of 1997 something of a media flap occurred when Senator Ron

Wyden objected loudly and publicly that the Department of Education had rejected a grant

application from a blind physicist in his state merely because the proposal was not

submitted in a double-spaced, large-print format. The rejection apparently had nothing to

Equality Safari-Style

PHOTO/CAPTION: Michael Baillif

Equality Safari-Style

by Michael Baillif

From the Editor: In the years since Michael

Baillif first won an NFB scholarship in 1984, he has frequently contributed to the Braille

Monitor. Often his articles are reflections on experiences he has had during trips to

other countries. The following article is no exception. Here it is:

Our van had been bumping, thumping, and skidding

over the nearly impassable road for what seemed like an eternity. Finally we had reached

Convention Extras

Elizabeth Campbell

Convention Extras

by Elizabeth Campbell

From the Editor: The following article is the

last pre-convention offering from the Texas affiliate. In just a few weeks we will be

gathering for the 1998 convention of the National Federation of the Blind, and you don't

want to miss it. President Maurer is hard at work on the convention agenda, and you

already know from recent Monitor articles just how much activity is planned around

Raising the Bar

Raising the Bar: First Tme at National Convention

by Dan Burke

From the Editor: People who have attended

National Conventions know what an astonishing impact that first experience can have on a

life, but it's hard to convey to those who have never taken their courage in both their

hands and decided to go what a difference that week of inspiration, information, and

friendship can make in their lives. They can easily conceive of all sorts of problems,