News April-June 1995, Volume 26, No. 2 ISSN 1046-1663 National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped The Library of Congress LaBarge becomes source for cassette players LaBarge Electronics of Huntsville, Arkansas, has become a second American manufacturer of the cassette player used by the patrons of the NLS free national talking-book program. A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held at the LaBarge Electronics manufacturing facility in Huntsville on April 3, followed by a plant tour. Local officials as well as print and broadcast media attended the event. As the second American company source of the cassette playback machine, LaBarge "provides the Library of Congress with the necessary production to meet current and future cassette playback equipment needs," said NLS director Frank Kurt Cylke in his remarks at the ceremony. "We and LaBarge Electronics have been working for several years to bring their production to `on-line' status. This ribbon-cutting ceremony is a tribute to a contractual partnership that will greatly benefit blind and physically handicapped patrons of the talking-book program for years to come." The Library's contract with LaBarge calls for the production of 20,000 cassette playback machines. The Telex Corporation of Blue Earth, Minnesota, is NLS's other manufacturer of playback equipment. In his remarks, Cylke noted the importance of "zero defects," and, making his comments directly to the LaBarge employees who work on the cassette-player production line, "Whatever your job, and each job is very important, it helps make a perfect machine. You should know you are doing a job that has meaning to 750,000 Americans who rely on talking books as an important part of their lives." Craig LaBarge, president of the St. Louis-based firm, said, "Over the years, LaBarge has participated in many sophisticated and demanding programs; designed and manufactured products and systems that operate beneath the sea, below the earth, and in outer space; and now, with the production of this cassette player, products that improve quality of life." The NLS network was represented by J.D. Hall, Arkansas regional librarian, Little Rock, and Rachel Anne Ames, Fayetteville, Arkansas, subregional librarian, as well as several other network staff and Telephone Pioneers. Library of Congress officials, including Scott Fulmore, chief of the Contracts and Logistics Services Division (C&L), were present and made remarks to the media. Fulmore said, "The best part of this achievement is that this is an American company working in a contractual partnership with the Library of Congress. From a technology perspective, I know this has been a difficult achievement, driven by a goal of `total quality.' Today's ribbon-cutting ceremony represents the fruition of many years of effort by LaBarge Electronics and the Library to produce a perfect product." Also representing the Library of Congress were Katherine Phillips, contracts officer, C&L; Brad Kormann, chief of the NLS Materials Development Division (MDD); Henry B. Paris, former chief (retired) of MDD, who was instrumental in initiating procedures for a second source of machines; John Cookson, head of the NLS Engineering Section; and Robert Fistick, head of the NLS Publications and Media Section, who coordinated the event. Future production "With two sources of supply now developed, we have a competitive environment for bidding to help keep costs down," says Brad Kormann, who, as chief of MDD, is responsible for monitoring production. "We also have assurance of a continuing supply of machines, which are essential for patrons who use recorded reading materials." According to Kormann, LaBarge has several plants around the country. The Huntsville plant, which produces the C-2, has been more than 90 percent defense oriented. "This kind of production has been new for them, and assembly-line procedures had to be worked out." The C-2 cassette machine has been through the full NLS quality-assurance testing cycle, starting with development of two prototype samples and then a small production run of 200 machines. Currently, 300 machines are being sent to each of two test sites in the network of cooperating libraries: the regional libraries in Sacramento, California, and Daytona Beach, Florida. An additional 100 machines are being sent to NLS to test packaging for handling in the mails. By the end of the summer, production is expected to be up to 2,000 machines per month. A new "C-3" machine contract, currently out for bids, can be awarded in a split with contractors producing either C-1 or C-2 machines. The two machines are similar in design but use tape decks from different manufacturers. The units also differ in the length of time to fully charge the battery: the C-2 takes about twenty-two hours but can be left plugged in indefinitely; the C-1 takes about fourteen hours and should be unplugged and allowed to run down between charges. These variations result largely because of materials incorporated. Both machines serve patron needs for playback equipment. (photo caption: Frank Kurt Cylke, NLS director (left), and Craig LaBarge, president of LaBarge Electronics, examine one of the first NLS cassette machines produced at the Huntsville plant.) (photo caption: Honored guests tour the production area as a television cameraman records the LaBarge employees at work.) ### ManTech concludes study: Committee supports continued decentralization of machine repair "The changes are going to be evolutionary, rather than revolutionary." That's how Michael Moodie, NLS research and development officer, characterizes NLS's latest plans for the inventory control and repair of its playback