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Vision
Webletter
May
2003
... a potpourri of
items of interest to most everyone. Feel free to
share it with your colleagues and others you
believe would find the information
useful.
In
This Issue
- Recruiting
Families with Multiple Cases of Macular
Degeneration
- Too
Much Reading May Ruin Children's
Vision
- Gene
Linked To Usher Symdrome Type
1
- Report
Reveals More Americans Facing Blindness Than
Ever Before
- Move
Into the 21st Century -
Digitally
- Victor
Reader Vibe: First Mainstream DAISY Player in
the World
- SoundAdvice
Opens Internet To Visually
Impaired
- Emergency
Preparedness Guide
- Telex
Scholar Talking Book Player
- Vision
Enhancement: A Vital Resource for Vision Loss
Community
- C2
Talking Compass
- Good
Prices On Useful Items
- VisAble
Video Telescope
- Computer
Lab Instructor Position
- New
Video From DO-IT
- Transcript
of Address on Community Based Services Now
Available
- Cycling
Training
- Mexico
Redesigns Currencies To Help
Blind
- NCD's
Youth Advisory Committee Needs Your
Help
- Vision
Tek Talk Bulletin
- Distribution
Note
***************************************
1.
Recruiting Families With Multiple Cases of Macular
Degeneration
The Massachusetts
Eye & Ear Infirmary and Harvard Medical School
are conducting an important national genetic study
called the Family Study of Age-Related Macular
Degeneration (AMD). They are currently recruiting
families in which there are two or more living
siblings with AMD. If your family meets this
criteria and is interested in participating, please
call 800.219.9157 for further information. If
eligible, you and your family members will receive
a free eye exam at your local eye doctor's office.
2.
Too Much
Reading May Ruin Children's Vision
According to an
article published May 17, 2003 in the British
Medical Journal by Douglas Fredrick, associate
clinical professor of ophthalmology at the
University of California in San Francisco, anxious
parents who have told their children over the years
that they would damage their eyes by reading under
the bedcovers or in bad light, or by holding a book
too close to their face, were probably correct.
Evidence is increasingly showing that children who
read obessively and do a lot of close work are more
likely to become near-sighted than those who push
their books aside and climb trees.
Studies are showing
that academic high achievers tend to be more
near-sighted than other groups. This does not mean
they are more intelligent but just that they have
achieved academic success through a lot of study.
People whose professions entail much reading during
either training or performance of the occupation
(lawyers, physicians, microscopists and editors)
have higher degrees of myopia. And, aboriginal
people, among whom there was no myopia, have
developed a western rate of short-sightedness after
taking a western curriculum of
education.
Myopia can be
caused either by the eye being too long or by the
lens curvature being too strong to focus an image
on the retina. Some is genetic.
Myopia rates also
vary between ethnic groups, from 70% to 90% in
Asia, to 30-40% in Europe and America, and 10-20%
in Africa.
Babies are usually
far-sighted but settle down to near perfect sight
between the ages of five and eight. The question
for scientists is how big a part genetics and early
visual experience play.
If a child
predisposed to short sight does a lot of reading
while the eye is settling down, the defocused
images may cause the eye to continue searching for
a focal point. This can turn mild myopia into
moderate myopia in late adolescence. More close
work at university or in a job can then lead to
still worse sight.
3. Gene
Linked to Usher Syndrome Type 1
In the recent study
by a team from the University of California, San
Diego School of Medicine, it has been determined
that Usher Syndrome Type 1 is caused by a
malfunction in the removal of phagosomes (degraded
disk membranes from the eye's photoreceptor cells)
from the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) within
the eye. Usher Syndrome Type 1 is a rare disorder
in which children are born deaf and go blind later
on in life.
The current
investigation details how the defective gene
undermines normal cellular functioning in the
retina. In laboratory cell cultures and in mice
bred without the myosin VIIa gene, the researchers
identified an intercellular process that takes
place between the photoreceptor and RPE cells,
which are one of the outer layers of the retina. In
contact with the tips of the photoreceptor cells,
the RPE cells play a role in refreshing the
photoreceptors' disk membranes by engulfing and
degrading the older disk. The myosin VIIa helps
transport disks to the lysosomes within the RPE.
The scientists discovered that the process of the
degradation of the photoreceptor disk membranes
could not take place properly when the myosin VIIa
gene was missing in the mice.
