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Can Do Careers for
               Deaf People
            “Deaf people can do anything, except hear.”
                          I. King Jordan
                             President
                      Gallaudet University



Fall 2005                Transition Services Preparation & Training
Introduction
   Deaf people are often told they are unable to do
    certain careers.
   This PowerPoint presentation will counter this
    idea by giving examples of a number of careers
    that Deaf people are currently employed in.
   It will include links to programs for these careers
    as well as real-life stories about people who have
    succeeded.

                   Transition Services
Fall 2005          Preparation & Training
Lawyers
   DeafLawyers.org – A resource for deaf/hard-of-hearing attorneys
    and law students
       New About Us: includes articles written about deaf/ hard-of-hearing
        lawyers
       Resources: gives information about different communication systems
        deaf/hard-of-hearing law students and attorneys have used throughout law
        school and their professional career
       Articles by Us: a list of books, articles, reports, etc. written by deaf/hard-of-
        hearing attorneys and law students
       Other Links: links to websites about individual deaf lawyers




                            Transition Services
Fall 2005                   Preparation & Training
Lawyers

Deafga.org – A community for deaf and hard of hearing
attorneys and law students. You must be a member to
access most of the information on this website, but this
would be a great resource for students once they enter law
school. One of the main features is the forums held
through this website.




                   Transition Services
Fall 2005          Preparation & Training
Lawyers
   Teri L. Mosier is a Deaf lawyer who
    was also an At-Large Delegate for
    Vice President, Al Gore. She is not
    the first national deaf delegate for
    the U.S., although she is the first
    democratic delegate for Kentucky.

   There are also many other deaf
    lawyers who are making their name
    in the news. Below are a few:
       John Stanton
       Claudia Gordon
       Carla Mathers
       Kelby Brick
   Bonnie Tucker, wrote a book, “The
    Feel of Silence” about her
    experience of growing-up deaf and
    then becoming a lawyer.
                           Transition Services
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Doctors, Veterinarians,
               Dentists, Nurses, etc.
   Association of Medical Professionals with Hearing Losses (AMPHL)
       A non-profit organization formed in 2000 to “provide information
        promote advocacy and mentorship, and create a network for individuals
        with hearing loss interested in or working in health care fields”.
       Lists academic/professional guidelines for specific careers including
        schools that currently or in the past had deaf individuals graduate through
        their program
       Resources include: a list of books and articles written about deaf
        individuals in the health care fields, forums; chat rooms; and other
        websites.
       Information about stethoscopes that have been modified for deaf/hard-
        of-hearing individuals




                           Transition Services
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Doctors and Other Medical
                  Professionals
   There are many articles that relate to doctors
    and other medical professionals who are
    Deaf. Here are just a few:
      6 Deaf doctors (4 physicians, 1
       veterinarian, and 1 dentist) who all live in
       Rochester, NY, grew up deaf, and know
       sign language. They share some of their
       everyday experiences about being in the
       medical profession.
      Another more detailed article, about one
       of the above doctors, Angela Earhart,
       who uses a sign language interpreter.
                      Transition Services
Fall 2005            Preparation & Training
Doctors and Other Medical
                  Professionals
The book,
“When the Phone Rings, My Bed Shakes: Memoirs of a Deaf D
 written by Philip Zazove,
explains his life growing up
deaf and the struggles he
faced on his path to
becoming a doctor.




                  Transition Services
Fall 2005         Preparation & Training
Scientists
In the present and past there have been a number of
scientists who are deaf. Gallaudet University has a website
that includes information about deaf scientists in history as
well as current professors of science or people within the
field of science. A list of a few of these follow.




                   Transition Services
Fall 2005          Preparation & Training
Scientists
Dr. Harry Lang, has been a professor
at NTID for 30 years and teaches
physics and mathematics. He has
written two books that deal with deaf
people in the field of science. The
first book,
“Silence of the Spheres: The Deaf Experience in the History of Science”
, explains the contributions that deaf
men and women have made to
science. The second book,
“Deaf Persons in the Arts and Sciences: A Biographical Dictionary”
 has ‘150 biographies of deaf
scientists, artists, engineers, actors,
writers, poets, and other
professionals’.

                          Transition Services
Fall 2005                 Preparation & Training
Scientists
Christian Vogler is a
research scientist at the
Gallaudet Research
Institute. He is currently
working on using
computers to recognize
ASL by wearing a
Cyberglove to track hand
movements and using
video to track facial
expressions.
                   Transition Services
Fall 2005          Preparation & Training
Miss America
Heather Whitestone was the first deaf person to be
crowned Miss America in 1995. She has promoted
awareness of Deaf/hard-of-hearing issues all around the
country. She has written books including “Listening With
My Heart” and “Believing the Promise” which both share
her life-changing wisdom. One of her biggest
achievements has been her five-point STARS program
which was made to show others how to achieve “Success
Through Action and Realization of your dreamS”. The
five points in this system are: a positive attitude, a goal, a
willingness to work hard, a realistic look at your problem,
and a support team. She has served the community in
many ways and been honored with many achievements and
awards. In 2002, she was appointed as a member of the
board for the Advisory Council for the National Institute
of Health on Deafness and Other and Other
Communication Disorder. Transition Services
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Pilots
The Summer in the Skies program is put on by the Indiana School for the
Deaf (ISD). During this 4-week long summer class, students get to fly
between 4-6 hours with a certified instructor as well as do flight
simulations. They do such activities as “read and navigate with a compass,
plot courses, and read navigational charts and maps for cross-country
flights. They obtain and interpret weather briefings, plot courses, and
calculate wind correction angles, time en route, and amount of fuel needed
for cross-country flights. They also learn how to navigate with satellites
and GPS technology.” They also build paper airplanes and hold
competitions, write reports about famous pilots, write a daily journal about
their experience, and take field trips to museums as well as airshows.




                        Transition Services
Fall 2005               Preparation & Training
Astronauts
U.S. Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama and the Western
Pennsylvania School for the Deaf (WPSD) have joined
forces to provide a Space Camp experience for Deaf and
Hard of hearing children from all over the world. In this
5-day program, students train much as how real pilots
would for a mission into space. They do activities such as
“simulated Space Shuttle missions, IMAX® movies,
training simulators, rocket building and launches,
scientific experiments, and lectures on the past, present,
and future of space exploration.
                   Transition Services
Fall 2005          Preparation & Training
Priests/Ministers
   There are only 7 or 8 deaf Catholic priests in the United
    States.
 Father Thomas Coughlin was the first deaf priest ordained
    in the United States. In the past, he has traveled 11
    months of the year around the United States and abroad.
    He ministers to deaf people by using American Sign
    Language (ASL). One of his main goals is to expand the
    ministry to deaf people within the Catholic Church. In
    1979, he met privately with Pope John Paul II. He is
    currently a pastor of San Francisco’s St. Benedict Parish at
    St. Francis Xavier Church, which is known for its deaf
    congregation.
 In the San Francisco area, there are
    three deaf seminarians studying at St. Patrick’s Seminary in
    Menlo Park as well as two other deaf priests within the
    state of California.
 Some other deaf priests are Father Michael Depcik and
    Father Joseph Mulcrone.
                            Transition Services
 There are a number of other deaf ministers throughout
Fallthe United States.
     2005                   Preparation & Training
Firefighters and Emergency
          Medical Technicians (EMTs)
   EMT’s have different techniques to communicate more efficiently at the
    work place such as:
        memorizing the sequence of radio procedures, then giving reports when partner
         gives the signal
        Partners can repeat medical orders or questions that come up by radio, and they
         can lip read sometimes via the rearview mirror then confirms the orders verbally
         over the radio
   EMT’s have found other ways when checking a patient
        Using a electronic stethoscope instead of listening for breathing sounds in chest
        Feeling for heart palpitations
   Firefighters have found alternatives ways to receive information and
    communicate in the firehouse and during a fire
        Instead of yelling to get attention or to watch out for a specific area, Fire Chief
         will pull the hose to get everyone attention
        Use of a pager for a fire alarm and to show where the fire is at.


