Tennessee's governor is looking to spend $22 million to put up news buildings at the school for the deaf. WBIR-TV has a video report below or you can read the story here.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Service for Gally Prof
A memorial service will take place Sunday in honor of the Gallaudet University math professor who died in a fire with her daughter. Laura Snyder-Gardner and her daughter, Mary Ann, were both hard of hearing. The fire that engulfed their home in Falls Church, Virginia took their lives--along with ten family pets. Authorities are investigating the cause. Mary Ann was a junior at the Model Secondary School for the Deaf where Snyder-Gardner helped coach the girls soccer team.
A Decade Ago... A Crime Stopped
A deaf bank customer helped stop a bank robbery on this day (Jan 30) in 2003. A bank teller in Rochester, New York tipped off the man as he was going through the drive-through. The robber had entered a branch of HSBC yelled that he was robbing it, then jumped on a counter and pistol-whipped a teller. Another teller at the drive-up window just happened to be helping a deaf customer at that moment. She mouthed the words "we are being robbed." The lip-reading customer then drove to a nearby liquor store and called 911. Police nabbed the robbery suspect not far from the bank as he was trying to wash dye off his hands after a dye pack in the money bag had exploded. The injured teller suffered only minor injuries.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Rapper's National Release Date
Deaf rapper Sean Forbes releases his album Perfect Imperfection on April 2. Read about it here.
Monday, January 28, 2013
Interview with ‘Deaf’ Viral Video Star
An interview with Sarah Churman talks about her new book and ability to hear. Read it here.
Drug Bust at Gally
A Gallaudet student is behind bars and facing felony drug charges after police found two pounds of marijuana in her dorm room. Some of it was baked into cookies and fudge squares. Prosecutors say Molly Sachs is drug dealer. She will appear in court for a preliminary hearing Thursday. The bust started when an RA notified a security guard about a smell in the dorm. More than 100 prescription pills were found along with the marijuana. Below is a video report from WJLA-TV (no captioning).
Changes to WV deaf school
West Virginia is looking into combining its schools for the deaf and blind. The state Board of Education will also consider moving the facilities when it meets next month. The schools have been in Romney on some 80 acres of land since 1870. About 120 students attend the schools.
Friends reflect on death of a Gallaudet teacher
Gallaudet University is mourning the loss of Laura Snyder-Gardner and her daugther Mary Ann, who died in a house fire in Falls Church this past week. Snyder-Gardner taught at Gallaudet
Miss. Festival this Spring
DEAFFEST returns to Mississippi in May. The bi-annual Deaf Festival started in Jackson during 2011 and will bring together family and friends once again on May 3 and 4. Watch for more information here.
A First for Thailand
Bo Bo Kyaing is breaking ground as the first interpreter for the deaf to appear on Thailand's broadcast airways. Read the story here.
Suit: Police didn't Provide an interpreter
A Florida woman is hoping to soon resolve a lawsuit she filed over the failure of police to provider her with a sign language interpreter during her arrest last year. Yolanda Gevarzes is deaf says Port Orange officers took her into custody on a domestic violence charge following an argument with her boyfriend in the parking lot of a Chili's restaurant during which she bit him. Rather than call an interpreter to find out what Gevarzes says took place, they used her boyfriend as an interpreter, which led to her arrest. The 41 year old from nearby Daytona Beach was even handcuffed with her hands behind her back for a time, before being taken to the Volusia County Branch Jail. The staff of the facility did not provide with an interpreter either. Gevarzes is a grandmother who had never been arrested. She was released the next morning and no formal charges were ever filed against her.
Getting to Know... Hearing Loops
When you see a blue sign of a human ear, that's a cue to hearing aid users that they can press a tiny button to hear a special broadcast sent directly to their device. This is called a hearing loop, a thin copper wire that radiates electromagnetic signals in a room. A tiny receiver called a telecoil built into most hearing aids and cochlear implants picks up the signal. With the flip of a switch on the device, sound comes through with greater clarity than can be heard by someone with normal hearing. This might be music, sound from a movie, a or a speaker. Hearing loops are better known in Europe than in the US, where only about a thousand have been installed in museums, stores, theaters, airports, and sports arenas.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
The man who crafted the ADA law is retiring
Iowa Senator Tom Harkin says he will not run for a 6th term next year. Harkin is 73 and been a member of the US Congress for nearly 30 years. A Democrat, he is the 7th most senior member of the body and chairs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. His most significant achievement came in 1990 when he authored the Americans with Disabilities Act and helped it through the legislature. Harkin says the Americans with Disabilities Act was inspired by his deaf brother, Frank, whom he watched struggle against social barriers. The ADA law prohibits private employers, state and local governments, employment agencies and labor unions from discriminating against qualified individuals with disabilities in job application procedures, hiring, firing, advancement, compensation, job training and other conditions and privileges of employment.
