The MetroWest Daily News
Monday April 12, 1999
In Dougies Corner

staff photo by Judy Royster
Doug Flutie Jr., 7, sits with his grandmother, Agnes
Fortier in "Dougies Corner," as Doug Flutie signs an autograph for a fan,
following the dedication ceremony of the new autism resource center at Naticks Morse
Institute Library yesterday.
Natick opens autism center named for Doug Flutiess son
By Deanna Zammit
News staff writer
NATICK - Buffalo Bills quarterback Doug Flutie and his son, Dougie, yesterday cut the
ribbon at "Dougies Corner," the Morse Institute Librarys new autism
resource center in Natick.
"Hopefully, were going to make a difference in awareness," said
Flutie,
a Natick resident whose 7-year-old son was diagnosed with autism three years age,
"because God knows we all need it."
The new center on the librarys second floor is one of three autism resource
centers in the region, and the only one in MetroWest. The center houses more than 200
educational items, including videotapes, information packets, an Internet-linked computer
and 120 books new books on autism.
"This is the best thing in the world," said Lisa Clover, whose son Andrew has
autism. "When Andrew was diagnosed three years age, there was nowhere to go. At that
I think I lived on the Internet."
The Center, which has been in the works for a year, is the result of a collaborative
effort by the library, the Flutie Foundation and The Family Voice.
The Family Voice, a support and advocacy group for children with autism and their
parents, approached the library about a year ago to house some of its research
books. Soon after, the group presented the library with a grant. A $10,000 pledge from the
Flutie foundation followed.
The foundation money will be donated to the center over a period of several years, and
the library will use it to update books, videos and other materials and incorporate
educational programs about autism for the public.

staff photo by Judy Royster
Doug Flutie stands with 7-year-old Dougie as he welcomes
guests to the dedication of "Dougies Corner," the new autism resource
center at Natick library. Also attending the ribbon-cutting ceremony dedicating the corner
were Fluties daughter Alexa, 11, and wife Laurie.
"They just have a lot of good information," said Chris Campbell, whose son
Richie has autism. "Because this is an ongoing thing. Were constantly learning
new things about autism and you really have to keep up to date.
The Centers committee, composed of members of the library, the special education
departments of public schools, and the Higachi School for children with autism, will
determine which new materials should be included to fuel public awareness.
"We were really surprised how much fear we found and that our children
werent really welcome into society," said Rich Bissell, a member of Families
Organizing for Change, an advocacy group for families with disabled children.
His son Eric has cerebral palsy. Erics twin brother, Aaron, has developmental
disabilities.
What Dougies Corner is doing it "letting people know that children with
disabilities are people first, are children first," Bissell continues.
Clara Claiborne Park, the Autism Awareness Days keynote speaker and author of
"The Siege," defined autism through her experience of raising her now
40-year-old daughter, Jesse.
"Autism is when your 2-year-old daughter looks straight through you to the wall
behind," said Part, "Autism is when your 11-year-old daughter fills sheet by
sheet with long division. Division by three, by 11, by 17."
Park described her involvement with her daughters development as a siege,
"because it was like assaulting a walled city."
Today, Jesse is an accomplished artist whose brilliantly colored paintings of
architecture incorporate the autistic persons demand for precise detail. One sold
for $1,000, and her mother is hoping for a New Year City art show.
She also works 27 hours per week in a college post office.
Park was quick to remind the audience that all this did not come overnight. The siege
was long.
Educating a child with autism is a lifelong building block process. When Park started
there were no resource.
There was no special education.
There was no autism resource center.
When you child is diagnosed with a disability, "You have to give up a lot of
dreams," said Bissell, who once dreamed of having the first set of twins in the NFL.
"And then create new ones," his wife, Cindy, chimed in.
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