Talking Book News

1030 North 32nd Street, Phoenix, Arizona 85008, Phone: (602) 255-5578, Fax: (602) 286-0444, Outside Phoenix Area: 1-800-255-5578, email: btbl@lib.az.us, website: http://www.lib.az.us/braille

Hours of operation: Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Vol. 38, No. 3
Fall 2008

VOLUNTEER NEWS

Volunteer From Your Home

volunteer from your home

We are seeking several new volunteers to help with home review. If you are a patron or family member, this is a way to lend a hand without leaving home. Home reviewers listen to locally recorded books and report on technical and narrative quality. If you are interested call Jeanie at 602-255-5578.


New Sound, New People, New Booths

The recording studio at BTBL has been in transition for a year. Volunteers and staff are excited about the future.

photo of Volunteer Ron D. tries a new headset while he directs with a reader. Analogue equipment in background will soon be gone.
Volunteer Ron D. tries a new headset while he directs with a reader. Analogue equipment in background will soon be gone.

We are enjoying the fruits of the fund raising activities and generosity of Friends of Talking Books. They have made a tremendous effort to outfit the Romano Digital Recording Studio and move us forward. The goal is to have all local recording ready to migrate to the new Talking Book format that we expect from the National Library Service in 2009.

In July, Maria Pina became Studio Director in Phoenix.

Former Studio Director Carol Watson had to take long term disability following back surgery.

Maria has a BS degree in broadcasting and communication from ASU. She was hired by BTBL last fall to fill the duplicating position left vacant by the retirement of Don Farnsworth. In the duplication area Maria learned the back end of book production first. When Maria moved from duplication to the studio, Christine Marquez moved from magazine circulation to duplication.

Maria is getting her feet on the ground in the studio, stepping into 25 book projects, 8 magazines a month, tracking books recorded at the Sun City and Mesa studios, learning the technology and meeting and scheduling the studio volunteers.

She has trained the magazine readers so that all our magazines are digitally recorded. Only one book project needs to be finished in analogue then the remaining analogue equipment in the studio can be relegated to state surplus.

By the time this newsletter is printed, three new recording booths will be delivered. This goal was reached much more quickly than expected when funds raised by the Friends of Talking Books were combined with federal funds available through a grant.

We thank the Friends for their continuing commitment and hard work. We thank all studio volunteers for their patience and fortitude. 
Volunteer Pam F. practices using the digital software to record Saturday Evening Post Volunteer Pam F. practices using the digital software to record Saturday Evening Post



headline welcome

Thanks for giving your time and talent to help provide Talking Books!
Garth Andrews – director, reader/Phoenix
Teresa Ariza – duplication
Jane Ehrlich – reader, director/Phoenix
Pam Fisher – self-monitor, reader/director/Phoenix
Nancy Garrard - director, RRRB
Susan Kagan - RRRB
Alice Lauer – book duplication, studio review
Carrie Schaffer – book inspection
Larry Wolf – machine repair/Phoenix




Target Volunteers - Many Hands Make Light Work

photo of target volunteers On September 18, four employees from the Target Call Center in Tempe volunteered to help move books at BTBL - not a glamorous job but very much needed. We continue to consolidate old books with low circulation and condense our collection to make room for new titles.

The Target volunteers worked with mailroom staff and moved thousands of books during their two hour project. Target encourages employees to volunteer in the com¬munity. A lot of their employees take that message to heart. In addition to this group project Target recently made a do¬nation to the Friends of Talking Books silent auction. We thank them for their support.




Mesa Welcomes Machine Repair Volunteers From The Springs

In the end of May we received word that the machine repair group which had met for five years at the Springs, an assisted living home in East Mesa, would have to move or shut down. We are most appreciative that The Springs generously allowed the machine repair volunteers to use space there for five years free of charge. But the company needed the space for a new program they were implementing for their residents.

graphic of recording machineThe four consistent vol¬unteers in this group, Madge Farkas, Carolyn Farkas, Carol Petzold and Ted Hulett were very productive. They did not want to stop repairing nor did BTBL want to loose the dozens of machines they were repairing each month.

In late July, these volunteers were welcomed by The City of Mesa Public Library. Ted was already familiar with the location because he had volunteered both at the Springs and in Mesa for several years. The four volunteers from the Springs have their own day, Wednesday, in Mesa.

Special thanks go to David Clark who has been the lead vol¬unteer for the Mesa machine repair group for many years. David oversaw the transition and makes sure the Wednesday volunteers have what they need and that all the volunteers are following the same repair procedures.



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Any mention of products and services in Talking Book News is for information only and does not imply endorsement.

Talking Book News is also available in braille, on cassette as part of Newsletters Unlimited and on our website at http://www.lib.az.us/braille/ If you would like to receive this newsletter on cassette or in braille, please call 602-255-5578 or 1-800-255-5578.

Talking Book News is published quarterly by the Arizona State Braille and Talking Book Library Division, Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records.