Teen Tennis Sensation Getting Notice Down Under
A deaf teen is taking part in the Australian Open's boys' tournament. 14-year-old Korean junior Lee Duck-hee tells Paul Newman says not being able to hear makes it easier for him to concentrate on the court. He prefers not to mention his deafness to opponents or officials, but wants to be treated like anyone else. Read the story here.
Friday, January 25, 2013
University receives gift for deaf students
A very generous computer engineer is giving more than one million dollars to support deaf students at California's Fresno State. Find out why he's giving the money in this video report from KGPE-TV or you can read more about the gift on the school's website here.
Police Stand off in Texas
A deaf man is behind bars after a standoff with police in Corpus Christi. Watch a video report from TV station KIII below on DeafNewsToday.com or you can read the story here.
KiiiTV3.com South Texas, Corpus Christi, Coastal Bend
KiiiTV3.com South Texas, Corpus Christi, Coastal Bend
Celebrity shows off her signing skills
Lawless star Jessica Chastain surprised onlookers by communicating through ASL with a deaf fan. Read the story here.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Texting 911 in Canada
One year from today (Jan 24, 2014) is the deadline for Canadian wireless carriers to upgrade their equipment so that their networks support text messaging communication with the deaf. Users will have to register their phone numbers with their wireless service provider to ensure it is compatible with the new 911 feature. Here's how it works: During an emergency, the phone customer calls 911 and then the emergency center is automatically informed there is a text message coming through related to an emergency. A text message sent to 911 does not go to emergency services in the country.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Gally Prof Dies
A Gallaudet math professor died in a fire along with her daughter in the northern Virginia town of Falls Church. Laura Gardner and her teenage daughter, Marry Ann, had moved from Florida to the DC suburb about two years ago. Neighbors say the neighborhood was rocked by a loud noise before the fire broke out. WUSA-TV has this video report (no captions). Gardner was 48 years old and had worked at Gallaudet since 2009. She served as an assistant coach of the girls' soccer team at the Model Secondary School for the Deaf last year.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Hearing Loss affects Memory, Thinking
If you are losing your hearing as you grow older, you might also lose your ability to remember and your mental sharpness. That's the finding of a new study. Researchers at Johns Hopkins University say those with hearing loss lose as much as 40 percent on their thinking abilities over time, compared to their counterparts with no hearing loss. Lead author of the study, Dr. Frank R. Lin, published findings a couple of years ago linking hearing loss with dementia. Details are published in JAMA Archives of Internal Medicine.
The ASL Petition
The woman who is waiting for a White House response on her petition to have ASL recognized as an official language was born deaf and discouraged from using American Sign Language. But Adrean Clark went on to start ASL for America with fellow Gallaudet alum Jeannette Johnson. Clark now lives near Minneapolis with her deaf-blind husband and poet, John Lee Clark, and their two children. She submitted a petition to the White Houses's We the People website back in November. You can see it here. It has more than 32,000 signatures- more than the required 25,000 in 30 days to earn an official response, which should be coming soon.
Monday, January 21, 2013
Learning the Fiddle By Touch, Sight
Profoundly deaf fiddle instructor Liz Shaw is helping students learn to to play the fiddle. Read the story here.
Switched at Birth Scoop
Switched at Birth will air an episode using no spoken English, just ASL, as we told you earlier this month. It is a TV first. The Seattle PI has a fuller explanation on what you can expect during this March 4th TV show here.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Retreat hosted for parents of deaf students in South Texas
A group of more than two dozen parents also heard from different speakers and attended classes on a range of topics yesterday in McAllen. Read the story here.
Screening misses some deaf kids
Newborn hearing tests are missing some deaf infants, leading some parents to mistakenly believe their child has no hearing loss. That's the finding of a new study. Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center looked a the medical records of more than 900 children who came to the Center with hearing loss. Nearly 80 of the kids had passed their initial newborn screening. Some received wrong results while others developed progressive hearing loss. The researchers recommend a second round of testing at three months of age, though they want to do more research into when these children began losing their hearing.