machines. Moodie's comments reflect those of the NLS Implementation Study Advisory Committee in response to the latest report by ManTech, a contractor that recently completed a study of the distribution, repair, and inventory control of audio playback equipment. The contractor identified machine repair as a major factor. Last spring the committee concluded that centralizing machine repairs in one or two facilities would be expensive and that other approaches might produce effective solutions. The committee asked the contractor to provide more data supporting the need for change and to recommend options. ManTech report In its report for this year's meeting, held at NLS on February 13-14, ManTech indicated that improvement is needed, citing its work with twenty volunteer repair groups. The contractors tested forty machines repaired by each group against draft standards recently developed by NLS volunteer repair organizations-- Telephone Pioneers and Elfuns--and machine-lending agencies (MLAs). Of the 800 machines tested, only 58 percent were found to meet the standards. To explain this relatively low percentage, Moodie cited the "huge growth" in the number of cassette book machines in use in recent years, noting that these machines require more and more-difficult repairs than record players do. In addition, until now there have been no general repair standards. ManTech offered three options for improving machine repair: establishing a centralized facility run by hired staff; developing a set of twenty to thirty regional facilities staffed by volunteers; or strengthening the current decentralized system of some three hundred volunteer repair groups. Committee recommendations After discussing the costs and effort required for each option, the committee supported enhancement of the current, decentralized repair system and used ManTech's findings to suggest ways to improve the system's performance. One concern is already being addressed with the development of the machine-repair standards. Beginning this spring, five volunteer machine-repair sites will begin using the standards, with NLS engineers providing training and support. The committee explored other ways to improve machine repairs, including increased involvement of NLS with repair groups, an independent quality check of repaired machines, and an increase in the quantity of test equipment and materials supplied by NLS. The committee suggested that, while strengthening the current decentralized system, NLS might also encourage the growth of any groups that show an interest in accepting more work, eventually consolidating the repairs at a smaller number of sites. That measure would decrease the expense and staff time needed to provide the level of support called for by the study. On other topics, the committee suggested that inventory control could be improved by increasing the use of such technologies as telecommunications and barcoding, tightening guidelines for borrowing of machines by institutions, and initiating more aggressive procedures for retrieving machines from patrons who leave the system. The committee also discussed parts of the ManTech report that covered many of last year's recommendations detailed in _News,_ Vol. 25, No. 2. Six-year study concludes With the conclusion of ManTech's contract at the end of March, the NLS study, begun with a survey of baseline costs in 1989, is complete, although recommendations and procedures will continue to be explored by NLS staff. NLS director Frank Kurt Cylke thanked all the members of the advisory committee, who worked with NLS in studying the reports generated by ManTech and whose guidance led to the design of a centralized braille distribution system and other improvements in the NLS system. "We greatly appreciate all the effort and insight contributed by members of the advisory committee," he said. "They have added enormously to the study process, helping to craft practical solutions that benefit consumers and are usable at network libraries." Four members of the committee have served since the beginning. They are network librarians Sue Murdock, Richard Peel (now retired), Joyce Smith, and Margaret Wolfe. (Committee members in attendance: Aloma Bouma, National Federation of the Blind; Jim Johnson, COSLA; Barbara Mates, ASCLA; Sue Murdock, Northern Conference; Richard Peel, Western Conference; Jennifer Sutton, American Council of the Blind; Guynell Williams, Southern Conference; Margaret Wolfe, Midlands Conference Members unable to attend: Thomas Miller, Blinded Veterans Association; Joyce Smith, Subregional libraries) ### AFB moves to new quarters The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB), one of the founders of the talking-book program and a major producer of talking books, has moved to a new workplace in midtown Manhattan, New York City, after sixty years in the Chelsea district. The 45,000-square-foot facility is located on the third floor of a twenty-three-story building in Penn Plaza, across the street from Madison Square Garden and Penn Station, one of New York City's primary transportation hubs. The fully accessible quarters contain offices; an information center; and AFB's complete audiotape production operation, which occupies nearly one-third of the total space. "AFB has shown its continuing commitment to the talking-book program by devoting financial resources to the design and construction of state-of-the-art studios and duplication facilities," says Jim Rossi, vice president of Talking Books and Information Services. Office areas Visitors to the new plant enter a reception area that contains Helen Keller memorabilia. Keller's desk, chair, Bible, brailler, and other office fixtures are on