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To that end, she said she is working on a book about "high-functioning people with schizophrenia" such as herself. "I hope my book and other books like it give people more understanding and more sympathy and more empathy." Rebecca Onie, who co-founded and is CEO of a Boston-based Project HEALTH, said the award might prompt others to use as a template her organization to improve the health of low-income families. "This is validation of our model and creates for us an opportunity to educate..." she said. For Timothy Barrett, the award will make it easier for him to keep alive the craft of papermaking. The founding director of the papermaking facilities at the University of Iowa Center for the Book, Barrett, 59, said the grant means more research into how paper was made centuries ago, further unlocking the secrets of the process. "It's hard to get research funds because I'm not in a traditional field," he said. Besides that, he said, the grant will help him pay tribute to those craftsmen who, for a variety of reasons, never wrote down how they made paper. "I'm really eager to see that they not be forgotten," he said. ___ On the Net: MacArthur Foundation: http://www.macfound.org/
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