For a Homeless Deaf Man, an iPad Makes Life Easier
The NY police have gotten angry with a homeless man because they did not realize that he could not hear their instructions. He was born with no hearing in one ear and only a little in the other. A charity bought him an iPad last month to make it easier for him to communicate through ASL on video relay. Read more of the story from the New York Times here.
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Desktop Captioning Phone

A new phone unveiled last week offers a new tool for the deaf and hard-of-hearing when it comes to making calls. Clarity's Ensemble phone is a corded desktop unit that amplifies sound as much as 50 decibels using the same technology found in many expensive hearing aids. Plus, you can read what the other party is saying through a 7-inch color touch-screen text display. The text is provided by call center agent at Purple Communication, so Ensemble offers near-real-time speed captioning. The cost is $229 for the until while the captioning is free. Find out more here.
A captioning first
This week's presidential inauguration will include a closed captioning first--attendees will be able to read closed captioning of the proceedings on their smartphones. It is one of several innovations that organizers say will make this inauguration more accessible than any before. The Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies says it is working diligently to make this an ADA-friendly inauguration.
Charges added to school worker indictment
A teacher’s aide at the Maryland School for the Deaf is facing multiple counts of abuse. Prosecutors say Clarence Taylor sexually abused seven children at the school. Taylor was indicted for kissing and fondling three girls between the ages of 10 and 13 in December and this week charges related to four other children have been added. He worked in the evenings as an aide for two years.
Bison Lose Coach
Gallaudet is losing its men's soccer coach. Luis Gendive held the part-time position at the University for five years. He leaves with a record of 10-77-1. A search is underway for a replacement.
Friday, January 18, 2013
Britain’s only deaf Rugby referee
Danny Shepherd loves his job - because he can’t hear abuse from fans. Read the story here.
YouTube Sensation Writes Her First Book
Sarah Churman became a YouTube sensation in 2011 when video of her reaction to getting her first hearing device implant went viral. The North Texas woman born with hearing loss wrote a book about her implants. You can watch a video from Dallas station KXAS-TV below on DeafNewsToday.com. The station caught up with Churman at a book signing yesterday. Or read the story here.
View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Tom Cruise: Another Swatting Hoax
It happened again to a Hollywood celebrity. Someone made an emergency call today, claiming shots were fired at the home of Tom Cruise. Beverly Hills police surrounded his house, but the call was a fake. Police are now trying to figure out who made it. It has recently happened to other celebrities, too: Simon Cowell, Ashton Kutcher, Charlie Sheen, Miley Cyrus, and Justin Bieber. LA police arrested a preteen a few months ago for making "swatting calls" in at least two of those cases. The boy used a computer program to make TTY calls, typically used by the deaf and hard-of--hearing.
Former School Leader Dies
The first deaf superintendent of the Texas School for the Deaf has died. Victor Galloway battled a long illness and Alzheimer's before passing yesterday at the age of 84. He was superintendent for five years, from 1981-1986. He was also the first deaf superintendent of the Scranton State School for the Deaf in Pennsylvania, where he served from 1979-1981. Not only that, Galloway was the first deaf educator in the College of Sciences the NTID (National Institute for the Deaf) in Rochester. He lost his hearing as a toddler because of a childhood illness. He got a bachelor's degree from Gallaudet University, a master's degree from the California State University at Northridge, and a doctorate from the University of Arizona. Galloway met his wife in 1966. She was a student in his ASL class.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
BBC on Deaf Belgian twins
The BBC has a video report on the identical twin brothers in Belgium who died by lethal injection, reopening the euthanasia debate. Watch it here (no captioning).
Bad Lip Reading
A YouTube channel called Bad Lip Reading offers a look at how difficult it is to read lips. One of the channels videos, focused on NFL players and coaches, has gone viral with more than 1.5 million hits since it came out yesterday. See what you think.
Fed of Blind on Euthanized Deaf Twins
The National Federation of the Blind is speaking out about two deaf men who were put to death by lethal injection in Belgian after they began losing their sight. President Marc Maurer says:
"This disturbing news from Belgium is a stark example of the common, and in this case tragic, misunderstanding of disability and its consequences. Adjustment to any disability is difficult, and deaf-blind people face their own particular challenges, but from at least the time of Helen Keller it has been known that these challenges can be met, and the technology and services available today have vastly improved prospects for the deaf-blind and others with disabilities. That these men wanted to die is tragic; that the state sanctioned and aided their suicide is frightening."Read more here.
Deaf-Blind Performers take Stage tonight in NY
An acclaimed Israeli theater ensemble debuts its show Not by Bread alone tonight in New York. All the performers in the troupe, named Nalagaat (Hebrew for Please Do Touch) are deaf and blind. The US premiere takes place at the Skirball Center for the Performing Arts at New York University. Read some background on the group in the New York Times here.