display, as well as her many medals and citations, including a 1955 Academy Award for a starring role in the feature documentary _Her Story._ Exhibit cases along the main hallway house items that recount the nearly seventy-five-year history of AFB. Among the artifacts is a time capsule left by Helen Keller containing a wire recording of the opening ceremony for AFB's original building. The main office area consists of a long hallway with independent office units along one side and cubicles along the other. The floors throughout the area are carpeted. Cut-out squares at corners expose the wooden floor beneath to serve as tactile guides, alerting visually impaired visitors to hallway intersections. The information center offers tables and carrels for walk-in patrons to use while doing research on nonmedical aspects of blindness and visual impairment. Computers with adaptive equipment are available to access on-line bibliographies and other resource listings. Compact shelving contains the M.C. Migel Library--more than 37,000 books, periodicals, dissertations, reports, and other resources. Shelves also house the Helen Keller Archives, containing photographs, personal material, mementos, and rare books. Four conference rooms allow for staff gatherings, board meetings, and other functions. The main meeting room is equipped with indirect lighting, an expandable table, and teleconferencing capability. The facility uses motion-detector light switches to save energy and employs card-reader security technology to protect staff and materials. Production area The audiobook production facilities are laid out to allow smooth movement of people and materials. For the first time, all phases of AFB's talking-book production are located under one roof. "We expect the more efficient flow-through of materials to give us a much easier, smoother operation," says Gerry Nigro, acting director of the Talking Books Department. Eight state-of-the-art recording studios serve as the heart of the talking-book production program. Each acoustically independent studio is lined with six-inch insulated walls that dampen outside noise, and the entire studio area is surrounded by six-inch sheetrock walls that further eliminate extraneous sounds. Individual thermostats allow narrators to control ventilation and temperature in each booth according to their needs. At one end of the studio area, monitors and reviewers check narration tapes for artistic and technical quality. A collection of reference books at the other end of the unit gives narrators quick access to sources that aid in correct pronunciation. Next door to the studio, staff members perform quality checks on narration tapes. Tapes then move to the next production step located in the duplication area. Thirty duplicating units copy open-reel tape that is then loaded into cassette shells. The duplicating area also contains an archive room and an in-house technical repair shop. Around the corner from the duplication equipment, tables and shelves are set up to allow for packing and storage of cassette books ready for shipment. Mailbags and tubs and other materials are moved through a freight elevator near the shipping area. The new work area was designed by the Keir Handman Group of New York. An open house is scheduled for late May. (photo caption: Reception area in AFB's new New York City facility.) (photo caption: A collection of Helen Keller memorabilia is displayed in the AFB reception area.) (photo caption: Frances Levine, technical proofing manager (above), monitors an AFB audiobook recording. Technician Isaac Taft (right) prepares one of the thirty duplicating units.) ### Telephone Pioneers honored at Great Hall gala event "We are gathered this evening to pay tribute to the Telephone Pioneers of America, who for the past thirty-five years have spent countless hours repairing more than two million playback machines used by blind and physically handicapped patrons of the Library of Congress's talking-book program, called the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped," said Deputy Librarian of Congress Dr. Hiram Davis in addressing a gala reception in the Great Hall of the Library's Thomas Jefferson Building on March 28. Continuing his remarks to approximately 200 guests representing the Telephone Pioneers, the national telecommunications industry, the Congress, the Library, NLS staff, and the NLS network of libraries, Davis said, "The National Library Service has grown because of continued congressional support of reading programs for citizens who are handicapped and because of the support of the Telephone Pioneers of America, without whose tireless efforts the Library could not continue the talking-book program. "The Telephone Pioneers of America, with a membership of more than 875,000 former and current telecommunications employees in the United States and Canada, is the largest industry-related volunteer organization in the world. It has provided funding and volunteers in support of the many educational needs of our society and continues to enhance the lives of all Americans through national and community projects. "To give you some idea of their enormous national contribution to the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, just consider this fact: between 1980 and 1993, the Pioneers voluntarily repaired 1,093,352 playback machines--a private sector contribution valued at more than $54.6 million dollars. The Pioneers continue to provide expert repair and maintenance service for the more than 757,600 cassette players and 231,391 record players in circulation today. "On behalf of the Library of Congress, I am honored to present this award plaque to Don MacKenzie, president of the