Thursday, April 30, 2009
Save Our School
Matlin Gets Her Star
Actress Marlee Matlin will get her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame next Wednesday. Long-time friend Henry Winkler and the president of Disney/ABC Television Group will take part in the ceremony along with children from the International Center of Deafness & the Arts. Matlin’s star will go in front of Musso & Frank Grill on Hollywood Boulevard. She’s also due to pick up the Mary Pickford Award at the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce Community Foundation’s Women of Distinction luncheon. The youngest to win the best actress Academy Award, Matlin's autobiography titled I’ll Scream Later hit store shelves just three weeks ago.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Poetry Out Loud
Academic Bowl Results
Baseball Tourney
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
School Closure Petition
Pastor in Murder-for-hire Scheme
Talking to Yourself
Monday, April 27, 2009
Implant House
On tonight's episode of Fox's hit series House, a deaf teen and his mother face a decision about whether to use cochlear implants. They decide against the implants - but Dr. House decides to go ahead with the surgery any way. The boy rips the implant out but his mom decides to have the doctors put it back. Ryan Lane plays the 14-year-old wrestler. He is a deaf actor who also appeared on the show Cold Case. If you missed the show, you'll be able to watch it online next week at Hulu.com. New episodes are posted eight days after their initial TV broadcast.The Vagina Monologues
iPod Hearing Loss
Amazing Race: Episode 10
There are only four teams left on the Amazing Race and one is a deaf man and his mom. During last night's episode, the teams made their way to Beijing where Marge and Luke must get a foot massage. Sounds simple but it’s painful. Luke decides to holds hands with a member of another team (Tammy) and share their pain. The teams next have to swim eight lengths of a pool or do a synchronized dive together. Margie and Luke choose to swim laps and moved through the relay quickly. Viewers who tuned in last week saw Luke get into a confrontation with another team, sisters Jen and Kisha. Ironically, it's Jen who’s in trouble this time. She falls apart over the requirement to swim. Margie makes fun of Jen and Kisha's lack of swimming ability after she thought that Jen was making fun of Luke’s deafness last week. Later, Luke can be heard saying, ''I'm gonna make it to the final three…and kick their ass.'' The episode ends without showing who is eliminated. With only have two more episodes to go, we can expect one team will be eliminated next week, leaving three to battle it out for the one million dollar prize.
Getting to Know... Auslan
Sunday, April 26, 2009
One Year Ago.. The North Pole
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Is Luke Spoiled?
Bloggers are attacking the mom of Amazing Race contestant Luke (who is deaf). Luke had a run-in with another player on the CBS show and Marge immediately defended her son. One of them calls Luke "spoiled and mollycoddled" and writes:"It really bit my butt that Margie automatically defended Luke's actions and accused the entire hearing world of thinking deaf people are dumb... When he acts up, she needs to see his behavior and call him on it. She can't just base all things on the world being against him because he's deaf."
You can read more here.
Friday, April 24, 2009
Disney Devices
First State to Require Implant Coverage
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Hockey Championships
Deaf Student Scholarship
Gallaudet Time Capsule Found
Gallaudet's Graduation Speaker
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
School’s Top Pitcher is Deaf
Deaf Acting Teacher
Deaf Weak on Cancer Prevention
One Year Ago.. Matlin Hangs Up Dancing Shoes
Violent Traffic Stop
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Airline Challenges Deaf-Blind
Spike in Video Phone Cost Dropped
Marriage.. By the Numbers
Promising Stem Cell Research
Monday, April 20, 2009
Deaf Pro Soccer Players
▪ Southampton midfielder Jason Euell, who is deaf in one ear, has spent 12 years in the English leagues and represented Jamaica's national team.
▪ Canadian goalkeeper Tony Chursky, who played in the North American Soccer League from 1976 to 1982, was also deaf in one ear
▪ Early in the 20th century, Englishman Albert Gardner, who was profoundly deaf, played for Birmingham.