Medical Student Wins Appeal
It looks like a deaf medical school student will get his jury trial. An appeals court is reinstating Michael Argenyi's lawsuit against Creighton University after it was dismissed by a judge. He sued the Omaha school for discrimination because the private Jesuit university accepted him for medical school but then refused to accommodate his learning needs. Argenyi has a cochlear implant but also uses cued speech. He was able to use a transcription service along with a cued speech interpreter at Seattle University as an undergrad. He earned a high GPA at the school in Washington State. But while at Creighton, he was provided some assistance, Argenyi says it was not enough. The school refused his request for interpreters and a transcription system - claiming they were to expensive. Creighton even refused to let him use an interpreter when he interacted with patients--despite the fact that he was willing to pay for the service out of his own pocket. The school told him that he should not be using interpreters in the "real world".
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Hearing Aid Models
Here is a look at the 5 types of hearing aid models along with their advantages and costs.
▪ BTEs "behind the ear"
These are the familiar crescent-shaped instruments first developed in the late 1940s. These durable aids include a receiver, microphone and amplifier that fits over the ear. The small plastic case is worn behind the ear and connects to an ear mold inside the ear. It directs sound into the ear canal through a tube and custom-fitted ear mold. The most options and is easiest to handle. Picks up sound and processes it into electrical impulses that are sent through a wire to the speaker. Cost: $500 to $2,900 per ear.
▪ "mini" BTEs or OTE (on the ear)
These are the newest aids. They dramatically reduces the size of the crescent and replaces the bulky wire and speaker with a clear, thin tube. They cost $700 to $2,350 per ear.ITEs "in-the-ear" Smaller than BTEs, these fit into the outer ear and project slightly into the ear canal. Fairly easy to handle and comes with many features. These can be ordered with or without dual microphones, which provide information to the computer to analyze and reduce background noise. It comes in full shell size and the smaller, less-visible "half shell" size. Cost: $500 to $2,400 per ear.
▪ ITCs "in the canal"
This variation on the in-the-ear models protrudes only slightly into the outer ear. They are partially visible though smaller than ITEs. Not for people with severe or profound hearing loss. Fewer features and more difficult to handle. Cost: $650 to $2,350 per ear.
▪ CIC "completely in canal"
The smallest but most difficult to handle model, these customized hearing aids are tucked so far down that it comes with a plastic thread to pull it out; They are rarely visible. Not for people with severe or profound hearing loss, smaller batteries with short life; will last no more than 7 years. Impressions are taken of the ear canal to fashion the aids. Cost: $500 to $2,900 per ear.
▪ IOT "invisible open technology"
A one-size-fits-all model, these aids are a variation on CIC aids but are not custom-fitted. Sometimes referred to as "fit-and-go," it can be programmed in one visit to a hearing aid center. Cost: $1,500 to $1,900 per ear.
▪ BTEs "behind the ear"
These are the familiar crescent-shaped instruments first developed in the late 1940s. These durable aids include a receiver, microphone and amplifier that fits over the ear. The small plastic case is worn behind the ear and connects to an ear mold inside the ear. It directs sound into the ear canal through a tube and custom-fitted ear mold. The most options and is easiest to handle. Picks up sound and processes it into electrical impulses that are sent through a wire to the speaker. Cost: $500 to $2,900 per ear.
▪ "mini" BTEs or OTE (on the ear)
These are the newest aids. They dramatically reduces the size of the crescent and replaces the bulky wire and speaker with a clear, thin tube. They cost $700 to $2,350 per ear.ITEs "in-the-ear" Smaller than BTEs, these fit into the outer ear and project slightly into the ear canal. Fairly easy to handle and comes with many features. These can be ordered with or without dual microphones, which provide information to the computer to analyze and reduce background noise. It comes in full shell size and the smaller, less-visible "half shell" size. Cost: $500 to $2,400 per ear.
▪ ITCs "in the canal"
This variation on the in-the-ear models protrudes only slightly into the outer ear. They are partially visible though smaller than ITEs. Not for people with severe or profound hearing loss. Fewer features and more difficult to handle. Cost: $650 to $2,350 per ear.
▪ CIC "completely in canal"
The smallest but most difficult to handle model, these customized hearing aids are tucked so far down that it comes with a plastic thread to pull it out; They are rarely visible. Not for people with severe or profound hearing loss, smaller batteries with short life; will last no more than 7 years. Impressions are taken of the ear canal to fashion the aids. Cost: $500 to $2,900 per ear.