Telephone Pioneers of America," Davis concluded. After receiving the engraved brass plaque mounted on a walnut base, MacKenzie thanked Davis and the Library of Congress on behalf of the Telephone Pioneers for their tribute. Davis introduced Kenneth Jernigan, president of the Friends of Libraries for Blind and Physically Handicapped Individuals in North America (Friends) and president emeritus of the National Federation of the Blind (NFB), who spoke of the importance of the Telephone Pioneers' volunteer machine-repair efforts in the context of what that effort means to the 750,000 patrons of the talking-book program. He lauded NLS as a vital part of the lives of blind people and said, "I commend the work of the NLS program, its staff, and its director." Euclid Herie, vice president of the Friends and president and chief executive officer of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB), also made brief remarks, describing in some detail his experiences in providing talking-book services in Canada and how the Telephone Pioneers have made a difference in the lives of Canadians who use the services. _Answering the Call_ _Answering the Call: Telephone Pioneer Talking-Book Machine-Repair Program 1960-1993,_ a new NLS publication, describes the development of a nationwide network of repair workshops staffed by volunteers who are members of the Telephone Pioneers of America. It tells how Pioneers began repairing machines at the request of the Library, when staff repair of machines proved impossible. The book's authors are Ruth Nieland and George Thuronyi, writer-editors in the NLS Publications and Media Section. _Answering the Call_ is a record of that work and a tribute to the Pioneers' dedication. The book contains photographs of Pioneers at work and describes development of the program up to the establishment of regional coordinators in 1993. The book is available from the NLS Reference Section.) (photo caption: Don MacKenzie, president of the Telephone Pioneers of America, accepts a plaque from Dr. Hiram Davis, Deputy Librarian of Congress. At the right MacKenzie displays the plaque, which recognized the Pioneers' thirty-five years of service to NLS, and accepts the applause of the event attendees. Photographs by Yusef El-Amin.) ### Minnesota library celebrates completed expansion Outdoors it was gray and gloomy, but inside the atmosphere was filled with laughter and warmth as more than 350 people gathered to celebrate the rededication of the Minnesota Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (MLBPH) in Faribault on April 12. "It was a warm, family-type affair with people visiting from all over the state and lots of laughter as the background `music' for everyone," says Nancy Walton, library director. "Old friends and first-time visitors enjoyed meeting the library staff and touring the library to discover what we do to bring books to their homes by mail." The rededication was held in the Minnesota State Academy for the Blind to enable all students to attend. The library shares the campus of the Academy and serves as the school library. Speakers included Bill Asp, director of library development and services in Minnesota; Debra Wasserman, chair of the MLBPH Patron Advisory Committee; Elaine Sveen, superintendent of the Academy; and Nancy Walton, library director. Myrna Wright, MLBPH library director from 1972-1993, was the guest of honor. The highlight of the program, according to Walton, was a song written and performed by the Academy choir, who wrote new words to the tune of "I've Got Shoes." Their rendition of "I need books, you need books, all of us people need books" was accompanied with props such as discs, cassettes, and braille, and by bongo drums. Everyone walked back to the library through the drizzle for the ribbon cutting, refreshments, and library tours. The celebration culminated a year of construction that brought the collection together in one building for the first time in more than twenty years. During the construction, the library remained open, and patron service continued despite noise, dust and dirt, lack of restrooms and running water, temporary doors, and constantly moving staff and material as all areas of the building underwent changes. The library collection of more than 200,000 items was rearranged and reorganized as the braille and cassettes housed in Dow Hall were moved into the new library stacks. The Academy also endured all the inconveniences and "all the fun" of the major construction, according to Walton. "Students and staff were sidewalk superintendents and awed observers of the construction process." The Academy provided the library staff with much-appreciated restrooms, quiet conference space, and an air-conditioned refuge during the summer. The finished library is larger and more convenient that the previous facility. The 20,900-square-foot building includes nearly 9,000 square feet of new space on two levels. The remodeled and expanded reading room features a new entrance, browsing collections of braille and cassette books and braille magazines, and a private listening room. On the lower level, the collection is shelved by media, in book number order, and retrieval is much faster than before. Two-thirds of the new area is filled with compact shelving (bringing total compact shelving to half the lower level) with the rest engineered for future expansion. Only the cassette collection extends to the first floor, where the newest cassettes are shelved. On the first floor, staff work areas were expanded, painted, and rearranged to make better use of space; the recording booth was moved into the audio-visual area; and equipment for the volunteer recording program and cassette