▪ Matthew Eby is former Gallaudet University sports star who now plays reserve defender for the Real Maryland Monarchs.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Conflict on Amazing Race
On this evening's episode of Amazing Race, teams flew to China where Margie and her deaf son Luke argued with sisters Jen and Kisha. Luke pushed at Jen who calls him a bitch. Luke didn’t hear it, of course, but Margie did. And she tells her son what Jen said to him. At the next clue box, they have another confrontation. Luke pushes Jen into the clue box.
The CBS show made each train birds to retrieve fish in the middle of a lake. Luke tried to direct the birds with sign language and Jen laughed when one of the birds bit him. Margie and Luke then had to find a calligraphy station and copy four Chinese characters in calligraphy.
Jen and Kisha arrive at about the same time as Margie and Luke but the sisters are declared the winners and win a trip to Barbados. Luke signs his frustration and declares that Jen is a bitch. Kisha and Jen start laughing which upsets Marge because she thinks the sisters are laughing at Luke's deafness.
Stuntmen Mark and Michael are the last team to finish and are eliminated from the race.
State Lawmakers Tackle Insurance Woes
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Marlee Matlin Interview
Prez Pick : Gallaudet Alum
Friday, April 17, 2009
Tiny Molecules
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Helping the Deaf to Love Music
Marlee Matlin's Confession
Actress Marlee Matlin says she was in rehab when she found out she had been nominated for an Oscar. The Children of A Lesser God star tells the story in her new book I'll Scream Later. She remained in California’s Betty Ford Clinic for nearly a month, trying to overcome addiction to cocaine. Matlin says most of her friends never knew what she was going through. She also writes about a violent courtship with William Hurt. Matlin says he was physically abusive and she had new bruises every day. They met as co-stars on the set of Children of a Lesser God. She claims Hurt was battling alcoholism at the time while she wrestled with her drug addiction.
Ways to Save Your Hearing
1. Wear earplugs
2. Turn it down
3. Get better headphones
4. Give your ears a rest
5. Quit smoking
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
New Yankee Stadium
Margie and Luke Winners!
OneYear Ago.. A First For Japan
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Helen Keller's Religion
While many people know of Helen Keller as an inspirational figure, an advocate for the disabled, a feminist and a champion rights, few are as familiar with her religious leanings. Her book My Religion explained how she became a follower of Swedish Christian mystic Emanuel Swedenborg. Swedenborg held that there is a spirit world corresponding to the physical world, and in that spirit world the senses are perfect. Ray Silverman chaplain at Bryn Athyn College of the New Church in Pennsylvania put together a new edition of Keller's book and called it Light in My Darkness.
Monday, April 13, 2009
The Risks of Interpreting
Sunday, April 12, 2009
The First Recorded Deaf Artist
Friday, April 10, 2009
Deaf Man Beaten on Video
KSAZ-TV in Phoenix says two men beat a deaf when he failed to respond to their requests for money - and it was all caught on tape.
Explaining Cochlear Implants?
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Verizon Expands Videophone Service
One Year Ago.. A Gallaudet First
Gallaudet University created its first chair fully endowed by a deaf person one year ago. The Gerald “Bummy” Burstein ’50 Endowed Chair in Leadership will now begin appointing scholars to study and research leadership in the deaf community. The $1 million chair was set up nine years ago by Burstein who picked up the nickname because of his support for his hometown team, the Brooklyn Dodgers, also known as “Dem Bums.” The Dodgers eventually moved to California and so did Burstein. He was the first deaf person to receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Gallaudet and is credited with introducing Americans to deaf applause as hands waving in the air. He first saw it in France. Bummy is also an expert parliamentarian with several books to his credit.Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Deaflympics Facts
▪ Founder - deaf Frenchman Eugene Rubens-Alcais
▪ First Named - International Silent Games
▪ Last Time - 2001, including 2,405 competitors from 71 nations
▪ Next Time - The 2009 games will be in Taiwan
▪ Frequency - Held every 4th summer
▪ Requirements - Team members must have at least a 55 decibel loss in their better ear to be eligible
▪ US Requirements - The United States Deaf Olympics Association expects its coaches are competent in ASL
▪ US head coaches must take at least 1 college class in the subject ▪ Rules - At no times is a player allowed to be wearing hearing aids
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Deaf Man Murdered in Texas
Diving into History
The most decorated diver in the history of the University of Georgia is deaf. Florida native Chris Colwill was born with less than half of his hearing intact. He won SEC Diver of the Week six times along with NCAA titles on the one and three meter boards in his junior season. Colwill was a member of the United States Olympic team that competed in Beijing.