▪ IOT "invisible open technology"
A one-size-fits-all model, these aids are a variation on CIC aids but are not custom-fitted. Sometimes referred to as "fit-and-go," it can be programmed in one visit to a hearing aid center. Cost: $1,500 to $1,900 per ear.
Gang Members Sentenced
An LA judge gave the deaf 22-year-old son of a gang leader a decade in prison yesterday. Louie "Lil Chico" Rios is the son of Santiago "Chico" Rios. The elder Rios was sentenced to 19 years and seven months behind bars. Prosecutors say their gang committed hate crimes against black people in the Los Angeles suburb of Azusa. Both men have tattoos above their upper lips that say "Azusa". More than 50 members of the gang were arrested in 2011 and all have been convicted. The gang assaulted blacks in an attempt to drive them out of Azusa.
Monday, January 14, 2013
French 'Switched' star living the American dream
Gilles Marini is not only a star on Switched at Birth, he has also played roles in Brothers and Sisters and competed on Dancing With the Stars.
Read his story here.
Stabbed Man Speaks Out
A deaf man attacked for using sign language - mistaken for gang signs - spoke with WXII-TV today. You can watch the video here. The TV station did not supply captions.
First Teacher of the Deaf
A Spanish monk in the 16th century named Fray Pedro Ponce de Leon is recognized by most historians as the first teacher of deaf children, though some experts point to Spanish painter Juan Fernandez Navarrete, who lived in the earlier part of the century and was himself mute. Ponce de Leon was a Benedictine monk who took a vow of silence and developed a form of sign language to communicate. He apparently taught finger-spelling to deaf children who probably arrived at his monastery already knowing some home signs.
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Being born deaf hasn’t slowed down young singer
Read the story about a Canadian teenage singer here.
A TV First!
A episode of Switched at Birth will be done entirely in ASL. The ABC Family show is in its second season and producers say this will be the first time a scripted series on mainstream television will use only American Sign Language. The episode airs Monday, March 4. Learn more here.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Implant remote stolen from deaf woman
An Ohio woman didn't mind losing her purse, keys and wallet as much as the remote control for her cochlear implant. Read the story here.
Update: More on Sign Language Assault
We told you Thursday about a deaf man who was stabbed in North Carolina. Another man mistook sign language for gang signs. Below on DeafNewsToday.com is a video report from Carolina TV station WGHP. Or read the story here.
Friday, January 11, 2013
Deaf Restaurant in the Middle East
The BBC takes a look at a Gaza restaurant staffed by deaf people here.
Deaf-Blind Israeli Theater Troupe Performing in Manhattan
The only troupe in the world whose actors are deaf and blind, is leaving its comfortable home in the Israeli port of Jaffa to perform Not by Bread Alone at the Skirball Center in Manhattan from Jan. 16 to Feb. 3. Read more about it here.
Life Guard wins Appeal
An appeals court is overturning a ruling against a deaf life guard. Nicholas Keith says Oakland County, just outside of Detroit violated his ADA rights when it fired him before he even started work at the Oakland County wave pool. A Michigan judge dismissed his case in 2011, but Keith appealed and now a higher court has unanimously agreed with Keith. Born deaf, he is a certified lifeguard and wears a cochlear implant.
Beaten and Robbed
Seattle Summer Academy
The deadline for applying to U-Dub's Summer Academy is coming up (January 25). The University of Washington program is designed to improve the math and science skills of deaf and hard of hearing students who are looking to go into a career involving computers. The 9-week program runs from June 21 to August 24, 2013. If you are accepted, your tuition, housing and transportation is free.
School Leader Out
The superintendent of Utah's Schools for the Deaf and Blind won't be back and the state school board isn't saying why. The members met behind closed doors before taking a vote on whether to keep Steve Noyce. It was unanimous to not renew his contract. This upends Noyce's plans to work for one more year and then retire. He had come under criticism recently from ASL advocates who said he favored spoken instructions over sign language.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Attacked over Sign Language
A North Carolina man is behind bars for attacking a deaf man he thought was using gang sign. Terrance Daniels was signing with a friend as they walked down a street in Burlington. Robert Neal mistook ASL for gang signs, he stabbed Daniels repeatedly. Daniels is in stable condition, while Neal is behind bars. His bond was set at half-of-a-million dollars.
CNN picks of deaf discrimination story
A Missouri woman's complaint against eBay highlights the dispute over Web access.
