140-141 security. I do not wish to be a kept citizen, humbled and dulled by having the state look after me. I want to take the calculated risk, to dream and to build, to fail and to succeed." The place to dream and to build, to fail and to succeed is in the political arena. Footnotes Crutch Power 13, 1972. Quotes from interviews held on April 11 and 2See speech delivered by Harold S. Remmes, president of the Massachusetts Councils of Organizations for the Handicapped, before the Rehabilitation Research and Training Conference in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on February 2, 1972. 3Speech by Congressman Vanik, Congressional Record, December 9, 1972. 79-885 72 pt. 1 37 142 Interview List Janet Albrecht, Assistant Planning Director, Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Boston, April 14, 1972. 13, 1972. Jack Barleon, patient at West Roxbury, April Elmer Bartels, former president of the Massachusetts Association of Paraplegics, Bedford, Massachusetts, April 13, 1972. Priscilla Bartlett, director of physical therapy at West Roxbury, April 13, 1972. David Barrie, chief of the rehabilitation division of Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., Boston, December 21, 1971. Dr. William Bean, legislative assistant, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, May 10, 1972. Michael Burns, legislative aide to Senator Alan Cranston, Washington, May 18, 1972. Paula Burton, Washington representative of United Cerebral Palsy, Washington, May 15, 1972. Dr. A. Bernice Clarke, counselor in the Massachusetts office of the Social Rehabilitation Service, Boston, December 21, 1971. Dr. Merlin DuVal, assistant secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Hanover, New Hampshire, April 2, 1972. Jerry Eggert, doctoral candidate in sociology, West Roxbury, April 11, 1972. Dr. Eugene Erlich, head of Newington's child-life department, February 2, 1972. Mike Francis, legislative aide to Senator Robert Stafford, Washington, May 18, 1972. William Green, president of New England Chapter of the Paralyzed Veterans of America, West Roxbury, April 11, 1972. 143 Interview List (continued) Pat Gwaltney, legislative aide to Senator Robert Taft, Washington, May 11, 1972. Dignh Hamburg, aide in the Bureau of Education for the Handicapped, Washington, May 17, 1972. Jim Harvey, legislative assistant to the majority, House Committee on Education and Labor, Washington, May 12, 1972. Alonzo Hilliard, chief of social services at West Roxbury, April 10, 1972. Dean Hokanson, assistant director of child-life at Newington, February 3, 1972. Prudence Kurht, director of physical therapy at Newington, February 2, 1972. Emily Lamborn, federal-state coordinator for the Dr. Martin LaVor, minority legislative coordinator, House Committee on Education and Labor, Washington, May 12, 1972. Rona Mattissoff, assistant director, West Roxbury's educational placement service, April 12, 1972. Richard Melia, special assistant to Rehabilitation Services Administration Commissioner Edward Newman, Washington, May 10, 1972. 11, 1972. Robert Nadeau, patient at West Roxbury, April Barbara Newell, director of occupational therapy at West Roxbury, April 12, 1972. 1, 1972. Amy Philips, principal at Newington, February Bernard Posner, deputy secretary of the President's Committee on Employment of the Handicapped, Washington, May 11, 1972. Joe Press, patient at West Roxbury, April 13, 1972. Interview List (continued) 144 Zane Saunders, head of speech pathology and audiology at Newington, February 3, 1972. Harry Schweikert, Washington representative of the Paralyzed Veterans of America, Washington, May 10, 1972. Tom Snyder, patient at West Roxbury, April 11, 1972. educational placement service, April 12, 1972. Donald Swann, head of the physical medicine department at West Roxbury, April 11, 1972. Dr. Herbert Talbot, former chief of West Roxbury's spinal cord injury service, December 21, 1972 and April 11, 1972. Mary Tino, director of occupational therapy at Newington, February 2, 1972. Lisa Walker, legislative aide to Senator Harrison Williams, Washington, May 12, 1972. 145 Bibliography This bibliography is only a partial listing of the sources I consulted during the year. A full listing would serve little purpose, as those sources which follow are the ones I drew upon in writing. Part I Definitions and Demography Chronic Conditions and Limitations of Activity and Mobility in the United States, July, 1965, to June 1967, a Public Health Service Publication, (Government Printing Office; Washington, 1971). Prevalance of Selected Impairments in the United States, July, 1963 to June, 1965, a Public Health Service Publication, (Government Printing Office, Washington, 1968). The Social Security Survey of the Disabled: Vol. 1-17, (Government Printing Office: The Register 1966, Washington, Developmental Disabilities In New Hampshire, an unpublished report by the Day Care and Child Development Council of New Hampshire, June, 1971. Correspondence with the Registry for Handicapped Children and Adults in British Columbia; with the National Center for Health Services, and with the public health departments in Massachusetts, Indiana, California, Montana, Maine, Connecticut, Colorado and New Jersey. |