                               Transition Services
Fall 2005                      Preparation & Training
Firefighters and Emergency
        Medical Technicians (EMTs)
     The book,
     “Silent Alarm: On the Edge with a Deaf EMT”
      is written by Steven
     Schrader who was a
     firefighter and EMT for 15
     years. This books
     describes his success and
     the obstacles he faced
     being deaf in this
     profession.
                  Transition Services
Fall 2005         Preparation & Training
FBI Agents
   Sue Thomas lost her hearing at the age
    of 18 months and grew up learned to
    speak and lip read at Youngstown
    Hearing and Speech Center. She
    received a degree in political science
    from Springfield College and starting
    working for the FBI after graduation.
    Thomas used her lip reading abilities to
    decipher conversations in videotape for
    which there was no sound. In 1990, she
    wrote an autobiography, “Silent Night”
    which tells about her experience
    working in the FBI. From her book
    came the television series “Sue Thomas:
    F.B Eye” discussing stories from the
    book and showing experiences from her
    life.
                         Transition Services
Fall 2005                Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
Michelle Banks became deaf at the age of one
and attended Kendall Demonstration Elementary
School and then the Model Secondary School for
the Deaf. She went on to college at Gallaudet
University and then transferred to the State
University of New York (SUNY) at Purchase
where she entered the school of drama. In 1990,
she founded the Onyx Theatre, the first deaf
theatre company in the U.S. for people of color.
She made her break when she got cast as a deaf
character on the Showtime television programs,
Soul Food. She has also been seen on TV in
Strong Medicine and the UPN series Girlfriends.
She has been in two movies, Malcolm X and
Compensation, a silent film in which she starred.
She has been in a number of plays including Big
River. She has did her own traveling one-woman
show, Reflections of a Black Deaf Woman.
                       Transition Services
Fall 2005              Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   Linda Bove was born deaf on
    November 30, 1945. She is most
    well known for her character on
    Sesame Street as Linda. She was a
    founding member of the National
    Theatre of the Deaf in 1963. She
    played Sarah Norman a number of
    times in the famous play Children of a
    Lesser God. She also once made an
    appearance on the TV show Happy
    Days.

                        Transition Services
Fall 2005               Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
Deanne Bray grew up in California and became
deaf at the age of 3. She was a teacher for deaf
high school students and did some acting on the
side. She has been in a number of plays with
Deaf West Theatre, made guest appearances in
TV shows such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,
Ellen, and Diagnosis Murder, and appeared in some
independent films and TV movies. In 2002, she
became the lead actress in Sue Thomas: F. B.
Eye. She plays the part of the real Sue Thomas,
the FBI’s first female special investigative
assistant who was deaf.


                       Transition Services
Fall 2005              Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   Amy Ecklund became deaf at the age of 6 and
    became interested in acting when she was
    young. She is able to speak and read lips and
    also knows American Sign Language. She has
    appeared in a number of different theatre
    productions. She played the role of Abigail
    Blume starting in 1995. She has received
    honors due to her role in Guiding Light,
    including in 1998 a Daytime Emmy Nomination
    for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a
    Daytime Series. In 1999, she had a cochlear
    implant as did her character on the soap opera.
                      Transition Services
Fall 2005             Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
Lou Ferrigno lost his hearing at the age of 3
due to an ear infection. He started training for
bodybuilding at the age of 13 and won major
bodybuilding titles, including Mr. America and
Mr. Universe, when he was in his early 20’s.
He later became a professional football player
for the Toronto Argonauts. He has appeared
in a number of movies and TV programs and
played the “Hulk” in the television show “The
Incredible Hulk.” Currently, Ferrigno works
on bodybuilding education.
                    Transition Services
Fall 2005           Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   Phyllis Frelich was born in Devil's
    Lake, North Dakota. She was a Tony
    Award-winning Actress. She was
    raised in a deaf family. She really
    loves performing on stages and front
    of cameras for audiences
    everywhere.  She graduated from
    Gallaudet in 1967, and has won
    many awards for drama. She
    participated with the National
    Theatre of the Deaf. Her most
    popular movie performance is from a
    movie called "Bridge to Silence." 
                        Transition Services
Fall 2005               Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   C.J Jones was born hearing to deaf parents, but
    became deaf at the age of 7 from spinal meningitis.
    In 1972, he graduated from the National Technical
    Institute for the Deaf, but started working in
    theater and film afterwards. Jones worked with the
    National Theater of the Deaf (which won him a
    Tony award), and appeared on shows such as
    Sesame Street, A Different World, and in Living
    Color. He created his own comedy routine “The
    Living Cartoon”, and hosted a video series for deaf
    children called “Happy Hands Kids Club”. Finally,
    Jones has directed and appeared in a stage
    production of “Children of a Lesser God” and
    appeared in different programs that aired on the
    old Silent Network Deaf cable.

                           Transition Services
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
 Marlee Matlin is one of the
 most famous deaf actresses
 in the United States. She
 became well known for her
 role in “Children of a Lesser
 God”, in 1986, and received
 both a Golden Globe and
 Academy Award both for
 Best Actress in this movie.
 This was then turned into a
 play which she also starred
 in. She has also been in a
 number of movies and TV
 shows since.
                     Transition Services
Fall 2005            Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   Anthony Natale first decided that he
    wanted to act during high school and
    has followed his dream ever since.
    Natale is mainly known for his role as
    the deaf son in Mr. Holland’s Opus as
    well as the man in the elevator signing
    “You complete me” in Jerry Maguire.
    He has performed in other movies such
    as Sorority Boys and City of Angels as
    well as televisions appearances in 7th
    Heaven, Any Day Now, Once and
    Again, and Pacific Blues. He is currently
    teaching small ASL classes.
                        Transition Services
Fall 2005               Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   Howie Seago was born deaf and grew up and
    learned ASL during college at California State
    University from other deaf friends. He began
    producing and acting in plays around the world,
    touring with the National Theater of the Deaf
    and staring in many of their productions. One
    of his most exciting television rolls was an
    appearance as "Riva" in Star Trek; The Next
    Generation, Episode; Loud as a Whisper. A
    few of the other television shows he has
    performed in includes "The Equalizer,"
    "Hunter," and “Rainbow's End.” He is also
    very well known for his performance in the
    foreign film “Beyond Silence”. Currently
    Howie teaches ASL and is the director of a
    special deaf youth drama program at Seattle
    Children's Theatre. Howie and his brother have
    created a series of entertaining video stories for
    children called Visual Tales.
                             Transition Services
Fall 2005                   Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   Shoshannah Stern started her acting
    career in her high school plays at
    California School for the Deaf. She
    attended Gallaudet University, and
    while still attending classes she got
    the role in WB’s “Off Centre”.
    Shoshannah has appeared on Threat
    Matrix on ABC, had a well-publicized
    guest shot on ER, Boston Public and
    Providence. Shoshannah is 4th
    generation deaf in her family.