Read the story here.
Reversing Hearing Loss
A drug treatment is showing promise for reversing hearing loss from loud noises. Harvard Medical School researcher Albert Edge says LY411575 will partially restore hearing in mice
and could grow hair cells in humans. You'll find details of the study in the journal Neuron.
Travel Tips
Make each airline agent aware of your situation at each stage of your trip.. from the booking agent all the way to the gate agent and flight attendants.
Arrange for pre-boarding and have a friend or family member escort you to the gate. Escorts can get a gate pass that will allow them through security and to the gate.
Airlines will often seat you at the front of a plane if you request it to read lips better or if you have a service dog with you.
Take a piece of paper with you explaining your situation and how you’d like to communicate. Show it especially to an agent when you arrive at the gate so that he or she can make sure you are aware of any important announcements such as a gate change.
Most airlines offer assistance for hard-of-hearing passengers over the phone.
· American: TDD 800-543-1586
· Continental: TDD/TT 800-343-9195
· Delta: TDD 800-831-4488· JetBlue: TTY/TDD 800-336-5530
· Southwest: TTY 800-533-1305 and video relay at SWAVRS.TV
· United: TDD 800-323-0170
· US Airways: TTY 800-245-2966
· Virgin America: None
Of these airlines, only Continental and US Airways offer closed-captioned films.
Arrange for pre-boarding and have a friend or family member escort you to the gate. Escorts can get a gate pass that will allow them through security and to the gate.
Airlines will often seat you at the front of a plane if you request it to read lips better or if you have a service dog with you.
Take a piece of paper with you explaining your situation and how you’d like to communicate. Show it especially to an agent when you arrive at the gate so that he or she can make sure you are aware of any important announcements such as a gate change.
Most airlines offer assistance for hard-of-hearing passengers over the phone.
· American: TDD 800-543-1586
· Continental: TDD/TT 800-343-9195
· Delta: TDD 800-831-4488· JetBlue: TTY/TDD 800-336-5530
· Southwest: TTY 800-533-1305 and video relay at SWAVRS.TV
· United: TDD 800-323-0170
· US Airways: TTY 800-245-2966
· Virgin America: None
Of these airlines, only Continental and US Airways offer closed-captioned films.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Text to 911 progress
The FCC is recognizing Gallaudet University’s Technology Access Program for the vital part it is played in the development of text-to-911 technology. The service will be available nationwide a year from this May from by the four big U.S. wireless carriers: AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon.
William's cochlear implant story
William Mager has been profoundly deaf since birth. He uses sign language and lip-reading to communicate. In November, after many years of thinking about it, he chose to have a cochlear implant surgically fitted. The device was activated just before Christmas and since then he has been learning how to interpret the sounds and impulses that it feeds to him. The BBC has a report about his experiences here.
Gally's Grad school
Gallaudet is getting a positive nod from US News and World Report. It's survey of grad schools from 377 ranked colleges and universities across the country gives the Washington, DC school a high ranking for having a high percentage of alumni who enroll in graduate school within a year of graduation. Gallaudet had 55 percent of its graduates continue on to higher education within their first year out of college, putting it at number ten among the schools surveyed.
Update: Baby In Cochlear Implant Video
Whatever happened to the 8 month old in the video that went viral when his cochlear implant was turned on? It happened in 2008. In the video, he can be seen smiling widely when he hears his mother’s voice for the first time. Jonathan is now five years old. You can read an update on his family and view a photo slideshow here.
Getting to Know... Service Animals
What is the legal definition of a service animal?
Therapy Animals are not legally defined by federal law but there is a legal definition for service animals in the Americans With Disabilities Act. Service animals are specifically trained to help the disability-related needs of their handlers and are not considered 'pets'.
Is using a service animal protected in public places?
Federal laws protect the rights of individuals with disabilities who are accompanied by their service animals in public places.
Does a guide dog have to be certified by the State to be an “official” guide dog?
No. Any guide dog, signal dog, or other animal individually trained to provide assistance to an individual with a disability.
Can a business owner insist on proof of state certification before letting a service animal into the business?
No. ADA regulations only allow animals to be excluded from a facility if it is a direct threat to the health or safety of other people or will disrupt the regular operation of the business. Local laws may restrict pets from restaurants, housing, and theaters, but these rules do not apply to service dogs. However, handlers of service animals must obey local leash and vaccine laws and must have their dogs under control at all times.
Are therapy animals protected in the same way?
Therapy animals are considered pets and do not fall under the regulations provided by the ADA.
