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Disability News: Bullying at the North Pole

Sunday, December 25th, 2011

The next installment of Yahoo’s bi-monthly Disability News roundup will be published Jan. 22. Happy holidays to all!

Was Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer bullied?

George Giuliani, a special ed professor at Long Island University in New York, has some issues with a classic Christmas cartoon. “The whole community of the North Pole is into exclusion, not inclusion,” says Giuliani of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” a 1964 television special that finds its way back onto the airwaves each December. “The message to disabled children is we will not accept you as you are, but only if you can do something extraordinary,” he said. If your family is watching Charlie Brown, the Grinch, or, yes, Rudolph this season, here’s some advice from Herbert Nieburg, a Connecticut psychologist and bullying expert: “Parents should have a conversation with their kids … the main one being about difference. How do we work with people who are different? It’s not just having a red nose, it’s being gay, smart, athletic. Parents should talk constantly with kids about how we treat other people.”

Santa and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer

Santa Claus and Rudolph puppets from the TV special "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." (AP photo/Paul Vernon)

Broadway strikes an autism-friendly chord

A unique performance of Broadway musical “The Lion King,” based on the Disney film by the same name, incorporated production changes aimed at making the theater-going experience more accessible for people on the autism spectrum. Adjustments to the show included “bringing down the sound of a steam blast, lowering the music at points, and eliminating strobe lights,” said Lisa Carling, director of the Theatre Development Fund’s Accessibility Programs. The sensory sensitivities some autistic people have can turn large crowds, bright lights and loud sounds into big stressors, making theater attendance difficult. The Associated Press reports: “According to organizers, the performance in the 1,600-seat theater had quickly sold out (with another 1,000 families on a waiting list for tickets), pointing to a real need for accessible theater for the autism-spectrum community.” TDF plans to mount another autism-friendly show in 2012.

A performance of "The Lion King."

A production of "The Lion King" in Las Vegas. (AP photo/Darrin Bush).

The touchscreen that lets you feel textures

The Week reports on the next frontier in touchscreens: “Touchscreens that feel nubbly or even fur-like? That’s the surreal promise behind new technology from Tokyo firm Senseg, which allows users to feel textures captured in an image on a tablet’s display screen — photos of pebbles, sandpaper, or packing material will feel like the real thing.” Potential uses include virtual keyboards with discernible key edges, Braille tablets, and touch-based video games.

Deafness shaped Beethoven’s music

According to scientists, progressive deafness profoundly influenced Beethoven’s compositions, prompting him to choose lower-frequency notes as his condition worsened, AFP reports. What’s really interesting is that once he was totally deaf, the higher notes returned. “When he came to rely completely on his inner ear, he was no longer compelled to produce music he could actually hear when performed, and slowly returned to his inner musical world and early composing experiences,” says the research paper. Check out a video about the project below:

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Disability News: Holiday movies and dining in the dark

Sunday, December 11th, 2011

‘Untouchable’ challenges box office records in France

“Untouchable,” a comedy based on the true story of a rich quadriplegic and his caretaker, has become a box office phenomenon, the Associated Press reports. The French biopic has made $90 million since it opened last month, which puts it on pace to possibly become France’s top-grossing film ever. Film executive Cecile Gaget describes the film as a cross between “The King’s Speech” and “Driving Miss Daisy.” The Weinstein Co. plans to release a version of the film in the United States and several other countries, but no date has been set. Check out the captioned trailer below.

Deaf teen can go to movies, thanks to grandma

When Phyllis Glazer took her grandson Danny to the movies in Omaha, she knew he wasn’t enjoying the film as much as he could. “Everybody would be watching the movie, and I would be leaning over and signing, and he would be looking at me,” she said. “It was depressing.” Through a persistent email campaign and a chunk of money from her personal savings, Glazer persuaded her local cinema chain to offer captioning. Watch their story below.

Blind French eatery seeks to conquer New York

“A French restaurant where diners cannot see what they are eating, often spill their wine and must conduct conversations while staring into pitch darkness has proved such a success in Europe that it is making a foray into the Americas,” Reuters reports. Dans Le Noir, a chain staffed by blind waiters, will open in Times Square this month. “I wanted to show that a company where 50 percent of staff are very heavily handicapped can perfectly well be profitable, thrive each year and become international like any other one,” said founder Edouard de Broglie, 49. At Dans Le Noir (“In the Dark”), visually impaired waiters guide diners into a pitch-dark room where they are served a multi-course meal. “We tell people: stop hiring handicapped people to fill quotas, but try instead to see how they can be productive within your business,” de Broglie said.

Patrons enter the Dans le Noir restaurant in Paris. (AP Photo/Laurent Rebours, file)

Patrons enter the Dans le Noir restaurant in Paris. (AP Photo/Laurent Rebours, file)

A fresh connection for talented students with disabilities

Lime Connect, an organization that partners with leading corporations to offer internships to high-potential students with disabilities, is helping companies tap a new talent pool, Reuters reports. “There are no special internships or positions put aside for our candidates,” says Susan Lang, president and chief executive of Lime Connect. “They compete with everyone else. All they’re getting is the connection.” That connection is a powerful thing, though: Participants have landed gigs at Google, Target, PepsiCo, and Goldman Sachs. Students in their sophomore years can apply now at the Lime Connect site.
Bonus: 4 college application tips for students with disabilities

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Disability News: Back on two feet and wearing wires

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

Paralympian regains use of her legs, joins pro team

Monique van der Vorst has a remarkable story. When she lost the use of her legs after having ankle surgery as a teenager, she took up handcycling and won two silver medals at the Beijing Paralympics. After a freak accident last year, she began to regain feeling in her legs, and now she is training to ride with a top professional cycling team. “Cycling with arms or legs, tactics, corners are almost the same,” Van der Vorst said, but she noted that “all the training I did in the last 10 years gives me a good base.”

