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Everyman announces first full season at new home
It might be hard to duplicate the anticipation and publicity that greeted the inaugural season in Everyman Theatre's inviting new home on West Fayette Street, but that hasn't stopped the company from trying. "I want next season to be even more...
Tags: Tom Courtenay, Charles Street, Everyman Theatre, Entertainment Events, Red (movie, 2010)
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Hearing impairment doesn't stop these hockey players
Trey Wilson can't hear the crowd applaud when he scores a goal, and he has scored quite a few since he discovered hockey was a perfect outlet for his energy. The 25-year-old left wing from Riverside was born deaf, which means he can't hear the crunch of...Tags: Sports, Tony Granato, Anaheim Ducks, Bobby Ryan, National Collegiate Athletic Association
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For 'Tribes,' a bit of understudy musical chairs
Audiences who attended Sunday's performance of "Tribes," Nina Raine's play currently running at the Mark Taper Forum, were able to witness a rare bit of understudy musical chairs. Center Theatre Group said actress Gayle Rankin, who played the the role...
Tags: London Theatre, Entertainment, Celebrities, Music Theater, Entertainment Events
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'Tribes' star Russell Harvard talks deaf community culture
Russell Harvard plays the deaf brother in a dysfunctional family in "Tribes" at the Mark Taper Forum through April 14. The Austin, Texas-based actor, who won a Drama League Award for the role off-Broadway, will move with the production to the La Jolla...
Tags: Entertainment, Daniel Day-Lewis, Culture, Science and Technology, New York City
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Winter Park softball player breaks down language barrier by signing
WINTER PARK — Daisha Padilla's first words were "mom" and "dad." She wasn't an infant, and she wasn't learning to speak. Padilla was using sign language as a sophomore at Winter Park. "They are pretty simple words to sign," said Padilla, who has...
Tags: Sports, Students, Teaching and Learning, Softball
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Deaf employees in the workforce
There were no deaf children where I grew up, no deaf children where I went to school. There was no hearing impairment I can remember in my family, no deaf personnel serving in the military where I was assigned. So it's no surprise that I was also... -
Hearing loss partially reversed in noise-damaged ears of mice
Anyone who’s gone to too many rock concerts or worked with loud machinery for too long (or listened to too many kazillion-decibel advertisements at a movie theater) may eventually pay the price: hearing loss caused by damage to tiny, sound-...
Tags: Eric Clapton, Harvard Medical School, Pete Townshend, Science and Technology
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Hearing loss, cognitive decline associated in older people, study says
Hearing loss among older adults appears to be associated with faster cognitive decline than people without hearing loss, researchers found. The study published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine on Monday suggests that, on average, individuals with...Tags: Internal Medicine, Alzheimer's Disease, Internists, Health and Medical Professionals
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Theater review: 'Children of a Lesser God' from Beth Marshall Presents
It's not uncommon in life to hear — but not actually listen. Ask any long-married couple. Or the parent of a toddler. Or, for that matter, the parent of a teenager. Humankind, in fact, has made rather an art of communication in which the true...
Tags: Celebrities, Marlee Matlin, Arts and Culture, Winter Garden
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EEOC claims Toys 'R' Us discriminated against deaf job applicant
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued Toys "R" Us, alleging the company broke the law when staff at its Columbia store refused to provide a sign-language interpreter for a job applicant who is deaf. The lawsuit, filed last week in U.S....
Tags: U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Toys "R" Us, Inc., Trials, Employment Opportunities, Justice System
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Review: 'Tribes' will be heard — and felt
In the intellectually raucous British household of Nina Raine's "Tribes," family members don't so much talk as assault each other with monologues. The dinner table cacophony consists of scraps of debate, ironic jabs, aesthetic proclamations, academic...
Tags: Health and Safety at School, Roy Rogers
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'Tribes' uncovers a dysfunction both silent and spoken
In the play "Tribes," a young deaf man with a boisterous, hearing family learns something from a new girlfriend that his parents and siblings never bothered to teach him: how to sign. He had always been expected to keep up with them by reading lips....
Tags: Entertainment, Celebrities, Genetic Condition, Roy Rogers, Tinnitus
Apr 21, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 28, 2013
|Column| Los Angeles Times
Apr 9, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 7, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 6, 2013
|Story| Orlando Sentinel
Mar 29, 2013
|Story| Daily American
Jan 10, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Jan 23, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 20, 2013
|Story| Orlando Sentinel
Mar 19, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 11, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 7, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Original site for Hearing Impairment topic gallery.