NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 17, 2004 - 3 ON CAMPUS Theater group to perform classic Today Wild Swan Theater will present its version of "A Christmas Carol." There will be two shows, one at 10:30 a.m. and another performance at 12:30 p.m. in the Mendelssohn Theatre in the Michigan League. The play was written by Jeff Dun- can and is based on the novel by Charles Dickens. Wild Swan is an Ann Arbor group that produces original scripts for traditional tales. It will be performing in *Ann Arbor until Sunday before moving to the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn. Cereal CEO to lecture on business success ' General Mills CEO Stephen Sanger will give a lecture this evening at 5:30 p.m. in Hale Auditorium. Sanger will dis- cuss General Mills's success as a leading consumer food company and the chal- lenges they have faced. 'Anchorman' to be screened tonight in Michigan League The movie "Anchorman," starring Will Ferrell, will be shown tonight from 8:30 to 11 p.m. in the ballroom of the Michigan League. The cost of the event is $3 with a student identification card. Meditation focus of workshop University Unions Arts & Programs will hold a workshop to teach students meditation and offer tips for regular prac- tice. The event will take place tonight in the Henderson Room of the Michigan League from 6 to 8. 0 CRIME NOTES DPS catches wanted person 0 While pulling over a car for a traffic violation on Monday, the Department of Public Safety officer discovered the driver was wanted on a warrant held by the Ann Arbor Police Department. The subject was transported to the Washtenaw County Jail with charges of operat- ing a vehicle under the influence of drugs and carrying a revolver in his vehicle. *Attempted break- in at child center A caller reported Monday that an unknown subject tried to break into the shed near the playground at the Univer- sity Child Center on Cornwell Place. DPS has no suspects. *Man down, but not found A man reported seeing a person down on the ground by the Northwood III Apartments on Monday. The area was checked, but DPS officers were unable to locate the subject. * THIs DAY In Daily History Regents call for a tuition refund after raising fees i Nov. 17, 1973 - The University's Board of Regents agreed to a tuition refund. The regents ordered the Uni- versity's executive officers to develop a plan to return about $1 million in excess tuition revenue to students who paid fees for the fall 1973 term. The motion was proposed by Regent Paul Brown. He recommended that the University give rebates, reduce tuition for the winter term or waive fees for term r in order to correct an error in the 24 per- NOTEWORTHY HEARING Continued from page 1 Knofski said she knows it's hard for the hearing community to comprehend that thought. Whenever someone thinks of the word "deaf," they can't help but imagine someone cut off from the world, she said. But Knofski grew up with the silence, and she said it never has prevented her from living life to its fullest. Rather, Knofski said she would like to ask people to imagine what they might be missing out on by hearing.. "I agree that hearing and the things you can use it for is a wonderful gift. With my remaining hearing, I often get to experience those pleasures. But these beauties can be experienced through the eyes as much as the ears," she said. People from the deaf community emphasize things visually, said Paula Berwanger, a linguistics lecturer. Speech is not a possibility for most deaf people since many have never heard "If I tell p words before andp cannot articulate to repeat them, she said. "Spoken they say, language is not a natural language for more I as people who are born deaf," she added. less peop Instead, willing t sign language w ligt embodies"their with me. primary method of communication. - 1 In recent years, deaf people have often been referred to as a linguistic minority by academics. The language has not only functioned as a medium for them to communicate, but also has united many deaf people into a culture where their deafness is valued. Despite their ability to communicate through signing, many deaf people's lives have revolved around society's norms on how to communicate. From this alternative worldview that takes pride in their deafness, Rackham student Richard Eckert said he plans to argue in his dissertation that deafness is in fact an ethnicity. Eckert, who is deaf, said the stereotype that deaf people are disabled has impeded people from viewing deafness as a form of identity. "There is a built-in belief of superiority based upon physicality, and it is so deeply embedded that seldom does one think about it," he added. Present since the times of Alexander Graham Bell and his efforts to eugenically sterilize people born with deafness, the misconception of deafness as a disability continues to permeate in the medical world, Eckert said. With the development of new hearing devices meant to treat their so-called disability, Eckert says the deaf community has become a victim to a society that does not tolerate its different way of life. "Thoseinadominantculturetendtotake their values and beliefs for granted. Most hearing people simply assume that the deaf person must approach hearing culture and that the hearing culture has little need to approach deaf culture," Eckert said. It's become an overbearing prejudice for Knofski, which she said frustrates her relations with people of normal hearing. Isolated from the other students in her classes, Knofski said she usually finds that her perceived disability acts as a social barrier. "If I tell people to repeat what they say, they might do it once or twice. But the more I ask, the less people are willing to interact with me," she said. She also said people are unwilling to spend the effort to communicate with her even though she wears hearing aids throughout the day. She added that she wished the roles were reversed, with hearing people .optlt forced to use sign language to hx a tcommunicate with Ce Waii4 ... the sk, the )le are ) interact rabatha Knofski LSA senior her. "Mostofthetime I wish to just throw out my hearing aids, because I already have a language I can use without having to do the extra work for everyone else," she said. In tandem, the mainstream media also bombards her with images of Fraternity races to Columbus n 187-mile relay for charity By Kim Tomlin Daily Staff Reporter This Friday, 62 Pi Kappa Alpha broth- ers will wake up at 4 a.m. to head to Ohio State University. The brothers will be starting the Sec- ond Annual Charity Football Run and are predicted to arrive 30 hours later in Columbus, Ohio, where the Michigan football team will be playing rival Ohio State. Each brother will run a leg in the 187-mile relay. Race tC Baxter Allen, an LSA senior and Each brother member of the fra- Alpha Fraternity ternity, is running the 187-mile rel< three miles for the N The relay will cause. "We are on Friday and is really excited. It's take about 30 h a fun way to raise 0 The event wil money,"said Allen, mated $10,000 who started condi- Carr Cancer Fun tioning for the event at the beginning of the semester. D arit IIb for the relay. The event will raise an esti- mated $10,000 - five times as much as the $2,000 that last year's run brought, said LSA sophomore Jon Krasnov, a member of the fraternity. The money raised will be donated to The Coach Carr Cancer Fund, started in 1998 by Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr. The fund originated with a donation Carr gave to the University's Comprehen- sive Cancer Center after his mother died of breast cancer. Housed within the OSU center, the cancer fund continues to in Pi Kappa provide money that vill run a leg in helps finance care y to Columbus and support for >egin at 4 a.m. cancer patients and expected to their families. urs "This money raise an esti- is going to impact or The Coach patients and fami- lies right here in the state," said Janet Roth, development officer of the can- State's campus is not participating in the fundraiser but is planning a reception for the incoming runners. To raise money, the University chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha has sought donations from alumni brothers and their families and friends as well as by asking door- to-door. The fraternity will be accepting donations until tomorrow night. This year it has decided to offer incen- tives to the largest donors; fleece sweat- shirts will be given to the five largest contributors. The fraternity would like to see the funds reach $50,000 and beyond in the next few years as recognition expands, Krasnov added. He said he also would like the relay to help bring awareness to positive events in which the Greek system participates, in response to the negative attention given to fraternities for hazing allegations. But, he added, "the most rewarding aspect is the money raised is going to cancer patients and their families." success stories of deaf people triumphing through medical breakthroughs, like cochlear implants which can dramatically improve a deaf person's hearing. Knofski sees the device as a solution for a person who became deaf through illness or injury, but never for her. She said she views medical research on ways to cure deafness as an attack on her identity that needs no treatment, although she added that not everyone in the deaf community adheres to the same belief. But the sentiment to change her way of life sometimes overwhelms Knofski. She said she resists by constantly reminding herself, "This is how they are trying to make me feel. How do I actually feel?" Knofski says rather than determining her own identity, society seems to be determining it for her, in spite of her own perseverance. "They can pity us since they have justifiable reasons, which I don't blame them for, since I understand those reasons. However, when they do feel that way and see us that way, there are consequences that affect deaf people and prevent our lives from being nonre- strictive," she said. LSA junior Matt Reed, a member of the fraternity, is set to run 15 miles, the most of all the participants, before handing the football to the next runner. Last year he ran 30 miles from Ohio State to the Pi Kappa Alpha house in Ann Arbor, Allen said. C.J. Johnson, LSA senior and president of Pi Kappa Alpha, said he is excited to run his 10 miles of the relay but is nervous about the cold weather conditions during the early morning. "The hardest part of the run, for me at least, is not the distance part of it ... but rather the fact that the tem- perature late at night during the 30-hour run can fall to below freezing, especially with the wind chill," said Johnson, who has been running every day to prepare cer center. "This is a big contribution in a lot of ways. It is significant because these are students with busy lives ... and they have invested a lot of time and energy. It's not just the time involved with the actual running down to Columbus." Krasnov said he is excited about rais- ing money for the cancer fund while put- ting the rivalry to good use. "Our vision is to continue to raise money for the Coach Carr Cancer Fund and to further enrich the tradition of the Michigan-Ohio State rivalry by one day running the ball into the stadium before kick-off." Currently, the ball is run to the stadium rather than from fraternity to fraternity. The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity on Ohio NO PLACE LKE J Q N E S.com Headaches?"f Michigan Head*Pain & Neurological Institute is conducting an in-clinic research study evaluating an investigational medication for migraine. Participants must be 18 to 75 years old and suffer no more than 2-8 headaches per month. A total of three clinic visits are required. Visit 2 is a three to four hour treatment visit while having an acute headache. Participants must be available to come to the clinic during normal business