disabled$21602$ - meaning and definition. What is disabled$21602$
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What (who) is disabled$21602$ - definition

Disabled in action; Disabled In Action

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers         
  • Battle Mountain Sanitarium in [[Hot Springs, South Dakota]]
  • An illustration of the Milwaukee location of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, from the 1885 edition of the ''[[Wisconsin Blue Book]].''
AMERICAN GOVERNMENTAL INSTITUTION FOR VETERANS
National Asylum for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; NHDVS
The National Asylum for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers was established on March 3, 1865, in the United States by Congress to provide care for volunteer soldiers who had been disabled through loss of limb, wounds, disease, or injury during service in the Union forces in the American Civil War. Initially, the Asylum, later called the Home, was planned to have three branches: in the Northeast, in the central area north of the Ohio River, and in what was then considered the Northwest, the present upper Midwest.
Injured list         
LIST OF INJURED BASEBALL PLAYERS
Disabled List; Injured list (baseball); 15-day disabled list; 10-day disabled list; 60-day disabled list; Injury List; Disabled list; Injury list
In Major League Baseball (MLB), the injured list (IL) is a method for teams to remove their injured players from the roster in order to summon healthy players. Before the 2019 season, it was known as the disabled list (DL).
Accessible toilet         
TOILET FOR DISABLED PEOPLE
Accessible toilets; Toilet for the disabled; Disabled toilet; Handicapped toilet
Accessible toilets are toilets that have been specially designed to better accommodate people with physical disabilities. Persons with reduced mobility find them useful, as do those with weak legs, as a higher toilet bowl makes it easier for them to stand up.

Wikipedia

Disabled in Action

Disabled In Action of Metropolitan New York (DIA) is a civil rights organization, based in New York City, committed to ending discrimination against people with disabilities through litigation and demonstrations. It was founded in 1970 by Judith E. Heumann and her friends Denise McQuade, Bobbi Linn, Frieda Tankas, Fred Francis, Pat Figueroa, possibly Larry Weissberger, Susan Marcus, Jimmy Lynch and Roni Stier (all of whom were disabled). Heumann had met some of the others at Camp Jened, a camp for children with disabilities. Disabled In Action is a democratic, not-for-profit, tax-exempt, membership organization. Disabled In Action consists primarily of and is directed by people with disabilities.

As stated on its website, the organization aims to "fight to eliminate the barriers that prevent [people with disabilities] from enjoying full equality in American society."

DIA believes in the motto, "Nothing about us without us!"

The organization meets monthly in New York City and publishes a newsletter, in print and online, called The DIA ACTIVIST.

Disabled In Action, along with the New York City Commission on Human Rights, is involved with The One Step Campaign, a coalition of disability, advocacy and service organizations. The campaign encourages stores, restaurants and other places of public accommodation in the New York City area to provide wheelchair accessibility.