                       Transition Services
Fall 2005              Preparation & Training
Actors/Actresses
   Terrylene's resume includes television
    and stage, but she has also acted in
    feature films such as Oliver Stone's
    "Natural Born Killers." Before her
    starring role in the play "Sweet Nothing
    in My Ear," she was best known for her
    role on television's Beauty and the Beast.
    She was one of the deaf actors on an
    episode of "Pacific Blue." Terrylene also
    starred in the film "AfterImage“ playing a
    psychic deaf woman. She has made her
    own appearance on the cover of Deaf Life
    (July 1992). Terrylene is also perhaps the
    most famous graduate of the Model
    Secondary School for the Deaf, and was
    invited back in 1998 to be their Services
                            Transition
Fallgraduation speaker. Preparation & Training
     2005
Comedian
 Kathy Buckley was thought to be retarded when she
 entered 2nd grade and was moved to a separate school.
 It took almost a year for professionals to figure out that
 her severe hearing loss was actually the reason for her
 speech and language delay. She is known as
 “America’s First Hearing-Impaired Comedienne.” In
 1988, she entered a comedy contest “Stand-Up Comics
 Take a Stand,” where she competed against comics
 who had been in the business for years. She easily won
 fourth place and then began touring the country doing
 comedy shows. She wrote an autobiographical theatre
 play, “Don’t Buck With Me!” as well an
 autobiographical book entitled If I Could Hear What I
 See. She works with camps and other organizations
 where she can work with children because she believes
 that all children should grow-up with good role models.
  She has been on a number of entertainment and news
 shows on television as well as a few Services TV.
                            Transition movies on
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Comedian
   Professor Glick has created a
    comedy routine called
    DEAFology which pokes fun of
    different situations in hearing and
    deaf culture. This show is
    appropriate for both the deaf and
    hearing and is a great way to make
    people aware of Deaf culture in a
    fun way. He travels all around the
    country performing his routine
    with the saying “The place where
    sound stops and the fun begins”.
                       Transition Services
Fall 2005               Preparation & Training
Juggler/Unicyclist
   Pinky Aiello was born deaf and has grown up
    loving the theater. While working at the
    National Theater of the Deaf Professional
    Summer School, a director from Ohio hired in
    “The Double Pierrot” with the Fairmount
    Theatre of the Deaf in Cleveland. For this
    particular role, she was required to learn how
    to juggle and use a unicycle. This soon turned
    into a passion, and she began performing on
    the streets of Cleveland for fun. Aiello is a
    member of the International Jugglers
    Association and is currently performing at
    Universal Studios Hollywood and Six Flags
    Magic Mountain. She also perform with "Girls
    On Stilts" and "The Juggling Fools". She
    works at private parties, carnivals and
    other events given by hearing people, but now
    branching out to perform at Deaf Festival,
    Schools, clubs, camps where I also give
    workshops on juggling, Transition Servicesstilt
                             unicycle riding and
Fallwalking.  
     2005                    Preparation & Training
Stunt Person
   Kitty O'Neil, the world's fastest woman, was
    born in Corpus Christi, Texas. She was a
    stuntwoman and racer who became deaf
    when she was four years old. She got her
    credentials in teaching at the University of
    Texas. She studied the methods of teaching
    deaf children, and is a founder of "School
    Listening Eyes" in Witchita Falls. She taught
    deaf children using oral methods. She won
    many diving championship awards and
    craves new challenges, such as dangerous
    sports. She rode a speed boat at the velocity
    of 285.23 miles per hour, and has been on
    water skis at 104.85 miles per hour in 1970.
    She has driven in many vehicle races. She
    also did stunts for the movie called "Bionic
    Woman" and "Wonder Woman". She was
    listed in the Guinness Book of World
    Records, because she traveled at a speed of
    512.710 miles per hour. Transition Services
                              She did many
    different stunts.
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Body Building
  Shelly Beattie was born in Santa Ana Orange
   County, California. She is a champion
   bodybuilder who is best known as one of the
   "American Gladiators". She became deaf at
   three years old. Because of difficulty adjusting
   to her deafness, she was placed in a foster
   home when she was 14 and 17 years old. She
   loves to compete in sports and body building.
   She studied Child Psychology in Oregon for a
   while. She holds the 1988 and 1989 National
   and World record for fastest time with co-ed
   handcar team, and also hold high school track
   heptathlon records. She is also the world bench
   press record holder at 315 pounds. She won
   several bodybuilder competitions .

                          Transition Services
Fall 2005                 Preparation & Training
Athletes
   Dummy Hoy was born hearing became profoundly
    deaf at the age of 2 from spinal meningitis. He
    started playing as an amateur baseball player in his
    hometown of Findlay, Ohio and was quickly
    recruited to play for Oshkosh, Wisconsin. His skills
    in the field were unbelievable, especially in center
    field, but his batting average was very low. This
    was because he was forced to turn around and lip
    read the umpire to see the call after each pitch and
    pitchers soon learned to quick pitch him. Hoy
    asked his 3rd base coach to signal the call to him and
    his batting average skyrocketed! Umpires soon saw
    this as beneficial for everyone to see the call and
    the sign for strike was created. In 1951, Hoy was
    unanimously voted the first player to be enshrined
    in the American Athletic Association of the Deaf’s
    Hall of Fame. The AAAD (now called the USA
    Deaf Sports Federation) began lobbying to get Hoy
    inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

                               Transition Services
Fall 2005                      Preparation & Training
Athletes
   Curtis Pride was born deaf from rubella and
    played many sports while growing up. Pride
    began his career as a part-time New York Mets
    minor leaguer, and moved on to stints with the
    Montreal Expos (minors and majors), the
    Detroit Tigers (majors), the Boston Red Sox
    (minors/briefly in the majors), the Atlanta
    Braves (majors), the Kansas City Royals, the
    Salt Lake Stingers (minors), and the Nashua
    Pride (minors). In 2005, he is playing with the
    New York Yankees. While not playing baseball,
    Pride and his wife participate in the “Together
    with Pride” organization which works with
    children who are deaf or hard or hearing.


                           Transition Services
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Athletes
   Jim Kyte was born deaf and grew up playing
    hockey, drafted into the National Hockey
    League (NHL) in 1982. Starting with
    Pittsburgh, Kyte has played for many teams
    such as Winnipeg, Ottowa, Vancouver, and
    San Jose. He was the first legal deaf player in
    the NHL, as well as the only person to ever
    wear hearing aids during the game. He wore
    a special helmet with flaps over the ears to
    protect the hearing aids during games or
    practice. Kyte ran his own summer hockey
    school for deaf and hearing-impaired kids in
    Toronto. He eventually opened the Jim Kyte
    Hockey School for the Hearing Impaired in
    Ottawa, a business which he continued to
    run after his retirement.
                            Transition Services
Fall 2005                   Preparation & Training
Athletes
   Kimberly Brand is a 16 year old gymnastics who competes on
    the state level for her high school. She specializes in the floor
    exercise, overcoming the challenge of synchronizing her routine
    to the music that accompanies it. Lights set up in the gymnasium
    signal her when the music has started and she has all the moves
    counted out in her head. The year before, Brand won four gold
    medals and a bronze in her first appearance at the Grand Canyon
    State Games
   Amy Walker is a 17 year old gymnastic who is ranked as one of
    the best 15 gymnasts in the country. Amy is deaf and has vision
    from one eye. During her floor exercises, her teammates stand
    around the floor helping her keep to the beat by stomping.