duplication was upgraded. There is now a fax machine in the library to receive customer requests, and staff have dial-in access to the Internet. The entire building is air conditioned. A new sculpture is installed on the west side of the addition. "Octopus and Ice Cream," by Stanton Sears and Andrea Myklebust, was acquired through the Minnesota Art in Public Places program of the Minnesota State Arts Board, with additional funding from the MLBPH gift fund. Art from the 1959 building, a sculpture wall featuring cut-out shapes of animals and plants, has been reinstalled at the new library entrance. Extensive landscaping has been added around the library. Plants were selected for their interesting scents, says Walton, and for their "pleasant sounds in the wind." Information for this article was provided by Nancy Walton, Minnesota regional librarian, Faribault. (photo caption: Cheryl M. Peterson, data processing coordinator and audio-visual unit lead worker for the Minnesota regional library, tests new recording equipment.) (photo caption: The front entrance of the Minnesota regional library with new wing at the right.) ### Network exchange Nevada The regional library in Carson City has produced a new brochure called "Talking Books" describing services available, materials provided, eligibility criteria, and the areas served by the regional library and by the subregional in Las Vegas. The cover of the attractive, hot-pink brochure features a new logo with the sun rising over the mountains, a cassette, and the Library of Congress seal superimposed over an outline of the state. Two recent newspaper articles also featured the library. One dealt primarily with volunteer services, including those of the Sierra Nevada chapter of the Telephone Pioneers, who maintain the more than 2,500 machines available for patrons. The other featured the newly established recording operation, which began this year to provide books on Nevada history and _Nevada Magazine._ The recording program has taken two years to establish, following the 1993 installation of a recording booth purchased with federal grant money. The subsequent time has been used to purchase equipment (about $20,000 worth) and to recruit and train volunteer narrators, monitors, and reviewers. New York (Suffolk County) The Suffolk Cooperative Library System, which includes Talking Books Plus, the subregional library, is cosponsoring a series of five community forums on rights and responsibilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act, services available through independent-living organizations, and services provided by libraries. The other sponsor is Self-Initiated Living Options, Inc. (SILO), Suffolk's independent-living organization. The forums are being held at public libraries throughout the county during April, May, and June. All locations are wheelchair accessible. Sign-language interpreters and an assistive-listening system are available. New York (Albany) The regional library, formerly called the New York State Library for the Blind and Visually Handicapped, has changed its name to the New York State Talking Book and Braille Library. The name change, which focused on the inclusion of "talking book" as part of the title, was considered by individual patrons, the Consumer Advisory Committee, members of the New York State Board of Regents, the Office of Cultural Administration, State Library executive staff, and library staff. Jane Somers, regional librarian, says that reactions to the new name have been uniformly positive. Hawaii An official dedication ceremony was held in October for the expanded Radio Reading Services Hawaii. On the recommendation of the advisory committee, an additional hour has been added to the morning programming and two more hours in the evening. With more than 100 people in attendance, a brief program, which gave a history of national and local reading services, was broadcast live to highlight the event. ### Canadian National Institute for the Blind Library The Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB) Library, formerly the Canadian Free Library for the Blind, became a division of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind in 1918. It provides a national mail-order library service and transcription services (textbooks and related material) to more than 16,000 registered users and produces books and documents in alternative formats for government agencies, libraries, businesses, and educational institutions. The Library also supports the educational, employment, and recreational needs of its users. It has a specialized print and audio collection on blindness, visual impairment, deaf-blindness, and rehabilitation. It also serves as a resource center for staff and volunteers. Library services for visually impaired people in Canada are funded solely by charitable donations. The demand for these services will continue to grow, as will the technological changes in computers and telecommunications. However, due to the recessionary financial climate and the competition among agencies for these funds, the library has been compelled to "reposition itself." (1) In 1991, under the guidance of Rosemary Kavanagh, executive director, the library board developed a strategic five-year plan, _Crossroads 1993-1998,_ in response to the change in consumer needs and information services and the reallocation of funds. The new goals are the following: --- Expansion of service beyond leisure collections toward comprehensive access to information resources to students, academics, professionals, employed persons, and the retired elderly community. --- Positioning of the library as a partner and supplier of alternate-format materials and access