Researchers stated
that Usher Syndrome 1B results from the loss of
function of a single gene. This study, therefore,
demonstrates the precise location where that gene
needs to be corrected in the retina to provide a
potential cure for the blindness associated with
the disorder. Consequently, they now know that the
RPE needs to be targeted for gene therapy of Usher
1B.
4. Report
Reveals More Americans Facing Blindness Than Ever
Before
According to the
results of the Vision Problems in the U.S. study
recently conducted by the National Eye Institute
and Prevent Blindness America, over one million
Americans aged 40 and over are currently blind and
an additional 2.4 million are visually impaired. As
the Baby Boomer generation ages, these numbers are
expected to double over the next 30 years.
Blindness and visual impairment represent not only
a significant burden to those affected by sight
loss, but also to the national economy as
well.
The new report
addresses the leading causes of vision impairment
including:
- Diabetic
retinopathy, believed to be the leading cause of
blindness in the industrialized world in people
between the ages of 25 and 74. It affects more
than 5.3 million Americans age 18 and older.
- Age-related
macular degeneration (AMD), the most common
cause of blindness and vision impairment in
Americans aged 60 and older. More than 1.6
million Americans over age 60 have advanced
AMD.
- Cataract, the
leading cause of blindness in the world, affects
nearly 20.5 million Americans age 65 and
older.
- Glaucoma, a
chronic disease that often requires life-long
treatment to control, has been diagnosed in
about 2.2 million Americans and it is believed
there are another two million who do not know
they have it.
The full report is
available in downloadable format at either of the
following sites:
www.preventblindness.org
www.nei.nih.gov/eyedata
5. Move
Into the 21st Century - Digitally
If you want to end
the most frustrating habit - wrestling with audio
books on cassette tape or CD - we can offer you a
new viable and inexpensive solution. You'll no
longer have to deal with misplaced, lost, snarled,
poor quality sound reproduction cassettes or
shoe-box filling playback machines. Just join the
many others who have switched to a new, digital way
of listening to audio books.
Audible
(www.audible.com/spreadthewords/recruit)
has thousands of audio books and programs instantly
available and portable. Download them, transfer to
a player (free with a 12 month service plan)
including the Pocket PC and the iPod, and listen
anywhere, anytime.
The selection is
stunning: best sellers, classics, self improvement,
religion, comedy; even drama and public radio
shows.
But one of the best
parts about switching to Audible is not having
cassette and CD cases rattling around the house, in
a briefcase, or in the car! Since all the audio is
downloaded and digital, you can carry hours of
audio on an audio device and listen anywhere.
Audible is also priced so you can save up to 80%
compared with the same audio programs on CD or
cassette. And you'll really like being able to
download any title any time you want. No more
waiting for your books to be delivered by mail from
your regional library, for a bookstore to open, or
racing in a store with not enough time or sighted
help to browse.
If you provide our
user name, visionww, when you register at
Audible, you will be offered a free month of
Audible membership service, if you decide to join,
and Vision World Wide will receive a small
commission
There's a truly
incredible offer when you sign up for 12 months of
the AudibleListener plan: claim a FREE Otis MP3
player that plays 17 hours of spoken word audio --
or take a free download of one of today's best
selling audiobooks. Just go to www.audible.com/spreadthewords/recruit.
Downloading and
listening to Audible programs is easy...as easy as
technology gets these days. But more important, if
you have questions the folks at Audible.com will
help you through the process
Go now to
www.audible.com/spreadthewords/recruit
and begin a whole new way of reading. We're
convinced that downloading audio books will change
your life.
Oh, by the way,
don't forget to enter our user name,
visionww, when you register.
6. Victor
Reader Vibe: First Mainstream DAISY Player in the
World
At the CSUN
Conference on Technology and Persons with
Disabilities in March 2003, VisuAide lived up to
its corporate slogan "Driving the Digital Talking
Book Revolution" by announcing Victor Reader Vibe,
the latest Digital Talking Book Player in its
growing product line of DAISY playback devices.
Victor Reader Vibe is one of the smallest and most
affordable DAISY player in the industry but offers
full navigation and advanced features found in the
most powerful DAISY players at a fraction of the
price.
The Victor Reader
Vibe is a portable CD player designed for students
and professionals that is well suited for both the
visually impaired and print disabled. Users can
navigate faster and more efficiently through
reference works and complex textbooks. In addition
to basic navigation features, it lets the user skip
straight to a specific page, insert bookmarks to
return to a specific section or mark important
passages. Its compact size and rechargeable
batteries make it easy to take and use
anywhere.