Monday, April 6, 2009
Hearing Loss in Low-Income Families
Researchers took a look at five studies conducted between 1966 and 2007. Lead author of the hearing study was Dr. Donald G. Keamy who is both an instructor at Harvard Medical School and a surgeon at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. Details are in this month’s issue of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery.
Hearing loss is one of the most common birth disorders in the US. Two to four of every 1,000 children are born either deaf or hard-of-hearing.
MegaDeaf Conference
The Kentucky School for the Deaf recently hosted the first MegaDeafConference. The two-hour teleconference included more than 40 institutions that educate the deaf in 21 states along with Northern Ireland and England. The program of student-produced offered presentations included:
- The Ernest C. Drury School for the Deaf in Ontario showing drama productions
- The Kentucky School for the Deaf showed its award-winning program Idioms of the Week
- The Montana School for the Deaf and Blind offered a virtual ski trip
- The journalism class of the Minnesota’s North Star Academy took participants on a tour of its online newspaper
- The Ohio School for the Deaf showed off its recycling project called Goes Green!
- The Kansas School for the Deaf presented famous deaf Kansans.
Sue Thomas F.B.Eye
Animal Planet will begin reruns of a TV series about a deaf woman working for the FBI starting tonight. Sue Thomas F.B.Eye ran from 2002-06 and starred Deanne Bray. It was on Animal Planet because the character has a hearing dog named Levi.What many viewers don’t know is that the series is based on a real person. The real Sue Thomas is a deaf fingerprint technician whose lipreading ability won her a job on the FBI's elite surveillance team.
Her story is told in the book Sue Thomas: Breaking the Sound Barrier.
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Gallaudet Numbers Rising
Animated ASL Dictionary
Friday, April 3, 2009
ASL as Foreign Language Requirement
Court Interpreters
Congressional Resolution about Gallaudet
Congress has passed a resolution to recognize both Abraham Lincoln's role in the establishment of Gallaudet University.
The resolution was introduced in the House of Representatives by California congressman Lynne Woosley and Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio who are both member sof Gallaudet's Board of Trustees .
Here's the full resolution:
Whereas in 2009, the United States honored the 200th anniversary of the birth of President Abraham Lincoln;
Whereas on July 4, 1861, President Lincoln stated in a message to Congress that a principal aim of the United States Government should be `to elevate the condition of men--to lift artificial weights from all shoulders--to clear the paths of laudable pursuit for all--to afford all, an unfettered start, and a fair chance, in the race of life';
Whereas on April 8, 1864, President Lincoln signed into law the legislation (Act of April 8, 1864, ch. 52, 13 Stat. 45) authorizing the conferring of collegiate degrees by the Columbia Institution for Instruction of the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind, which is now called Gallaudet University;
Whereas that law led for the first time in history to higher education for deaf students in an environment designed to meet their communication needs;
Whereas Gallaudet University was the first, and is still the only, institution in the world that focuses on educational programs for deaf and hard-of-hearing students from the pre-school through the doctoral level;
Whereas Gallaudet University has been a world leader in the fields of education and research for more than a century; and
Whereas since 1869, graduates of Gallaudet University have pursued distinguished careers of leadership in the United States and throughout the world:
Now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That Congress—
(1) congratulates and honors Gallaudet University on the 145th anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln's signing of the legislation authorizing the establishment of collegiate programs at Gallaudet University; and
(2) congratulates Gallaudet University for 145 years of unique and exceptional service to the deaf people of the United States and the world deaf community.
Passed the Senate March 24, 2009