THE ADVOCATE
A Newsletter for Students with Disabilities

Interesting Facts about April:

     Some very famous people born in April had disabilities that you may not have heard about before.  Most notably, Leonardo da Vinci (April 15, 1452-May 2, 1519), the quintessential "Renaissance Man" who excelled in painting, botany, music, mathematics, sculpture, engineering, architecture and anatomy, is also believed to have had epilepsy!  Hans Christian Anderson, (April 2nd, 1805-August 4, 1875) , the author of famous children's stories like "The Little Mermaid," "Thumbelina," and "The Emperor's New Clothes," had dyslexia.  Some other more recent celebrities that you may know include Hugo Weaving (4 April 1960), who played "Agent Smith" in the Matrix movies, "Elrond", the elfin king, in the Lord of the Rings movies, and the voice of "Megatron" in Transformers, has epilepsy; Jessica Alba (April 28, 1981) had OCD, pneumonia 4-5 times a year, and collapsed lungs twice during childhood; and Jim Eisenreich (April 18, 1959), a former major league baseball player, has Tourette syndrome and founded the Jim Eisenreich Foundation for Children with Tourette Syndrome in 1996.    

  
  The origins of the name for the month of April are obscured in the past.  Some believe that April was named for the Latin word aperire, "to open," because the trees and flowers all begin blooming.  Others claim that the month was named after the Greek goddess, Aphrodite.  Regardless, today April's children claim the diamond as their birthstone and the daisy and sweet pea as their flower.  April is also notorious in the United States for the ever-impending tax day on April 15th.  For you procrastinators out there, Benjamin Franklin said it most famously, "In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes."  As an additional bit of morbid trivia, Abraham Lincoln was also assassinated on the 15th of April, 1865.  

Spotlight on APSU Disability Awareness Month

April is Disability Awareness Month here at Austin Peay!  The Office of Disability Services has several events lined up to promote awareness among students about disabilities. 

On the 7th, Mr. Voorhees will be hosting the STAR Access unit here on campus.  The APSU community will have the opportunity to tour The Star Access Express Bus parked at the UC Plaza between 10am and 2pm to expand awareness of this mobile assistive technology program.  There will be free food and a free T-shirt available to those who tour the bus with a valid APSU student ID. 

On the 15th, Disability Services will host the "Wheelchair, Blind, Crutches Relay" around the Library Bowl.  The event is designed to demonstrate how challenging it can be to travel using a wheelchair or crutches, or while visually impaired.  Come and get a free T-shirt, drink and snack while enjoying the show, or join in the relay to learn what it can be like to have a mobility related disability!

On the 22nd, at the Student Organization and Leader Awards Assembly Disability Services will recognize all the outstanding note-takers who volunteered this year.  And on the 24th, an autistic artist named Derrick Freeman will present his works from 10am-3pm at the African American Cultural Center. 

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Disability Studies at Vanderbilt University

The Vanderbilt Kennedy Center is one of the leading medical research centers in the United States.  Many of the research they do revolves around people from the local community, like you.  Many of the studies offer a money reward or gift certificates for people who participate.  There are all kinds of research topics currently being studied:  dyslexia, ADHD, learning disabilities, low vision disabilities, epilepsy, and even a study for women who are pregnant.  In addition to these studies, there are over 21 studies currently examining adults with disabilities.  If you or someone you know might be interested in helping doctors understand more about a certain disability, visit the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center website for more details.   

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Love and Marriage after a Disability

"My wife and I were in a motel in Roanoke, Va., on our way home from three months at the Hershey Medical Center in Pennsylvania, where she had been convalescing after being crippled in a car accident. It was our first night away from the skill and comfort of the nurses we had come to depend on, and so far, so good. Then we woke up and smelled something. It smelled like a bowel movement. I lifted up the sheets. It was a bowel movement, and it was in our bed.

We knew we had a lot to learn, but we had no idea how much.

Hearing the word paraplegic had made us focus on the big thing, the fact that Linda could no longer walk. Less anticipated were the smaller humiliations and inconveniences, like bowel movements in bed or on the way to a party, sores that came out of nowhere and took months or years to heal, and inaccessible restroom stalls that caused Linda to have to catheterize herself in the public area where people were washing their hands and talking......."

