Monitor Miniatures

Untitled Document

The Braille Monitor

June, 1989

(back)

(next)

Marc Maurer stands outside of the

National Center for the Blind in Baltimore

as the National Federation

of the Blind sign is about to be placed on top of

the building in the

fall of 1988.

(back)

(next)

IS THERE A MISTAKE

The Braille Monitor

June, 1989

(back)

(next) (contents)

IS THERE

A MISTAKE?

Spring is the time of year for housecleaning,

and that includes the Monitor mailing list. You can help us with this

task by taking a moment to check the mailing label on this magazine. If there

are any errors or changes you would like to have made in your name or address,.please

let us know. If you are receiving more than one copy of the Monitor by mistake,

PRESIDENT MAURER TESTIFIES FOR A NATIONAL BRAILLE BILL

The Braille Monitor

June, 1989

(back)

(next) (contents)

PRESIDENT MAURER TESTIFIES

FOR A

NATIONAL BRAILLE BILL

On March 7, 1989, a hearing was conducted

before the Select Education Committee of the house

Committee on Education and Labor. Congressman Major L. Owens, Chairman

of the Select Education Subcommittee, invited President Maurer to appear

LrrERACY FOR THE BLIND AT SCHOOL AND WORK: A PANEL DISCUSSION

The Braille Monitor

June, 1989

(back)

(next) (contents)

LITERACY

FOR THE BLIND AT SCHOOL AND WORK:

A PANEL DISCUSSION

Braille literacy is undoubtedly one

of the most important and pressing issues facing blind citizens today. Whether

blind adults of the coming decades will take their rightful place as fully-productive

members of their communities will depend in large measure on their ability to

The Braille Monitor

June, 1989

(back)

(next) (contents)

BLIND WORKERS CLAIM WAGES EXPLOITIVE

From the Editor: The

Southwest Lighthouse for the Blind in Lubbock, Texas continues to attract nationwide

publicity. Here is an article which appeared in the Columbia, Missouri, Daily

Tribune on March 6, 1989. It is one more indicator of the progress the National

Federation of the Blind is making and the changing public attitudes which are

accompaning it.

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP)

JOBS, EQUALITY, AND THE BLIND

The Braille Monitor

June, 1989

(back)

(next) (contents)

JOBS, EQUALITY, AND THE BLIND

by

Patricia Munson

Superintendent

Andrew Viscovich honors Pat Munson on her twenty-five years of teaching

in the Berkeley United School District

From the Editor.-

Patricia (Pat) Munson is one of the leaders of the National Federation of the

Blind of California.

This year I am celebrating

The Braille Monitor

June, 1989

(back)

(next) (contents)

WHO IS BLIND

AND IS IT RESPECTABLE?

By Kenneth

Jernigan

It is

interesting to note how flexible the attitudes about blindness are. When an

individual with a little eyesight is trying to get a job, he or she is often

not blind at all; but when that same individual is filling out Social Security

or tax forms, he or she may be as blind as they come. A number of years ago

The Braille Monitor January, 1990

The Braille

Monitor

Vol. 33, No.

1 January

1990

Barbara

Pierce, Editor

Published in inkprint, Braille, on talking-book disc,

and cassette by

THE NATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE BLIND

MARC MAURER, PRESIDENT

National Office

1800 Johnson Street

Baltimore, Maryland 21230

NFB Net BBS: (612) 696-1975

Web Page Address: http//www.nfb.org

Letters to the president,

Braille Monitor, 6/91

The

Braille Monitor

Vol. 34,

No. 6 June

1991

Barbara Pierce,

Editor

Published in inkprint, in Braille,

on cassette and

the World Wide Web and FTP on the Internet

The National Federation of the Blind

Marc Maurer, President

National Office

1800 Johnson Street

Baltimore, Maryland 21230

NFB Net BBS: (612) 696-1975