Viewing page 22 of 34

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

(5/20/81 mtg page 5)

T-2, S-1
002 Picks up in the midst of SC telling about Jan de Lap and Studio 101(explanation of "101")
019 Discussion of how to interpret ABC stories.
080 Arrival of Tom Fields. ( Quite a bit of teasing of him as oralist by the Ennises)
098 JR: Asks JG what kinds of things he'd most like to tell people about in FAF -- favorite stories?
(105) JG : People always like jokes [ Banter: clean or dirty? -- DH is a family book -- this is a family festival ] but we musn't leave them with the idea that being deaf is a barrel of laughs, either; mix it up. JE: People might like stories about [[strikethrough]] famous [[/strikethrough]] accomplished deaf people.
117 JG: Tells about Laura Searing, a newspaper reporter, deafened age 12; also a poet; very successful.
129 JE: Remembers in Texas the segregation of black deaf when he was a  child; there was a school for white deaf and another one for the blind and the black deaf; Bill didn't know about black deaf people till later because he'd never seen one. [ conversation with JG] 
143 JG: [unintellible on tape] (158) We don't have as many stories about the deaf-blind. [ General tenor of this discussion: idea that FAF should include stories about as many different deaf groups as possible]
161 JG: Douglas Craig, a [black deaf] waif found wandering the streets of Washington [in 1871] by a congressman named Craig, who brought him to E.M. Gallaudet and asked him to place him in Kendall School; he had no name so EMG called him Douglas Craig, after the congressman; he went to the school, perhaps never graduated, but stayed to work there, became a legend. One story: when new Gally students would arrive, Craig would come up to them: "Give me a dollar." They always didn't dare refuse. Then in the spring when the class went to Great Falls for their picnic, he would give each one his dollar back so that he would have some money to spend at the picnic.(178) Another story: His name he always wrote "Douglas Craig, M.M" Speculations about the meaning of M.M.: "Master of Mail" (b/he was responsible for getting the Gally mail); "M.of Mechanics"(b/he did mechanical repairs on campus); "Master of Manure"(responsible also for the grounds).