To find out how this inspirational story ends, visit the New York Times site below and read the whole article.  The above article selection entitled "In a Charmed Life, a Road Less Traveled," by Layng Martin Jr. was published on March 6th, 2009, in the New York Times.  To read the full article visit the following link to the New York Times.

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Tips In Case of Emergency:

You never know where life might lead...  we are all at risk for every-day sounding disasters like car accidents and food poisoning, and here in Clarksville there is also the possibility of winter weather related emergencies, flash-flooding, terrorist attacks on Ft. Campbell or Nashville, and tornadoes.  Don't be caught unprepared when these simple steps could save your life!

 1.  PLAN!

-Add ICE (in case of emergency) to your cell-phone contact list.  Paramedics and emergency responders look for ICE in your cell-phone contact list so they know who/what number to call in case of an emergency where you are unconscious or incapacitated.

-Make sure you have a radio to alert you in case of an emergency.

-Consider what special needs and equipment you need and make sure you have enough food, water, batteries, and equipment in your home to support yourself and your family for 2 weeks.

-Make an evacuation plan (where to go and how to get there), in case you have to leave your home.

2.  Gather Emergency Contact Information

-Collect names, phone numbers, mailing addresses, and email addresses for family members, friends, doctors, and equipment vendors into one location or even one sheet of paper.

-Identify at lease one agreed upon contact 100 miles outside the area, in case local phone lines are down.

-Make a list of important information, including emergency contacts, medical history, special accommodations needed, instructions for safely moving self or equipment, medications, and allergies.

-Keep this list near your phone and in your wallet and share with trusted friends or family.

3.  Gather Important Legal Documents (and store them with your list of contacts and important information from step 2 above!).

-Health insurance and copy of card

-Bank and account numbers

-Copy of prescription drug plan card

-Copy of social security card

-Copy of important papers such as marriage and death certificates, stocks, passports, and insurance policies.

4.  Share Location of Critical Information with a Trusted Person.

-Critical information includes your emergency contact list, important information list (from step 2), evacuation plans, emergency supplies, and emergency utility shut-offs.

-Ask a trusted person to check on your well-being after an emergency.

5.  Gather Disaster Supplies.

-Including: enough bottled water for everyone in the household for 2 weeks, flashlight and extra batteries, portable radio and extra batteries, cell phone and charger, first aid kit, hand operated can opener, enough non-perishable food for everyone in household for 2 weeks, essential prescriptions and over-the-counter meds for everyone in the household for 2 weeks, durable medical equipment (bandages, catheter) for 2 weeks, backup equipment necessary for survival (generator, manual wheelchair), extra cash, blanket, whistle on a string, toilet paper or wipes, soap, small shovel or plastic garbage bags for disposing waste, matches stored in a waterproof container, pet food and supplies (if applicable), dust mask, paper and pencil or pen, rain coat or plastic tarp, extra supply of clothes and shoes.

-Ideally you should store all of these items together in a few boxes that you can easily access or transport quickly if needed.

6.  Practice Telling Others Your Needs.

-If you need to leave your home and have items that must come with you, know in advance exactly what you must communicate to those there to help you.  Example:  "Please bring my medicines.  They are in the bathroom on the bottom shelf in the closet." 

7.  Know How to Respond.

-Think about what you will do if there is an emergency.

-Stay calm!

-Listen to the radio for instructions.

-Check in with your support system.

-Put your plan in action by seeking shelter in place or evacuating.

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Jokes to Brighten Your April Fools Day!

A student comes to a young professor's office hours. She glances down the hall, closes his door, kneels pleadingly, and says, "I would do anything to pass this exam."  She leans closer to him, flips back her hair, gazes meaningfully into his eyes, "I mean..." she whispers, "...I would do...anything."  He returns her gaze, saying "Anything?"  "Anything," she says.  His voice softens, "Anything??"  She answers, "Absolutely anything."  His voice turns to a whisper, "Would you... study?"

Dumb (but real) Tennessee Laws:  You can't shoot any game other than whales from a moving automobile.  It is illegal to use a lasso to catch a fish.  Stealing a horse is punishable by hanging.  Hollow logs may not be sold.  It is legal to gather and consume road-kill.  And more than 8 women may not live in the same house because that would constitute a brothel.

