The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 20, 1983, Image 7

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Wednesday, April 20, 1983/The Battalion/Page 7
eading for those who can’t
Taping opens books to blind
United Press International
DALLAS — Sometimes the
:n is not mightier than the
oken word. An agency in
Etas proves that point in
jens of weird accents and mil-
ns of words each month.
The Dallas Taping for the
— one of only a half-
:ensuch agencies under con-
ict with the Library of Con-
:ss—has opened the pages of
reasure Island” to blind chil
li in hospitals, computer
anuals to hi-tech buffs and
lancial reports to blind stock-
|ders.
We help anybody who can’t
id the printed word,” said
ncy director Edward Sterne,
lat means the blind, the
rningdisabled, the handicap-
person who is incapable of
ilding a book.”
He said the agency’s produc
tions, based on the voices of 130
volunteers, run the gamut.
“We tape trade publications
We help anybody who
can’t read the printed
word. That means the
blind, the learning dis
abled, the handicapped
person who is incapable
of holding a book. —
Edward Sterne, agency
director.
and financial reports,” he said.
“We do a lot of textbooks, docu
ments for graduate students,
newspapers, books on pesti
cides. We have an American In
dian who gives us scads of In
dian books.”
The service has filled the lib
rary of a local children’s hospital
with classics including “Trea
sure Island,” “Alice in Wonder
land,” “Tom Sawyer” and “Little
Women.”
Sterne said the service issues
about six books a month under
contract with the Library of
Congress and tapes another
2,022 publications monthly by
local request.
But the work is time-
consuming and difficult.
“For ‘20,000 Leagues Under
the Sea,’ ” he said, “we made
eight cassettes of 90 minutes
each. A volunteer gives us only
two hours a week. When one
volunteer is through reading,
we move in another so taping
goes on all day long. So that’s a
lot of volunteer time in a single
book.”
He said the printed word
sometimes can cause problems
when it’s vocalized.
“In current novels there are a
lot of four-letter words,” he said.
“It’s one thing to read some
thing in the privacy of your liv
ing room and quite another to
read it out loud.”
Sometimes the objections are
political or religious.
“We have two people who re
fused to read a book by Jane
Fonda because they didn’t like
what she stood for,” he said.
“Another reader wanted to
put a disclaimer on a book we
were assigned by the Library of
Congress,” he said. “This is the
Bible belt and the book was ab
out atheism, an anti-God trea
tise. That was tough.”
He said the assignment was
given to another.
“We have to be flexible,” he
said. “These are volunteers.”
He said the readers must be
given hours of training and
many cannot qualify in taping
national publications.
“The Library of Congress
doesn’t want to hear Texas or
Southern accents,” he said.
He said the Dallas agency
pioneered a new field of word-
talk.
Now, he said requests for the
computer tapes are flooding
from New York, Chicago, St.
Louis and elsewhere.
DIETING?
Even though we do not prescribe
diets, we make it possible for many to
enjoy a nutritious meal while they
follow their doctor's orders. You will
be delighted with the wide selection
of low calorie, sugar free and fat free
foods in the Souper Salad Area, Sbisa
Dining Center Basement.
OPEN
Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM
QUALITY FIRST
Gramm opposes proposal
o swap his constituents
y ■
.veekendl
United Press International
AUSTIN — Rep. Phil
lamm, of Bryan-College Sta-
, has been quoted by one
te representative as being
ongly opposed to a redistrict-
plan that would take some
lets from his current district
ive him some in House Ma
li} Leader Jim Wright’s dis-
The reapportionment prop-
al, which will go to floor de
les in both the House and Sen-
:next week, would take away
publican Gramm’s consti-
ents in southwest Dallas Coun
ty and put them in Dallas Demo
cratic Congressman Martin
Frost’s district.
To compensate for the loss,
primarily Democratic voters
from House Majority Leader
Jim Wright’s district would be
shifted into Gramm’s district.
Sen. Oscar Mauzy, D-Dallas,
who is sponsoring the plan, de
nied it is an attempt to punish
Gramm for resigning his seat as
a Democrat and successfully
being re-elected as a Republican
in February.
“The two changes are basical
ly a wash. They cancel each
other out,” Mauzy said Monday.
But Gramm supporters con
tend the primarily white and
conservative voters in Dallas
County gave Gramm 79 percent
of the vote in the special elec
tion.
“According to him (Gramm),
it (the changes) would make it
much tougher for him to get re
elected,” said Sen. Buster
Brown, R-Lake Jackson. “The
net effect of the two changes
causes trouble.”
In addition to the changes in
Gramm’s district, the proposal
also would alter freshman U.S.
TEXAS A&EM UNIVERSITY
SYMPHONIC BAND
- membership by audition each September
- instrumentation set for 75
- activities include concerts and a spring trip
- rehearsals twice a week
- open to all students
/
Begun in 1973, the Symphonic Band offers students
at Texas A&M University the opportunity to play their
instruments with others from across Texas and the nation.
Rehearsing twice weekly, Tuesday and Thursday, from
12:30-1:45 p.m., the band allows students to play in a
group while concentrating on their major field of study.
If you would like to audition, block the above time out at
registration by listing SYMB 500.
For additional information write or call
Bill J. Dean
Director Symphonic Band
E. V. Adams Band Bldg.
College Station, Texas
77843
STH&g*rr SPE-Clft-L- SRMg ^.75
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Sr v) con jTy
Rep. Tom VandergrifFs district
by expanding it to include the
entire city of Arlington. That
city, which was the long-time
former mayor’s strongest base
of support, currently is divided
among two districts.
“The people of Arlington
were upset about not being in
just one congressional district
and I think rightly so,” Mauzy
said.
T-S-Q
Prescriptions Filled
Glasses Repaired
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301 Patricia
846-3768
846-7751
New Lunch
Hours
11 a.m.-2 a.m. M-Th
11 a.m.-3 a.m. F. & S.
11 a.m.-l a.m. Sun.
PIZZA
CHANELLO ’S
Now Open For Lunch
Chanello’s new management be
lieves that 30 minutes is long
enough to wait for a pizza, so, at
CHANELLO’S, if your pizza isn’t
delivered within 30 minutes, its
FREE anywhere within our delivery
area.
Exp. 5-30-83
30 Minute Delivery
or FREE.
Good on any pizza delivered in
more than 30 minutes from the
time you ordered.
CHANELLO’S
SUPREME
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16" Supreme Pizza
Plus 2 qts. Coke
o„, v $ 9 35
4-30-83
Expires 5-31-83
Expires 5-31-83
$
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$
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Any 2 Item 12" Pizza
Plus 1 qt. Coke!
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Any 16" 2 Item Pizza £
Plus 2 qts. Coke!
CHANELLO’S
5-31-83
OFF
Any 20" Pizza Plus 2
qts. Coke.
CHANELLO’S
5-31-83
Lunch Special
$ 2 Off Any Pizza Plus 1 qt. 0
Coke. 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
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