Monique van der Vorst poses with her wheelchair.

Monique van der Vorst, a former wheelchair and handcycle racer, will now line up against elite able-bodied riders. (2010 AP Photo/Bas Czerwinski)

‘Oldest of the old’ could be redefined

Remember when Oprah said 50 is the new 40? Turns out 90 is the new 85, at least according to a recent Census report. According to the Associated Press: “By 2050, the United States is likely to have 9 million people 90 and older, the report projected … [and] the average 90-year-old can expect to live another 4.6 years, and anyone who makes it to 100 can reasonably expect to squeeze out more than two more years of life.” Two bits of related news: A study of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people over 50 found higher rates of physical disabilities, depression and loneliness than heterosexuals face, and more aging Americans are able to stay in their homes by buying memberships in nonprofit groups known as “villages.”

Ohio student wears recording device to catch teacher bullying

Imagine your developmentally disabled child complaining for years about a teacher and school aide. You report the mental and emotional abuse to school officials, who decide that your child is lying and tell you that continued complaints could be considered “harassment and slander.” Would you back down? Or would you, as one Ohio couple did, have your child wear a recording device to school for a few days? The instructors were caught making such comments as “Are you that damn dumb? Are you that dumb?” and “It’s no wonder you don’t have friends. No wonder nobody likes you.” After an investigation, the family reached a $300,000 settlement in a lawsuit against the school district and the two instructors. The aide resigned and gave up her permit, and the teacher’s license was suspended for a year. In a similar case, a special education teacher in New Jersey was disciplined after a student used his cellphone to record the teacher calling him a “tard” and saying, “You want me to call you normal and you don’t even know what it is!”

The fashionable side of adaptive technology

Next time you pick out curtains, you might have more to decide on than color. Carpets that respond to diabetics’ damaged feet and gloves that provide increased sensory feedback are just a couple of examples of how wearable electronics might soon change our lives. Lynne Bruning works in e-textiles and conductive fabric, and she says, “The field is evolving so fast that every time I do a lecture … I have a new slide show with recent developments, methods and materials. As the hardware becomes smaller, faster, and more compatible with smart phones, the more quickly improvements develop.”

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Disability News: Election Day, aging and staying in the ring

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

Oregon looks to iPads to help disabled people vote

Exercising your civic responsibility? There’s an app for that. A handful of Oregonians voted with a tap of a finger this week in the state’s “latest attempt at using new technology to help voters with disabilities cast ballots privately,” the Associated Press reports. “Voters with poor vision can adjust the font size and screen colors, or they can have the iPad read them the candidates’ names and even the voter pamphlet. A voter with limited mobility could attach a ‘sip-and-puff’ device to control the screen.” Officials say the pilot program will be expanded if it proves successful. In related news, some say a new South Carolina law that requires voters to have a photo ID “will hit the state’s black, poor, elderly and disabled voters the hardest.”

Lewis Crew votes via iPad

Lewis Crew, 75, votes via iPad in Beaverton, Ore. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

Disabled in Japan take pride in wrestling

A controversial WWF-style event in Tokyo is putting disabled wrestlers in the ring. Competitors face a variety of challenges, ranging from psychological problems to physiological issues. For example, Relaxnews reports, “One of the bouts pitted ‘The Blind Giant’ against a profoundly deaf opponent,” and a “miracle heavy class” match featured a man with a dislocated neck fighting a partially paralyzed woman. Although organizers have received plenty of complaints about the event, participants say the forum is an important one. “I can say with pride that no one can defeat me in the ring of handicapped pro-wrestling,” says Makoto Tsuruzono, 34. “You can live with pride if you feel you are second to none when doing something, no matter how trivial it is.”

Disabled wrestler Makoto Tsuruzono fights against "Chest Man."

Disabled wrestler Makoto Tsuruzono fights against "Chest Man."

Technological advances take on challenges of aging

Although plenty of attention has focused recently on the babies that pushed the global population past 7 billion, the world’s seniors are getting plenty of buzz. In Japan, robots are being called into service to provide physical and emotional support to seniors: Toyota, for example, recently unveiled four nursing and health-care robots that help with such tasks at patient transfers. In the United States, the increasing number of seniors is prompting a look at the scarcity of geriatricians, or doctors that specialize in treating the elderly. If it’s hard for you to relate to the challenges older people face, you might want to check out a high-tech suit developed at MIT that puts “the wearer in the shoes of a person in their 70s suffering from advanced diabetes and osteoarthritis” and is meant to give product designers insight into users’ needs. Finally, a new poll finds that only 9 percent of centenarians think luck had much to do with them reaching 100 — click through to find out which factors get credit in their book.

Toyota's "balance training assist" robot

A Toyota Motor Corp. staff plays a TV soccer game as she demonstrates a "balance training assist." (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye)

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