[nfbwatlk] Convention

Albert Sanchez albertsanchez1 at cox.net
Mon Jul 10 16:20:38 CDT 2006


Hi All,
I agree with Ben about the convention being one of our best. I was almost 
overwhelmed with the ceremony honoring our veteran service men/women since 
my oldest nephew Brandon is currently pulling duty in Iraq as a blackhawk 
helicopter pilot.

The banquet was wonderful, especially the tribute to Mrs. tenBroek--wish I 
could've hurd the speakers better.

It was also great to see many of my Washingtonian friends again this year.

More later,

Albert Sanchez, W A 7 F X B/4
IRLP Node 4000
Al's Piano Tuning & Repair
703-933-9303
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Prows, Bennett (HHS/OCR)" <Bennett.Prows at HHS.GOV>
To: "NFB of Washington Talk Mailing List" <nfbwatlk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Monday, July 10, 2006 5:01 PM
Subject: [nfbwatlk] Convention


I haven't seen any reports yet on the convention just finished.  I
thought, that despite some hotel glitches, that this was one fantastic
convention.  The feature of course was the release of the Kurzweil NFB
reading machine.  It seems to work very well with most printed or text
material for now.  I was impressed that it could be brought close to
signs, etc, and mostly read the material fine.  As it is upgraded, this
small, portable device will become invaluable for reading many things.
It was exciting to hear that the 30 NFB scholarship winners this year,
in addition to receiving at least $3000 in scholarships, (one winner
received $12,000), the winners received another $1000 from Kurzweil
company, and a copy of the Kurzweil 1000 scanning software, and as a
bonus got a Kurzweil NFB reader, valued at $3,500.  That's not to
mention their expenses to convention.  What a program.



We also had great convention sessions, and division meetings, etc.  The
visit from Kinky Freedman, the gubernatorial candidate in Texas, who is
a Jewish comedian, author and musician was fun and interesting.  He
entertained the thousands gathered at the opening plenary session on
Tuesday.  This came just before the ceremony honoring the blinded
veterans in attendance who are Federationists.  It was impressive to
hear how many leaders we have in the movement who have served in the
various branches of the military.  The ceremony was extremely moving to
all who were present.



The National Association of Blind Lawyers put on the ninth annual mock
trial this year, and we raised some money for the division as well.  I
heard there were about 305 people there, so we did pretty well this
year, and the folks who came were overwhelming appreciative of the
entertainment and education about the discrimination case which was
based on a real case the NFB was involved in concerning a large
automobile manufacturer who refused to hire back a foundry worker who
was laid off after becoming blind.



The highlight presentations again were Doctor Maurer's Presidential
Report and Banquet address, both of which will be available soon at our
web site at <www.NFB.org>



Of course, we had great social gatherings too, and met new friends, and
renewed old friendships.  There were indeed about 3000 people attending
again this year.  So, now recharged, we move on to the year in the NFB.



More stories from the convention I'm sure are coming up.



/s/

Bennett Prows, J.D.

Health Information Privacy Program

Office for Civil Rights

Seattle, Washington

(206) 615-2621

E-mail:  Bennett.Prows at hhs.gov






--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


> _______________________________________________
> nfbwatlk mailing list
> nfbwatlk at nfbnet.org
> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nfbwatlk
> 




More information about the nfbwatlk mailing list