Therapy Animals are not legally defined by federal law but there is a legal definition for service animals in the Americans With Disabilities Act. Service animals are specifically trained to help the disability-related needs of their handlers and are not considered 'pets'.
Is using a service animal protected in public places?
Federal laws protect the rights of individuals with disabilities who are accompanied by their service animals in public places.
Does a guide dog have to be certified by the State to be an “official” guide dog?
No. Any guide dog, signal dog, or other animal individually trained to provide assistance to an individual with a disability.
Can a business owner insist on proof of state certification before letting a service animal into the business?
No. ADA regulations only allow animals to be excluded from a facility if it is a direct threat to the health or safety of other people or will disrupt the regular operation of the business. Local laws may restrict pets from restaurants, housing, and theaters, but these rules do not apply to service dogs. However, handlers of service animals must obey local leash and vaccine laws and must have their dogs under control at all times.
Are therapy animals protected in the same way?
Therapy animals are considered pets and do not fall under the regulations provided by the ADA.
Gallaudet Reinstates Diversity Officer
Gallaudet University is giving Angela McCaskill her job back. President T. Alan Hurwitz made the announcement Monday in an email to everyone at the DC school. He didn't explain why he was making the move. McCaskill was put on leave in October when it became known that she had signed a petition encouraging the issue of gay marriage to be put to a vote in Maryland. Hurwitz explained his decision here which led to protests and an online petition here. Watch a video report from WJLA-TV below or you can read the story here.
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Getting to Know your Hair Cells
Hair cells play a critical role in our hearing. When they are damaged, doctors say they act like blades of grass. When someone walks on grass, the blades initially lie down and then bounce back up. but if you keep walking that same path over and over again, the grass will stay down. Hair cells are the same way, if you send waves of sound from the outside without opportunity for the cells to recover or you rip them up through excessive noise. Hair cells do not grow back.
Monday, January 7, 2013
Suit: ‘Deaf Discrimation’
WDAF-TV offers a video report on a Missouri woman who sued eBay. Watch it below on DeafNewsToday.com or read the story here.
Hong Kong Conf
A Sign Linguistics and Deaf Education conference takes place Jan. 30 through Feb. 2nd in Hong Kong. The 3rd International Conference on Sign Linguistics and Deaf Education in Asia will be hosted by the Centre for Sign Linguistics and Deaf Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. There is more information here.
Getting to Know.. Greg Hlibok
Greg Hlibok took over the FCC's Disability Rights Office two years ago. Hlibok has been profoundly deaf since birth. After studying engineering, he later became the first deaf law student at Hofstra University and at the age of 43 has became the first chief of the office to have a disability. His job is to help put into place a law that requires digital technology creators to make their materials available to the blind and deaf. Hlibok is best known in the Deaf community as the student body president of Gallaudet University during the 1988 Deaf President Now protest.
Sunday, January 6, 2013
New signs for science
The University of Washington student paper takes a look at a school project to developing a science-friendly American Sign Language vocabulary here.
'Switched at Birth''s Marini Talks Show's Impact
Actor Gilles Marini talks about working on a TV show where the characters are both hearing and deaf and the impact that has on the way people view the deaf community.
14-hour Fight for Survival
A deaf North Carolina hunter nearly died in a hunting accident last month. Only through grit and determination was he able to win his battle against nature and pull himself and his mangled leg out of a swamp following a hunting-related accident. Read his story here.
Call for special license plates
There's an effort underway to get special license plates for the deaf in Kentucky.
WDRB-TV has a video report, posted below on DeafNewToday.com. You can read the story here.
WDRB 41 Louisville - News, Weather, Sports Community
WDRB 41 Louisville - News, Weather, Sports Community
Friday, January 4, 2013
Bringing Judaism’s Oral Law to the Deaf
If you are a religious deaf man in Israel, the traditional doors to Jewish learning have been in so many ways closed to you. But Yosef Tolidano—a young deaf man descended from a long and distinguished line of Sephardic rabbis—has pulled open those doors. Read more here.
Age-Related Hearing Loss
About one-out-of-three Americans over the age of 60 have age-related hearing loss. The condition is known medically as prebycusis. It happens naturally with age. It can be caused by changes in the inner ear, auditory nerve, middle ear or outer ear. Some of its causes are aging, loud noise, heredity, head injury, infection, illness, certain prescription drugs, and circulation problems such as high blood pressure. Studies indicate it is probably inherited.
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Search for restoring stability after state takeover at deaf school
A look at what the new leader of Rhode Island's School for the Deaf is doing to restore its battered reputation here.
