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Edited on Tue Apr-15-08 10:00 PM by Radio_Lady
The Accessible Information Network (formerly "Golden Hours") which served the blind, homebound, disabled and senior citizens since 1975, will be off the air by the end of April. There are separate plans to keep it on the Internet. However, these plans are not finalized at this time.
For your information, SAP (Second Audio Programming) will be gone completely from all VHF TV stations around the nation on February 19, 2009, as part of the national move to digital transmission. Management at OPB elected to dump it earlier. Sadly, the staff members there were not offered other comparable positions.
There are 100 or so volunteers who find themselves "encouraged to volunteer in other ways" by the VP of Marketing and Planning Tara Taylor. I appreciate the chance to work with them for more than seven years on pledge drives, as well as four years with Audience Services, and the rest of the time with a one-hour talk show each week on AIN.
For the interim, I have a new relationship with the website at www.KGW.com -- just for movie reviews at this time, but there will be a ramp-up to book previewing when possible.
Also, I will be fulfilling my dream to work with animals again. In my youth, I took care of a mare and a stallion for some neighbors in rural North Miami, Florida. As a teenager, I raised and trained my Boston Terrier "Duchess of Dade" and competed in obedience trials. "Dolly" earned her Companion Dog degree, and then I bred her to one of the champions of the breed. She produced seven male puppies, and did not require a Caesarian section as most of the dams of that breed do. We ended up with our pictures in a book on Boston Terriers.
When I lived in New York, I had my own business as a dog trainer whenever things got too tough in the world of media. This is a bit off-topic, but I was able to work right up to the birth of my daughter in October 1968, one of the first children delivered by the Lamaze method of "prepared childbirth." Later, I had my son by the same method in Mercy Hospital in Miami, a Catholic teaching hospital where I was pleased to have the cooperation of an obstetrician who had never seen a prepared delivery. My son had the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck, which made it a high-risk delivery. I was glad I was awake for these births. I just want to thank Elizabeth Bing and all the pioneers who taught me the breathing techniques. I had virtually no anesthesia during the birth of either child.
So, ultimately, I am paying it forward. Last Saturday, I signed up with www.forwardstride.org to get me out of offices and studios and into the world of horses and the outdoors. I'm thrilled with this new connection. This group, formerly known as Agape, and located in Sherwood, just moved to just 2.7 miles from our Beaverton home over winter break. There are 27 horses on 60 acres. It is beautiful and improving every day. They took over the old Fox Hollow stables, if you remember that at all.
How fortunate I am to be able to help those who need this recreational therapy!
Thanks for your patience and understanding.
Radio Lady Ellen Kimball in Oregon (d/b/a Accessible Media Services)
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