[stylist] The National Center for the Blind described
Angela fowler
fowlers at syix.com
Thu Jan 1 01:37:27 UTC 2009
Man, I'd like to go there some day.
-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of LoriStay at aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, December 31, 2008 4:59 PM
To: stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: [stylist] The National Center for the Blind described
NFB does PR regularly, producing tapes and or CDs about blindness. One of
the best is So the Blind may Read. Bring your handkerchief. National
Representatives visit state conventions to talk about blindness, and inspire
blind people to achieve more than they think they can.
One day you ought to hop a train and go down to Baltimore to tour the Center
and the Jernigan Institute.
Let me describe it. And be aware I may not do it justice.
Originally, the building housing the national Center for the Blind at 1800
Johnson street was a big, open warehouse. Downstairs was a factory.
Upstairs
was the Center. Nowadays all three floors are used for the Center, as
well as an additional, new building for the Jernigan Institute. They are
connected, though you need a guide to get from one to the other till you are
used to the corridors.
The National Center housed a "materials center" at one time containing just
about anything you might want to order if you were blind. This has been
shifted to the "Independence Market" and though the storage is just as big,
only a small room is available with the items for sale, such as needle
threaders, braille and talking watches, cooking aides, cookbooks in Braille,
and all sorts of
necessities. We bought a tape recorder last time we were there, which has
devolved to a tape player, as it malfunctioned. We don't do many tapes any
more anyway. It's useful. If you need one, you can get a catalog on tape
or
maybe even CD from the center, or you can check the website.
When you enter the third floor, there is a large reception area with chairs,
a front desk containing the switchboard, and various glass fronted offices,
including Dr. Maurer's. turn right, and then left, and you walk down the
hall
of proclamations, and at the end turn right again and you approach the
cafeteria.
At one seminar, we participated in various activities including baking
brownies under sleepshades, and using a barbecue and a chain saw. Guess
which I
did?
There is a piano in the cafeteria, or at least it was there when I visited.
It was donated by a vendor, so no one's money was spent on it.
If when you enter the reception area and pass the front desk, you turn left,
you pass several meeting rooms, pass a small lunchroom, go through double
doors on the right side (Please!), and you find yourself passing sleeping
rooms,
built so that seminars could be held at the center. After the double doors
you find a stairway off to the left to the fourth floor. (More sleeping
rooms,
I presume. Haven't been up there) If you proceed straight ahead, down
the
end you find the Harbor room, a big room with a kitchenette, and a
fireplace, perfect also for seminars.
If it's still there, there is a gymnasium near the harbor room for those
wishing to work the treadmill and various other equipment on their lunch
hour.
And that's just the third floor of the center.
I think the Technology Center is on the second floor (Don't quote me). In
this room, you find one of every piece of equipment manufactured for blind
people. Computer equipment, Braille Printers, note takers, and so on. If
it's
made, the Center has purchased one to show, though it may or may not be sold
through the Federation.
Somewhere in the building is a recording studio. Newsline for the Blind
operates out of the Center.
Dr. Maurer has an apartment for his family off the Harbor room, so he can be
readily available.
In the Jernigan Center, which fronts on a street parallel to Johson Street,
and is an impressive building, you will find an auditorium, the Jernigan
library, vastly expanded from its original home in one of the meeting rooms
of the
center, and a huge room that has been used for balls and receptions. I
think
maybe the Youth slam might be held there (a summer program for blind youth).
The staff of the center and the institute are dedicated people who tend to
work far more than eight hours a day, though they might be reachable by
phone only the usual eight.
The halls of the center and the institute are long enough so that you
definitely get your exercise in!
I know I've left things out. Please feel free to supplement what i've
described.
Lori
In a message dated 12/31/08 4:41:17 PM, jbron at optonline.net writes:
> Perhaps our focus should be a PR campaign to show, in articles, with
> speakers, audio visual demonstrations etc. exactly what is possible
> with children who are educated properly even if they are blind.
>
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