Deaf Boys Save Friend's Life
A couple of deaf teenagers in the UK saved the life of an 11-year-old who nearly drowned in a pool. Shezan Khan and Jordan Naylor came to the rescue of Waseem Hussain in Hartlepool, England. The boys were swimming together at an event organized by a local deaf club when Waseem got into the deep end--and cannot swim. It took a great deal of effort for the boys to pull him up from the bottom. Chris Drew, principal of their school, The King’s Academy, has honored them with a Principal’s Commendation award.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
On this date... Jan 1, 2010
On this date in 2010, Alan Hurwitz became the 10th president of Gallaudet University. Here's some background on him:
Family: Deaf since birth, he was raised by Harold and Juliette Hurwitz, both of whom were deaf, in Sioux City, Iowa. His father worked as an upholsterer for 20 years at Sioux City Furniture Company and then for Metz Baking. Juliette was a quality assurance assembler for 25 years. His parents retired and moved to Kansas City, Missouri. Juliette died in 1991 and Harold passed away in 2000. Alan Hurwitz has been married to his wife, Vicki, for 44 years. They have two children. A son, who is hard of hearing and a daughter, who is deaf.
Education: An expert lip-reader, Hurwitz is a 1965 graduate from Central Institute for the Deaf in St. Louis where he spent a decade learning to talk as a child. He then attended North Junior High where he was the only deaf student. Hurwitz was without the aid of an interpreter or note taker but excelled at sports. Hurwitz went on to earn electrical engineering degrees from Washington University and St. Louis University. His doctorate is in curriculum and teaching from the University of Rochester.
Family Education: His wife, Vicki, graduated from Central Institute for the Deaf in 1954. His mother, Juliette Ruth Kahn, also graduated from Central Institute for the Deaf in 1934. His son is now a lawyer in Rochester, New York. His daughter works for a family service foundation.
Career: Five years as an engineer and programmer at McDonnell Douglas aerospace company in St. Louis. Current president of the National Technical Institute for the Deaf (NTID) where he has worked since 1970. Hurwitz sometimes living in dormitories for a few days to inspect conditions. His wife was a student development coordinator at NTID and directed RSD's outreach center.
Service: Hurwitz has served as president of both the National Association of the Deaf and the World Organization of Jewish Deaf. He served two decades on the board of Rochester School for the Deaf. His wife co-founded Deaf Women of Rochester.
Religion: The first Jewish leader for Gallaudet, Hurwitz grew up in an Orthodox environment. He and his wife has been to Israel four times and they are members of a Reform congregation.
Family: Deaf since birth, he was raised by Harold and Juliette Hurwitz, both of whom were deaf, in Sioux City, Iowa. His father worked as an upholsterer for 20 years at Sioux City Furniture Company and then for Metz Baking. Juliette was a quality assurance assembler for 25 years. His parents retired and moved to Kansas City, Missouri. Juliette died in 1991 and Harold passed away in 2000. Alan Hurwitz has been married to his wife, Vicki, for 44 years. They have two children. A son, who is hard of hearing and a daughter, who is deaf.
Education: An expert lip-reader, Hurwitz is a 1965 graduate from Central Institute for the Deaf in St. Louis where he spent a decade learning to talk as a child. He then attended North Junior High where he was the only deaf student. Hurwitz was without the aid of an interpreter or note taker but excelled at sports. Hurwitz went on to earn electrical engineering degrees from Washington University and St. Louis University. His doctorate is in curriculum and teaching from the University of Rochester.
Family Education: His wife, Vicki, graduated from Central Institute for the Deaf in 1954. His mother, Juliette Ruth Kahn, also graduated from Central Institute for the Deaf in 1934. His son is now a lawyer in Rochester, New York. His daughter works for a family service foundation.
Career: Five years as an engineer and programmer at McDonnell Douglas aerospace company in St. Louis. Current president of the National Technical Institute for the Deaf (NTID) where he has worked since 1970. Hurwitz sometimes living in dormitories for a few days to inspect conditions. His wife was a student development coordinator at NTID and directed RSD's outreach center.
Service: Hurwitz has served as president of both the National Association of the Deaf and the World Organization of Jewish Deaf. He served two decades on the board of Rochester School for the Deaf. His wife co-founded Deaf Women of Rochester.
Religion: The first Jewish leader for Gallaudet, Hurwitz grew up in an Orthodox environment. He and his wife has been to Israel four times and they are members of a Reform congregation.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