                       Transition Services
Fall 2005              Preparation & Training
Athletes
   Eugene Hairston was born in New York City and became deaf
    at the age of 2 from spinal meningitis. At the age of 15 he
    started boxing and soon started fighting again amateurs.
    During his workouts, his trainers used "body English and
    speech," giving instructions between rounds with gestures,
    adding well-formed words that Hairston could lipread. It
    wasn’t long before his management team decided he was ready
    to enter the amateur boxing world. In 1947, he won two
    important Golden Gloves championships: one in New York
    and one in Chicago. After 61 amateur bouts, Hairston had a
    record of 60 wins and only one loss! His handlers decided he
    was ready to turn professional. He won his first 16 fights (with
    four knockouts), and people began to take notice. He got
    national exposure when his fights were televised 13 times.
    Being deaf, Hairston was unable to hear the time-keeper’s bell
    at the end of each round. The New York Boxing Commission
    installed flashing red lights on each of Madison Square
    Garden’s four ring posts so he would know when the round
    was over. The lights also helped hearing boxers when noisy
    crowds drowned out the bell. Other arenas soon picked up on
    the idea. Eugene "Silent" Hairston was one of the most
    talented deaf prizefighters in ring annals, the first to be deaf
    and black.                   Transition Services
Fall 2005                        Preparation & Training
Athletes
   Terrence Parkins was born deaf in
    South Africa and will be competed
    in the 2000 Summer Olympics in
    Sydney for swimming. "I am going
    to the Olympics to represent South
    Africa, but it's so vitally important
    for me to go, to show that the deaf
    can do anything," Parkin says. "They
    can't hear, they can see everything. I
    would like to show the world that
    there's opportunities for the deaf."
    Parkins won the silver in the 200 m
    breaststroke          Transition Services
Fall 2005                 Preparation & Training
Athletes
   Kenny Walker became deaf at the age of
    two from meningitis, had a short, but
    interesting football career. First he was an
    All-American player on the University of
    Nebraska Cornhuskers, then was drafted
    by the Denver Broncos. After he retired
    from football, Walker became a football
    coach at the Iowa School for the Deaf.
    He wrote his autobiography titled Roar of
    Silence: The Kenny Walker Story and he is
    featured in Deaf Life Press Book Great
    Deaf Americans.
                        Transition Services
Fall 2005               Preparation & Training
Lifeguard
   LeRoy Colombo was born deaf and
    paralyzed with both legs from spinal
    meningitis. Because of a lot of work with
    his parents, he regained use of both of
    his legs and discovered a love for
    swimming. LeRoy saved his first life at
    the age of 12 by rescuing a drowning
    boy. He eventually became the first deaf
    lifeguard as well as the "World's
    Greatest Lifeguard," being credited with
    saving over 900 lives in a career that
    spanned 40 years. During that time,
    LeRoy put his own life in jeopardy and
    almost drowned 16 times. He was forced
    to retire in 1962 from a heart condition,
    but still continued to swim a mile a day
    up until the day he died in 1974. He was
    so respected that after his death parts of
    Texas lowered the flag to half-staff and
    had a moment of silence, even
                             Transition Services
    dedicating a plaque on the beach that he
Fallpatrolled.
      2005                   Preparation & Training
Musicians
   Evelyn Glennie was the first full time solo
    percussionist in the world. She has recorded
    18 albums/cds and won two Grammy
    Awards and received two further
    nominations. In a live performance Evelyn
    can use up to approximately 60 instruments.
    At the age of 5, Evelyn won a National
    Primary School Art competition, then at age
    19 Evelyn graduated from the Royal
    Academy of Music. In 1991 Evelyn's
    autobiography 'Good Vibrations' was
    published and reprinted in 1995. She has
    appeared on 'Sesame Street' '60 Minutes',
    'The Jim Lehrer News Hour' and 'The Late
    Show with David Letterman' among many
    others. Evelyn gives around 110 concerts
    per year.               Transition Services
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Artists
  Louis Frisino was born deaf and grew up with a
  love for art, attending the Maryland School for
  the Deaf in Frederick, Maryland. After
  graduation, he attended the Maryland Institute
  College of Art. From there, he went on to
  work as a commercial artist at the News
  American, but made his reputation in the deaf
  community as a creative artist. Frisino
  specializes in realistic nature subjects, such as
  fish, dogs, and ducks, creating many lifelike
  paintings of different species. Additional
  Frisino accomplishments include: inclusion of
  his drawings in a book of decoys, use of his
  artwork for Christmas cards by the National
  Wildlife Federation (1976 & 1977). Frisino can
  also be found in the book Who’s Who in
  Waterfowl Art by Ray Chapman. He has also
  won the acclaimed Peabody Award.


                             Transition Services
Fall 2005                    Preparation & Training
Artists
   Morris Broderson was born deaf and learned to
    express himself in sign language. When he was
    fourteen he attracted the attention of his aunt
    with a pencil sketch he did of her. She
    recognized his exceptional talent and encouraged
    him to further his studies in art. He studied at the
    University of Southern California and Jepson Art
    Institute to increase his skills. In 1960 he showed
    some of his pieces in a art museum in San
    Francisco and the response was so good that he
    started traveling to showcase his work. After
    staying in Japan for a short time, the Asian
    influences of The ballet, poetry, flowers and joys
    of childhood became a huge part of his paintings.


                            Transition Services
Fall 2005                   Preparation & Training
Artists
   Douglas Tilden was born hearing, but
    lost his hearing to scarlet fever at the age
    of five. Tilden attended the California
    School for the Deaf (CSD), and after
    graduation he worked at CSD. While
    working there, he began sculpting. Then
    he moved to France for awhile, and met
    a deaf sculptor there who taught him
    more about sculpting. Some of his best
    known sculptures are located in San
    Francisco, such as Admission Day,
    California Volunteers, The Baseball
    Player, and Mechanics Monument.
    Tilden was vice president of the World
    Federation of the Deaf, and president of
    the California Association ofServices
                         Transition the Deaf
Fall 2005                Preparation & Training
Artists
   Granville Redmond was stricken with scarlet
    fever at the age of three, from which he lost his
    hearing. Redmond attended the Berkeley School
    for the Deaf from 1879-1890, where he was
    encouraged in his artistic interests. Following
    graduation, Redmond attended the San Francisco
    School of Design, from which he was awarded a
    scholarship for further study in Paris. Following
    his return to the U.S., Redmond lived in Los
    Angeles and the Bay Area, until work in
    Hollywood prompted him to settle permanently
    in Los Angeles. Redmond used his sign language
    skills in bit parts in silent movies, and during this
    time befriended Charlie Chaplin. In fact, he had a
    studio on the Chaplin lot, and appeared in a
    number of his films. Today Redmond is
    nationally known for his Impressionist landscapes
    featuring the California wildflowers, as well as his
    coastal, and Tonal moonlit scenes.

