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Yes, Helen Keller was a handicapped person because she was blind and deaf.
Leonard Lee Brooks has written: 'Evaluation of multi-handicapped deaf-blind programs' -- subject(s): Blind-deaf, Education, Evaluation
yes. u can be claimed disabled if u r deaf, blind, or handicapped, you are filed as disabled
He will tell him up in his ear, but the deaf person will not hear the blind person screaming, and the blind person won't be able to see the deaf robber running away!!! -Anynomous
Kevin Carey has written: 'The power of nine' -- subject(s): Apparatus for the Blind, Blind, Apparatus for the, Computers and the visually handicapped, Information technology, Libraries and the deaf, Libraries and the physically handicapped, Libraries and the visually handicapped, Services for, Visually handicapped
He won't. He'll just go mug the deaf person for the diamond and give it back to the blind person.
No- there were deaf and blind people long before the creation of the written word.
Helen Keller - is a blind,deaf and mute woman but he has been a great and famous writer.
A symbol that represents a deaf and blind person could be a combination of the sign language symbol for "deaf" and Braille characters for "blind," perhaps overlapping or intertwined to visually convey both conditions.
Helen Keller was the only person in her immediate family who was both blind and deaf. Her parents, Kate and Arthur Keller, and her two siblings were not blind or deaf.
A person who is deaf is classed as a handicap because they do not have the ability to hear. Which in turn puts them at a disadvantage.
because it can't hear other people but they can rest,play,eat....