The Victor Reader
Vibe can play regular Audio and MP3 CDs. The player
includes earphones, a power adapter, a carrying
case and rechargeable batteries that can be
recharged directly in the unit. Its tactile
markings and controls are grouped in easy
recognizable zones so as to make it exceptionally
accessible.
Price: $219 USD;
$329 CND. These prices are for North America only.
Contact: VisuAide.
E-Mail: info@visuaide.com.
Web: www.visuaide.com.
7.
SoundAdvice Opens Internat To Visually
Impaired
Software that obeys
natural voice commands to retrieve information from
email, files or the Internet and responds in a
human voice with the data in just seconds, is now
available from Telesensory Corporation.
The first software
of its kind, SoundAdvice combines voice-activated
instructions with a fast and powerful information
retrieval engine that lets anyone use the computer
by asking a question or commanding the system to
find a particular fact or file. The information is
located in about three seconds and then provided
back in a human voice.
SoundAdvice makes
information searches on the Web easy for anyone
without touching the keyboard or using a mouse.
This is especially beneficial to low vision users
as they can now easily and quickly get information
from the Internet or have their e-mail read to
them.
Based on VoiceBox
technology, SoundAdvice users train the system with
a few sentences to recognize their voice. Then,
the user speaks into a wireless headset or desktop
microphone to request information in the form of a
question or a command. In seconds, the answer or
file is spoken back in one of several human voice
options selected by the user.
With SoundAdvice,
users get timely and accurate information from the
Web or can access files in their computer. Using
traditional screen-reading software, however, this
same process could take up to 30 minutes.
Information requested is retrieved from a
comprehensive, pre-programmed database of Web sites
covering a plethora of topics including news,
business and finance, sports, movies, weather, and
nutrition. Users can also access the white and
yellow pages, a dictionary, encyclopedia and
thesaurus and can even command SoundAdvice to play
stored MP3 music files, tell jokes or read email.
In addition to
supporting general information searches,
SoundAdvice can be used to find resources,
activities and special services for the visually
impaired. For instance, users can request
information on travel or vacation camps for the
blind or visually impaired; identify sports
contacts for the visually impaired, such as blind
bowling leagues; or find out where to get guide
dogs, employment information or other products.
SoundAdvices
information retrieval engine runs on Windows 2000
or XP and requires a PC that has an 800 MHz
processor and 256 MB RAM. The software comes on a
CD, making installation simple. Volume, speed and
tone of audio output are adjustable.
SoundAdvice comes
packaged as a CD with a microphone headset. The
software can be purchased online at
www.telesensory.com or through dealers or
distributors worldwide.
Price:
$595.
For more
information, send an e-mail to soundadvice@telesensory.com
or call 800.804.8004, Operator #15.
8.
Emergency Preparedness Guide
The Center for
Disability Issues and the Health Professions
(CDIHP) at Western University of Health Science has
developed a 40-page emergency evacuation
preparedness guide stressing safety and evacuation
planning, as well as regular practice of drills.
Sections of the guide include an ability
self-assessment, establishment of a personal
support network, evaluation and identification of a
person's assistance needs during an evacuation, and
suggestions for determining evacuation options. The
guide's author is June Isaacson Kailes, a
disability policy consultant.
An electronic
version of the guide is available free in PDF,
HTML, or Word format at
www.cdihp.org/evacuationpdf.htm
A print version
costs $24.95 including shipping and tax. Order
from: Center for Disability Issues and the Health
Profession, Western University of Health Sciences,
309 E. Second Street, Pomona, CA 91766-1854. V:
909.469.5380. F: 909.469.5407. E-Mail:
evac@westernu.edu.
9. Telex
Scholar Talking Book Player
Telex
Communications has introduced a new digital talking
book player designed to give blind and dyslexic
users greater access to published material. The
Scholar Talking Book Player is a small DAISY CD
Player that will accept and automatically select
standard CDs and MP3 CDs. Its primary controls are
easily identified by their larger size and tactile
rubber construction. Secondary controls are smaller
and feature a chrome finish. The player will
provide instant access to specific page numbers and
chapters in the DAISY structure, and includes a
full numeric keypad with bookmarking features. An
LCD screen displays disc details for "at a glance"
teacher monitoring.