services to institutions that advocate and market the requirements of the blind information consumer in a competitive environment. --- Resolution of duplicate and overlapping services between the CNIB Library and other publicly funded institutions based on established standards. --- Emphasis on partnerships and networking to assure the range and depth of information resources and promote awareness and cooperation among Canadians, other institutions in North America, and inter-nationally. --- Addition of products that recognize the trends in service and information needs and ensure that the blind consumer receives all the advantages of new developments in a timely manner. (2) The Information Resource Centre (IRC) was opened in June 1994 to address these goals. Billing itself as a "library without walls, it offers state-of-the-art electronic technology that allows user access to electronic databases from home or office and access to resources at other libraries." (3) At present, the IRC is equipped with a Kurzweil Reading Edge scanner with voice and braille output connected to a computer. It also has four computer workstations equipped to provide voice and braille output that allow for access to electronic newspapers and job posting, CD-ROM dictionaries and encyclopedias, and related resources. One of these workstations has large-print magnification. This equipment provides for the quick production of information in audio, braille, and computer-diskette format. CNIB has taken the lead in defining its clients as "consumers who need to place equal value on quality, accuracy, and time-liness of a product." (4) Toward this end, the IRC is in partnership with the North York Public Library and the University of Toronto Business Library so that requests for information beyond CNIB's basic collection are appropriately answered. The IRC receives a request and forwards it to the appropriate library, which sends the response back to IRC for production in the client's choice of alternate format within a few days of the initial request. By sharing responsibility with public-sector libraries and networking with them, the IRC is able to provide comprehensive and equal access to information professionals and resources within the community. The combination of technological changes and partnership with other service providers broadens the information resources available to visually impaired Canadians. This article is from a report of a visit to the Canadian National Institute for the Blind Information Resource Centre on September 26-28, 1994, by Ruth Nussbaum, NLS reference librarian. Notes 1. Kavanagh, Rosemary, presenter. _Supporting blind people in education and employment._ Paper presented at IFLA 60th General Conference, August 21-28, 1994, Havana, Cuba. p. 5. 2. _Crossroads 1993-1998: a strategic plan for the CNIB Library for the Blind._ Toronto: CNIB, 1993. p. 12. 3. "A library without walls: the CNIB Information Resource Centre (IRC)" (flyer), n.d. 1 p. 4. Kavanagh, Rosemary. p. 13. ### International briefs Australia Louis Braille Books has won the 1994 TDK Australian Audio Book Award for Blanche d'Alpuget's _White Eye: A Novel,_ narrated by Australian actor Beverley Dunn. The entry scored 92.4 percent, the highest score ever, and was the third straight win for Louis Braille Books. The National Library of Australia's publication _Link-Up_ heralded the impressive win with the heading, "It's a hat-trick!" The unabridged novel runs twelve hours on eight cassettes. Louis Braille Books has been producing audio books for libraries since September 1993. The award is sponsored by TDK (Australia) Pty. Ltd. and administered by the National Library, which is advised by an award committee and three judges representing publishers and booksellers, audio specialists, and consumers. Australia (New South Wales) The number of library patrons rose to 7,822, according to the 1993-94 annual report of the Royal Blind Society, including 630 from South Australia. Circulation was 183,361 talking-book titles, 3,256 braille books, and 1,415 braille magazines. The Audio Production Unit copied 156,753 cassettes, adding 264 new titles for a total of 6,280 titles available. Contract recordings earned $116,140, up from $82,462 the previous year. Sales to public libraries yielded $27,059, up from $11,403 in 1992-93. The Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind and the Royal Blind Society reached agreement with an English publisher of full-length audio books to purchase submasters and reproduce them in talking-book format. Additionally, the Round Table on Reading Materials for People with Print Disabilities published an updated version of its standards for audio production entitled Sound Advice. For more information, write Royal Blind Society of New South Wales, 4 Mitchell Street, Enfield, NSW 2136; fax (02) 747-5993. New Zealand On December 6, 1994, the New Zealand Parliament passed a copyright act containing ground-breaking copyright exemptions for the production of special-format materials for people with impaired vision or a physical handicap that prevents use of print materials. The bill took effect on January 1, 1995, and gives blanket permission for blindness agencies, including for-profit groups, to produce braille and other special-format materials without infringing copyright. Conditions for reproduction of literary and dramatic works include that reasonable effort be made to obtain a modified copy within a reasonable time and at an ordinary commercial price, and that copies be provided only to people with a print handicap as defined in the legislation. The copyright holder must be notified, and charges, if any, should be no more than the cost of