                               Transition Services
Fall 2005                      Preparation & Training
Authors
   Henry Kisor was not born deaf but
    lost his hearing around the age of 2 ½.
    He is the current book editor at the
    Chicago Sun Times and other novels
    such as What’s That Pig Outdoors: a
    Memoir of Deafness, Zephyr: Tracking a
    Dream Across America, and Flight of the
    Gin Fizz: Midlife at 4,500 Feet. For
    phone interviews and other
    promotions that he must do for his
    books and his job, Kisor conducts
    them through faxes which takes a long
    time, but gets the job done. Services
                          Transition
Fall 2005              Preparation & Training
Storytellers
   Trix Bruce has been profoundly deaf since
    she was 6 months old. She has been involved
    in the performing arts since 1980. After
    completing her college program, she became
    involved with interpreter training, becoming
    an approved sponsor for the Registry of
    Interpreters for the Deaf (RID) Certificate
    Maintenance Program. Trix's main area of
    study has been ASL Linguistics with a focus
    on ASL Performance. In her performance
    now, she has become an actress, a poet, a
    storyteller, and a one deaf woman show. Her
    work has been warmly received in local
    community centers, national RID chapters,
    Deaf Way II, interpreter conventions and
    more. Wildly popular as a teacher of ASL
    storytelling and ASL interpretation, Trix
    impresses audiences at all levels of ASL skill,
    from beginning to fluent signers.
                             Transition Services
Fall 2005                   Preparation & Training
Poets
   Laura Searing covered the Civil War
    and wrote for "Reform Nation".
    She was a well-known journalist for
    America. In her writing, she used
    the surname "Howard Clyndon",
    because of the same reasons as
    Harriet Martineau. Laura became
    deaf at the age of 11. She strongly
    supported the Union, and was a
    ardent Republican. She wrote about
    many different subjects, including
    President Abraham Lincoln. 
                      Transition Services
Fall 2005            Preparation & Training
Founders of Companies/Businesses
   Matthew Moore was born deaf and
    attended Indiana School for the Deaf,
    graduating as valedictorian of his class. He
    attended Rochester Institute of
    Technology for college and worked as a
    Personnel Clerk for Dept. of U.S. Army
    after graduation. Afterwards he worked at
    a Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor,
    until 1983 when he became President of
    MSM Productions. In 1994 he received
    the Gallaudet University Alumni
    Association’s Alice Cogswell Award “for
    valuable service on behalf of the Deaf
    Community.
                        Transition Services
Fall 2005               Preparation & Training
Founders of Companies/Businesses
   I. King Jordan was born hearing but became
    profoundly deaf at the age of 21 from a car
    accident. Dr. Jordan earned a B.A. in
    psychology from Gallaudet in 1970. The
    following year he earned an M.A., and in 1973
    a Ph.D., both in psychology and both from
    the University of Tennessee. Upon receiving
    his doctorate, Dr. Jordan joined the faculty of
    Gallaudet's Department of Psychology.  In
    1983 he became chair of the department;
    three years later he was appointed dean of the
    College of Arts and Sciences. In 1988, during
    the Deaf President Now Movement at
    Gallaudet University, I. King Jordan became
    the first deaf president.

                           Transition Services
Fall 2005                  Preparation & Training
Founders of Companies/Businesses
   Vinton Cerf first gained recognition for his
    contributions to the development of what came to
    be known as the internet. He is routinely referred
    to as "the father of the internet," having helped to
    found the Arpanet in the early 1970s, a forerunner
    of today's internet. As part of that development,
    he co-designed the TCP/IP protocol for internet
    communication. His frustration with
    communication with other researchers reportedly
    was one of the motivations for his work to
    develop internet communications protocols. He
    has also chaired the Internet Corporation for
    Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), held
    high-level positions at MCI Worldcom, where he
    is a senior vice president responsible for internet
    technology, and received an award from President
    Clinton for his role in developing the internet.



                              Transition Services
Fall 2005                     Preparation & Training

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定制英国克兰菲尔德大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
 