And a few funny April Fools Day pranks from the online Museum of Hoaxes:

In 1996, the Taco Bell Corporation announced it had bought the Liberty Bell and was renaming it the Taco Liberty Bell. Hundreds of outraged citizens called the National Historic Park in Philadelphia where the bell was housed to express their anger. Their nerves were only calmed when Taco Bell revealed, a few hours later, that it was all a practical joke. The best line of the day came when White House press secretary Mike McCurry was asked about the sale. Thinking on his feet, he responded that the Lincoln Memorial had also been sold. It would now be known, he said, as the Ford Lincoln Mercury Memorial.

In 1998, Burger King published a full page advertisement in USA Today announcing the introduction of a new item to their menu: a "Left-Handed Whopper" specially designed for the 32 million left-handed Americans. According to the advertisement, the new whopper included the same ingredients as the original Whopper (lettuce, tomato, hamburger patty, etc.), but all the condiments were rotated 180 degrees for the benefit of their left-handed customers. The following day Burger King issued a follow-up release revealing that although the Left-Handed Whopper was a hoax, thousands of customers had gone into restaurants to request the new sandwich. Simultaneously, according to the press release, "many others requested their own 'right handed' version."

In 1992, National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation program announced that Richard Nixon, in a surprise move, was running for President again. His new campaign slogan was, "I didn't do anything wrong, and I won't do it again." Accompanying this announcement were audio clips of Nixon delivering his candidacy speech. Listeners responded viscerally to the announcement, flooding the show with calls expressing shock and outrage. Only during the second half of the show did the host John Hockenberry reveal that the announcement was a practical joke. Nixon's voice was impersonated by comedian Rich Little.

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Dates to Remember:

Apr 2 Visual Performing Artist:  Richard Hight 11:30am-12:30pm, MUC Lobby

Apr 7 STAR Access, 10am-2pm, UC Plaza;  Game Show:  "Are you Smarter than a Freshman?" 5:30pm at Einstein's, MUC

Apr 10 Good Friday- NO CLASSES!

Apr 14 Global Govs Recognition Banquet (invitation only), 5pm MUC Ballroom BC

Apr 15 Wheelchair, Blind, Crutches Relay, 11am-1pm, Library Bowl;  Movie:  "Saving Private Ryan" 6pm, MUC303

Apr 21 Speaker:  Dr. Mel Mayfield, APSU Professor Emeritus, WWII Veteran, "Experiences during WWII in France and Germany", 11:30am, Red Barn (Memorial Health Building Gym)

Apr 22 Student Organization and Leader Awards, 6pm,MUC Ballroom

Apr 24 Eyes of Faith Artwork Presentation by Derrick Freeman, 10am-3pm, AACC

Apr 29 Last Day of Spring Classes!!

Apr 30 Spring Fling, 2-6pm, MUC Plaza

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Now Taking Student Submissions!

We want YOU!  If you have a piece of artwork, comments about a previous newsletter article, a photograph, a poem, a story about how you overcame a challenge, a favorite recipe, a tech. tip, or an announcement that you would like to publish in the Advocate, please send it via email to ODSTESTS@apsu.edu with the subject line "Advocate submission", or drop your submission off at the ODS front desk.  Don't forget to include your name, contact information, and any special instructions.  And please make sure your submission is typed and legible.

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Tech Corner

All APSU Students including ODS registered students have access to the Assistive Technology located in the the library (first floor-- JAWS and Kurzweil 3000) and ODS Access lab (second floor JAWS, Kurzweil 3000/1000, ZoomText, CCTV and Dragon Naturally Speaking) and MUC114 ODS AT Lab (Closed Caption Television (up x60 enlargement), Zoom Text Magnifier, JAWS  Screen Reader, and Kurzweil 3000/1000). Further description of ODS Assistive Technology is available through the Services for Access and Assistive Technology link on the ODS web.

For an orientation explaining the assistive technology ODS provides, please come to an open AT orientation— for dates and times go to the link Announcements and Events on the ODS web site.

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Mission Statement

The Office of Disability Services (ODS) primary mission is to ensure equal access for students with disabilities to all curricular and co-curricular opportunities offered by Austin Peay State University. ODS is also committed to provide leadership to the campus community to ensure compliance with legal requirements for equal access.

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