Some additional
features include:
- Its USB
interface anticipates upgrades and future
products.
- Four AA
batteries provide hours of reading
enjoyment.
- Sturdy, impact
resistant case features snap lock clamshell
design.
- Skip protection
allows for smooth, uninterrupted
reading.
- Battery pack is
located inside the clamshell, to prevent battery
door from popping open.
- Lightweight
headphones and a line out for connection to
external speakers, if desired, are
included.
- AC adapter/wall
wart is available as an accessory.
- Measures
5.25"/133.35mm in Width; 6.0"/152.4mm in Length;
and 1.59"/40.4mm in Height.
- Weighs 0.65
lb/0.3 Kg.
Price:
$249.
Contact: Telex
Communications. V: 800.828.6107 Ext. 7498 or
952.887.7498. Web: www.telex.com/duplication/products.nsf/allpages/0313DC795FA04C8E86256BC2006F1EA6
10.
Vision Enhancement: A Vital Resource for the
Vision Loss Community
Vision Enhancement
is the leading international journal providing
information & resources for people with vision
loss. It is published quarterly and covers . .
.
- Latest
medical/scientific developments in the
ophthalmological and optometric fields.
- Resource guide
to available books, websites, and magazines
relating to vision loss.
- How to's on
subjects from computer operation to day-to-day
living.
- Latest high-
and low-technological developments in products
designed to assist the vision impaired.
(Examples range from walking cane sensors which
may eventually replace dog guides to user
friendly can openers.
- As the number
of vision-impaired people increase, product
development increases as well. Some ideas are
good, some marginal, some just plain bad. Vision
Enhancement boldly reviews this emerging
technology.
- First person
articles which inspire and motivate.
- First person
articles from medical professionals and
technology developers.
- Valuable
Resource Directory covering products, services,
medical facilities, associations and others
serving the vision-impaired.
- Information
about happenings around the world: seminars,
conferences, workshops, job opportunities, and
more.
Vision Enhancement
Also Offers You:
- Current
information on medical treatment and devices
helpful to the vision impaired. This field is
moving so rapidly that even medical personnel
are having difficulty staying current. The
vision impaired can be tragically unaware of
developments which might help them.
- Psychological
support and encouragement to the vision impaired
and their families. Because vision loss
involves an emotional journey very much like
grief caused by death, it is vital to help the
vision impaired and their families cope with
denial, anger and the other key phases.
- An interface
between patients and doctors. Because it is
vital that the caregiver community understands
vision loss---particularly the psychological
impact---from the standpoint of the patient,
Vision Enhancement deals specifically with this
interface.
- A
consumer-protection clearinghouse. Because they
want so desperately to find a cure, vision
impaired people are vulnerable to false promises
from unethical marketers of goods and services.
These predators rob the vision impaired of both
money and hope, and it is one of Vision World
Wide's highest purposes to defeat them. Through
knowledge gained from the Vision Enhancement
Journal, you can help in this
effort.
You Can Use Vision
Enhancement. .
- As a reference
guide
- As a training
guide for staff and volunteers
- As discussion
material in group sessions
- As part of your
program planning and evaluation process
- As a learning
guide for those who have limited knowledge of
visual impairment.
And...
- you can share
Vision Enhancement's contents directly with the
vision-impaired people you work with...
- as an
informational and motivational tool!
To subscribe for
one year (4 issues) at just $25, call 317-254-1332
or toll free 800-632-7152, or download a
Subscription Form at www.visionww.org/subscribe.htm
and fax or mail it with your payment of just $25 to
5707 Brockton Drive - #302, Indianapolis, IN
46220-5481. Visa and MasterCard accepted. Formats
available include: large print, audiocassette,
computer disk, electronic (PDF, ASCII text, or
E-Mail), and Enhanced Letter Format - 28-pt and
48-pt type on CD-Rom.
11. C2
Talking Compass
Robotron Group has
introduced a battery operated, handheld talking
compass that speaks at the press of a button the
four major compass points (north, south, east, and
west) and the interim points (northeast, northwest,
southeast, and southwest) in the purchaser's choice
of two languages. The languages currently available
include Arabic, Czech, English, French, German,
Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Indonesian, Korean,
Mandarin Chinese, Norwegian, Polish, Portugese,
Slovak, Spanish, Thai, and Turkish.
