OPEN HOUSE • ALL FOUR SCHOOLS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2005 • 1 PM TO 4 PM amount of time arranging the prayers in the Braille version of the text so that its pages are in the same order as they will be recited in the service, with the hope that no more than three volumes will be needed during any one service. "I take a lot of my direction from him',' said Pearl Lam, JBI International director of library operations, who is working closely with Dr. Nemeth on the Artscroll. "He is so knowledgeable on com- pilation. He is really right all the time' Finalizing The Text Once the book is in order, Dr. Nemeth uses a proofreading sys- tem he devised for comparing the written word to the Braille. Since he is unable to see the printed text, he relies on two sources, one human and several mechanical. Because the electronic scanning system that transcribes the print into Braille tends to create errors in letters and omissions of punctua- tion, he uses a remarkable con- traption called the opticion. "It turns a printed document into raised lettering so a person who cannot see the page can feel the shape of the letters',' Lam said. "It involves a camera that I hold in my right hand that I run across the Braille page Dr. Nemeth said. "Whatever it sees, it causes little pins to pop up in the shape of the letters and vibrate in my left hand." Lam said,"Dr. Nemeth knows the feel of the raised Hebrew letters and the vowels by touching them with his fingers. That way he is able to read the original and com- pare it to the Braille transcription:' she said. "Not every blind person can use it. He is performing a feat that most human beings cannot." Another technical obstacle is that the Braille pages go from left to right, even when they are tran- scribed in Hebrew, so Dr. Nemeth needs to reverse their order so the pages will turn the way a Hebrew text does. In addition, because each line of Braille must have exactly 40 char- acters, corrections made often change the amount of characters in the line, making adjustments to many lines necessary. No wonder Dr. Nemeth can work on no more than five to 10 pages a IN October 20 2005 day. Two days a week, Dr. Nemeth works on the Artscroll with Abe Pasternak of Southfield, a volun- teer from Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Jewish Family Service in West Bloomfield. "He actually came to help do things like read my mail to me, but quickly I found out his expertise in Hebrew is excellent, so we work on the book together instead:' Dr. Nemeth said. "What we work on is the proof- reading phase said Pastenak."Dr. Nemeth reads the Braille and I fol- low along in the Artscroll to make sure the words are in the right order and the vowels are all cor- rect:" In addition to the invaluable help he offers Dr. Nemeth, Pasternak said, "He ended up teaching me so much. He taught me grammar I didn't know and some unusual punctuation that you don't see very often. I didn't realize I would enjoy this work so much." After more than a year of work- ing together, he said, "I have no intentions of leaving. I'll be there for whatever's next:' So, says Dr. Nemeth, will he. made my first documentary at Country Day when I didn't get into the school play my senior year. Film was something I had never really considered before, but was the best thing that ever happened to m I *a s n't at the very top of my class academically, or a star athlete, but I knew what I was good at and Country Day helped me pursue it. So much attention is paid to each student in every way. They allowed me to focus on what I knew I could do best. Getting into N.Y.U. Film School and having a film exhibited at Cannes were dreams come true. I used to limit myself. I don't do that anymore. You leave Country Day with the mindset that you're a winner. Everything that you do and everything you present to the • • world is done with such enthusiasm and in the right spirit. Everybody I -know who graduated from Country Day is on such a beautiful path. It's bigger than an educational experience - it's a life experience. 0 Stefenie Sasson, '00 Independent filmmaker OWTre Sasson Pictures A Point Of Light Among Dr. Nemeth's many hon- ors is being named by former President George H.W. Bush as one of his Thousand Points of Light, in the program recognizing outstanding individuals. In 1991, Dr. Nemeth was appointed as chair of the Michigan Commission for the Blind by former Gov. John Engler. "In that capacity I negotiated with legislators to pass a bill that would require teachers to teach Braille to blind children;' he said. "More than half of our states — so far — have accepted the bill, including Michigan." In 1972, the Russian govern- ment hosted Dr. Nemeth and his wife so he could teach about the Nemeth Code. He was invited back in 1976 to teach how blind individuals can access the screen of a computer. In a home filled with awards and plaques — including those from the Division on Visual Impairments of the Council for True Visionary on page 20 - DETROIT CO 1111111M INIMIN TRY DAY SCHOOL Achievement means something different to each and every child. At Detroit Country Day School, our exceptional faculty provides both the nurturing and the challenges needed for our students to discover what achievement means to them - to accomplish what they thought they never could, and to learn how good their best can really be. We invite you to discover what the Spirit of Achievement can mean for your son or daughter. Please call us at (248) 646-7717, or learn more at www.dcds.edu . Detroit Country Day School. Because the right school will change a child's future. 19