Current Style: Standard

Current Size: 100%

What’s New

West Indies about to set up its first blind cricket team

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:51 -- admin

http://news.bbc.co.uk

The England blind cricket team and former stars Desmond Haynes and Devon Malcolm will help the West Indies set up the country's first cricket team, a move which will increase the sport's growing international network.

Also assisting is the London Community Cricket Association, which set up and coached the England team.

Visually impaired stage performer wows audiences

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:51 -- admin

Karin Shaw Anderson, Dallas; August 4, 2005

A talented 16-year-old schoolgirl in Dallas, Texas, U.S.A., has battled her blindness by becoming a stage performer.

Brittany King's vision began failing about two years ago. Repeatedly detaching retinas and accumulating scar tissue have left Brittany completely blind in her left eye and without peripheral vision and normal sight in her right. The cause of her visual problems has baffled Brittany's doctors. She compensates onstage and off by working harder.

Pak doctors in city to sharpen paediatric opthalmology skills

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:48 -- admin

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com; Hyderabad; August 23, 2005

Two ophthalmologists from Peshawar are at the L.V. Prasad Eye Hospital, Hyderabad, as part of a training programme sponsored by the Vision 2020 of the World Health Organisation. They are here to specialise in paediatric ophthalmology -- a specialisation needed to counter the alarming prevalence of childhood blindness in developing countries such as India and Pakistan.

Blind candidates can sit for bank exam, rules Supreme Court

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:47 -- admin

Telegraph (PTI); New Delhi; August 16, 2005

The Supreme Court has directed the banking service recruitment board to allow a visually handicapped woman to sit for a Probationary Officers' (P.O.) exam.

Four years ago, Amita had challenged the recruitment board's decision to reject her application on the ground that she was visually impaired.

A trip to the marketplace

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:45 -- admin

In each issue of beyond the I, this column presents a first-hand account of a visually-impaired person's experiences in the 'real' world. Jitender Sharma shows us how an everyday thing as a trip to a market can be fraught with danger.

I decided to go to the market one evening. Little did I realise that I would be undertaking an adventure, albeit not a very happy one.

Children show us the way

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:45 -- admin

Only children can demonstrate inclusive love, unfettered as they are from the conditioning of society, finds out Priti Monga, P.R. Officer, at Shroff Charity Eye Hospital in Delhi.

One morning this summer, a group of 10 visually impaired children was brought to Shroff Charity Eye Hospital (S.C.E.H.) in Daryaganj, Delhi, for eye check-ups from a school for blind children. The driver of the bus told staff, in a worried tone, that the children had been sent to the hospital unescorted.

Visually-impaired artists exhibit paintings

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:23 -- admin

Reina Newton Tefs; Naples Sun Times; June 29, 2005

"I like to paint with bright colors because they are easier to see," Janet Ray explained at a reception on June 10. Ray started painting five years ago when she noticed a painting displayed at the Visually Impaired Persons of Southwest Florida (VIP) centre. To see the painting she had to put on her 'coke-bottle' glasses and step close to the wall. The artwork inspired her to give painting a whirl because she knew that the artist who created it was legally blind, like she was.

Growing number of assistive products aid seniors, disabled

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 18:23 -- admin

Rachel Brand, Rocky Mountain News; Colorado; June 10, 2005

Voice recognition technology that turns on lights and opens doors. Reading glasses that double the size of a television screen. A talking microwave oven.

Once designed to help blind, paralyzed and cognitively disabled Americans, such products now are finding a second home among seniors.

Pages

Facebook comments

Subscribe to What’s New