production and a reasonable contribution to general expenses of the producer. The revision of copyright legislation was prompted by obligations under the recent General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT). In lobbying for the clause on special-format material, one tactic was to send the submission of the Royal New Zealand Foundation for the Blind to members of Parliament in braille, with a covering note in print offering to fax a print copy. Says Tony Cooke, manager of transcription services for the Foundation, "[It was] much as blind people had to go to extra effort to read print. Quite a number of MPs did, indeed, request print copies, which majored on the human rights aspect: the right of people who are vision impaired to read commonly available material without anyone, including the author, being able to refuse this right." ### Kormann takes charge of materials development On February 6, 1995, Wells B. "Brad" Kormann assumed his position as chief of NLS's Materials Development Division (MDD). As head of one of the two major NLS divisions, Kormann oversees selecting, cataloging, and producing the books and magazines that comprise the NLS collections; designing, producing, and maintaining equipment; ensuring the quality of all NLS products; and distributing these materials to the NLS network and associated agencies. Besides supervising the activities of six NLS sections, he manages a staff of six within the division office. MDD staff work closely with the Network Division (Miriam Pace, chief), which is responsible for providing consultant services and assistance to the network of 142 cooperating libraries around the country. The chiefs of these two divisions serve on management-review teams for all NLS activities. Prior to his appointment at NLS, Kormann served for six years as a program manager with the Naval Air Systems Command, where he directed centralized teams of engineers, attorneys, logisticians, and other functional specialists through the life-cycle procurement of multimillion-dollar avionics equipment. Earlier, he served as an engineer and assistant program review officer in the same organization. He provided computer-aided engineering and budgetary analysis for multimillion-dollar weapons products. "I had a long career in the military. It had an important mission, and I believe that NLS also has a very important mission," says Kormann. The new MDD chief further explains, "My first direct experience with the talking-book program occurred when my grandfather became blind at ninety-seven. He had been a political science professor at Bryn Mawr College (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), and he was very sharp intellectually, but had no way to read books except through the talking-book program. The program provided a valuable service to him and kept him going until he reached 100." Kormann is a 1975 engineering graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. He holds a master of arts degree in human resource management from Pepperdine University and a master of business administration degree from Duke University. He is also a graduate of the Defense Systems Management College, Fort Belvoir, Virginia. (photo caption: Wells B. "Brad" Kormann. Photo by Marita Clance.) ### The Program The National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped of the Library of Congress publishes books and magazines in braille and in recorded form on discs and cassettes for readers who cannot hold, handle, or see well enough to read conventional print because of a temporary or permanent visual or physical handicap. Through a national network of state and local libraries, the materials are loaned free to eligible readers in the United States and to U.S. citizens living abroad. Materials are sent to readers and returned by postage-free mail. Books and Magazines Readers may borrow all types of popular-interest books including bestsellers, classics, mysteries, westerns, poetry, history, biographies, religious literature, children's books, and foreign-language materials. Readers may also subscribe to more than seventy popular magazines in braille and recorded formats. Special Equipment Special equipment needed to play the discs and cassettes, which are recorded at slower than conventional speeds, is loaned indefinitely to readers. An amplifier with headphone is available for blind and physically handicapped readers who are also certified as hearing impaired. Other devices are provided to aid readers with mobility impairments in using playback machines. Eligibility You are eligible for the Library of Congress program if: --- You are legally blind--your vision in the better eye is 20/200 or less with correcting glasses, or your widest diameter of visual field is no greater than 20 degrees; --- You cannot see well enough or focus long enough to read standard print, although you wear glasses to correct your vision; --- You are unable to handle print books or turn pages because of a physical handicap; --- Or, you are certified by a medical doctor as having a reading disability, due to an organic dysfunction, which is of sufficient severity to prevent reading in a normal manner. How to Apply You may request an application by writing NLS or calling toll-free 1-800-424-9100, and your name will be referred to your cooperating library. _News_ is published quarterly by: National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped Library of Congress Washington, DC 20542 All correspondence should be addressed to the attention of Publications and Media Section. Editor: Vicki Fitzpatrick Writers: Jane Caulton, Margaret Cytron, Robert Fistick, Ruth Nieland, and George Thuronyi *** 6/1/95 (gft) ***