Can do careers 9-05-05

  • 1. Can Do Careers for Deaf People “Deaf people can do anything, except hear.” I. King Jordan President Gallaudet University Fall 2005 Transition Services Preparation & Training
  • 2. Introduction  Deaf people are often told they are unable to do certain careers.  This PowerPoint presentation will counter this idea by giving examples of a number of careers that Deaf people are currently employed in.  It will include links to programs for these careers as well as real-life stories about people who have succeeded. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 3. Lawyers  DeafLawyers.org – A resource for deaf/hard-of-hearing attorneys and law students  New About Us: includes articles written about deaf/ hard-of-hearing lawyers  Resources: gives information about different communication systems deaf/hard-of-hearing law students and attorneys have used throughout law school and their professional career  Articles by Us: a list of books, articles, reports, etc. written by deaf/hard-of- hearing attorneys and law students  Other Links: links to websites about individual deaf lawyers Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 4. Lawyers Deafga.org – A community for deaf and hard of hearing attorneys and law students. You must be a member to access most of the information on this website, but this would be a great resource for students once they enter law school. One of the main features is the forums held through this website. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 5. Lawyers  Teri L. Mosier is a Deaf lawyer who was also an At-Large Delegate for Vice President, Al Gore. She is not the first national deaf delegate for the U.S., although she is the first democratic delegate for Kentucky.  There are also many other deaf lawyers who are making their name in the news. Below are a few:  John Stanton  Claudia Gordon  Carla Mathers  Kelby Brick  Bonnie Tucker, wrote a book, “The Feel of Silence” about her experience of growing-up deaf and then becoming a lawyer. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 6. Doctors, Veterinarians, Dentists, Nurses, etc.  Association of Medical Professionals with Hearing Losses (AMPHL)  A non-profit organization formed in 2000 to “provide information promote advocacy and mentorship, and create a network for individuals with hearing loss interested in or working in health care fields”.  Lists academic/professional guidelines for specific careers including schools that currently or in the past had deaf individuals graduate through their program  Resources include: a list of books and articles written about deaf individuals in the health care fields, forums; chat rooms; and other websites.  Information about stethoscopes that have been modified for deaf/hard- of-hearing individuals Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 7. Doctors and Other Medical Professionals  There are many articles that relate to doctors and other medical professionals who are Deaf. Here are just a few:  6 Deaf doctors (4 physicians, 1 veterinarian, and 1 dentist) who all live in Rochester, NY, grew up deaf, and know sign language. They share some of their everyday experiences about being in the medical profession.  Another more detailed article, about one of the above doctors, Angela Earhart, who uses a sign language interpreter. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 8. Doctors and Other Medical Professionals The book, “When the Phone Rings, My Bed Shakes: Memoirs of a Deaf D written by Philip Zazove, explains his life growing up deaf and the struggles he faced on his path to becoming a doctor. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 9. Scientists In the present and past there have been a number of scientists who are deaf. Gallaudet University has a website that includes information about deaf scientists in history as well as current professors of science or people within the field of science. A list of a few of these follow. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 10. Scientists Dr. Harry Lang, has been a professor at NTID for 30 years and teaches physics and mathematics. He has written two books that deal with deaf people in the field of science. The first book, “Silence of the Spheres: The Deaf Experience in the History of Science” , explains the contributions that deaf men and women have made to science. The second book, “Deaf Persons in the Arts and Sciences: A Biographical Dictionary” has ‘150 biographies of deaf scientists, artists, engineers, actors, writers, poets, and other professionals’. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 11. Scientists Christian Vogler is a research scientist at the Gallaudet Research Institute. He is currently working on using computers to recognize ASL by wearing a Cyberglove to track hand movements and using video to track facial expressions. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 12. Miss America Heather Whitestone was the first deaf person to be crowned Miss America in 1995. She has promoted awareness of Deaf/hard-of-hearing issues all around the country. She has written books including “Listening With My Heart” and “Believing the Promise” which both share her life-changing wisdom. One of her biggest achievements has been her five-point STARS program which was made to show others how to achieve “Success Through Action and Realization of your dreamS”. The five points in this system are: a positive attitude, a goal, a willingness to work hard, a realistic look at your problem, and a support team. She has served the community in many ways and been honored with many achievements and awards. In 2002, she was appointed as a member of the board for the Advisory Council for the National Institute of Health on Deafness and Other and Other Communication Disorder. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 13. Pilots The Summer in the Skies program is put on by the Indiana School for the Deaf (ISD). During this 4-week long summer class, students get to fly between 4-6 hours with a certified instructor as well as do flight simulations. They do such activities as “read and navigate with a compass, plot courses, and read navigational charts and maps for cross-country flights. They obtain and interpret weather briefings, plot courses, and calculate wind correction angles, time en route, and amount of fuel needed for cross-country flights. They also learn how to navigate with satellites and GPS technology.” They also build paper airplanes and hold competitions, write reports about famous pilots, write a daily journal about their experience, and take field trips to museums as well as airshows. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 14. Astronauts U.S. Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama and the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf (WPSD) have joined forces to provide a Space Camp experience for Deaf and Hard of hearing children from all over the world. In this 5-day program, students train much as how real pilots would for a mission into space. They do activities such as “simulated Space Shuttle missions, IMAX® movies, training simulators, rocket building and launches, scientific experiments, and lectures on the past, present, and future of space exploration. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 15. Priests/Ministers  There are only 7 or 8 deaf Catholic priests in the United States.  Father Thomas Coughlin was the first deaf priest ordained in the United States. In the past, he has traveled 11 months of the year around the United States and abroad. He ministers to deaf people by using American Sign Language (ASL). One of his main goals is to expand the ministry to deaf people within the Catholic Church. In 1979, he met privately with Pope John Paul II. He is currently a pastor of San Francisco’s St. Benedict Parish at St. Francis Xavier Church, which is known for its deaf congregation.  In the San Francisco area, there are three deaf seminarians studying at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park as well as two other deaf priests within the state of California.  Some other deaf priests are Father Michael Depcik and Father Joseph Mulcrone. Transition Services  There are a number of other deaf ministers throughout Fallthe United States. 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 16. Firefighters and Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs)  EMT’s have different techniques to communicate more efficiently at the work place such as:  memorizing the sequence of radio procedures, then giving reports when partner gives the signal  Partners can repeat medical orders or questions that come up by radio, and they can lip read sometimes via the rearview mirror then confirms the orders verbally over the radio  EMT’s have found other ways when checking a patient  Using a electronic stethoscope instead of listening for breathing sounds in chest  Feeling for heart palpitations  Firefighters have found alternatives ways to receive information and communicate in the firehouse and during a fire  Instead of yelling to get attention or to watch out for a specific area, Fire Chief will pull the hose to get everyone attention  Use of a pager for a fire alarm and to show where the fire is at. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 17. Firefighters and Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) The book, “Silent Alarm: On the Edge with a Deaf EMT” is written by Steven Schrader who was a firefighter and EMT for 15 years. This books describes his success and the obstacles he faced being deaf in this profession. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 18. FBI Agents  Sue Thomas lost her hearing at the age of 18 months and grew up learned to speak and lip read at Youngstown Hearing and Speech Center. She received a degree in political science from Springfield College and starting working for the FBI after graduation. Thomas used her lip reading abilities to decipher conversations in videotape for which there was no sound. In 1990, she wrote an autobiography, “Silent Night” which tells about her experience working in the FBI. From her book came the television series “Sue Thomas: F.B Eye” discussing stories from the book and showing experiences from her life. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 19. Actors/Actresses Michelle Banks became deaf at the age of one and attended Kendall Demonstration Elementary School and then the Model Secondary School for the Deaf. She went on to college at Gallaudet University and then transferred to the State University of New York (SUNY) at Purchase where she entered the school of drama. In 1990, she founded the Onyx Theatre, the first deaf theatre company in the U.S. for people of color. She made her break when she got cast as a deaf character on the Showtime television programs, Soul Food. She has also been seen on TV in Strong Medicine and the UPN series Girlfriends. She has been in two movies, Malcolm X and Compensation, a silent film in which she starred. She has been in a number of plays including Big River. She has did her own traveling one-woman show, Reflections of a Black Deaf Woman. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 20. Actors/Actresses  Linda Bove was born deaf on November 30, 1945. She is most well known for her character on Sesame Street as Linda. She was a founding member of the National Theatre of the Deaf in 1963. She played Sarah Norman a number of times in the famous play Children of a Lesser God. She also once made an appearance on the TV show Happy Days. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 21. Actors/Actresses Deanne Bray grew up in California and became deaf at the age of 3. She was a teacher for deaf high school students and did some acting on the side. She has been in a number of plays with Deaf West Theatre, made guest appearances in TV shows such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Ellen, and Diagnosis Murder, and appeared in some independent films and TV movies. In 2002, she became the lead actress in Sue Thomas: F. B. Eye. She plays the part of the real Sue Thomas, the FBI’s first female special investigative assistant who was deaf. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 22. Actors/Actresses  Amy Ecklund became deaf at the age of 6 and became interested in acting when she was young. She is able to speak and read lips and also knows American Sign Language. She has appeared in a number of different theatre productions. She played the role of Abigail Blume starting in 1995. She has received honors due to her role in Guiding Light, including in 1998 a Daytime Emmy Nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Daytime Series. In 1999, she had a cochlear implant as did her character on the soap opera. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 23. Actors/Actresses Lou Ferrigno lost his hearing at the age of 3 due to an ear infection. He started training for bodybuilding at the age of 13 and won major bodybuilding titles, including Mr. America and Mr. Universe, when he was in his early 20’s. He later became a professional football player for the Toronto Argonauts. He has appeared in a number of movies and TV programs and played the “Hulk” in the television show “The Incredible Hulk.” Currently, Ferrigno works on bodybuilding education. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 24. Actors/Actresses  Phyllis Frelich was born in Devil's Lake, North Dakota. She was a Tony Award-winning Actress. She was raised in a deaf family. She really loves performing on stages and front of cameras for audiences everywhere.  She graduated from Gallaudet in 1967, and has won many awards for drama. She participated with the National Theatre of the Deaf. Her most popular movie performance is from a movie called "Bridge to Silence."  Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 25. Actors/Actresses  C.J Jones was born hearing to deaf parents, but became deaf at the age of 7 from spinal meningitis. In 1972, he graduated from the National Technical Institute for the Deaf, but started working in theater and film afterwards. Jones worked with the National Theater of the Deaf (which won him a Tony award), and appeared on shows such as Sesame Street, A Different World, and in Living Color. He created his own comedy routine “The Living Cartoon”, and hosted a video series for deaf children called “Happy Hands Kids Club”. Finally, Jones has directed and appeared in a stage production of “Children of a Lesser God” and appeared in different programs that aired on the old Silent Network Deaf cable. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 26. Actors/Actresses Marlee Matlin is one of the most famous deaf actresses in the United States. She became well known for her role in “Children of a Lesser God”, in 1986, and received both a Golden Globe and Academy Award both for Best Actress in this movie. This was then turned into a play which she also starred in. She has also been in a number of movies and TV shows since. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 27. Actors/Actresses  Anthony Natale first decided that he wanted to act during high school and has followed his dream ever since. Natale is mainly known for his role as the deaf son in Mr. Holland’s Opus as well as the man in the elevator signing “You complete me” in Jerry Maguire. He has performed in other movies such as Sorority Boys and City of Angels as well as televisions appearances in 7th Heaven, Any Day Now, Once and Again, and Pacific Blues. He is currently teaching small ASL classes. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 28. Actors/Actresses  Howie Seago was born deaf and grew up and learned ASL during college at California State University from other deaf friends. He began producing and acting in plays around the world, touring with the National Theater of the Deaf and staring in many of their productions. One of his most exciting television rolls was an appearance as "Riva" in Star Trek; The Next Generation, Episode; Loud as a Whisper. A few of the other television shows he has performed in includes "The Equalizer," "Hunter," and “Rainbow's End.” He is also very well known for his performance in the foreign film “Beyond Silence”. Currently Howie teaches ASL and is the director of a special deaf youth drama program at Seattle Children's Theatre. Howie and his brother have created a series of entertaining video stories for children called Visual Tales. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 29. Actors/Actresses  Shoshannah Stern started her acting career in her high school plays at California School for the Deaf. She attended Gallaudet University, and while still attending classes she got the role in WB’s “Off Centre”. Shoshannah has appeared on Threat Matrix on ABC, had a well-publicized guest shot on ER, Boston Public and Providence. Shoshannah is 4th generation deaf in her family. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 30. Actors/Actresses  Terrylene's resume includes television and stage, but she has also acted in feature films such as Oliver Stone's "Natural Born Killers." Before her starring role in the play "Sweet Nothing in My Ear," she was best known for her role on television's Beauty and the Beast. She was one of the deaf actors on an episode of "Pacific Blue." Terrylene also starred in the film "AfterImage“ playing a psychic deaf woman. She has made her own appearance on the cover of Deaf Life (July 1992). Terrylene is also perhaps the most famous graduate of the Model Secondary School for the Deaf, and was invited back in 1998 to be their Services Transition Fallgraduation speaker. Preparation & Training 2005
  • 31. Comedian Kathy Buckley was thought to be retarded when she entered 2nd grade and was moved to a separate school. It took almost a year for professionals to figure out that her severe hearing loss was actually the reason for her speech and language delay. She is known as “America’s First Hearing-Impaired Comedienne.” In 1988, she entered a comedy contest “Stand-Up Comics Take a Stand,” where she competed against comics who had been in the business for years. She easily won fourth place and then began touring the country doing comedy shows. She wrote an autobiographical theatre play, “Don’t Buck With Me!” as well an autobiographical book entitled If I Could Hear What I See. She works with camps and other organizations where she can work with children because she believes that all children should grow-up with good role models. She has been on a number of entertainment and news shows on television as well as a few Services TV. Transition movies on Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 32. Comedian  Professor Glick has created a comedy routine called DEAFology which pokes fun of different situations in hearing and deaf culture. This show is appropriate for both the deaf and hearing and is a great way to make people aware of Deaf culture in a fun way. He travels all around the country performing his routine with the saying “The place where sound stops and the fun begins”. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 33. Juggler/Unicyclist  Pinky Aiello was born deaf and has grown up loving the theater. While working at the National Theater of the Deaf Professional Summer School, a director from Ohio hired in “The Double Pierrot” with the Fairmount Theatre of the Deaf in Cleveland. For this particular role, she was required to learn how to juggle and use a unicycle. This soon turned into a passion, and she began performing on the streets of Cleveland for fun. Aiello is a member of the International Jugglers Association and is currently performing at Universal Studios Hollywood and Six Flags Magic Mountain. She also perform with "Girls On Stilts" and "The Juggling Fools". She works at private parties, carnivals and other events given by hearing people, but now branching out to perform at Deaf Festival, Schools, clubs, camps where I also give workshops on juggling, Transition Servicesstilt unicycle riding and Fallwalking.   2005 Preparation & Training
  • 34. Stunt Person  Kitty O'Neil, the world's fastest woman, was born in Corpus Christi, Texas. She was a stuntwoman and racer who became deaf when she was four years old. She got her credentials in teaching at the University of Texas. She studied the methods of teaching deaf children, and is a founder of "School Listening Eyes" in Witchita Falls. She taught deaf children using oral methods. She won many diving championship awards and craves new challenges, such as dangerous sports. She rode a speed boat at the velocity of 285.23 miles per hour, and has been on water skis at 104.85 miles per hour in 1970. She has driven in many vehicle races. She also did stunts for the movie called "Bionic Woman" and "Wonder Woman". She was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records, because she traveled at a speed of 512.710 miles per hour. Transition Services She did many different stunts. Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 35. Body Building Shelly Beattie was born in Santa Ana Orange County, California. She is a champion bodybuilder who is best known as one of the "American Gladiators". She became deaf at three years old. Because of difficulty adjusting to her deafness, she was placed in a foster home when she was 14 and 17 years old. She loves to compete in sports and body building. She studied Child Psychology in Oregon for a while. She holds the 1988 and 1989 National and World record for fastest time with co-ed handcar team, and also hold high school track heptathlon records. She is also the world bench press record holder at 315 pounds. She won several bodybuilder competitions . Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 36. Athletes  Dummy Hoy was born hearing became profoundly deaf at the age of 2 from spinal meningitis. He started playing as an amateur baseball player in his hometown of Findlay, Ohio and was quickly recruited to play for Oshkosh, Wisconsin. His skills in the field were unbelievable, especially in center field, but his batting average was very low. This was because he was forced to turn around and lip read the umpire to see the call after each pitch and pitchers soon learned to quick pitch him. Hoy asked his 3rd base coach to signal the call to him and his batting average skyrocketed! Umpires soon saw this as beneficial for everyone to see the call and the sign for strike was created. In 1951, Hoy was unanimously voted the first player to be enshrined in the American Athletic Association of the Deaf’s Hall of Fame. The AAAD (now called the USA Deaf Sports Federation) began lobbying to get Hoy inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 37. Athletes  Curtis Pride was born deaf from rubella and played many sports while growing up. Pride began his career as a part-time New York Mets minor leaguer, and moved on to stints with the Montreal Expos (minors and majors), the Detroit Tigers (majors), the Boston Red Sox (minors/briefly in the majors), the Atlanta Braves (majors), the Kansas City Royals, the Salt Lake Stingers (minors), and the Nashua Pride (minors). In 2005, he is playing with the New York Yankees. While not playing baseball, Pride and his wife participate in the “Together with Pride” organization which works with children who are deaf or hard or hearing. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 38. Athletes  Jim Kyte was born deaf and grew up playing hockey, drafted into the National Hockey League (NHL) in 1982. Starting with Pittsburgh, Kyte has played for many teams such as Winnipeg, Ottowa, Vancouver, and San Jose. He was the first legal deaf player in the NHL, as well as the only person to ever wear hearing aids during the game. He wore a special helmet with flaps over the ears to protect the hearing aids during games or practice. Kyte ran his own summer hockey school for deaf and hearing-impaired kids in Toronto. He eventually opened the Jim Kyte Hockey School for the Hearing Impaired in Ottawa, a business which he continued to run after his retirement. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 39. Athletes  Kimberly Brand is a 16 year old gymnastics who competes on the state level for her high school. She specializes in the floor exercise, overcoming the challenge of synchronizing her routine to the music that accompanies it. Lights set up in the gymnasium signal her when the music has started and she has all the moves counted out in her head. The year before, Brand won four gold medals and a bronze in her first appearance at the Grand Canyon State Games  Amy Walker is a 17 year old gymnastic who is ranked as one of the best 15 gymnasts in the country. Amy is deaf and has vision from one eye. During her floor exercises, her teammates stand around the floor helping her keep to the beat by stomping. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 40. Athletes  Eugene Hairston was born in New York City and became deaf at the age of 2 from spinal meningitis. At the age of 15 he started boxing and soon started fighting again amateurs. During his workouts, his trainers used "body English and speech," giving instructions between rounds with gestures, adding well-formed words that Hairston could lipread. It wasn’t long before his management team decided he was ready to enter the amateur boxing world. In 1947, he won two important Golden Gloves championships: one in New York and one in Chicago. After 61 amateur bouts, Hairston had a record of 60 wins and only one loss! His handlers decided he was ready to turn professional. He won his first 16 fights (with four knockouts), and people began to take notice. He got national exposure when his fights were televised 13 times. Being deaf, Hairston was unable to hear the time-keeper’s bell at the end of each round. The New York Boxing Commission installed flashing red lights on each of Madison Square Garden’s four ring posts so he would know when the round was over. The lights also helped hearing boxers when noisy crowds drowned out the bell. Other arenas soon picked up on the idea. Eugene "Silent" Hairston was one of the most talented deaf prizefighters in ring annals, the first to be deaf and black. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 41. Athletes  Terrence Parkins was born deaf in South Africa and will be competed in the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney for swimming. "I am going to the Olympics to represent South Africa, but it's so vitally important for me to go, to show that the deaf can do anything," Parkin says. "They can't hear, they can see everything. I would like to show the world that there's opportunities for the deaf." Parkins won the silver in the 200 m breaststroke Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 42. Athletes  Kenny Walker became deaf at the age of two from meningitis, had a short, but interesting football career. First he was an All-American player on the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers, then was drafted by the Denver Broncos. After he retired from football, Walker became a football coach at the Iowa School for the Deaf. He wrote his autobiography titled Roar of Silence: The Kenny Walker Story and he is featured in Deaf Life Press Book Great Deaf Americans. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 43. Lifeguard  LeRoy Colombo was born deaf and paralyzed with both legs from spinal meningitis. Because of a lot of work with his parents, he regained use of both of his legs and discovered a love for swimming. LeRoy saved his first life at the age of 12 by rescuing a drowning boy. He eventually became the first deaf lifeguard as well as the "World's Greatest Lifeguard," being credited with saving over 900 lives in a career that spanned 40 years. During that time, LeRoy put his own life in jeopardy and almost drowned 16 times. He was forced to retire in 1962 from a heart condition, but still continued to swim a mile a day up until the day he died in 1974. He was so respected that after his death parts of Texas lowered the flag to half-staff and had a moment of silence, even Transition Services dedicating a plaque on the beach that he Fallpatrolled. 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 44. Musicians  Evelyn Glennie was the first full time solo percussionist in the world. She has recorded 18 albums/cds and won two Grammy Awards and received two further nominations. In a live performance Evelyn can use up to approximately 60 instruments. At the age of 5, Evelyn won a National Primary School Art competition, then at age 19 Evelyn graduated from the Royal Academy of Music. In 1991 Evelyn's autobiography 'Good Vibrations' was published and reprinted in 1995. She has appeared on 'Sesame Street' '60 Minutes', 'The Jim Lehrer News Hour' and 'The Late Show with David Letterman' among many others. Evelyn gives around 110 concerts per year. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 45. Artists Louis Frisino was born deaf and grew up with a love for art, attending the Maryland School for the Deaf in Frederick, Maryland. After graduation, he attended the Maryland Institute College of Art. From there, he went on to work as a commercial artist at the News American, but made his reputation in the deaf community as a creative artist. Frisino specializes in realistic nature subjects, such as fish, dogs, and ducks, creating many lifelike paintings of different species. Additional Frisino accomplishments include: inclusion of his drawings in a book of decoys, use of his artwork for Christmas cards by the National Wildlife Federation (1976 & 1977). Frisino can also be found in the book Who’s Who in Waterfowl Art by Ray Chapman. He has also won the acclaimed Peabody Award. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 46. Artists  Morris Broderson was born deaf and learned to express himself in sign language. When he was fourteen he attracted the attention of his aunt with a pencil sketch he did of her. She recognized his exceptional talent and encouraged him to further his studies in art. He studied at the University of Southern California and Jepson Art Institute to increase his skills. In 1960 he showed some of his pieces in a art museum in San Francisco and the response was so good that he started traveling to showcase his work. After staying in Japan for a short time, the Asian influences of The ballet, poetry, flowers and joys of childhood became a huge part of his paintings. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 47. Artists  Douglas Tilden was born hearing, but lost his hearing to scarlet fever at the age of five. Tilden attended the California School for the Deaf (CSD), and after graduation he worked at CSD. While working there, he began sculpting. Then he moved to France for awhile, and met a deaf sculptor there who taught him more about sculpting. Some of his best known sculptures are located in San Francisco, such as Admission Day, California Volunteers, The Baseball Player, and Mechanics Monument. Tilden was vice president of the World Federation of the Deaf, and president of the California Association ofServices Transition the Deaf Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 48. Artists  Granville Redmond was stricken with scarlet fever at the age of three, from which he lost his hearing. Redmond attended the Berkeley School for the Deaf from 1879-1890, where he was encouraged in his artistic interests. Following graduation, Redmond attended the San Francisco School of Design, from which he was awarded a scholarship for further study in Paris. Following his return to the U.S., Redmond lived in Los Angeles and the Bay Area, until work in Hollywood prompted him to settle permanently in Los Angeles. Redmond used his sign language skills in bit parts in silent movies, and during this time befriended Charlie Chaplin. In fact, he had a studio on the Chaplin lot, and appeared in a number of his films. Today Redmond is nationally known for his Impressionist landscapes featuring the California wildflowers, as well as his coastal, and Tonal moonlit scenes. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 49. Authors  Henry Kisor was not born deaf but lost his hearing around the age of 2 ½. He is the current book editor at the Chicago Sun Times and other novels such as What’s That Pig Outdoors: a Memoir of Deafness, Zephyr: Tracking a Dream Across America, and Flight of the Gin Fizz: Midlife at 4,500 Feet. For phone interviews and other promotions that he must do for his books and his job, Kisor conducts them through faxes which takes a long time, but gets the job done. Services Transition Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 50. Storytellers  Trix Bruce has been profoundly deaf since she was 6 months old. She has been involved in the performing arts since 1980. After completing her college program, she became involved with interpreter training, becoming an approved sponsor for the Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf (RID) Certificate Maintenance Program. Trix's main area of study has been ASL Linguistics with a focus on ASL Performance. In her performance now, she has become an actress, a poet, a storyteller, and a one deaf woman show. Her work has been warmly received in local community centers, national RID chapters, Deaf Way II, interpreter conventions and more. Wildly popular as a teacher of ASL storytelling and ASL interpretation, Trix impresses audiences at all levels of ASL skill, from beginning to fluent signers. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 51. Poets  Laura Searing covered the Civil War and wrote for "Reform Nation". She was a well-known journalist for America. In her writing, she used the surname "Howard Clyndon", because of the same reasons as Harriet Martineau. Laura became deaf at the age of 11. She strongly supported the Union, and was a ardent Republican. She wrote about many different subjects, including President Abraham Lincoln.  Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 52. Founders of Companies/Businesses  Matthew Moore was born deaf and attended Indiana School for the Deaf, graduating as valedictorian of his class. He attended Rochester Institute of Technology for college and worked as a Personnel Clerk for Dept. of U.S. Army after graduation. Afterwards he worked at a Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor, until 1983 when he became President of MSM Productions. In 1994 he received the Gallaudet University Alumni Association’s Alice Cogswell Award “for valuable service on behalf of the Deaf Community. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 53. Founders of Companies/Businesses  I. King Jordan was born hearing but became profoundly deaf at the age of 21 from a car accident. Dr. Jordan earned a B.A. in psychology from Gallaudet in 1970. The following year he earned an M.A., and in 1973 a Ph.D., both in psychology and both from the University of Tennessee. Upon receiving his doctorate, Dr. Jordan joined the faculty of Gallaudet's Department of Psychology.  In 1983 he became chair of the department; three years later he was appointed dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. In 1988, during the Deaf President Now Movement at Gallaudet University, I. King Jordan became the first deaf president. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training
  • 54. Founders of Companies/Businesses  Vinton Cerf first gained recognition for his contributions to the development of what came to be known as the internet. He is routinely referred to as "the father of the internet," having helped to found the Arpanet in the early 1970s, a forerunner of today's internet. As part of that development, he co-designed the TCP/IP protocol for internet communication. His frustration with communication with other researchers reportedly was one of the motivations for his work to develop internet communications protocols. He has also chaired the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), held high-level positions at MCI Worldcom, where he is a senior vice president responsible for internet technology, and received an award from President Clinton for his role in developing the internet. Transition Services Fall 2005 Preparation & Training