Price:
$69.95.
Contact: Robotron
Group, 15 Stamford Road, Oakleigh 3166, Australia.
V: 61.39568.2568. Web: www.robogroup.com.
12. Good
Prices On Useful Items
The following items
are limited to web orders only and the supplies are
limited. Go to the Maxi-Aids website at
www.maxiaids.com
to place orders.
Talking
Pedometer:If you'd like to hear the number of
steps and distance you've traveled, Maxi-Aids has
just the device you are looking for. It is the
Talking Pedometer and it also has a talking alarm
clock to track the time. Online Price: Just $6.75.
Tel-Therm:
This indoor/outdoor talking thermometer alerts
you when the roads can become icy, or if the
outside is too hot for outdoor activities. Daily
high/low temperature reporting tells you the
highest and lowest temperatures of the day. Also
includes an hourly temperature announcement in a
female voice. The black numbers on its LCD display
are 5/8" in size. The case is white and measures 3
1/2"L x 6"H x 2"W. Online Price: $12.95.
Easy-Pour
Locking Lid Pan:
This 3 quart stainless steel pot has drain
holes in lid to allow steam to escape. The lock-on
tabs keeps lid tight and prevents food and hot
water from spilling over. It is great for cooking
pasta and vegetables. Online Price:
$19.95.
Travel
Organizer:
This burgundy leather wallet-mini file system
is ideal for the person on the go. It
features:
- 3
compartments
- Top flap with
Tab closure
- 6 Tabbed
compartment paper money file
- Removable
credit/business card file
- Inside zippered
compartment for important papers
- Retractable
wrist strap
- Convenient
Size: 6"x 9" x 3/4"
Online Price:
$19.95.
One Touch
Profile Talking Glucose Blood Monitor -
English:
This Medicare approved portable unit provides
reliable blood glucose readings in both digital and
voice output. It beeps to indicate sufficient blood
on test strip and ends uncertain test results.
Results are available in 45 seconds with no timing,
blotting, washing or wiping needed. The kit
includes: glucometer, automatic blood pen, speech
box (compact), 10 test strips and lancets, glucose
control solution, log book, and cassette
instructions. It uses 1 9V alkaline battery
(included). Online Price: $249.95.
Note: Due to
Healthcare Regulations this Product is not
Returnable.
Easy Say Stop
Liquid Level Indicator:
This unique liquid indicator uses two easy
replaceable "N" batteries (included). It plays
music when the liquid touches it. The device is
small enough to fit in the pocket. Online Price:
$7.95.
13.
VisAble Video Telescope
Betacom has
introduced the VisAble Video Telescope WT 300, a
handheld, portable telescope with a 40x zoom and
auto-focus lens. Shaped like a small video camera,
the telescope is designed to operate like a
closed-circuit television. A press-and-hold feature
allows a user to capture, or take a picture of, a
view for closer inspection. It compensates for
difficult lighting environments. Other useful
features include:
- 35 degree field
of view.
- Zoom 40x (10x
optical, 4x digital).
- Close-up focus
to infinity.
- Electronic
Contrast Enhancement.
- Readily
available and replaceable Lithium-ion battery
(1800mA) that provides 8 hrs. mixed or 3 hrs.
continuous use.
- Displays
480,000 pixels (800c x 600r) sequentially
refresh at 180 Hz.Easily stores in a purse or
hangs around the neck.
- Useful for
distance or mid-range tasks like recognizing
faces or spotting signs.
- Can be used as
a magnifier for reading labels or
menus.
In other words,
this device is useful for viewing, watching,
orienting, searching, looking, scanning,
inspecting, recognizing, discerning, spotting,
observing, discovering, perceiving, and
distinguishing - all tasks that assist many people
with low vision to reclaim some vision
independence.
Price:
$1,995.
Contact: Artic
Technologies, 1000 John R. Road - Suite 108, Troy,
MI 48083. V: 248.588.7370. E-Mail: info@artictech.com.
Web: www.artictech.com/visable.htm.
14.
Computer Lab Instructor Position
Intercommunity
Blind Center of Whittier, CA is looking for a
computer lab instructor to begin employment July 1,
2003. Resumes must be submitted no later than June
13, 2003. Salary is negotiable depending upon
qualifications and experience.
Duties include
teaching visually impaired consumers the full use
of the computer with all types of assistive
technology (hardware and software); evaluate
consumer progress and performance; must be able to
perform on-site work evaluations and consumer
assessments; conduct technology workshops for
interested employers; must possess strong
organizational and interpersonal skills; create and
maintain consumer files; prepare reports as
required; maintain the Computer Lab; and other
duties as assigned.
Qualifications
include preferably four years of relevant
experience - two years required; relevant teaching
experience; and demonstrated expertise in the use
of computer and adaptive technology for the
visually impaired.
Contact: Gerald R.
Konsler, Ph.D., Executive Director, Intercommunity
Blind Center, 7702 S. Washington Avenue - Suite A,
Whittier, CA 90602. V: 562.945.8771. F:
562.945.0051. E-Mail: gerry@blindcenter.com.
Web: www.blindcenter.com.
15. New
Video From DO-IT
Disabilities,
Opportunities, Internetworking, and Technology
(DO-IT), a special program at the University of
Washington in Seattle, has recently prepared a
shortened version of its video Working Together:
People with Disabilities and Computer Technology
that is now included in its educational sales
program. This 14-minute VHS tape, Computer Access:
In Our Own Words, through narration, testimonials,
and demonstrations by the DO-IT Scholars, provides
a short awareness presentation of technology used
by young people with a wide variety of
disabilities. The tape has both an open captioned
version and another that includes audio description
as well.
Price: $25.
It is also
available online at www.washington.edu/doit/Video/comp_acc.html
Contact: DO-IT,
University of Washington, Box 355670, Seattle, WA
98199-5670.
16.
Transcript of Address on Community Based
Services
In his presentation
March 5, 2003, which was carried on C-SPAN,
National Council on Disability Chairperson Lex
Frieden addressed community-based services for
people with disabilities, the implications of
health care reform for people with disabilities,
and the development of an International Convention
on the Rights of People with Disabilities, which is
coming before the United Nations in
June.
A transcript of Mr.
Frieden's presentation as the Morning Newsmaker at
the National Press Club is now available at
www.ncd.gov/newsroom/testimony/frieden_03-05-03.html
17.
Cycling Training
The U.S.
Association of Blind Athletes and the National
Disability Sports Alliance will conduct a
developmental racing camp for riders aspiring to
national and international competition June 15-18
at the Colorado Springs Olympic Training Center.
Contact: Mark
Lucas at mlucas@usaba.org.
18. Mexico
Redesigns Currencies To Help Blind
The Central Bank of
Mexico will make changes to its currency so
individuals with visual impairment will be able to
identify bills and coins. The new money will
incorporate reliefs to make denominations
identifiable by touch. The bank is currently
studying the textured currencies before making
changes to raw materials and starting production.
Mexican currency already contains impressions in
relief that are detectable by touch but the
impressions of the new currency will be more
specific, easier to find and easier to distinguish.
Mexico has five types of bills and seven
coins.
19. NCD's
Youth Advisory Committee Needs Your
Help
National Council on
Disability's Youth Advisory Committee is seeking
input from former and current college students with
disabilities. Information about the inquiry - How
Do Students with Disabilities Pay for College? -
can be found at
http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/advisory/youth/yac_inquiry.html.
Responses can be sent to NCD's Youth Advisory
Committee by fax at 202.272.2022 or through e-mail
to youthfeedback@yahoo.com.
20. Vision Tek Talk
Bulletin
If you are a
computer user and would like to receive
computer-related information, including tips and
tricks to improve your skills, you will want to
sign up for the free Vision Tek Talk Bulletin. To
subscribe, send a blank e-mail to:
VisionTekTalk-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
The current issue
can be read on our website at: www.visionww.org/tek-may03.htm.
21.
Distribution Note
You are encouraged
to share this free Vision Webletter with anyone on
your mailing list that you think would find it
useful. Readers wishing to receive future Vision
Webletters in their own mailboxes should just send
a e-mail to
VisionENews-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.
All issues of our
Vision Webletters are available at www.visionww.org/visionenews.htm.
Our Privacy
Policy:
Vision World Wide does not lend or sell any of
its mailing lists.
**************************
Vision World Wide,
Inc. * 5707 Brockton Drive - #302 * Indianapolis,
IN 46220-5481 * Tel: 317.254.1332 / 800.632.7152 *
Fax: 317.251.6588. E-Mail: visionworldwide@yahoo.com.
Web: www.visionww.org
***************************************
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